Who's the guy talking about power shakes at 1:47? He looks very familiar but I'm not placing him.
Ted Lange from The Love Boat, in his pre-acting days as far as I can determine. He has some very insightful things to say in the film.
Who's the guy talking about power shakes at 1:47? He looks very familiar but I'm not placing him.
And the subject of a terrific part-concert, part-documentary movie the next year.
(Warning: NSFW offensive language)
This is what local stations used to do when I was a kid. It was especially egregious with things like the Flash Gordon serials.So here's the deal with INSP's Branded schedule: They finished the "Call to Glory" 3-parter, then skipped the next episode, "The Ghost of Murietta" (March 20, 1966), and are now on the following two-parter...after which they're for some reason going back into the middle of Season 1, also leaving us short the last three episodes of the series.
How do you send a telegram to someone who wanders around like Caine?A telegram summons Jason to Washington
Did we ever pin down the dates in WWW as closely as this episode pins down Branded?For those of us who might be getting our shows mixed up, he quickly dismisses the idea of using a couple of other leading characters...
I'm going to take a wild wild guess here....Parties of interest include those against Grant's intention to support Cuban revolutionaries; and gold-hungry potential land-grabbers who want the Sioux driven from the Black Hills.
"Jason, do you like moving pictures about gladiators?"
Nice touch.and invites Jason to a boarding house where ex-president and current Tennessee senator Andrew Johnson (who's probably on the IMDb list as one of several uncredited actors listed as "Senator") holds court to a group of anti-Grant DC power brokers.
Either Jock Ewing or the creator of Garfield.James Swaney (Jim Davis)
His second reputation is pummeling people who bring up his first reputation.The man Swaney already had lined up, Jim Randall (uncredited Michael Ross), brings up Jason's reputation and is promptly pummeled.
Nice. Grant probably enjoyed getting a few whacks in after all those years at a desk job.Grant offers Jason a ride in his coach, and outside they're jumped by three men, two of them masked, and fight them off--Grant employing his cane
Where'd John Carradine disappear to? Was he just a cameo?INSP is running the end credits, as superimposed text at the bottom of the screen, in lieu of the original sequence.
It probably depends on the time of day. My Mother turns it on when she gets up in the morning, which is pretty early-- not as early as me, but pretty early.ETA: I just went back and watched the commercials...the ones that they're playing on Branded all seem pretty benign and typical of retro TV channels: AARP, a weight loss program, a nutrition supplement, a nebulizer, a Lifetime commercial that seemed to be inserted by Frndly in place of something else, William Shatner about a Medicare helpline, CashNetUSA, a blood sugar medication.
Pretty much, but I like it better than "Maggie May."This is sort of the generic Rod Stewart song.
It's like hitting myself with a pain stick.Morbid fascination with how low the early '70s can go?
I thought so. Funny to see him in that context.That's Ted Lange, Issac from 'The Love Boat'.
Ted Lange from The Love Boat, in his pre-acting days as far as I can determine. He has some very insightful things to say in the film.
Frndly said:McCord learns that the dagger with which he and President Grant were attacked belonged to Senator Ashley (Peter Graves).
Some of his jobs are longer term, like the one he's heading out to sounds.How do you send a telegram to someone who wanders around like Caine?![]()
I'm sure that both shows have or would happily run stories completely out of order of actual dates given or implied.Did we ever pin down the dates in WWW as closely as this episode pins down Branded?
"He's a lily-livered coward...but don't say it to his face, he'll kick your ass!"His second reputation is pummeling people who bring up his first reputation.![]()
He was in the scenes at his home, generally serving as momentary comic relief.Where'd John Carradine disappear to? Was he just a cameo?
"Please, Donny, may I have another?"It's like hitting myself with a pain stick.
Wiki says that he was in the Broadway and touring cast of Hair...likely his main claim to fame at that point.Looking at his IMDB and Wikipedia entries, this looks like it was his first on camera appearance in either movies or television. It certainly opened doors for him, because he's been working steadily since then.
They're building exclusive rail extensions for Secret Service use.The episode opens with Jason inspecting the knife and offering his grandfather a job helping him run a railroad engineering office out West.
And the patient comes pre-medicated.Jason reports back to Grant at a dental appointment (where the doctor is using a presumably pedal-powered contraption for his tools)
Looks like my wild wild guess was wrong.Socorro sees this and is horrified to learn that her brother has sold out to the Cuban regime and plans to kill the president with his foil at the event.
Jason expresses regret that he didn't bring his secret boot knife.While the two of them are being held prisoner in Ashley's cellar
That was a bad plan. Did she survive?Socorro tells Jason about her brother's plan, then instigates an altercation with their guard
Well, then, he should have tripped and accidentally cut himself and had a horrifying dramatic moment of realization and one last pleading instant of eye contact with Jason before falling down dead.In private--not wanting to risk starting a war--Jason reveals to Grant that the tip of Cueverra's blade was poisoned.
That's interesting. I wonder if Carradine is in the next story.Jason says his goodbyes to the president, Ashley, and Laurette, and prepares to travel back out West with his grandfather.
Full credit? Good for him.I neglected to mention last time that Chuck Connors got a story credit for this two-parter.
Yeah, I don't think they obsessed over details like I do.I'm sure that both shows have or would happily run stories completely out of order of actual dates given or implied.
"He's a lily-livered coward...but don't say it to his face, he'll kick your ass!"
Kind of a waste of a cool character actor. Good thing John Carradine never said no to a job in his life.He was in the scenes at his home, generally serving as momentary comic relief.
Wow, Isaac was in Hair. Things you never suspect.Wiki says that he was in the Broadway and touring cast of Hair...likely his main claim to fame at that point.
Wiki said:The sixth encounter with Dr. Loveless a.k.a. Robin Hood of Sherwood forest, whose latest scheme involves a chemical that kills plant life and a suit of medieval armor.
Wiki said:Max and Agent 99 go undercover in a circus to find a KAOS smuggling ring. Special guest starring Paul Dooley, with a notable performance by Mickey Manners as the half man/half woman Gertrude/Gerald.
What would those dollar bill-guarders need moving telegraph communications for?They're building exclusive rail extensions for Secret Service use.
Actually, he refused to take the cigar out of his mouth--"Work around it!"And the patient comes pre-medicated.
Or some plastique in his heel.Jason expresses regret that he didn't bring his secret boot knife.
Nope.That was a bad plan. Did she survive?
I assume you mean Cueverra and not Grant.Well, then, he should have tripped and accidentally cut himself and had a horrifying dramatic moment of realization and one last pleading instant of eye contact with Jason before falling down dead.
That's interesting. I wonder if Carradine is in the next story.
According to IMDb, he will be in the episode that airs as the series finale. If the intervening two episodes don't deal with Jason and Joshua's new job together out West, that's likely the old production vs. airdate order thing. Hopefully we'll see for ourselves eventually, but in the meantime, here's something to remember General McCord by:Kind of a waste of a cool character actor. Good thing John Carradine never said no to a job in his life.![]()
No, it was "based on a story by....".Full credit? Good for him.
Now there's a time travel song.The New Vaudeville Band performs "Winchester Cathedral"
Wow. Looks like Topo is feeling the heat from Jim Henson.Topo Gigio (Italian mouse puppet)
Coming this Fall on HBO: Deadwood Forest. Hm. Too obscure?Jim and Artie find a forest with no animals, its fruit-bearing trees dead... and the agents are surrounded and taken prisoner by bow-wielding Merry Men.
A Steampunk Western with a dwarf arch villain pretending to be Robin Hood who has also adopted a secret identity as a mechanical knight to manipulate a tribe of American Indians. Life is good!They're taken to the pavilion tent of Dr. Loveless, now assuming the role of Robin Hood
They got the technology from Loveless. America is a melting pot.The chief leaves West tied up in front of a crossbow set to go off when a thong dries. (This doesn't seem like an authentically Native American form of torture.)
Is this part of some greater scheme, or is he just getting mean in his old age?Loveless sneaks in through a secret entrance to boast of his formula, which killed all the local insects, causing the plants to die. Mixed for greater potency, he expects it to be capable of killing all animals, fish, and birds, and possibly even man.
Doctor Bartender!an elder chief (Paul Fix)
"Normal" being a relative term.Resuming his normal identity
You've got to admire the effort he puts into these things.and has Jim and Artie led through a passage concealed in a tree to a hidden lab, where he uses a scale model of a town to demonstrate for the agents and Indians how he could deploy his (now confusingly incendiary) formula via balloon to destroy Washington, DC.
What th--?Afterward, the agents are unable to find any sign of Loveless or his female accomplice, but we see a rabbit come out of the log.
"Say, Artie, do you like Zoetropes of gladiators?"In the train coda, fighting practice with Artie serves as an excuse for Conrad to get in some shirtless time
Ah, that special relationship between a hero and his arch enemy.and the agents receive a package at a station, containing a statuette of a knight that plays a recording of Loveless and Antoinette performing.
Sometimes it's hard to avoid the impression that KAOS is winning.and on how multiple undercover agents have been killed.
He's getting closer to inventing the Smart phone, though.Carlson gives them some particularly questionable gadgets...a camera with a concealed tape recorder and a tape recorder with a concealed camera.
"Are you people blind? He's female on the left... and male on the right!"The agents then interview G-G, who's made up and dressed like a blonde female on the right side and a dark-haired male on the left.
Is this the CONTROL equivalent of "go play in traffic?"At the Chief's urging via shoe phone, Max is about to search the lion cage
Did they all pile out of a little car?they're saved by the Chief and a group of CONTROL agents, all disguised as clowns.
He can frisk half and 99 can frisk the other half.the Chief is uncomfortable with Max's insistence that he follow procedure by frisking Gertrude-Gerald.
Somebody's been reading Poe.In the coda, Max implicates Rudolph the mascot chimp as an accessory, as he was used to lock up Tiny Allen's trailer via the transom.
That's for them to know and us to watch on TV in color a century later.What would those dollar bill-guarders need moving telegraph communications for?
Actually, he refused to take the cigar out of his mouth--"Work around it!"
Ouch. That never would have happened on Wild Wild West.Nope.
Indeed.I assume you mean Cueverra and not Grant.
How can you not love this guy?in the meantime, here's something to remember General McCord by:
View attachment 29695
[Joshua McCord exits scene, followed by sound of gunshot offscreen.]
Ah, okay. Still pretty cool, though.No, it was "based on a story by....".
Hmm...maybe. Can't be upstaged by some darned Newsomecomer!Wow. Looks like Topo is feeling the heat from Jim Henson.
I'm sure it was the usual extortion/revenge/ruling thing.Is this part of some greater scheme, or is he just getting mean in his old age?
No, that was John Hoyt. Fix was Piper in WNMHGB...and before that, the marshal on The Rifleman.Doctor Bartender!
Exactly.What th--?![]()
Correcting my slight anachronism, eh?"Say, Artie, do you like Zoetropes of gladiators?"
That's the shoe.He's getting closer to inventing the Smart phone, though.
No, they just came running up from a tent after the Chief shot the gun from Hanlon's hand.Did they all pile out of a little car?![]()
She got a dramatic death scene, bidding Jason to save the president with her dying breaths.Ouch. That never would have happened on Wild Wild West.
You can bet Ed never forgot Topo's name. Jim should have kissed him more.Hmm...maybe. Can't be upstaged by some darned Newsomecomer!
Oh, man....No, that was John Hoyt. Fix was Piper in WNMHGB...and before that, the marshal on The Rifleman.
Kinda building on it.Correcting my slight anachronism, eh?
Imagine Max with an electronic shoe phone. He'd be foot dialing the Chief thirty times a day.That's the shoe.![]()
She died a hero.She got a dramatic death scene, bidding Jason to save the president with her dying breaths.
Whoa. Disco Zorro.
"Call me Jim. I like your shirt.""You'll pay for that, Senator Ashley...or should I say, Mister Briggs?"
"Phelps."
"Whatever!"
1. "Ode to Billie Joe," Bobbie Gentry
2. "All You Need Is Love," The Beatles
3. "Reflections," Diana Ross & The Supremes
4. "Light My Fire," The Doors
5. "Baby, I Love You," Aretha Franklin
6. "Come Back When You Grow Up," Bobby Vee & The Strangers
7. "Cold Sweat, Part 1," James Brown
8. "Pleasant Valley Sunday," The Monkees
9. "You're My Everything," The Temptations
10. "I Was Made to Love Her," Stevie Wonder
11. "Words," The Monkees
12. "Heroes and Villains," The Beach Boys
13. "Thank the Lord for the Night Time," Neil Diamond
14. "Apples, Peaches, Pumpkin Pie," Jay & The Techniques
15. "The Letter," The Box Tops
16. "A Whiter Shade of Pale," Procol Harum
17. "A Girl Like You," The Young Rascals
18. "Carrie-Anne," The Hollies
19. "Funky Broadway," Wilson Pickett
20. "(I Wanna) Testify," The Parliaments
21. "Silence Is Golden," The Tremeloes
22. "Brown Eyed Girl," Van Morrison
23. "Fakin' It," Simon & Garfunkel
24. "There Is a Mountain," Donovan
25. "San Franciscan Nights," Eric Burdon & The Animals
26. "To Love Somebody," Bee Gees
27. "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher," Jackie Wilson
28. "You Know What I Mean," The Turtles
29. "I Had a Dream," Paul Revere & The Raiders feat. Mark Lindsay
31. "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," The Buckinghams
33. "Groovin'," Booker T. & The M.G.'s
34. "Let the Good Times Roll & Feel So Good," Bunny Sigler
35. "Can't Take My Eyes Off You," Frankie Valli
36. "Twelve Thirty (Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon)," The Mamas & The Papas
37. "Things I Should Have Said," The Grass Roots
38. "I Dig Rock and Roll Music," Peter, Paul & Mary
39. "Hypnotized," Linda Jones
40. "Gettin' Together," Tommy James & The Shondells
46. "Gimme Little Sign," Brenton Wood
47. "My Mammy," The Happenings
55. "Knock on Wood," Otis & Carla
57. "Get on Up," The Esquires
58. "Love Bug Leave My Heart Alone," Martha Reeves & The Vandellas
59. "Never My Love," The Association
63. "Run, Run, Run," The Third Rail
70. "I Make a Fool of Myself," Frankie Valli
71. "Little Ole Man (Uptight, Everything's Alright)," Bill Cosby
72. "The Cat in the Window (The Bird in the Sky)," Petula Clark
83. "Expressway to Your Heart," The Soul Survivors
84. "The Ballad of You & Me & Pooneil," Jefferson Airplane
88. "Get Together," The Youngbloods
93. "Purple Haze," The Jimi Hendrix Experience
96. "The Look of Love," Dusty Springfield
Or maybe Topo's original name was something else and they just rolled with it...You can bet Ed never forgot Topo's name.
Now I'm picturing young people hobbling around while transfixed with one of their shoes...Imagine Max with an electronic shoe phone. He'd be foot dialing the Chief thirty times a day.![]()
Well, it was his in the first place..."Call me Jim. I like your shirt."
"Lady Friend," The Byrds
"Little Ole Man (Uptight, Everything's Alright)," Bill Cosby
Tonight I'd thought I'd do a little soul/funk. Starting with Billy Preston
And finish with Edwin Starr. Sorry Sly, this is what the song should have sounded like, not drugged out and slurred vocals.
Wow, this is weird, like a strange early hybrid of videocassette and data disk. It's like something from the Burgess Shale of home entertainment.Electronic Video Recording (EVR), a high quality, film-based video format
That seems odd. I wonder if the family had some kind of ill will toward the Beatles or something.The funeral for Brian Epstein is held. It is strictly a family affair and none of the Beatles attends.
This is a fantastic story. In fact, I just mentioned it recently, but I forget if it was this thread or elsewhere. Anyway, it's very cool, like something out of a William Gibson novel.Bates proclaimed the location as the Principality of Sealand
Simple but nice, basically a poem set to music."Lady Friend," The Byrds
Same for this one and even moreso. I wonder what the record for shortest single is."The Cat in the Window (The Bird in the Sky)," Petula Clark
Oldies Radio Classic. Also surprisingly short, though."Expressway to Your Heart," The Soul Survivors
He should have formed a Supergroup with William Shatner and Greg Morris."Little Ole Man (Uptight, Everything's Alright)," Bill Cosby
Micko.Or maybe Topo's original name was something else and they just rolled with it...
Hopping on one foot. That's hilarious.Now I'm picturing young people hobbling around while transfixed with one of their shoes...
That seems odd. I wonder if the family had some kind of ill will toward the Beatles or something.
Same for this one and even moreso. I wonder what the record for shortest single is.
1. "Alone Again (Naturally)," Gilbert O'Sullivan
2. "Long Cool Woman (in a Black Dress)," The Hollies
3. "I'm Still in Love with You," Al Green
4. "Brandy (You're a Fine Girl)," Looking Glass
5. "Hold Your Head Up," Argent
6. "Baby Don't Get Hooked on Me," Mac Davis
7. "Goodbye to Love," Carpenters
8. "You Don't Mess Around with Jim," Jim Croce
9. "Rock and Roll, Part 2," Gary Glitter
10. "Back Stabbers," The O'Jays
11. "The Guitar Man," Bread
12. "Motorcycle Mama," Sailcat
13. "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right," Luther Ingram
14. "Black & White," Three Dog Night
15. "Saturday in the Park," Chicago
16. "Lookin' Through the Windows," Jackson 5
17. "Coconut," Harry Nilsson
18. "Beautiful Sunday," Daniel Boone
19. "Join Together," The Who
20. "Go All the Way," Raspberries
21. "The Happiest Girl in the Whole U.S.A.," Donna Fargo
22. "Power of Love," Joe Simon
23. "Honky Cat," Elton John
25. "Daddy, Don't You Walk So Fast," Wayne Newton
26. "Sealed with a Kiss," Bobby Vinton
27. "Run to Me," Bee Gees
28. "Popcorn," Hot Butter
30. "Pop That Thang," The Isley Brothers
31. "Where Is the Love," Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway
32. "Everybody Plays the Fool," The Main Ingredient
33. "Play Me," Neil Diamond
35. "Speak to the Sky," Rick Springfield
36. "How Do You Do?," Mouth & MacNeal
39. "Nights in White Satin," The Moody Blues
41. "The City of New Orleans," Arlo Guthrie
42. "My Ding-a-Ling," Chuck Berry
43. "Ben," Michael Jackson
46. "Get on the Good Foot, Pt. 1," James Brown
49. "Starting All Over Again," Mel & Tim
50. "Happy," The Rolling Stones
53. "Use Me," Bill Withers
54. "Garden Party," Rick Nelson & The Stone Canyon Band
58. "Burning Love," Elvis Presley
60. "Tight Rope," Leon Russell
62. "Why" / "Lonely Boy", Donny Osmond
67. "You Wear It Well," Rod Stewart
77. "From the Beginning," Emerson, Lake & Palmer
78. "For Emily, Whenever I May Find Her," Simon & Garfunkel
79. "Freddie's Dead (Theme from 'Superfly')," Curtis Mayfield
87. "Good Time Charlie's Got the Blues," Danny O'Keefe
89. "Listen to the Music," The Doobie Brothers
You like to make me look things up, don't you?Wow, this is weird, like a strange early hybrid of videocassette and data disk. It's like something from the Burgess Shale of home entertainment.![]()
That seems odd. I wonder if the family had some kind of ill will toward the Beatles or something.
Without looking it up, that would be my guess as well. I don't recall reading anything about animosity between the Beatles and Brian's family.I think it had more to do with the family and the Beatles wanting it to be about Brian and not a media circus with the four of them attending.
I knew it had come up recently, though I don't recall the context.RJDiogenes said:This is a fantastic story. In fact, I just mentioned it recently, but I forget if it was this thread or elsewhere.
Sounds nice, but relatively unremarkable as the Byrds go.Simple but nice, basically a poem set to music.
I vaguely recalled this one being better than I think it is now. It's a bit of a mess musically.Same for this one and even moreso. I wonder what the record for shortest single is.![]()
Yep.Oldies Radio Classic.
I think this is pretty interesting, and not too far out of his wheelhouse.Best stick to stand-up Bill.
A mutual co-star is currently on the chart in 55th Anniversaryland:He should have formed a Supergroup with William Shatner and Greg Morris.![]()
First thig that came to mind upon reading.With all respect to Brian Epstein, I can't help getting a bit of a giggle watching that footage of the Beatles reacting to the news, because it always reminds me of this.
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