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50th Anniversary Viewing Revisited
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The Mod Squad
"The Girl in Chair Nine"
Originally aired September 23, 1969
Season 2 premiere
Wiki said:
A mother receives a note that her daughter has been kidnapped, but the Squad soon discovers the girl was trying to cover up an illegal abortion.
So...how 'bout that Moon landing, huh?
The episode opens with "paragnost"/clairvoyant Dr. Eric Santos (Cesare Danova) in the college classroom of Professor Aaron Tanner (John Stephenson), reading impressions from numbered chairs of the students who will soon be randomly occupying them. His impressions are remarkably accurate--including of Julie, describing the double life she leads with two men in vague detail. Chair number 9 remains unoccupied, as he predicted. The missing student is Gail Whitney (Veronica Cartwright), and Santos has flashes of her tied up to a bed. At HQ, Julie is trying to get a skeptical Greer involved when he receives a call about a notification that Gail Whitney has been kidnapped, but without a ransom demand.
Greer doesn't want Santos involved, but Mrs. Whitney (Angela Greene) insists, and the psychic is able to describe a person of interest from impressions. Linc is assigned to tail Santos in a very efficient manner, by acting as his driver. Santos describes how he was an architectural engineer who gained his abilities after an auto accident, his first vision being of the murder of his wife and daughter. Then he receives more detailed flashes of the suspect, indicating that she's at a coffee house. Elsewhere, Julie hears from a fellow student, Barbara (Iris Rainer), that Gail's actually out of town dealing with a certain condition. Julie claims to be in the same condition (because she has experience playing that), and Barbara points her to the guy who made the arrangements for Gail, Tory Peterson (Gary Crabbe), who hangs out at a hip coffee house. Julie proceeds there and learns that her contact will be the proprietor, Big Mama (Sylvia Hayes), who perfectly matches Santos's description of the person of interest.
But back with Linc, Santos receives a psychic update that he was getting his women of interest mixed up, and the real one is now an older woman with a hearing aid. Julie arranges to bring Pete along to get her contact info, against Mama's wishes, as her baby daddy and source of funds. Outside the cafe, another student, Jerry Bronson (Robert R. Cannon), who frequents the bookstore across the street, tries frantically to stop Julie based on his religiously informed moral objections. When Julie and Pete go inside, he reports it to the woman who runs the bookstore (Lillian Bronson)...who matches Santos's updated flashes. As Mama is making back-room bus travel arrangements to a location south of the border, Tory comes knocking, desperate to know what happened to Gail as she never checked into the Mexican hotel that's the final destination in the chain. As things gets heated, Julie calls in Greer, and he and the boys in blue take everyone in for questioning.
Meanwhile, Santos gets more flashes in bed and calls Linc for service in the middle of the night. They're still riding around in the morning when Santos realizes that they've been circling the location of interest. Linc calls Julie with details of the envisioned book shop near a coffee house; then he and Santos locate it. The wheelchair-bound bookstore proprietor identifies herself as Jerry's Aunt Margaret, who acts guileless and indicates that Jerry may be upstairs. But Santos doesn't ring for him with the pull-rope, sensing that Gail is up there, instead opting to call Greer...and we see that Jerry is upstairs, with Gail tied and gagged on his brass bed. It turns out that the baby is his, and he's trying to prevent her from getting the abortion, and is trying to persuade her to marry him instead...though she's understandably resistant to that option. Then he resolves to take her to Mexico, and chloroforms her...cuz yeah, he keeps chloroform in his bedroom with his brass bed and ropes.
Linc drops his cover to persuade Greer to come running with the boys; and he and Santos decide to bust the joint while they're waiting. Linc breaks in upstairs while Jerry is trying to quietly carry Gail downstairs, where he grabs some cash and a gun from the cash register, but makes enough noise that Auntie M hears him, and then finds himself surrounded by Santos and Linc. He escapes with Julie to his car and is pursued by Greer and his men. When they run him down, Greer tries to reason with him, but Santos intuits that Jerry's gun isn't loaded, boldly approaches him, and is proven right.
After Greer declares that Jerry will probably be getting psychiatric help and Gail may be granted a legal abortion, he, Santos and the Mods do a walk-off outside the bookshop.
I'm all for more concise and less spoilerish Wiki descriptions, but the contributor might have mentioned that there was a psychic in the episode. The most unintentionally funny moment was when Santos called Linc in middle of the night, and Linc delivered the standard "Who is this?". How could you be working every day with a guy played by Cesare Danova and not recognize his voice when he calls? Linc must've been pretty out of it!
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The Mod Squad
"My Name Is Manolete"
Originally aired September 30, 1969
Wiki said:
The Squad "adopts" a 9-year-old Mexican waif who has been abandoned by a gang of American thieves.
The episode opens with an adult man (Rex Holman) boosting a small, barefoot, Latino boy (Fabian Gregory) through a transom window to open the door of a jeweler's shop. While the man is robbing the place, the boy accidentally trips an alarm. The man immediately splits to get away with the driver (Bruce Watson); but the boy lingers like a deer caught in the headlights and is seen by the proprietor (Hal Smith) when comes downstairs. The boy then flees and hides in a nearby vehicle...which just happens to be the non-woodie station wagon that the Mods are using this week. They drive back to Julie's after a Chinese dinner with Greer, and Pete finds the boy in the back hiding under Julie's sweater. A lighthearted tussle ensues, with the boy putting up a good fight against Pete and Linc combined. After they carry him inside, the boy pretends not to understand English, though Pete speaks Spanish and the boy gives himself away early, so they make a point of saying things in English to get reactions out of him. He tells them that his name is Manolete and claims that he ran away from a cruel aunt named Lupe Lopez who lives in Long Beach. Julie agrees to let him stay the night, though Linc deduces from his own childhood experience that Manolete's story isn't true because his callouses indicate that he's never had shoes, and thus has no family. Manolete sneaks in a call at night to the burglars, and the one who was in the shop, Jonah, tells him to stay put and not say anything.
Pete and Linc come by in the morning with Manolete's clothes cleaned and a new pair of shoes for him. He admits to having lied to them about his aunt, but still doesn't tell them the truth. They take him to the rooming house of a Lupe Lopez in Long Beach (Alma Beltran), who has a strong negative reaction to him and says that she's not his family...and we see that Jonah and his partner are watching from their room upstairs. The Mods then take Manolete for a picnic and some kite-flying in the park, and call Greer to come, planning to tell him at first...but Greer talks about how he's been investigating the series of jewelry store robberies, and when he tells them about the jeweler having seen a small Mexican boy, they clam up. However, Manolete promptly runs up and outs himself, and Greer plays it cool.
Over a surprisingly good dinner prepared by Manolete at Julie's, Greer tries to get info out of him without letting on what it's about, and the boy admits to being a thief who was caught by the two hombres while stealing their hubcaps. Greer tells the Mods that even if charges are dropped against Manolete, he's liable to be deported unless they can get him adopted. Pete and Linc go back to the rooming house to bribe information about the burglars from Lopez. She identifies them as Jonah and Marv Richmond, but afterward tells her tenants about it, so the Richmonds determine that they have to silence the kid.
Greer contacts a couple he knows who already have nine adoptees, Paul and Nora Stedman (Paul Sorensen and Jeane Byron), who have the extended Mod family come to their ranch for Thanksgiving...though neither Manolete nor the Mods are happy that they're not having the more intimate dinner among amigos that they'd been planning. The Stedmans take to Manolete despite his antisocial behavior, but he finds out why he's there from one of the other kids, Leon (Eric Lee), and runs away, feeling that he's been betrayed by his amigos. The Mods return to Julie's to find that Manolete left the shoes there, while the boy returns to the rooming house. Jonah and Marv try to beat info out of the boy, so he makes a run for it, and the Mods arrive in time to intervene in the chase.
A playground brawl ensues with Pete and Linc taking the Richmonds down.
In the coda, the Mods visit the Stedman ranch after Manolete's been living there for a month, and find that he's well-adjusted to his new family. He also admits to one last lie, that his real name is Pepe. Their relationship with the boy have been informed by their own broken home experiences, the Mods are disappointed to find that they're no longer the closest thing he's had to a family, and do a ranch walk-off to their wagon.
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Did they have organ grinders in the Wild West?
A quick search indicates that they were around then, so I don't see why not in a city like Denver. I read that they became especially common in New York City around 1880 because of Italian immigration.
President Grant gets a lot of mail.
Indeed. He should have stepped down from national office and gotten a syndicated column.
The Circus of Crime! Where's Princess Python?
I'm a little surprised we weren't getting "Biff!" and "Pow!" during the fights at this point.
Is any of this Wild Wilder than in earlier seasons? I guess I'll find out soon enough.
And another villain defeats herself by taking a nasty fall.
Contrived to keep our heroes gentlemanly.
Sexism, not misogyny. Pet peeve.
I'll buy that. I always thought the term "misogyny" had become overapplied, but that's what rolled off my keyboard thanks to common exposure.