• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)

_______

All in the Family
"Edith Flips Her Wig"
Originally aired October 21, 1972
Wiki said:
When Edith gets arrested for shoplifting, she thinks she inherited her aunt's kleptomania.

Edith comes home from Saturday afternoon shopping acting tight-lipped about something that's bothering her. When the kids press, she blurts out that she was arrested for shoplifting, and gets into the history of her Aunt Gertrude, "the klepper". Archie comes home in a good mood from bowling to have the bomb dropped on him, and tries to get the story out of her, which takes the usual convoluted turns. Eventually it comes out that she ran out of a department store while trying on a wig to go after a woman she'd given bad bus info to. When Archie learns that she was put on a blacklist, he wants to straighten the matter out with the store, and cheers her up by expressing his understanding that she's not a criminal, she's just a dingbat. Then Gloria compliments the necklace that Edith's wearing, and she realizes that she stole that, too.

Mike argues that Edith should see a psychiatrist, and Edith gets further distraught when she realizes that she still has a borrowed umbrella that she thought she'd returned to Louise Jefferson. Edith opts to see Father John Majeski (Barnard Hughes reprising his role from "Edith's Accident"). After she has to remind him of what commandments she's broken, he has her get into the details of the incident and she realizes that she didn't do it on purpose, and that a floorwalker was there at the time who could serve as a witness on her behalf. Meanwhile, Archie goes to see the department store manager, Mr. Kirkwood (James Gregory), but sticks his foot in his mouth when he tries to get on the man's good side by expressing his preference for a store not run by Jews, only to be informed that Kirkwood's wife is Jewish...causing Kirkwood to describe Archie with the Yiddish word for "meathead". Despite this, Archie comes home to learn that the floorwalker has cleared Edith with his testimony.

_______

Emergency!
"Saddled"
Originally aired October 21, 1972
Wiki said:
Dixie injures her toe, which brings on teasing from Drs. Brackett and Early. John decides to do some saddle shopping in preparation for trying for the rodeo. Roy and John aid a girl injured in the explosion of a soda bottle. When Roy cites the owner of a business for an improperly installed gas heater, the owner scoffs at the fireman until they have to return when the heater explodes, injuring the owner. Other rescues include a boy lapsing into a coma after falling from a tree–later found to be suffering from the ITP blood disorder–and saving several children and a driving nun from a school bus crashed on a gorge.

Brackett has Early called into the exam room after Dixie has her toe run over by a portable X-ray machine, and they joke about amputation. At the station, Johnny tells Roy about how he's buying a saddle so he can make extra money doing rodeos, noting that he was raised on a ranch (causing Roy to describe him as an "Indian cowboy"). The squad is called to a lunch stand run by belligerant Ben Wesley (Larry Storch) to see to a teenage girl named Lisa Hill (Ronne Troup) who was injured by an exploding pop bottle, hitting her head on a pipe and possibly getting glass in her eye. Roy notices Wesley's improperly connected gas heater and cites him for it. Station 51 is later called to a follow-up explosion at Wesley's lunch stand, finding the owner conscious but badly burned. At Rampart, Early's gotten the glass out of Lisa's eyes without serious injury, and the girl is pleased to learn that the boy she was with, Mike Allen (Michael Rupert), has been fretting out in the hall over her.

At the station, Johnny's laying it on a bit thick during a rope-tying exercise the firemen are participating in when the squad is called to see to a seven-year-old child, Timmy Collins (Christopher Gardner), whose mother (Barbara Bosson) found him outside in a coma, apparently having fallen from a tree. Both the paramedics and Brackett notice older, existing bruises all over his arms that haven't healed. Brackett examines his blood and diagnoses ITP--a disorder involving the spleen consuming blood platelets, which interferes with healing. A couple of Timmy's friends somehow get to the hospital and wander the corridors looking for him. When the nurses are rounding up potential donors (including an orderly [Jay Hammer] who's been hitting on Dyna-Nurse), the boys volunteer, but Dixie tells them they shouldn't be needed.

Station 51 is called to the scene of a camp bus that's fallen offroad down a hillside and is partly hanging off a steeper cliff. The firemen climb down to secure the bus with ropes attached to the engine. Roy busts a window to climb in and help the driver, Sister Barbara (Elizabeth Baur), who's unconscious and pinned under wreckage. The kids, none of whom seem to be seriously injured, are evacuated, and the sister's first concern when she awakes is for them. (One of the kids is played by Kelly Troup, daughter of Bobby Troup and Julie London, and half-sister of Ronne.) Then the sister asks for her rosary and beseaches Roy to read a prayer from her book. This comforts her, rather than serving as a dramatic moment for her death. The paramedics use the Porta Power to free her, and she's carried down on the Stokes via the cherry picker to a road below. When she learns she's to be taken out by helicopter, she asks Roy to accompany her as, despite all she's endured, she's afraid of flying. At Rampart, Roy expresses to Dix how he's been moved by his experience with the sister. Meanwhile, Timmy's platelet count improves thanks to the donations.

In the coda, Johnny's having second thoughts about the rodeo thing while experiencing extreme soreness after his first practice session.

_______

The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Rhoda the Beautiful"
Originally aired October 21, 1972
Wiki said:
Even though she has lost 20 pounds, Rhoda still feels fat and hopeless, but she gets a boost of confidence when she enters Hempel's Department Store's beauty contest.

Rhoda's reached her Calorie Cutters goal, but isn't pleased with the result...probably because she didn't look 20 pounds heavier last week, though Lou and Phyllis both notice the difference. Then she announces that she was picked for the store contest, though she doesn't feel she belongs in it, and comes to think she's there to make the other contestants look good. On the day of the contest, Rhoda can't find anything to wear that still fits her, which is laying it on a bit thick, if you'll pardon the expression. Rhoda returns from the contest to announce that she came in third, but after Phyllis leaves, she confesses to Mary that she actually won.

This one seemed like the story was there to hang odd gags on, like Mary obsessing over not liking to eat lunch alone, Rhoda enjoying food vicariously through Mary, and Phyllis singing a song she once performed in a contest while Rhoda was trying on clothes.

_______

The Bob Newhart Show
"Goodnight, Nancy"
Originally aired October 21, 1972
Wiki said:
Emily is unexpectedly jealous of Bob's old girlfriend Nancy (Penny Fuller).

Emily takes a call from Nancy asking the Hartleys about a dinner date with her and her husband while they're in Chicago. Bob doesn't recognize Nancy by her married name, but he finds out who she is, Emily is more interested in having dinner with the Brocks than Bob is...until Emily learns that she was mistaking the girl Bob dumped for her for the college romance whom he wanted to marry. Bob has to quell potential rumors when Carol takes a follow-up message at the office. Nancy arrives at the restaurant ahead of her husband, Chuck (Dick Schaal), acts affectionate toward Bob, and, when she has him aside, matter-of-factly drops that she and Chuck are looking into getting a divorce.

At the table, Nancy repeatedly brings up old times with Bob, and Bob tries to shift attention to Emily, then accidentally agrees to a lunch date with just Nancy. Emily's insecurity comes out that night in bed, though Bob tries to downplay the situation. At work, Bob confides in Jerry that he thinks Nancy wants him, and he feels good about it, though he doesn't plan to reciprocate. At lunch, Bob tries to head Nancy off by explaining to her that what she's feeling is just infatuation, but she's ahead of him, and announces that she doesn't love him again--echoing their break-up and taking the wind of Bob's sails, as that's what he was building up to. Then Bob learns that Chuck has threatened to do bodily harm to him if Nancy has lunch with him, and Bob calls for the check. In the coda, Emily's pleased when Bob describes lunch as awkward and uncomfortable.

Continuity point: We learn that Bob and Emily have been married for three years.

_______

Mission: Impossible
"Cocaine"
Originally aired October 21, 1972
Wiki said:
In order to find out the drop location of the largest cocaine shipment ever to come to the United States, the IMF sets up an assistant (William Shatner) of a drug kingpin with what the assistant thinks is an opportunity to undercut him for a bigger payoff.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Carl Reid (Stephen McNally) and his right-hand man, Joseph Conrad (The Shat), meet with Fernando Laroca (Gregory Sierra), who demonstrates how their titular shipment will be smuggled in the base of a seahorse sculpture. When the artist, Rene Santoro (Miguel Landa), objects and tries to walk out, his fate makes Jim's ears burn.

The miniature reel-to-reel tape hidden in a book in a bookshop office said:
Good morning, Mr. Phelps. Carl Reid is the most important distributor of cocaine in the United States. Fernando Laroca is his chief supplier. These men have set up ingenious, indetectable pickup and payoff locations, and conventional law enforcement agencies have been unable to stop the flow of this dangerous drug. We have learned that within the next seventy-two hours, Laroca will deliver to Reid the largest shipment of cocaine ever to be smuggled into the United States. Your mission, should you accept, is to locate and seize this shipment. This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.

Mimi's in this one, but Barney's 'stache isn't. The IMF plants a story in the paper about how New Detective in Town Barney busted a million-dollar cocaine shipment concealed as part of a liquor shipment being delivered to a swinger club that Conrad frequents, the owner of which has conveniently just had plastic surgery following an accident and is now being filled in for by an undisguised Jim. Conrad scopes the place out and takes an interest in Stoned Waitress Mimi, going to her place after work. She's just showing him the secret compartment where she keeps her private stash when Barney and his Conventional Law Enforcement Squad raid the place and don't find the drugs, but arrest Mimi. Conrad is happy to throw her under the bus when she tries to establish an alibi, as he's gotten what he wants, examining the stash after the cops leave.

Reid's chemist Stanley (Milton Selzer) declares it to be the purest blow he's ever seen. Believing Jim to be the distributor, Reid has a credit agency whose tapes have been switched by Willy look into Jim's business, finding that it's been in trouble and deducing that he's keeping it afloat with the cocaine. Conrad has Mimi bailed out and strongarms her to take him to Jim, to whom Conrad offers his services as a distributor. When Jim tries to kick Mimi out, she pulls out and starts firing a small pistol, Jim struggles with her over it, and she's fake accidentally shot.

Conrad uses this as leverage to get Jim to take him to the secret drug lab of Synthetic Cocaine Chemist Willy. Conrad calls in Stanley--who tips off Reid against Conrad's instructions--to check the operation out, and the chemist is impressed. Barney, who's been set up by this point to be corruptible and in it for his own ends, raids the place solo, and Conrad pitches to him what a great opportunity this is and arranges a meeting with a group of buyers. Barney fake knocks off Stanley to silence him. Jim, Willy, and Mimi crash the buyers' meeting, fake-revealing that their part in all of this was a con within the scheme, and split with the buyers' $5 million in cash. An uncredited Charles Napier discovers that the white powder they were buying is just sugar, and that Conrad's been fake had.

Barney buys Conrad and himself time by offering to get the buyers the real thing. Now suspicious of what Conrad's up to, Reid has him followed by a thug named Steve (Emile Beaucard) while arranging to pick up his own shipment. Conrad waylays Reid's go-between (an uncredited Timothy Brown), forces the art gallery location out of him, and shoots him, but the go-between tells Steve the location before dying. Some monitored phone calls put the IMF onto both the art gallery and the location where Laroca is picking up the money. Reid and his men catch Conrad at the sea horse sculpture, and the IMF swoops in on all of them with Conventional Backup.

This one lost me after a point, the scheme was so convoluted.

_______

You'd think there'd be regulations about this sort of thing.
It's a big war, people get away with shit.

That must have been a sight. :rommie:
MASH01.jpg

Why don't they just call General Barker, like Ferret Face and Hot Lips always do?
They did it once.

During the course of the series, she graduated nursing school, enjoyed a rewarding career, and retired comfortably.
I see what you did there.

No clip?!? :(
Afraid not.

They should have a regular Hawaiian Brackett in the cast.
Well, they've got Doc Bergman as a recurring character, but he usually deals with forensic stuff, not emergency medicine.

This is an interesting plan.
Though under other circumstances, they'd have been swarming him with helicopters and whatnot.

I'm a firm believer in making a bad first impression. You have to live up to a good first impression, but after a bad first impression you seem not so bad in comparison to yourself.
Interesting advice.

Wow. Is that your line or theirs? :rommie:
Mine...I found myself writing "Cyrano scenario" and condensed it.

Never to be seen again.
Alice hungers!

She's somebody, but who?
Now, chum...she has as much right to the secret of her true identity as we do to ours.

Interesting. To me, it's a Summery song.
I'm thinking harvest, moonlight, witchcraft.

For shame! That would never even have occurred to anybody back then. :rommie: There was another, similar song back in the 70s, but I'm having a hard time dredging it up. Maybe I'll remember it by tomorrow.

Edit: It didn't take so long after all. The song is called "Save All Your Kisses For Me."
Had to check that out, but it's not at all the same thing. In "Save All Your Kisses for Me," that he's singing to a child is a twist at the end, and there's nothing pervy in the lyrics leading up to it--he could just as easily be singing to his dog. In "Claire," the narrator is pretty explicit that he wants to be romantically involved with a child.
 
Mission: Impossible
"Cocaine"
Originally aired October 21, 1972

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Quote the "M:I" book

" . . . The show's main point of interest is the machine itself, which, as built by Jonnie Burke, was a huge, laser-generator affair almost the length of an entire room. 'It was all Fairchild Aircraft camera cases, big fancy cast-aluminum electrical fittings, the motors that ran it were surplus,' Burke says. 'I bought practically everything for that machine in a surplus store. The total cost for building that thing was about twelve hundred dollars in those days.'"
 
Eventually it comes out that she ran out of a department store while trying on a wig to go after a woman she'd given bad bus info to.
Nobody seems to question why Edith is trying on a wig. Maybe Yvonne Craig is just a red herring.

expressing his understanding that she's not a criminal, she's just a dingbat.
This is actually a good way to deal with people in general.

Then Gloria compliments the necklace that Edith's wearing, and she realizes that she stole that, too.
:rommie:

he has her get into the details of the incident and she realizes that she didn't do it on purpose
She already knew that. But then, that's psychiatric help for you. :rommie:

Mr. Kirkwood (James Gregory)
Inspector Luger. And that crazy psychiatrist from Star Trek. And about a billion other things. But not My Favorite Martian.

causing Kirkwood to describe Archie with the Yiddish word for "meathead".
If only Mike was there for that. It would have come in handy.

Dixie has her toe run over by a portable X-ray machine, and they joke about amputation.
This made me feel homesick for my hospital days. :rommie:

(causing Roy to describe him as an "Indian cowboy")
We're a melting pot. :bolian:

Ben Wesley (Larry Storch)
Agarn!

the boys volunteer, but Dixie tells them they shouldn't be needed.
Awww.

(One of the kids is played by Kelly Troup, daughter of Bobby Troup and Julie London, and half-sister of Ronne.)
Must have been Bring-Your-Kids-To-Work Day.

This comforts her, rather than serving as a dramatic moment for her death.
Thank goodness.

When she learns she's to be taken out by helicopter, she asks Roy to accompany her as, despite all she's endured, she's afraid of flying.
She's going to be afraid of transportation in general after this.

Rhoda's reached her Calorie Cutters goal, but isn't pleased with the result...probably because she didn't look 20 pounds heavier last week
I forgot about the recurring theme of Rhoda's weight. It never made sense to me.

which is laying it on a bit thick, if you'll pardon the expression.
:rommie:

Emily's insecurity comes out that night in bed, though Bob tries to downplay the situation.
That seems unlike Emily.

In the coda, Emily's pleased when Bob describes lunch as awkward and uncomfortable.
That sounds like Emily. :rommie:

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Good one.

Joseph Conrad (The Shat)
That Barbary Coast guy.

Fernando Laroca (Gregory Sierra)
That Barney Miller guy. Our second Barney Miller guy today.

their titular shipment will be smuggled in the base of a seahorse sculpture.
The Trojan Seahorse!

Mimi's in this one, but Barney's 'stache isn't.
Maybe he's field testing fake 'staches.

Conrad is happy to throw her under the bus when she tries to establish an alibi, as he's gotten what he wants, examining the stash after the cops leave.
They just left this guy in her apartment? :rommie:

This one lost me after a point, the scheme was so convoluted.
Most of the time I don't even try anymore. :rommie:

It's a big war, people get away with shit.
True enough.

Wow. I wonder if that girl appreciates the sacrifice he made.

They did it once.
Really? Somehow it seems like more than that. :rommie:

I see what you did there.
:D

Interesting advice.
Don't take it seriously. :rommie:

Mine...I found myself writing "Cyrano scenario" and condensed it.
Good one. :bolian:

Alice hungers!
And she's a good cook!

Now, chum...she has as much right to the secret of her true identity as we do to ours.
Gosh, Mixman, you're right!

I'm thinking harvest, moonlight, witchcraft.
Good point. I don't think I was really aware of the band's name back in the day.

Had to check that out, but it's not at all the same thing. In "Save All Your Kisses for Me," that he's singing to a child is a twist at the end, and there's nothing pervy in the lyrics leading up to it--he could just as easily be singing to his dog. In "Claire," the narrator is pretty explicit that he wants to be romantically involved with a child.
Naw, it's just innocent fun. Little girls always say they want to marry adult men. It's like playing house or having a tea party.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Cute. :rommie:

'I bought practically everything for that machine in a surplus store. The total cost for building that thing was about twelve hundred dollars in those days.'"
That's the way you do it. Who needs these multi-million dollar budgets?
 
But not My Favorite Martian.
Beg pardon?

I forgot about the recurring theme of Rhoda's weight. It never made sense to me.
So it's not just me.

They just left this guy in her apartment? :rommie:
Now that you mention it...

Wow. I wonder if that girl appreciates the sacrifice he made.
See also this week's episode:
MASH02.jpg

Naw, it's just innocent fun. Little girls always say they want to marry adult men. It's like playing house or having a tea party.
Lines like "I don't care what people say / To me you're more than a child" and "But why in spite of our / Age difference do I cry" speak of a less-than-innocent tension on his part.
 
Beg pardon?
Sorry, I thought I had mentioned it before. I used to get him mixed up with the cop on My Favorite Martian.

See also this week's episode:
View attachment 30877
Well, now that's more like Hawkeye. He's not a uniform kind of guy. :rommie:

Lines like "I don't care what people say / To me you're more than a child" and "But why in spite of our / Age difference do I cry" speak of a less-than-innocent tension on his part.
It's just playful and lighthearted, and not meant to be taken seriously-- you're just interpreting through the distorted lens of the 21st century, where everything is creepy and pervy. I just checked the relevant Wiki pages and there's no mention of any controversy (then or now), but I did find this interview, where they talk about the song toward the end.
 
It's just playful and lighthearted, and not meant to be taken seriously-- you're just interpreting through the distorted lens of the 21st century, where everything is creepy and pervy. I just checked the relevant Wiki pages and there's no mention of any controversy (then or now), but I did find this interview, where they talk about the song toward the end.
It sounds like the intent was innocent, but something went wrong in the execution. It comes off like an unhealthy fixation rather than a cute twist.
 
It's just playful and lighthearted, and not meant to be taken seriously-- you're just interpreting through the distorted lens of the 21st century, where everything is creepy and pervy.
^^ QFT.
It sounds like the intent was innocent, but something went wrong in the execution. It comes off like an unhealthy fixation rather than a cute twist.
Not to me, it doesn't. It's all just innocuous fun. Nowadays everyone has a dirty mind.
 
The music world lost a great today with the passing of Jerry Lee Lewis. In honor of his passing, here's Electric Light Orchestra's version of "Great Balls Of Fire."

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

This would alternate with "Roll Over Beethoven" for a few years as their encore song, until they permanently settled on "Roll Over Beethoven."
 
50 Years Ago This Week

October 29
  • Lufthansa Flight 615 was hijacked, in order to extort the release of the three surviving perpetrators of the Munich massacre. The West German authorities accepted the demands, much to the chagrin of Israel.
  • In Houston, four fugitive bank robbers broke through airport security, killed ticket agent Stanley Hubbard, and then fought their way onto an Eastern Airlines jet, Flight 496, which they then hijacked to Cuba.

October 31
  • In the last major loss of American life in the Vietnam War, 22 servicemen were killed when their Chinook helicopter was shot down by a heat seeking missile.

November 1
  • The groundbreaking, made-for-television film That Certain Summer appeared as the ABC Wednesday Night Movie. Actors Hal Holbrook and Martin Sheen addressed a controversial topic, portraying an adult gay couple in the Golden Globe winning movie.

November 2
  • Pierre Trudeau announced that he would not step down as Prime Minister of Canada despite what appeared to be a 109–109 tie between his Liberal Party and Robert Stanfield's Progressive Conservatives. David Lewis of the New Democrats announced that the 30 NDP members would form a coalition with the Liberals to give Trudeau a majority (139 of 264 members) in Canada's House of Commons.
  • Five members of the American Indian Movement took over the office of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington and held it for seven days.

November 3
  • A group of 132 sailors on board the USS Constellation, mostly African American, began what has been described as "the first mass mutiny in the history of the U.S. Navy". The men refused to leave the mess deck in protest over announcements, the day before, that 250 black sailors would be discharged, six of them less than honorably, and demanded to meet with ship Captain J.D. Ward. The next day, the men disobeyed a direct order to report to the flight deck, and on November 9, the men refused orders to return to the ship while in San Diego. None of the sailors were ever arrested. Some were discharged early, and most were reassigned to shore duty.

November 4
  • The CIA spy ship Glomar Explorer was launched on its first voyage. Although the 170-member crew was ostensibly conducting mining exploration on the ocean floor, the ship's true mission was to attempt recovery of the contents of a Soviet submarine that had sunk on April 11, 1968.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "I Can See Clearly Now," Johnny Nash
2. "Nights in White Satin," The Moody Blues
3. "My Ding-a-Ling," Chuck Berry
4. "Freddie's Dead (Theme from 'Superfly')," Curtis Mayfield
5. "Burning Love," Elvis Presley
6. "Garden Party," Rick Nelson & The Stone Canyon Band
7. "I'll Be Around," The Spinners
8. "I'd Love You to Want Me," Lobo
9. "Good Time Charlie's Got the Blues," Danny O'Keefe
10. "Ben," Michael Jackson
11. "Listen to the Music," The Doobie Brothers
12. "I Am Woman," Helen Reddy
13. "Use Me," Bill Withers
14. "If I Could Reach You," The 5th Dimension
15. "Witchy Woman," Eagles
16. "Everybody Plays the Fool," The Main Ingredient
17. "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone," The Temptations
18. "Thunder and Lightning," Chi Coltrane
19. "Starting All Over Again," Mel & Tim
20. "Tight Rope," Leon Russell
21. "Summer Breeze," Seals & Crofts

23. "The City of New Orleans," Arlo Guthrie
24. "Spaceman," Nilsson
25. "Why" / "Lonely Boy", Donny Osmond
26. "Convention '72," The Delegates
27. "If You Don't Know Me by Now," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
28. "Elected," Alice Cooper

31. "You Ought to Be with Me," Al Green
32. "Popcorn," Hot Butter

35. "Operator (That's Not the Way It Feels)," Jim Croce
36. "Rock 'n Roll Soul," Grand Funk Railroad
37. "Ventura Highway," America
38. "Midnight Rider," Joe Cocker & The Chris Stainton Band
39. "It Never Rains in Southern California," Albert Hammond
40. "All the Young Dudes," Mott the Hoople
41. "I'm Stone in Love with You," The Stylistics
42. "From the Beginning," Emerson, Lake & Palmer
43. "Get on the Good Foot, Pt. 1," James Brown
44. "Rockin' Pneumonia--Boogie Woogie Flu," Johnny Rivers
45. "Funny Face," Donna Fargo
46. "Something's Wrong with Me," Austin Roberts

50. "Crazy Horses," The Osmonds
51. "Dialogue (Part I & II)," Chicago

53. "Clair," Gilbert O'Sullivan

57. "Corner of the Sky," Jackson 5

74. "Me and Mrs. Jones," Billy Paul

76. "Living in the Past," Jethro Tull


81. "Dancing in the Moonlight," King Harvest

89. "Long Dark Road," The Hollies


Leaving the chart:
  • "Baby Don't Get Hooked on Me," Mac Davis (18 weeks)
  • "Back Stabbers," The O'Jays (15 weeks)
  • "Go All the Way," Raspberries (18 weeks)
  • "Speak to the Sky," Rick Springfield (13 weeks)
  • "You Wear It Well," Rod Stewart (10 weeks)
See ya in 1981, Rick!


Recent and new on the chart:

"Thunder and Lightning," Chi Coltrane
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(charted Sept. 2, 1972; #17 US)

"Long Dark Road," The Hollies
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#26 US; #31 AC)

"Living in the Past," Jethro Tull
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#11 US; #3 UK in 1969)

"Me and Mrs. Jones," Billy Paul
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#1 US the weeks of Dec. 16 through 30, 1972; #10 AC; #1 R&B; #12 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 6, episode 8
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Journey Out of Limbo"
  • The Odd Couple, "Felix's First Commercial"
  • Love, American Style, "Love and the Clinic / Love and the Perfect Wedding / Love and the President / Love and the Return of Raymond"
  • All in the Family, "Mike Comes Into Money"
  • Emergency!, "Fuzz Lady"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "But Seriously, Folks"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "Father Knows Worst"
  • Mission: Impossible, "Movie"

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month.

_______

How about the real thing?
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Last edited:
In Houston, four fugitive bank robbers broke through airport security, killed ticket agent Stanley Hubbard, and then fought their way onto an Eastern Airlines jet, Flight 496, which they then hijacked to Cuba.
Holy crap, that's a hell of a hijacking.

The CIA spy ship Glomar Explorer was launched on its first voyage. Although the 170-member crew was ostensibly conducting mining exploration on the ocean floor, the ship's true mission was to attempt recovery of the contents of a Soviet submarine that had sunk on April 11, 1968.
Gonna have to check to see how that went. :rommie:

See ya in 1981, Rick!
Yeah, but the point is probably moot.

"Thunder and Lightning," Chi Coltrane
Good one, that I tend to replay several times when it comes up.

"Long Dark Road," The Hollies
I never heard this before. It's okay.

"Living in the Past," Jethro Tull
Classic Jethro Tull. Such a unique sound.

"Me and Mrs. Jones," Billy Paul
Pretty good. It has a nostalgic feel to it now.

How about the real thing?
Stone Cold Classic.
 
"Thunder and Lightning," Chi Coltrane

I've gone through my Time-Life Collection and I don't have this one, but it sounds so much like a song I've heard before, I'm wracking my brain trying to figure out where I've heard the medley before.

"Long Dark Road," The Hollies

First time I've heard this one. It's okay. Nothing special.

"Living in the Past," Jethro Tull

Now we're talking. Ian and the boys are hitting their stride here.

"Me and Mrs. Jones," Billy Paul

Again, one I know from my Time-Life series. Not one played much on the radio any more.
 
Yeah, but the point is probably moot.
What, you're not in this for at least nine more years? I won't even be done with M*A*S*H at that point...!

RJDiogenes said:
Good one, that I tend to replay several times when it comes up.
I've gone through my Time-Life Collection and I don't have this one, but it sounds so much like a song I've heard before, I'm wracking my brain trying to figure out where I've heard the medley before.
I wasn't familiar with this one at all, which was part of how it caught me by surprise...but I had a feeling from its chart trajectory that it was on its way into the Top 20. I've gotten it, having since caught up on other purchases I'd been putting off.

RJDiogenes said:
I never heard this before. It's okay.
DarrenTR1970 said:
First time I've heard this one. It's okay. Nothing special.
I wasn't familiar with this one going in, either, though I already owned it from a compilation I'd bought.

RJDiogenes said:
Classic Jethro Tull. Such a unique sound.
DarrenTR1970 said:
Now we're talking. Ian and the boys are hitting their stride here.
An apt title given the single's delayed success in America. Its distinctive '60s-ness underscores how much that sound has faded by this point.

RJDiogenes said:
Pretty good. It has a nostalgic feel to it now.
DarrenTR1970 said:
Again, one I know from my Time-Life series. Not one played much on the radio any more.
An oldies radio classic that doesn't really grab me.

RJDiogenes said:
Stone Cold Classic.
And on the 2004 Rolling Stone list, along with "Great Balls of Fire," natch.

I don't recall this coming up in Best of...
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

The impending cancellation of Captain Marvel recently came up in 70th anniversary business. Look what just came up in DC house ads 50 years ago this month:
Cap01.jpg

Also currently on the stands...don't look at me, Roy Thomas wrote it, but I had to share:
FF130.jpg
From FF #130, cover date January 1973.
 
I've gone through my Time-Life Collection and I don't have this one, but it sounds so much like a song I've heard before, I'm wracking my brain trying to figure out where I've heard the medley before.
"Thunder and Lightning" is on the Rock and Soul tape, but I think I know what you mean about a similar song-- I can't remember it at the moment either, though.

What, you're not in this for at least nine more years? I won't even be done with M*A*S*H at that point...!
You've forgotten my merciless mockery of "Jessie's Girl!" :rommie:

An apt title given the single's delayed success in America. Its distinctive '60s-ness underscores how much that sound has faded by this point.
Sounds like the 60s. :rommie:

I don't recall this coming up in Best of...
Love the interaction with Ed.

The impending cancellation of Captain Marvel recently came up in 70th anniversary business. Look what just came up in DC house ads 50 years ago this month:
And it would be one of the few DC books-- and few comics, overall-- that I was buying during that era (the others being Kamandi and Plop!).

Also currently on the stands...don't look at me, Roy Thomas wrote it, but I had to share:
Wow. :rommie: Is Reed an imposter or being controlled or something? That whole panel is out of character.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)

_______

M*A*S*H
"Yankee Doodle Doctor"
Originally aired October 22, 1972
Wiki said:
Hawkeye declares a filmmaker's documentary about the 4077th to be propaganda and decides to make his own, with characters based on Groucho Marx and Harpo Marx. Ed Flanders, later star of St. Elsewhere, plays the filmmaker.

The 4077th now falls under the larger command of General Crandell Clayton (Herb Voland), a friend of Blake's. The filmmaker, Lt. Dwayne Bricker, wants to focus on Hawkeye in the film, but Hawkeye becomes disillusioned when he hears the narrative copy that Burns practices delivering (which includes the titular phrase). Hawkeye and Trapper recruit Radar to distract Bricker so they can get at his trunk and expose the film. Blake realizes who's responsible as he's describing the situation to Clayton on the phone. Nevertheless, he considers it important to enlist Hawkeye's cooperation so the film can stay with the 4077th, so he agrees to Hawkeye's idea to remake the film without Bricker. Cut to the film being screened at the camp with Clayton in attendance. The guys have produced a broad comedy, with Hawkeye doing Groucho and Trapper doing Harpo. The film also prominently features Nurse Margie Cutler (the close-cropped Kotter-to-be reprising her role from "Requiem for a Lightweight"). However, the film concludes with Hawkeye going all Alan Alda, solemnly addressing the viewer about the harsh realities of their situation. Clayton decides to keep two parts--his straight-faced intro and Hawkeye's conclusion.

Clayton is depicted as being previously acquainted with Houlihan in a more-than-friendly manner...they played a similar beat with Barker.

_______

Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 6, episode 7
Originally aired October 23, 1972
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
Bill Bixby, Jack Carter, Jean Stapleton, Henny Youngman, Dorothy Manners

Stapleton is the main guest, introduced onstage with All in the Family directly referenced as Jean and Dick bond--Dick calls Dan a dingbat and Jean tells Dan to stifle. Bill is only a cameo guest in brief filmed gags of the type that I can't usually find clips for.
LI01.jpg
LI02.jpg

Jean and Richard share a number:
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

AITF also gets referenced in the news segment:
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

The latest in a recurring segment that always starts with Dan trying to take questions from the audience, to be met with silence (I don't think there even is an actual studio audience), followed by Dick taking the stage in a costume that he has to explain:
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Jean and Jud share a number:
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

An unannounced salute to the family:
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

_______

Hawaii Five-O
"Chain of Events"
Originally aired October 24, 1972
Wiki said:
The slaying of a public health official while conducting an investigation into venereal disease leads McGarrett into the world of politics and intrigue.

Jacob Kalema (William Valentine) refers teenager Linda Rynak (Gaye Nelson) to an address, and asks if there was anyone else besides Walter. She reluctantly names Senate candidate James Trevor Warren (Linden Chiles). Kalema makes an appointment to see him, but as he's making a rendezvous in a parking lot, somebody pulls up and shoots him. Kalema turns out to have been a respectable state Department of Health employee who specialized in tracking town VD. An official at his office delivers exposition on how they operate, which includes complete confidentiality. The records that Kalema had on him were taken, so Five-O uses a "morbidity card" in the office to track down one of his recent confidential clients, Mr. Boardman (Bob Witthans), who's embarrassed about it, but points them to the next contact in the chain, buyer Sophie Norris (Ellen Blake). She points them to college jock Walter Clyman (future felgercarb artist Dirk Benedict!), whom McGarrett sees. Walter points them to Linda, whose life he regrets having ruined. Steve learns from Linda's mother (Electra Gailas Fair) that she was meeting someone before school, which she hasn't shown up for. An APB is put out on Linda, who's subsequently found shot dead.

A distraught Mr. Rynak (Lou Frizzell) assumes that a "crazy, doped-up hippie" had to be responsible, and when Steve has to tell him how she became a person of interest in a murder case, he doesn't want to believe it. Then they bring in Walter for further questioning, and he expresses having had deeper feelings for her than his usual flings. Rynak picks up Walter walking to school with a trashy-looking friend called Frank in the back, confronts the lad about his activities with Linda, and accuses him of killing her. Walter ends up in the hospital after a bad beating. Walter talks to Steve about the other activities that Linda had to hide from her father, including working for the Youth for Warren Committee. Meanwhile, Paula Warren (Judi Meredith), with whom James has recently reconciled, packs up to leave him again when he asks her to get tests. When Steve goes to one of Warren's rallies to question his staff--including committee head Billy Grunwald (Ray Buktenica), campaign manager Marty (Jay Stewart), and secretary Jean Holland (Mary Frann), Warren takes an interest in what happened to Linda but doesn't confess to having had contact with Kalema...and his staff knows that he doesn't have an alibi for his whereabouts at the time of Linda's murder.

Mrs. Rynak points her husband to a scrapbook she found that has photos of Linda with Warren, complete with handwritten captions to underscore what was going on between them. An investigation of tire tracks found at scene of Kalema's murder turns up a car at Warren campaign HQ, where Warren is putting in a late night when Rynak bursts in with a gun. Five-O gets there in time to jump him, and he points them to the scrapbook, which he brought with him. Steve takes Warren to his office, where he admits to his fling with Linda and to having been contacted by Kalema; but he's surprised about one of his cars having been involved in the murder. It further turns out that he owns a .22 caliber gun, the type used for both killings. He thinks that Paula may have the gun with intent to harm herself, so they put out an APB on her. Warren's campaign staff gets ahold of Paula first and pleads with her to give Five-O a false alibi to save Warren's career.

Paula [tearfully]: I gave him everything I had...my help...my love. He gave me...syphilis.​

Frustrated with what Warren turns out to have been involved in, Grunwald and Marty walk out. Warren has Jean come to HQ with records about who she signed out the car to, and her story draws suspicion, as it involves her having been less than her usual meticulous self. When pressed, she breaks down about how she was trying to save Warren from being destroyed, and the gun is found in her bag. Warren agrees to testify before a grand jury, and emphasizes that he's seeing the campaign through despite the likely result.

_______

Adam-12
"Badge Heavy"
Originally aired October 25, 1972
Wiki said:
Officer Charlie Burnside pulls a prank on Officer Albert Porter, a friend of Reed's. Porter, who does not find the prank funny, informs Reed that Burnside is frequently "badge-heavy" (rough) with his suspects. After dealing with an inept would-be robber, Malloy and Reed observe Burnside choking a suspect. Reed reports the incident, but nothing is done by the Captain because the victim would not admit Burnside was the aggressor. Burnside turns cocky on Reed saying he has "an ace in the hole" and that Reed was mad about the prank he pulled on Porter, but it is later revealed that Burnside got to one of the robbers, placing him under investigation. At the end of watch, Burnside tries intimidating Reed, then tries brushing his intimidation off as a joke when he realizes the other officers are against him; when they all walk out, Burnside resigns.

Burnside (Quinn Redeker) teases reserve officer Albert Porter (Steve Franken, reprising his role from "Wednesday Warrior") about his physique, accompanied by putting a ripped uniform shirt in his locker. Reed thinks it's all in good fun, but Porter tells him how Burnside put a suspect in a brutal choke hold the previous week. Malloy advises waiting to see Burnside do something for themselves before they say anything.

On patrol, the officers are flagged down by gift shop owner George Nash (Jack Bailey) following a robbery. Scoping out an adjacent street on foot, Malloy finds a man desperately trying to start his car and arrests him when he mentions the robbery, which he shouldn't have known about. Back on patrol, the officers listen to reports about Adam-23 being engaged in a pursuit. They arrive at where Burnside has nabbed the suspect on foot, and Reed witnesses the officer scolding the suspect while keeping him in a choke hold, with the suspect collapsing unconscious when released. Burnside tries to smooth things over, but Reed doesn't buy his explanation. The suspect ends up in the hospital with a concussion, and Reed reports the incident to Mac.

Burnside confronts Reed after watch, accuses him of trying to get even for Porter, and threatens to settle things with physical force; Reed counters that he intends to bust Burnside. In the breakroom the next day, Burnside tries to turn the other officers against Reed, but Pete stands unflinchingly with his partner, and another officer expresses his confidence in Jim. Nevertheless, Mac reports to Reed that there isn't enough evidence to charge Burnside--particularly as the choked suspect has testified that he fought Burnside before he was placed in the hold, which smells fishy to Malloy and Reed.

Responding to a 211 in progress at a liquor store, the officers find two suspects running through a neighborhood on foot and split up to apprehend them. Burnside's unit rolls by and Charlie taunts Pete while he's handling his suspect appropriately.

Follow-up with the hospitalized chokehold suspect, including a polygraph, produces results worth bringing to the attention of Captain Grant (Art Balinger). Burnside confronts Reed in front of all the other officers in the locker room, at first trying to defend his own actions, and when rebuffed, accusing Reed of being a Girl Scout and a "hippie-loving creampuff". Charlie then starts to get physical, Malloy intervenes, and Charlie tries to blow off the situation to the witnesses, but they all walk out without comment.

Later, Reed's sitting in HQ in a suit ready to testify before a board when Mac comes out to inform him that Charlie Burnside has resigned from the force and is facing criminal prosecution.

_______

The Brady Bunch
"Fright Night"
Originally aired October 27, 1972
Wiki said:
After being spooked by the boys one night, the girls work on their own method of revenge. Once the score is evened, Mike calls for an end to the pranks. Regardless, the kids team up to scare Alice, after she claims to be afraid of nothing. Mike and Carol arrive home early and break up the scheme, but Alice arrives on the scene. Panicked, Alice smashes the bust of Mike that Carol made for an art contest, which was the subplot, thinking it is the head of a burglar. Carol and Mike come down hard on the kids and suspend the kids' allowances for two weeks, pointing out that their actions could have resulted in tragedy.

Carol is keeping Mike up late having him pose for a bust that she's making for her sculpture class exhibit. That night, Jan and Cindy are awoken by creaking in the attic and see what appears to be a ghost floating outside their window. The parents check out the attic to find a rocking chair creaking near a window, and overhear the boys yukking it up about how they frightened the girls. Marcia figures that they were pranked, and the girls search the boys' room to find a projector with a slide in it of Peter in a sheet, accompanied by Marcia demonstrating how they could have used a rope through the window to rock the chair. The girls' plan to get even involves betting the boys over dinner that they won't spend the night in the attic. In the spacious and fairly neat storage area, Peter and Bobby are awoken in their sleeping bags by a female voice moaning about needing to get out, and see a trunk's lid rise seemingly by itself and a cellophane ghost rise from it, which actually scares the two of them into running downstairs. When the parents take them back up along with Marcia, they find Greg inspecting the ghost, which is rigged with wire leading out the window down to the girls' room, as well as a tape recorder in the trunk.

The boys lose their bet, but when Alice laughs over the incident, claiming that nothing frightens her, Greg and Marcia get the idea to team up to prove otherwise. While all three adults are out, they rig up their gadgets, which include a skull with a flashing red light in it, a tape recording of Cindy screaming, and a sheet ghost rigged to fly down the stairs on a wire, and turn off the lights at the fuse box. But the parents return home first, Carol having won a ribbon for her bust. While they go to turn the lights back on, Alice comes home, sees the bust in the dark, and smashes it to pieces. The kids actually take the blame for this, though it wasn't part of their intended prank.

In the coda, Alice is posing for a Greek-style sculpture, wearing a toga over her usual outfit and holding a ceramic pitcher on her shoulder. Bobby and Cindy make a good-natured but very sloppy attempt to reassemble the bust of Mike.

_______

The Odd Couple
"The Odd Couples"
Originally aired October 27, 1972
Paramount Plus said:
For his mother's sake, Oscar must pretend he's still married to Blanche.

Oscar is up early enough to hear Felix's daily "sinus sonata" because he's received a telegram that his mother's coming, and is fretting over not having told her about his divorce. (Continuity point: Oscar and Blanche are said to have been divorced for three years. I'm almost certain that this contradicts an earlier episode, but don't ask me which one or what the previous details were.) Oscar's mother is so sensitive about break-ups, which results in overeating, that he's also told her that Felix and Gloria got remarried. Felix has to arrange to stay with Gloria, Oscar is forced to clean his room...

Felix: This room is beautiful--There's carpeting on the floor! Oh, let me get my camera!​

...and Blanche goes through the trouble of bringing over belongings from when they lived together. Oscar and Blanche take Mrs. Madison (Jane Dulo) out on the town, and Felix is back in the apartment tending his sinuses when they return, so they have to make excuses.

Mrs. Madison: Did you ever see two people so close? You're like Simon and Garfunkel!​

Mrs. M insists that Felix bring Gloria over, and Oscar and Blanche have to tend to the awkwardness of sharing a bed again. The next day, the ruse is already threatened by Felix having a spat with Gloria over signs that she's seeing another man when Murray drops by, not in the know about the situation, and has to be rushed out. Mrs. M senses that Felix and Gloria are separated again, and Oscar is encouraged by the others to take advantage of the opening to confess the truth, following an aborted preamble by Felix. Mrs. M promises not to hit the chocolates if the couples promise to try to reconcile. In the coda, the odd couple kiss their exes goodbye.

_______

You've forgotten my merciless mockery of "Jessie's Girl!" :rommie:
I haven't, I just had to come up with a comeback that suited the context.

Love the interaction with Ed.
Ed looked about ready to let Jerry eat ice cream out of his mouth.

FWIW, a reference to Sullivan having been cancelled came up in this past week's All in the Family.

And it would be one of the few DC books-- and few comics, overall-- that I was buying during that era (the others being Kamandi and Plop!).
I did not know that. FWIW, I found that house ad in a random issue of Kirby's The Demon that I happened to have.

Wow. :rommie: Is Reed an imposter or being controlled or something? That whole panel is out of character.
That's Sandman of the Frightful Four, he just defeated Reed. Regarding the implication about Tiny Tim's sexuality, I was surprised to see a comic of this period go there at all. Just referring to Tiny Tim at all hovers on the cusp of being signs-timey for its recentness and seeming a wee bit out of date at this point...I'm not sure how much he'd managed to stay in the spotlight by 1972.
 
Last edited:
The 4077th now falls under the larger command of General Crandell Clayton
Somebody new for 'ol Ferret Face and Hot Lips to call. :rommie:

but Hawkeye becomes disillusioned when he hears the narrative copy that Burns practices delivering
They picked Frank to narrate? That's an odd choice.

The guys have produced a broad comedy, with Hawkeye doing Groucho and Trapper doing Harpo. The film also prominently features Nurse Margie Cutler (the close-cropped Kotter-to-be reprising her role from "Requiem for a Lightweight"). However, the film concludes with Hawkeye going all Alan Alda, solemnly addressing the viewer about the harsh realities of their situation.
Kinda sums up the show at this point.

Clayton decides to keep two parts--his straight-faced intro and Hawkeye's conclusion.
Which, I'm sure, is exactly what Hawkeye wanted.

Clayton is depicted as being previously acquainted with Houlihan in a more-than-friendly manner...they played a similar beat with Barker.
They don't call her Hot Lips for nuthin.' :rommie:

AITF also gets referenced in the news segment:
And Jean gets to perform in the intro. That doesn't seem to happen much.

Jean and Jud share a number:
Nice. Very Vaudevillian.

a "crazy, doped-up hippie" had to be responsible
I think he's prejudiced.

Jean Holland (Mary Frann)
Bob's next wife.

Warren is putting in a late night when Rynak bursts in with a gun.
I hope he sent Frank over to apologize to Walter.

It further turns out that he owns a .22 caliber gun, the type used for both killings.
Why does he carry a .22? Is he afraid of being attacked by rabbits?

Paula [tearfully]: I gave him everything I had...my help...my love. He gave me...syphilis.
That should be a poster. In 1950. :rommie:

Warren agrees to testify before a grand jury, and emphasizes that he's seeing the campaign through despite the likely result.
Ah, the good old days, when politicians could be destroyed by scandal.

Reed witnesses the officer scolding the suspect while keeping him in a choke hold, with the suspect collapsing unconscious when released.
That has a familiar ring to it.

Reed reports the incident to Mac.
When he rolls up in his command-and-control wagon.

Burnside confronts Reed after watch, accuses him of trying to get even for Porter, and threatens to settle things with physical force
This is also reportable to Mac.

Burnside's unit rolls by and Charlie taunts Pete while he's handling his suspect appropriately.
I question this guy's motivation for becoming a cop.

a "hippie-loving creampuff".
What is it with all the Hippie abuse today? :rommie:

Charlie tries to blow off the situation to the witnesses, but they all walk out without comment.
He's lucky they had non-speaking roles!

Later, Reed's sitting in HQ in a suit ready to testify before a board when Mac comes out to inform him that Charlie Burnside has resigned from the force and is facing criminal prosecution.
Shoulda been a two-parter.

Peter and Bobby are awoken in their sleeping bags by a female voice moaning about needing to get out, and see a trunk's lid rise seemingly by itself and a cellophane ghost rise from it, which actually scares the two of them into running downstairs.
Because they could not have anticipated that the bet was part of a larger scheme to prank them back. :rommie:

they find Greg inspecting the ghost, which is rigged with wire leading out the window down to the girls' room, as well as a tape recorder in the trunk.
Upon graduation, each of these kids was recruited by the IMF.

The boys lose their bet, but when Alice laughs over the incident, claiming that nothing frightens her, Greg and Marcia get the idea to team up to prove otherwise.
So the two oldest and most mature kids, who were not involved in any of the previous childish pranks, suddenly decide to prank their kindly old housekeeper.

While they go to turn the lights back on, Alice comes home, sees the bust in the dark, and smashes it to pieces.
The kids are lucky their plan went awry, otherwise they would have ended up smashed to pieces. And eaten.

In the coda, Alice is posing for a Greek-style sculpture, wearing a toga over her usual outfit and holding a ceramic pitcher on her shoulder.
Come on, Alice, just the toga. It's for art.

(Continuity point: Oscar and Blanche are said to have been divorced for three years. I'm almost certain that this contradicts an earlier episode, but don't ask me which one or what the previous details were.)
This show always seems to make a mess of continuity. I get the feeling that Sam Beckett has leaped into each of them multiple times trying to fix their lives, but always failed. :rommie:

he's also told her that Felix and Gloria got remarried.
Oscar, Oscar, Oscar!

Felix: This room is beautiful--There's carpeting on the floor! Oh, let me get my camera!
:rommie:

Mrs. Madison: Did you ever see two people so close? You're like Simon and Garfunkel!
She's not wrong.

Mrs. M insists that Felix bring Gloria over, and Oscar and Blanche have to tend to the awkwardness of sharing a bed again.
The exes are being pretty good sports about all this.

In the coda, the odd couple kiss their exes goodbye.
Awww.

I haven't, I just had to come up with a comeback that suited the context.
Oh, whew. :rommie:

FWIW, a reference to Sullivan having been cancelled came up in this past week's All in the Family.
Damn. Talk about the end of several eras.

That's Sandman of the Frightful Four, he just defeated Reed. Regarding the implication about Tiny Tim's sexuality, I was surprised to see a comic of this period go there at all. Just referring to Tiny Tim at all hovers on the cusp of being signs-timey for its recentness and seeming a wee bit out of date at this point...I'm not sure how much he'd managed to stay in the spotlight by 1972.
Okay, I see it now. That really doesn't look like Sandman. He's even got Reed's hair. As for Tiny Tim, I think he was still making the rounds of The Tonight Show and so on (although I could certainly be wrong about that).
 
The impending cancellation of Captain Marvel recently came up in 70th anniversary business. Look what just came up in DC house ads 50 years ago this month:
I was quite excited to see that as a kid. I had read about Captain Marvel in a book called "All In Color For A Time" and was really taken with the character.
 
Somebody new for 'ol Ferret Face and Hot Lips to call. :rommie:
They don't call her Hot Lips for nuthin.' :rommie:
I get the impression this was one of those cases where the two generals were written as the same character, and the name was changed for actor availability.

Which, I'm sure, is exactly what Hawkeye wanted.
I don't think he did.

Bob's next wife.
Ah, that's who she is--Bob Hartley's dream wife.

I hope he sent Frank over to apologize to Walter.
Frank's kind of apology I'm sure Walter didn't need.

That should be a poster. In 1950. :rommie:
:D

Ah, the good old days, when politicians could be destroyed by scandal.
Indeed.

When he rolls up in his command-and-control wagon.
Nope, at HQ.

This is also reportable to Mac.
Some things a guy's just gotta handle himself. I loved Malloy's attitude when Burnside started badmouthing Reed...it was like, "You're dead to me, pal."

Because they could not have anticipated that the bet was part of a larger scheme to prank them back. :rommie:
Or noticed that the ghost was cellophane...

Upon graduation, each of these kids was recruited by the IMF.
MI34.jpg

So the two oldest and most mature kids, who were not involved in any of the previous childish pranks, suddenly decide to prank their kindly old housekeeper.
They were involved in pulling the pranks, but not as quick to fall for them.

The exes are being pretty good sports about all this.
Keep in mind that Klugman was actually married to his TV ex at the time. Oscar and Blanche really come off like they should be still married but bickering, rather than divorced.

Oh, whew. :rommie:
But did you forget that I proactively brought up the running gag when the single entered the chart 13 weeks ago?

Okay, I see it now. That really doesn't look like Sandman. He's even got Reed's hair.
John Buscema did have his own style of drawing Sandman, but he doesn't look much like Reed...more like Ben with those thuggish features and the lack of Reed's characteristic gray temples.
 
I get the impression this was one of those cases where the two generals were written as the same character, and the name was changed for actor availability.
That's probably true.

I don't think he did.
I got the impression that he did the Groucho stuff to have something to negotiate with to get his message out.

Ah, that's who she is--Bob Hartley's dream wife.
Yep. Best ending ever. :rommie:

Nope, at HQ.
I was being facetious. I get a kick out of how he always seems to be right around the corner. :rommie:

Some things a guy's just gotta handle himself. I loved Malloy's attitude when Burnside started badmouthing Reed...it was like, "You're dead to me, pal."
Malloy is all in for his partner, except for letting him drive.

Or noticed that the ghost was cellophane...
I've heard from professionals that it's hard to tell ectoplasm from cellophane in the dark.

"I'm still the princess, and I've changed my mind about handing over the keys to the kingdom to my cousin Vladimir. Instead we shall ally ourselves more closely with the West. And that sound was just a car backfiring in the hallway."

They were involved in pulling the pranks, but not as quick to fall for them.
Ah, I see.

Keep in mind that Klugman was actually married to his TV ex at the time. Oscar and Blanche really come off like they should be still married but bickering, rather than divorced.
I forget if they ever got remarried. I know Felix and Gloria did.

But did you forget that I proactively brought up the running gag when the single entered the chart 13 weeks ago?
Yes. Yes, I did. :(

John Buscema did have his own style of drawing Sandman, but he doesn't look much like Reed...more like Ben with those thuggish features and the lack of Reed's characteristic gray temples.
I didn't notice the temples, but that's why I thought he was being controlled by the Over-Mind or something.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top