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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

It turns out that Howdy Doody was the first show to have a planned finale, and it was kind of macabre and surreal. :rommie:

Also, I should have remembered that Route 66 had a planned finale.
 
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Practically picking up right where I left off, too! :D

Bumping Casey, who probably felt left out in retrospect.
If he was uncredited, then he's not a full on guest star agent like Barbara Anderson...more likely somebody who just pops in to don a disguise or do a voice on the phone, who just as easily could have appeared in an episode with Casey or one of her subs.

On the subject of substantial series finales that preceded M*A*S*H, add Kung Fu. In airdate order they weren't the last new episodes shown, but they devoted a three-parter to ending his brother quest, though not resolving his overall fugitive premise.

On the subject of expiring recordings, I'm set to re-rerecord the remaining episodes of Emergency! next week, though I'm not sure how that works on Frndly when I already have recordings of the same episodes; and I'm planning to binge what will probably be the season's last four episodes of M*A*S*H the weekend of Mar. 18.

This all reminds me of the Great Incredible Hulk Binge, when we were in the middle of our weekly reviews in the Other Thread and I had to rush to get through the remainder of the series in advance before Netflix dropped it.
 
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Practically picking up right where I left off, too! :D
The Kiddie Cops are back! :bolian:

If he was uncredited, then he's not a full on guest star agent like Barbara Anderson...more likely somebody who just pops in to don a disguise or do a voice on the phone, who just as easily could have appeared in an episode with Casey or one of her subs.
So Casey was just MIA for no apparent reason. Possibly a case of Quiet Quitting.

On the subject of substantial series finales that preceded M*A*S*H, add Kung Fu. In airdate order they weren't the last new episodes shown, but they devoted a three-parter to ending his brother quest, though not resolving his overall fugitive premise.
That would be tough to resolve, since he was actually guilty. :rommie: They did address it in the sequel series, but I forget how off the top of my head.

This all reminds me of the Great Incredible Hulk Binge, when we were in the middle of our weekly reviews in the Other Thread and I had to rush to get through the remainder of the series in advance before Netflix dropped it.
"Don't make me miss any episodes. You wouldn't like me when I miss episodes." :mad:
 
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50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)

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M*A*S*H
"The Long-John Flap"
Originally aired February 18, 1973
Wiki said:
A pair of long-johns sent to Hawkeye by his father becomes a hot commodity at the 4077th during a cold snap, as they're passed from person to person.

While the unit in general is suffering from a lack of cold weather gear, Hawkeye is showing off the fact that he's perfectly comfortable in his long johns. Trapper begs Hawkeye to sell them and Hawkeye eventually relents to guilt and lets him wear them, only for Trapper to lose them to Radar in a poker game. Nurse Beddoes (Kathleen King) takes an interest in Radar because of his valuable merchandise, but he breaks his date with her after he trades them with the cook (Joseph Perry) for a full leg of lamb. The cook then offers them to Burns as a bribe to avoid being busted down over a kitchen inspection, and Hawkeye has to suffer the indignity of seeing ferret face wearing his long johns in the Swamp.

Frank, not surprisingly, surrenders them to Margaret, only to be held up by Klinger (firmly in women's clothing at this point) for them, who learns that Houlihan now has them and lets Burns go.

Burns: The next time we meet, I wanna see a shine on those high heels!​

Klinger nabs them from Houlihan's clothesline with a bayonet, then confesses to Father Mulcahy and ends up leaving them with him. Mulcahy wears them overnight, then turns them over to Blake. The colonel doesn't want to give them up, but Hawkeye and Trapper find that he's having appendix trouble, so they rush him into the operating tent. An announcement goes out about the successful operation, but the announcement that the underwear was saved gets a bigger round of applause.

In the coda, Radar delivers the long johns to Hawkeye on behalf of Blake, and this time Hawkeye refuses to let Trapper wear them.

This was a pretty amusing bit of business overall.

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Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 6, episode 21
Originally aired February 19, 1973
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
David Birney, Meredith Baxter-Birney, Rip Taylor, Slappy White, Jo Anne Worley, Rona Barrett

She was just Meredith Baxter then, and they were co-starring on Bridget Loves Birney. The others are cameo guest, and Rona isn't announced. She's in the news segment:
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Rip does some physical comedy with his toupee, like wiping his head with a handkerchief that he tugs from side to side under the rug.

Richard doing Groucho at the opera:
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A Salute to Air Travel not only features Jud performing "Daisy a Day," but immersive retro context pays off in spades as Dan informs us that the astronauts took the song to the moon!
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https://judstrunk.com/history
On the Apollo 17 lunar mission, a tape copy of “Daisy A Day” was brought along by the astronauts, making it the first recorded song ever played on the moon.
I don't know why this isn't even mentioned in the song's Wiki article. The song had been released in November '72--did its inclusion in the last lunar landing lead to it becoming a charting hit? Anyway, damn--a salute to Jud Strunk!

The Fickle Finger goes to a policeman who had a legally parked car crushed:
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Hawaii Five-O
"Percentage"
Originally aired February 20, 1973
Wiki said:
A travel agent operating gambling junkets is slain as a warning to his partners to stop competing for the gambling business.

Nick and Lepe (Edward Shonk and Derek Mau), a couple of thugs working for a gambling kingpin named Yoshigo, beat travel agent James O'Hara (John Howard) to death with brass knuckles as a message to his partner, Sam Green, who's been hosting gambling junkets to foreign countries that are cutting in on the local business. Green (Milton Selzer), formerly a bookie who worked for Yoshigo, is at a junket in Seoul when he gets into $120,000 of debt backing a wealthy, irrate customer named Bill Howard (Mitch Mitchell), who thinks he's being cheated and insists on raising the limit. When Green returns home and learns about O'Hara, he figures that Yoshigo wants him alive in order to cut in on the business, so he calls the crime lord (Kwan Hi Lim) in front of Chin and Ben to announce that he's dropping the junkets.

Green is subsequently paid a visit by the Korean casino operator, Kuang (Seth Sakai), and a couple of his heavies, who take up residence in the hotel where Howard keeps a penthouse apartment. Green goes to McGarrett believing that Howard is in danger from Yoshigo, who'll use the opportunity to kill Howard as a way of creating a scandal that will discourage any further competing junkets. Yoshigo enters the hotel before Danno gets there to offer protection, and Danno witnesses Howard taking the obligatory dive from the high-rise. Fellow junketeers Walter and Valerie Sinclair (Douglas Kennedy and Carole Kai) are questioned because Valerie, who was having an affair with Howard, was one of the last people to visit him. Meanwhile, Yoshigo's current and longtime bookkeeper, Herman Stein (Leonard Stone), makes a clumsy attempt to blackmail Yoshigo into giving him a long-promised percentage of the business based on his knowledge of Yoshigo's visit to Howard's hotel. Green subsequently pays his old friend Stein a visit to persuade the reluctant bookie to help him break into Yoshigo's safe and turn state's evidence against him.

Between them, Che and Doc Bergman determine that Howard was murdered via skull fracture prior to being dragged to the lanai and pushed over. Examination of the otherwise-cleaned decorative Hawiian war club determined to have been the weapon turns up blood from the killer set in deep grooves of the rough-hewn wooden handle, which would have resulted from the killer's palm having been cut by the handle's sharp edges. Meanwhile, Green and Stein do the safe job, with Green planting a bomb on the safe afterward to divert suspicion from Stein, and Green turns over the books to Five-O, who don't know how he obtained them. Ben intercepts and arrests Kuang and his men as they're heading for the airport to catch a flight back to Korea.

McGarrett has the Sinclairs brought in again and has a look at their palms. Then he brings in Green and finds exactly the long cut across the palm that he was looking for. Green claims that he had no motive as Howard had paid him and he'd paid back Kuang, which Kuang supports, producing a briefcase packed with the cash. McGarrett then accuses Mr. Sinclair, who'd withdrawn that exact amount, of paying Sam to kill Howard, and reconstructs how the two of them dragged the body to the lanai--clothing fibers having been found that matched one of Sinclair's outfits--and how Sinclair waited to push Howard over to give Sam time to get out and establish an alibi. Sinclair confesses, having been motivated to do anything to keep a wife who now expresses her disdain, indicating that Howard gave her what the "old, old man" couldn't. Kuang is let go, but denied his money, which is now evidence in a felony case.

The title ties into Sam Green's penchant for working percentages. I figured he was the murderer because he was a little too actively scheming throughout the episode, and conspicuously friendly with Five-O.

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Adam-12
"Suspended"
Originally aired February 21, 1973
Frndly said:
A possible murder charge for Officer Reed, who is involved in an off-duty shooting.

The episode opens with Malloy and Reed among a group of officers engaging in instructed practice in a darkened firing range. The partners make things interesting by wagering who buys the soda afterward on their marksmanship. Once Reed's off-duty...well, I'll let the other guy do some of the work for me...
Wiki said:
Reed...stops by an all-night grocery store. When Reed leaves, a man [Jay Hammer] approaches him as if he knew him, then points out another man in a green Beetle holding a gun on the officer. Reed drops his groceries, shoves the man, jumps and fires at the Beetle driver, hitting the car, but the man in the Beetle shoots his accomplice. The grocer swears he only heard one shot, and the accomplice gives a dying declaration that Reed was trigger-happy and shot him.

Reed's replacement while he's on desk duty during the investigation is Officer Steve Tyson (Don Dubbins), an old acquaintance of Malloy's who's recently returned to the division and who's so by-the-book that even Friday Jr. Pete makes fun of him behind his back! Eager to help Jim get off the hook, Pete takes an approved code seven at the station to work out a number of alternate combinations of the plate number that Reed thought he saw but didn't match the VW, then check them out in scene in which Shaaron Claridge, the lady on the other side of the radio, makes her only onscreen appearance in the series:
A1205.jpg
There was a close-up but done at a really odd side angle...I assume owing to Claridge not having been an on-camera actress.

Reed goes before a review board, which is adjourned after they're informed that the shooting victim has died. Jim and Pete return to the scene of the shooting while off duty, trying to reconstruct what happened, and Pete continues to run plate numbers. Malloy continues this effort by calling the numbers in from the car while on duty, which is met with objection from Tyson, who promptly gets a demonstration in how you chew a fellow officer out. Finally one of the combinations turns up a '62 VW, so Pete goes to the registered address to check it out. They find the driver leaving his residence and pull him over, only for him to speed off as the officers are getting out of the car. A pursuit ensues, which ends with the suspect being cornered in a cul-de-sac. A weapon matching the one held on Reed is found on his person; and with black tape, Pete demonstrates for Steve and Mac how the letters and numbers on the plate could be masked to produce the ones that Reed saw.

This one had Pete summoning Steve back to the car during a seven "on the double". Pete's PA voice isn't as demonic as Jim's.

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Kung Fu
"Sun and Cloud Shadow"
Originally aired February 22, 1973
Wiki said:
Caine brokers a settlement between a landowner and Chinese miners, but the landowner adds an unacceptable condition to the deal. A karate master intends to capture Caine.

Cue flashback...
In flashback, Master Po espouses the wisdom behind Rock-Paper-Scissors. I wonder how Lizard and Spock would fit into his philosophy....

This story establishes that Kwai Chang does indeed still have his fancy fighting duds following the robbery, in a scene that contributes to this overall episode seeming a bit repetitive of the pilot. (Also, I read on Wiki that the hand symbol on the back indicates that he's mastered all five styles.)

In this one, a group of Chinese miners is working in a mountain that Morgan Woodward claims as his property, which results in some bloodshed with the threat of escalation. One of Woodward's sons, Richard Hatch, is in love with a beautiful young Chinese woman whom the miners value greatly.

Special Bond movie guest: Soon-Tek Oh (Lt. Hip, The Man with the Golden Gun)

Also appearing in an oddly uncredited but plot-substantial speaking part is Clyde Kusatsu, who'd go on to a memorable guest role on Black Sheep.


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The Brady Bunch
"How to Succeed in Business?"
Originally aired February 23, 1973
IMDb said:
Peter gets a job at the bike shop, but he is fired after three days.

Pete comes home ecstatic about his new job, about which the parents are proud, and he voluntarily gives up his allowance. But at the bike shop, Peter flusters his boss, Mr. Martinelli (Jay Novello), by working too diligently on the same bike for three days. When the customer calls wanting his bike, Martinelli sends Peter to lunch so he can finish the job himself, and Peter misinterprets polite comments that his boss makes to assume that he's earned a promotion, which he prematurely announces to the family. When Peter returns to the shop, however, Martinelli politely and reluctantly lets him go, describing him as not mechanically inclined.

The family prepares a surprise party, for which Alice bakes a cake. Peter comes home to inform Greg of what happened, and after dinner on the patio is about to inform the parents when the cake is brought out, lit by sparklers, so he keeps his silence. Greg advises Peter to ask Martinelli for one more chance, but Martinelli has to turn him down. He does, however, cover for Peter when the family visits, while Peter spends his work hours feeding pigeons in the park. When the folks announce that they want to take Peter up on an earlier pitch to sell them bikes, he tries to discourage them, so they visit the shop and learn the truth. The parents come riding up to Peter in the park on their new bikes, hand over the commission that Martinelli agreed to let Peter have, and give him an encouraging talk. The episode climaxes with the entire family riding their bikes together...including Alice, the only one who uses training wheels.

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The Odd Couple
"Let's Make a Deal"
Originally aired February 23, 1973
Wiki said:
Oscar and Felix appear on Let's Make a Deal as two halves of a horse.
This is what, the third episode this season to be about a game show?

Monty Hall makes his entrance at the end of a poker game that he's participating in, as he and Oscar are old college pals. Murray and Speed are starstruck; there's a gag in which a woman in a wacky costume is at the door as Monty is leaving; and Oscar has somehow burned a huge hole through Felix's bed without burning down the apartment building, because for some reason he fell asleep on it with a cigar while Felix was out of town. Sleeping on an Army cot doesn't agree with Felix's back. Oscar doesn't have the money to replace the bed, so he gets the idea to appear on Monty's show, which is currently in town, in the hope of winning a new bed.

Felix, who was such an enthusiastic fanboy of Password, has the opposite attitude toward LMAD; so this time it's Oscar coaching Felix on how the game works. At the studio, Monty turns Oscar down by stating that the rules for the show forbid friends or relatives as contestants, so Felix decides to outsmart him by disguising Felix. Felix refuses to go in a chicken outfit, insisting on coming up with his own costume...which turns out to be him and Oscar playing the front and back of a horse, respectively...their name tags sporting the aliases of Frederick Ungman and Ozzie Mallone. Oscar tries to backend-drive Felix into taking an envelope containing at least $100, but Monty insists on unmasking them, then rolls with the revelation and plays the two of them up as celebrity guests. Felix is disappointed that the prizes he passed up turned out to be a gourmet rotisserie and a microwave oven, but then the money turns out to be $1,000. Against Oscar's advice, Felix gets caught up in the mania and decides to take a chance on one of the curtains. The prize turns out to be twenty cases of canned squid, but one of the cans has a note attached to it, and Felix is given the choice of the money or the note. This time he's persuaded to take the money, and it turns out to be the right choice, as the note was just an IOU for another can of squid. However, Monty then comes clean on camera about his friendship with Oscar, volunteering the contestants' winnings to the charity of their choice in observance of the rules.

In the coda, Felix prepares a LMAD-style dinner for Oscar and Monty, consisting of three mystery plates. Oscar and Felix get steak, while Monty ends up with a can of squid.

This brings back vague memories, as I used to catch Let's Make a Deal on weekday afternoons as a pre-schooler.

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"The Long-John Flap"
Best title we've seen in a while. :rommie:

Hawkeye has to suffer the indignity of seeing ferret face wearing his long johns in the Swamp.
War is Hell.

only to be held up by Klinger
Well, there you go. He's out of the army. He got his wish. :rommie:

Burns: The next time we meet, I wanna see a shine on those high heels!
:rommie:

This was a pretty amusing bit of business overall.
Very lighthearted farce, even for the first season.

She was just Meredith Baxter then, and they were co-starring on Bridget Loves Birney.
Which I actually remember, if only vaguely.

The others are cameo guest, and Rona isn't announced.
I forgot about her, though. I think her column used to appear in the Sunday Advertiser's TV guide insert.

Richard doing Groucho at the opera:
Good one.

I don't know why this isn't even mentioned in the song's Wiki article. The song had been released in November '72--did its inclusion in the last lunar landing lead to it becoming a charting hit? Anyway, damn--a salute to Jud Strunk!
A salute to Jud Strunk indeed, if this is true. I have to admit to being a little skeptical, though, since it is not mentioned on the Wiki page or the NASA site (and it also seems a bit random, even if it was just something that one of the astronauts took along on their own). In fact, the Jud Strunk site seems to be the only place that does mention it.

...O'Hara.... Green....
Must be the special St Paddy's Day episode.

When Green returns home and learns about O'Hara, he figures that Yoshigo wants him alive in order to cut in on the business, so he calls the crime lord (Kwan Hi Lim) in front of Chin and Ben to announce that he's dropping the junkets.
If they would just legalize gambling, they wouldn't have these problems.

Between them, Che and Doc Bergman determine that Howard was murdered via skull fracture prior to being dragged to the lanai and pushed over.
Everything about the circumstances surrounding Howard's death is giving me a strong feeling of deja vu.

Meanwhile, Green and Stein do the safe job
I don't think there really are any safe jobs on this show.

McGarrett has the Sinclairs brought in again and has a look at their palms.
"You both have very short life lines unless you cooperate."

Sinclair confesses, having been motivated to do anything to keep a wife who now expresses her disdain, indicating that Howard gave her what the "old, old man" couldn't.
Okay, the murder of Howard just turns out to be a sordid domestic business, but the episode began with the murder of O'Hara by Yoshigo's thugs. Are we to assume, or are we told, that the improperly obtained evidence against Yoshigo will put him and his thugs away? This was an oddly structured story.

The partners make things interesting by wagering who buys the soda afterward on their marksmanship.
Do they say who won? We know it's Pete. :rommie:

Shaaron Claridge, the lady on the other side of the radio, makes her only onscreen appearance in the series:
Cool! It's nice that she got to do that.

Jim and Pete return to the scene of the shooting while off duty, trying to reconstruct what happened
What exactly did happen? Were they attempting to rob his groceries? Were they after him personally because he's a cop or because there was a grudge? From the description, it did sound like Jim fired first, which I believe is a no no. And he misses, which supports my theory that Pete won the soda bet. And why can't they tell that the killing bullet came from a different gun?

Tyson, who promptly gets a demonstration in how you chew a fellow officer out.
And immediately goes back to that other Division. :rommie:

with black tape, Pete demonstrates for Steve and Mac how the letters and numbers on the plate could be masked to produce the ones that Reed saw.
So the license plate number was altered, but Pete was able to track it down by re-arranging the altered characters that Jim saw. Pretty good. :rommie:

This one had Pete summoning Steve back to the car during a seven "on the double". Pete's PA voice isn't as demonic as Jim's.
Jim is just too straightlaced. He's hiding something. :rommie:

When Peter returns to the shop, however, Martinelli politely and reluctantly lets him go, describing him as not mechanically inclined.
"You're the middle child, Peter. You're basically useless."

The family prepares a surprise party, for which Alice bakes a cake.
Man, I was lucky if they remembered my birthday. :rommie:

Peter spends his work hours feeding pigeons in the park.
Good grief. :rommie:

The parents come riding up to Peter in the park on their new bikes, hand over the commission that Martinelli agreed to let Peter have, and give him an encouraging talk.
"Stop being such a baby. There are far worse disasters ahead."

...including Alice, the only one who uses training wheels.
She really goes out of her way to disguise her biker chick past.

This is what, the third episode this season to be about a game show?
Talk about product placement.

Oscar has somehow burned a huge hole through Felix's bed without burning down the apartment building, because for some reason he fell asleep on it with a cigar while Felix was out of town.
This is weirdly disturbing in so many ways....

Monty insists on unmasking them, then rolls with the revelation and plays the two of them up as celebrity guests.
A celebrity sports columnist and a celebrity Playboy photographer.

In the coda, Felix prepares a LMAD-style dinner for Oscar and Monty, consisting of three mystery plates. Oscar and Felix get steak, while Monty ends up with a can of squid.
Sure, punish Monty for not allowing himself to be swindled. :rommie:

This brings back vague memories, as I used to catch Let's Make a Deal on weekday afternoons as a pre-schooler.
I wasn't much on game shows, but I remember Monty Hall very well.
 
Well, there you go. He's out of the army. He got his wish. :rommie:
You'd think. I guess Leavenworth wasn't what Klinger had in mind.

A salute to Jud Strunk indeed, if this is true. I have to admit to being a little skeptical, though, since it is not mentioned on the Wiki page or the NASA site (and it also seems a bit random, even if it was just something that one of the astronauts took along on their own). In fact, the Jud Strunk site seems to be the only place that does mention it.
I was skeptical, too, but it seems an odd thing to put out there on network TV in the day and to continue decades later on a website while going unchallenged. If it did happen, it's vaguely possible that there was a promotional element involved...Jud was on Laugh-In when the mission took place, and while it was on its last legs at this point, LI had been a big part of the cultural zeitgeist in prior years. Didn't one of the missions have astronauts taking stamps to the Moon to increase their value?

"You both have very short life lines unless you cooperate."
Mr. Sinclair did make some cracks about palm reading.

Okay, the murder of Howard just turns out to be a sordid domestic business, but the episode began with the murder of O'Hara by Yoshigo's thugs. Are we to assume, or are we told, that the improperly obtained evidence against Yoshigo will put him and his thugs away?
That was the implication, yes.

Do they say who won? We know it's Pete. :rommie:
Went back to look...yep, Pete.

Cool! It's nice that she got to do that.
And she was called Shaaron in the episode.

What exactly did happen? Were they attempting to rob his groceries? Were they after him personally because he's a cop or because there was a grudge?
Alas, they never touched that.
From the description, it did sound like Jim fired first, which I believe is a no no.
Not when somebody already has a gun on you.
And why can't they tell that the killing bullet came from a different gun?
Good question. Where's Che when you need him?

And immediately goes back to that other Division. :rommie:
To be fair to Tyson, he did rise to the occasion, and apologized to Pete for being so by-the-book.

So the license plate number was altered, but Pete was able to track it down by re-arranging the altered characters that Jim saw. Pretty good. :rommie:
Specifically, the plate number was changed from ERQ 848 to LPQ 343...aided by the plate having a black background, of course.

Jim is just too straightlaced. He's hiding something. :rommie:
I think Shaaron's been turning down his sevens to deny him sustenance.

Good grief. :rommie:
Yeah, what is it with people feeding pigeons in parks?

A celebrity sports columnist and a celebrity Playboy photographer.
Who can't afford a new bed. Actually, Felix insisted that Oscar replace it, and in the end Felix was paying for it and Oscar was paying him back in installments...and they have established that Oscar has issues with gambling debt.
 
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Practically picking up right where I left off, too! :D

Good. You're in '73 now, so that's fitting, as the series ended its 5-season run that year.

1. "Killing Me Softly with His Song," Roberta Flack
2. "Dueling Banjos," Eric Weissberg
3. "Last Song," Edward Bear
4. "Could It Be I'm Falling in Love," The Spinners
5. "Love Train," The O'Jays
6. "Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001)," Deodato
7. "Crocodile Rock," Elton John
8. "The Cover of 'Rolling Stone'," Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show
9. "Rocky Mountain High," John Denver
10. "Daddy's Home," Jermaine Jackson
11. "You're So Vain," Carly Simon
12. "Don't Expect Me to Be Your Friend," Lobo
13. "I'm Just a Singer (in a Rock 'n Roll Band)," The Moody Blues
14. "Dancing in the Moonlight," King Harvest
15. "Danny's Song," Anne Murray
16. "Neither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye)," Gladys Knight & The Pips
17. "Do You Want to Dance?," Bette Midler
18. "Break Up to Make Up," The Stylistics
19. "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)," The Blue Ridge Rangers
20. "Ain't No Woman (Like the One I've Got)," Four Tops
21. "Aubrey," Bread
22. "Peaceful Easy Feeling," Eagles
23. "Call Me (Come Back Home)," Al Green
24. "Do It Again," Steely Dan

26. "Hummingbird," Seals & Crofts
27. "Dead Skunk," Loudon Wainwright III
28. "Space Oddity," David Bowie

30. "Stir It Up," Johnny Nash
31. "Sing," Carpenters

33. "Oh Babe, What Would You Say?," Hurricane Smith
34. "Masterpiece," The Temptations

40. "Peaceful," Helen Reddy
41. "I Got Ants in My Pants (and I Want to Dance), Pt. 1," James Brown

53. "Love Jones," Brighter Side of Darkness

47. "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia," Vicki Lawrence
48. "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree," Dawn feat. Tony Orlando
49. "Little Willy," The Sweet

54. "Walk on the Wild Side," Lou Reed

59. "Daisy a Day," Jud Strunk

65. "Wildflower," Skylark
66. "Drift Away," Dobie Gray

69. "The Cisco Kid," War

72. "The Twelfth of Never," Donny Osmond
73. "Out of the Question," Gilbert O'Sullivan
74. "Stuck in the Middle with You," Stealers Wheel

78. "Bell Bottom Blues," Eric Clapton
79. "Funky Worm," Ohio Players

81. "Sail On Sailor," The Beach Boys
82. "Reelin' in the Years," Steely Dan

86. "I'm Doin' Fine Now," New York City

93. "Hocus Pocus," Focus

98. "Frankenstein," The Edgar Winter Group

The early 70's had an astonishing, diverse collection of songs, and so many on this list were instantly memorable.
 
You'd think. I guess Leavenworth wasn't what Klinger had in mind.
I wonder which he'd prefer. :rommie: Although Korea worked out well for him in the longer run....

I was skeptical, too, but it seems an odd thing to put out there on network TV in the day and to continue decades later on a website while going unchallenged. If it did happen, it's vaguely possible that there was a promotional element involved...Jud was on Laugh-In when the mission took place, and while it was on its last legs at this point, LI had been a big part of the cultural zeitgeist in prior years. Didn't one of the missions have astronauts taking stamps to the Moon to increase their value?
Yeah, but they were reprimanded for it. I forget the details. The story is probably true, but it's just weird that there's no verification.

Went back to look...yep, Pete.
Of course. :rommie:

And she was called Shaaron in the episode.
Nice.

Not when somebody already has a gun on you.
What about that episode of Dragnet where the bad guy's bullet was hidden in the wall behind the shelf? Didn't they go after Friday for allegedly shooting first?

Good question. Where's Che when you need him?
Crossover!

To be fair to Tyson, he did rise to the occasion, and apologized to Pete for being so by-the-book.
That's cool.

I think Shaaron's been turning down his sevens to deny him sustenance.
Maybe those two gunmen were actually relatives of the Winchester boys. :rommie:

The early 70's had an astonishing, diverse collection of songs, and so many on this list were instantly memorable.
That continued well past the mid part of the decade. As far as diversity, including memorable one-hit wonders, the 70s were where it's at, man.
 
Of course. :rommie:
The wager for their bets should be letting Jim drive!

What about that episode of Dragnet where the bad guy's bullet was hidden in the wall behind the shelf? Didn't they go after Friday for allegedly shooting first?
I'd have to go back and look, but I'd think there was more to it; like Friday having to prove there was another gun involved at all, and that he didn't just shoot an unarmed kid.
 
The wager for their bets should be letting Jim drive!
That would have been hilarious. The ultimate incentive. :rommie:

I'd have to go back and look, but I'd think there was more to it; like Friday having to prove there was another gun involved at all, and that he didn't just shoot an unarmed kid.
Good point. I think you're right.
 
50 Years Ago This Week

ASM121c.jpg
(Amazing Spider-Man 121, cover date June 1973; reportedly released Mar. 13)


March 11
  • In the first free elections in Argentina since 1963, dentist Héctor Cámpora was elected the first civilian president of the South American nation after nearly a decade of military rule. Running on the premise of being a caretaker, he would serve only four months before relinquishing the position in favor of former dictator Juan Perón.
  • The Soviet Union's lunar rover Lunokhod 2 began its third round of activity on the moon's surface.

March 12
  • John T. Downey, the longest-held prisoner of war in United States history, was released after more than 20 years in prison as a humanitarian gesture by the People's Republic of China. Downey crossed over the Sham Chun River bridge from Shenzhen into British Hong Kong. Downey, a pilot for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), had been captured in Manchuria on November 29, 1952, along with Richard Fecteau while on a mission to extract a CIA courier. Fecteau had been set free on December 13, 1971. Downey's release came after U.S. President Nixon had publicly admitted that Downey had been a CIA agent, and after a personal request by Nixon to China's Premier Zhou Enlai following a stroke suffered by Downey's mother.
  • U.S. President Richard Nixon announced that he was expanding the protection of executive privilege, the means in which the U.S. president and staff were immune from having to testify or answer questions about White House events while in office, and said that it applied to former staff members as well.
  • The final episode of U.S. comedy series Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, at one-time the most popular show on television but the victim of declining ratings, aired on NBC.

March 14
  • North Vietnam released 108 additional American prisoners of war, including future U.S. Senator and presidential candidate John McCain, a U.S. Navy lieutenant commander at the time of his capture on October 26, 1967.
  • Died: Murat "Chic" Young, 72, American cartoonist who had created the popular comic strip Blondie in 1930 and continued to draw it at the time of his death.

March 15
  • In a press conference on national television, U.S. President Richard M. Nixon implied that the United States was prepared to resume fighting of the Vietnam War if North Vietnam or the Viet Cong were to violate the ceasefire. Asked about infiltration of men and material by North Vietnam into South Vietnam, Nixon said "Based on my actions over the past four years, they should not lightly disregard such expressions of concern." The reaction of the American public to the possibility of going back to war was so unfavorable that the Case–Church Amendment would be passed overwhelmingly by Congress and signed into law on July 1, requiring Congressional approval in advance of any future military activity in Indochina.
  • At the same conference, President Nixon said that he would not allow the FBI to turn over its files to a Congressional special committee, concerning the FBI investigation of the Watergate burglary. Nixon told reporters, "the practice of the FBI furninshing raw files to full committees must stop with this particular one."
MTM03.jpg
  • U.S. Air Force Captain Philip E. Smith was released from incarceration in the People's Republic of China after almost seven and one half years as a prisoner in Beijing, and U.S. Navy Lieutenant Robert J. Flynn was set free after more than five and a half years captivity. Captain Smith had flown into Chinese airspace on September 20, 1965, after becoming lost during an escort flight of a bomber over the Gulf of Tonkin in the Vietnam War, while Lieutenant Flynn had been captured after his airplane was shot down in Chinese territory on August 21, 1967. Both Smith and Flynn were allowed to cross the border into British Hong Kong.

March 16
  • Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom opened the new London Bridge. The new structure was the third over the River Thames in the past 750 years.
  • U.S. Army Captain Jim Thompson, the longest-held POW of the Vietnam War, was released after almost nine years of captivity in a Viet Cong prison in South Vietnam's Quang Tri province. On March 26, 1964, Captain Thompson had been a passenger on an observation plane that was shot down less than 13 miles (21 km) from the Special Forces Camp where he had been serving.
  • The heaviest weight lifted up to that time, the 6,000 ton 12,000,000 pounds (5,400,000 kg) center span of the Fremont Bridge in Portland, Oregon, was accomplished with the placement of 32 hydraulic jacks working in tandem.

March 17
  • Many of the few remaining United States soldiers began to leave Vietnam. One reunion of a former POW with his family would be immortalized in the Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph Burst of Joy.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Killing Me Softly with His Song," Roberta Flack
2. "Dueling Banjos," Eric Weissberg
3. "Love Train," The O'Jays
4. "Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001)," Deodato
5. "Last Song," Edward Bear
6. "The Cover of 'Rolling Stone'," Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show
7. "Could It Be I'm Falling in Love," The Spinners
8. "Neither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye)," Gladys Knight & The Pips
9. "Daddy's Home," Jermaine Jackson
10. "Danny's Song," Anne Murray
11. "Break Up to Make Up," The Stylistics
12. "I'm Just a Singer (in a Rock 'n Roll Band)," The Moody Blues
13. "Crocodile Rock," Elton John
14. "Ain't No Woman (Like the One I've Got)," Four Tops
15. "Rocky Mountain High," John Denver
16. "Call Me (Come Back Home)," Al Green
17. "Aubrey," Bread
18. "Sing," Carpenters
19. "Do You Want to Dance?," Bette Midler
20. "Dead Skunk," Loudon Wainwright III
21. "Dancing in the Moonlight," King Harvest
22. "Hummingbird," Seals & Crofts

24. "Space Oddity," David Bowie
25. "Masterpiece," The Temptations
26. "You're So Vain," Carly Simon
27. "Stir It Up," Johnny Nash
28. "Don't Expect Me to Be Your Friend," Lobo
29. "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree," Dawn feat. Tony Orlando
30. "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia," Vicki Lawrence

33. "Peaceful," Helen Reddy

36. "Little Willy," The Sweet

41. "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)," The Blue Ridge Rangers

45. "The Cisco Kid," War
46. "Walk on the Wild Side," Lou Reed
47. "Daisy a Day," Jud Strunk

54. "Peaceful Easy Feeling," Eagles
55. "The Twelfth of Never," Donny Osmond

57. "Wildflower," Skylark

59. "Drift Away," Dobie Gray

65. "Out of the Question," Gilbert O'Sullivan
66. "Stuck in the Middle with You," Stealers Wheel

68. "Reelin' in the Years," Steely Dan

70. "Funky Worm," Ohio Players

76. "You Are the Sunshine of My Life," Stevie Wonder

78. "Bell Bottom Blues," Eric Clapton
79. "Sail On Sailor," The Beach Boys
80. "I'm Doin' Fine Now," New York City

83. "Hocus Pocus," Focus

85. "Hallelujah Day," Jackson 5

97. "Frankenstein," The Edgar Winter Group


Leaving the chart:
  • "Do It Again," Steely Dan (17 weeks)
  • "I Got Ants in My Pants (and I Want to Dance), Pt. 1," James Brown (8 weeks)
  • "Oh Babe, What Would You Say?," Hurricane Smith (15 weeks)

(Also, "Love Jones" by Brighter Side of Darkness dropped off last week after 13 weeks; I've corrected the error in the post.)


New on the chart:

"Hallelujah Day," Jackson 5
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(#28 US; #10 R&B; #20 UK)

"You Are the Sunshine of My Life," Stevie Wonder
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(#1 US the week of May 19, 1973; #1 AC; #3 R&B; #7 UK; #281 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])


And new on the boob tube:
  • M*A*S*H, "Major Fred C. Dobbs"
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 6, episode 24 (series finale)
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Jury of One" (season finale)
  • Adam-12, "Keeping Tabs"
  • Kung Fu, "Alethea"
  • The Brady Bunch, "You Can't Win Them All" (last episode of the season available on P+)
  • All in the Family, "Gloria the Victim"

_______

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

_______

Good point. I think you're right.
Here's the relevant portion of my own post about the episode:
The body of the suspect, Arthur Ashton, is found, and his accomplice, Marianne Smith (Anita Eubank), is taken into custody. She claims that Ashton hadn't fired. His gun is found, but it's unloaded and has been immersed in a drum of used oil, leaving no evidence of it having been fired. Friday proceeds to face a board of inquiry consisting of three senior police officers. The testifying detectives have nothing negative to say about Friday's conduct in the aftermath, and offer that Smith's story sounds rehearsed. Nevertheless, the board questions the impact that Friday's long hours may have had on his judgment, as well as whether the gun might have been filled with blanks.
Depending on exactly what Marianne said in her false testimony, it sounds like a murky area where they had to prove that Arthur had a gun on the scene at all.
 
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View attachment 33173
(Amazing Spider-Man 121, cover date June 1973; reportedly released Mar. 13)
A controversial event for both fans and creators. Of course, she's back now, I think, in some form-- but I don't really bother to keep track anymore.

The Soviet Union's lunar rover Lunokhod 2 began its third round of activity on the moon's surface.
"Maybe if those Apollo guys are still there I can defect."

U.S. President Richard Nixon announced that he was expanding the protection of executive privilege, the means in which the U.S. president and staff were immune from having to testify or answer questions about White House events while in office, and said that it applied to former staff members as well.
"It's within the bounds of of executive privilege to expand the bounds of executive privilege. Thank you. It's been a privilege."

The final episode of U.S. comedy series Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, at one-time the most popular show on television but the victim of declining ratings, aired on NBC.
Too bad, but that's what they get for killing Star Trek. :mad:

Died: Murat "Chic" Young, 72, American cartoonist who had created the popular comic strip Blondie in 1930 and continued to draw it at the time of his death.
Now there was a strip that evolved.

At the same conference, President Nixon said that he would not allow the FBI to turn over its files to a Congressional special committee, concerning the FBI investigation of the Watergate burglary. Nixon told reporters, "the practice of the FBI furninshing raw files to full committees must stop with this particular one."
"Americans want their government to have the same right to privacy that they don't have."

Many of the few remaining United States soldiers began to leave Vietnam.
Lots of guys coming home from Vietnam and China this year.

"Hallelujah Day," Jackson 5
Never heard this one before. Good chance I never will again.

"You Are the Sunshine of My Life," Stevie Wonder
Stone-Cold Classic.

Depending on exactly what Marianne said in her false testimony, it sounds like a murky area where they had to prove that Arthur had a gun on the scene at all.
Yeah, definitely a completely different situation. I still think shooting first is only asking for trouble, though. :rommie:
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)

_______

Mission: Impossible
"The Pendulum"
Originally aired February 23, 1973
Wiki said:
In order to prevent a secret terrorist organization known as "The Pendulum" from disrupting the power centers of the United States and executing a major attack on the country in a plan called "Project Nightfall," the IMF must convince a brilliant but ruthless member of the organization (Dean Stockwell) he's being recruited by a more powerful organization. This was the last episode produced for the original series.

General Weston (Frank Maxwell) is driven into a reclamation project, shot by Gunnar Malstrom (Stockwell), and buried with a bulldozer. Malstrom reports to the directors of Pendulum--a really small-scale SPECTRE whose evil boardroom table is more of an evil card table; whose leader known only as Leader is played by Jack Donner; and one of whose members has had plastic surgery to impersonate Weston. We learn that Project Nightfall is a plan to take control of the US military.

The reel-to-reel tape in a wine cellar within sight of the Daily Planet said:
Good morning, Mr. Phelps. Gunnar Malstrom is one of the leaders of the Pendulum, a secret terrorist organization seeking to dominate the power centers of our country. We have been unable to identify any other members, but we have learned that the Pendulum group is putting into action a plan code-named "Nightfall," involving a major attack on our government. Your mission, should you decide to accept it, will be to prevent this catastrophe by discovering what "Nightfall" is, and stopping it. This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.

At the time of the briefing, Casey is already seeing Malstrom, who's a young electronics genius by day. At their next date, she makes an enigmatic recruitment pitch to him, and Willy steps over from the bar to chastise her for overstepping her bounds. Barney later pays Malstrom a visit at his office, in the role of a contact that Casey namedropped, expressing an interest in meeting the leaders of Pendulum while planting a bug. Investigating Barney, Malstrom's secretary, Allen Bock (Scott Brady), relieves a hotel switchboard operator who's really an IMFer (Beverly Moore) to eavesdrop on a phone conversation between Barney and Willy in their roles. On his next date with Casey, Malstrom expresses an interest in her offer, so she takes him to meet Barney at the headquarters of her organization, World Resources Unlimited, which has got the evil poker table beat all hollow...
IMDb said:
An establishing shot shows that the headquarters has an unusual "inverted double pyramid" design, in which each lower floor gradually becomes wider than the floor below it until the middle level, after which each floor becomes proportionately smaller for the same number of stories. This building is actually the library on the campus of the University of California at San Diego as it looked in the early 1970s when this was filmed.

Geisel Library - Wikipedia
Named after Dr. Seuss, no less!

The place is bustling with repertory foreign dignitaries brokering arms deals and such. Malstrom is allowed to sneak around and finds a vantage point from which to spy on a presentation being made by Willy in an envy-evoking evil lecture hall. Barney takes the podium to expose Malstrom, declaring him to be a prisoner. Malstrom is tied into a chair that's rigged to serve as a polygraph. In his conversation with Gunnar, Barney fishes for information, and Jim signals him regarding the results via lights behind Malstrom. They narrow down Pendulum's interest in Weston, who's chairman of the Joint Services Intelligence Staff. Meanwhile, Bock, who's supposed to be in Europe, reports to the Leader and Fake Weston about Malstrom's whereabouts, then heads out to infiltrate the place.

Malstrom is taken to see the organization's Chief--Jim, of course, who'd look great with a white cat. Pretending to know more than he does, Jim expresses an interest in acquiring Pendulum and making Malstrom its puppet leader. Malstrom isn't easily swayed, but Jim deduces from Malstrom's reactions that Nightfall is happening soon, and they have to find out when. The IMF is more ahead of things than they know as an IMF member (uncredited Max Kleven) who doesn't do voices dons a Bock disguise to stage a rescue attempt.

IMF agent: What if Malstrom starts askin' me any questions?
Barney: Don't worry, Willy'll kill you...using blood-capsule bullets, of course.​

Using an alias with government credentials, Jim goes to see Fake Weston, thinking that he's real Weston, to warn him of an assassination attempt. Weston invites him to sit in on a meeting of military brass that he's hosting--and secretly planning to bomb while he and the Leader, posing as Weston's aide, wait outside.

Sneaking around WRU's parking garage, the real Bock spots and takes out his imposter, then makes an attempt on Malstrom. When Willy sees that one of the guards has been shot by a real bullet, he realizes that he's dealing with Real Bock. While Willy's taking care of him via firefight, Malstrom commandeers a car and screeches out. Barney and Casey tail Malstrom with the help of a bug that Casey planted on him, and he proceeds to Weston's house in Beverly Hills, where military VIPs are known to live. Fake Weston goes out to see Malstrom after planting his bomb, and listening via the bug, Barney and Casey realize that Weston's a phony, learn of the bomb, and hear the Leader shooting Malstrom with a silenced pistol--boy, is Jim gonna be jealous! Barney alerts Jim via an earpiece, and Jim hurls the suspiciously unattended briefcase out the window just in the nick of time. A living and conscious Malstrom is wheeled out to an ambulance in the aftermath.

I was disappointed that no repertory agents were fake-electrocuted or fake-fed to piranhas.

_______

Love, American Style
"Love and the Crisis Line / Love and the Happy Family / Love and the Vertical Romance"
Originally aired February 23, 1973

"Love and the Crisis Line": When Sydney Wimple (Gary Burghoff must be on our radar from something...) reads about a crisis line in the paper--which shows pictures of the operators, who make house calls (I'm pretty sure it never worked like that)--his roommate, Steve Stone (Fabian), gives them a call, describing psychological symptoms that Sydney actually suffers around women. The operator who pays a visit, Janet (Carole Ita White), is nerdish and aggressive, not like the ones in the paper. When Steve makes the date sound better than it was, Sydney decides to give the crisis line a try. He specifically requests Janet, but gets a sub named Peggy (Linda Kaye Henning) instead. She's more than Sydney bargained for, so he passes her off to Steve. While Steve talks to her, Sydney wanders the apartment exhibiting the symptoms that Steve described on the phone, including nervous hiccups and distractedly putting his food in his seat and sitting on it. Sydney ends up going out on the ledge, considering himself hopeless. Peggy goes out after him and brings him back in. At this point she's more interested in talking to Sydney, and when she admits to her own hang-ups, Sydney offers to listen and the two experience mutual attraction. Steve goes out on the ledge for attention, but Janet drops in and enthusiastically goes out after him.

"Love and the Happy Family": See Jane (Sian Barbara Allen) kiss Dick (Ed Begley Jr.). Kiss, Jane, kiss. It turns out that Dick and Jane are step-siblings, her father, Walter (Murray Hamilton), having married his mother, Ruth (Kim Hunter). The kids are only in town for a break while attending schools in separate states, and while the parents are concerned about the two of them not getting along, Dick and Jane are actually feigning sibling spats so they can get away to make out...until Walter catches them in the linen closet. The parents sit them down for a talk and they argue that they're not really related. (Do I sense some shade being thrown in the general direction of The Brady Bunch?) The parents end up getting into a fight defending their children, so Dick and Jane agree to cool things down and just act like siblings for the remainder of the visit.

Hoping to get the two of them interested in other people, Walter brings home Bert (Murray MacLeod), an awkward young man who works at his firm. Dick insists on hovering around as a chaperone while Bert spends time with Jane, creating actual tension between the step-siblings. Walter brings Bert over again, and this time Jane throws herself at him to make Dick jealous. But when Bert brings her home from their date, Jane pushes him away and he leaves angrily. See Dick wait up for Jane. Wait, Dick, wait. The two of them make up, and the parents, pretending to be okay with it at this point, are relieved that the kids will be going their separate ways the next day...but anticipate things heating up in the summer.

"Love and the Vertical Romance": It's only after Victor (Albert Salmi) and Elizabeth (Karen Morrow) return from a two-week camping honeymoon that Elizabeth learns that her husband suffers from bedaphobia--he hasn't been able to sleep in a bed since his brother trapped him in a convertible sofa as a kid, so he sleeps leaning against a wall. She tries to join him, but has trouble staying upright when she starts to fall asleep. Elizabeth comes up with the idea of having Victor's long-estranged brother, Alfred (David Ketchum), over so that, under pretense of wanting to mend fences, Victor can trap Alfred in a sofa bed as a release. Afterward, Victor gains enough confidence to get into bed, but still suffers from anxiety about it, so Elizabeth pushes the button to retract their pull-down bed into the wall, so that they're lying in bed while standing up...the catch being that she suffers from claustrophobia.

_______

All in the Family
"Archie Is Branded"
Originally aired February 24, 1973
Wiki said:
Archie discovers a swastika painted on his front door one Sunday and dismisses it as a prank, but Mike believes it's something far more serious.

NOTE: Jean Stapleton's son, John Putch, appears in a small role as a Boy Scout.

Archie does a delayed double take after bringing in his Sunday paper. Assuming neighborhood kids are responsible, he calls the cops...and Edith wants to wipe off the door before they come. Archie opts to hang Old Glory over it instead. Edith discovers a vaguely threatening note outside, and when the mailman (on Sunday?) delivers a package that sounds like it's ticking, Mike puts it in the kitchen sink with the water on and everyone runs outside. When they go back in to check on it, they hear the ticking again and it turns out to be a kitchen timer in Edith's apron. The package had been a gift of cigars to Archie from the husband of Edith's cousin Amelia.

A shady character named Paul Benjamin (Gregory Sierra) shows up to offer protection, but it turns out that he's under the mistaken impression first that Archie is Jewish, and then that his name is Bloom. It turns out that Bloom is a Jewish school board member who lives up the street, and that the vandals got the wrong house, but Benjamin still expects them to return to follow up on their threat. Benjamin reveals that he's with the Hebrew Defense Association, a vigilante group, and some heated argument ensues with Mike and Gloria over his group's violent methods, with Archie backing Benjamin--and even coming to tolerate Paul's habit of referring to him as "bubbie". An associate of Benjamin's drops in to inform him that the vandals are headed to the actual Bloom house. After Benjamin leaves, the family hears an explosion outside and, in an unexpectedly grim ending, look out the door to find that Paul's been the victim of a car bombing...soberly underscoring Mike's argument that violence only begets more violence. The initial end credits play over silence rather than applause.

_______

Emergency!
"Seance"
Originally aired February 24, 1973
Frndly said:
Bizarre calls for help involving a woman who thinks her husband is being stalked by the spirit of her dead sister.

Seems like this one wanted to air in October. The station crew are watching Frankenstein when the squad gets called to help Dorothy Teal (Fintan Meyler), an unconscious woman at a titular occult gathering that's still in progress--led by a medium, Mrs. Butler (Suzanne Charny), who insists that the circle not be broken to help her. Harry Teal (Charles Aidman) comes home and breaks the party up, sending everyone on their way, though Butler warns of dire consequences...and tries to get payment, claiming that every psychic experience causes her to shed pounds. At Rampart, the conscious Dorothy explains that she was trying to reach her recently deceased sister, and insists on returning home rather than seeing a shrink.

A young man named Ken (Bruno Kirby, billed as B. Kirby Jr.) who's exhibiting strange behavior--including difficulty balancing and his eyes rolling back in his head--is dropped off at Rampart by friends who think he's putting them on, but he collapses at check-in. After consulting with Ken's personal physician via phone, Brackett gets Ken to admit that he's been taking his mother's prescription tranquilizers...motivated by being hung up on Jill (Laurie Brighton), the girl who stayed with him at the hospital despite assuming that he was faking it.

The paramedics are awakened in the middle of the night by a call to return to the Teal home (while the engine crew gets to roll over and go back to sleep). Dorothy insists that her sister Alice is haunting the house, and a skeptical Harry explains that the sisters became estranged over Dorothy marrying him. Dorothy insists that Harry has to leave the house, and he agrees to stay at a hotel if she'll return to the hospital. Back in the truck, Roy admits to having experienced a funny feeling when they searched the house to humor Mrs. Teal.

By day, the squad is called to the Teal home yet again, where Harry has suffered a head injury. He says that he tripped in the dark, but Dorothy is convinced that it was Alice. Johnny convinces her to take her husband to a doctor as a ruse to get her to a doctor. While she's getting her things together, Harry consults the paramedics about what he should do.

After the squad attends to a worker who was trapped under a stack of boxes at a warehouse, and at Rampart is discovered to have suffered a tear in his heart lining, Roy asks Brackett for his advice about the Teal situation. He recommends psychiatry or getting her away on a trip. Later, the station is called to a fire at the Teal home. They find the drapes burning and Harry lying unconscious from smoke inhalation with burned hands. When he's revived, he says that Dorothy set the fire, though she blames Alice.

The squad and another station are called to Marina del Rey, where a car has sunken in a channel. Roy and Johnny dive in to find the driver trapped in his VW with a small pocket of air. Rescue boats arrives to assist, and the paramedics go back down to insert an air hose through the small roll-out window; then come back down with the jaws to pry the door open and, taking turns diving all the while, help the driver to the surface.

In the coda, Brackett informs the paramedics that Mrs. Teal is under observation in a psychiatric ward.

_______

The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Put on a Happy Face"
Originally aired February 24, 1973
Wiki said:
Once Mary gets nominated for a Teddy Award, everything starts going disastrously wrong at work and the awards dinner.

In the week leading up to the ceremony, Mary has trouble securing a date for it; accidentally throws out the newsroom's obituaries file and has to rewrite them all on her own time; and injures her leg on the slippery hallway floor at the station...in addition to various other, more minor mishaps. As she's calling old boyfriends to try to get a date, she's nursing a cold from soaking her sprained foot. Rhoda comes to enjoy letting Mary be the miserable one for a change. Mary's banquet dress gets badly stained at the cleaner's and she has to borrow a less flattering one from Rhoda; and when she tries to accept an offer from Ted to fix her up with a guy he knows, she's baited and switched into going with him...but a bad hair incident on top of everything else has Ted passing her off as his sister at the event.

Mary inevitably wins the award for her Sunday program, and in her brief, nasally acceptance speech mostly apologizes for her appearance. On top of everything else, Mary's name is spelled wrong on the award. (Ask me about my spelling bee placement trophies!) In the coda, Ted takes the microphone after the presentation to give a speech about himself. In a tie-in with a gag earlier in the episode, the ending MTM logo features Mary imitating Porky Pig.

There's a reference to Ted wearing contact lenses. Rhoda is still seeing Jonas Lasser (Steve Franken reprising his role from "The Courtship of Mary's Father's Daughter").

_______

The Bob Newhart Show
"You Can't Win 'em All"
Originally aired February 24, 1973
Wiki said:
Bob becomes a local hero when his therapy helps a Chicago Cubs pitcher end a losing streak.

Jerry's upset when he learns that Bob's been having sessions with Cubs pitcher Phil Bender and didn't tell him (apparently a fictitious Cub, as he's played by Jim Watkins). After Bender breaks his losing streak by wrapping up a five-hit shutout, he credits Bob by name in an on-air interview. Bob immediately starts getting calls, first from Jerry and also from his mother (who really shouldn't have appeared so early as she's better unseen in the phone gags). Bob ends up getting an office visit from Moose Washburn (Vern E. Rowe), a Cubs catcher with a terrible batting average who has his share of issues. In a subsequent game, Bob watches tensely as Moose is called to the plate to pinch-hit and strikes out.

Bob: I gotta get out of baseball, I can't take the pressure anymore.​

At the office, everybody treats Bob like he lost the game. In a phone gag, Moose informs Bob that he's been traded to a Japanese team. Bob has Moose over for dinner, after which Bob, Jerry, and Emily argue about Moose's career as if he's not there; and Moose ultimately talks himself into looking forward to his new opportunity. Howard drops in on his way to a flight...

Bob: Listen, if you're leaving right now, would you give our friend here a lift?
Howard: Sure! Where you going?
Moose: Japan.
Howard: I'm sorry, I'm only going as far as Cleveland. Bye.​

In the coda, Bob dictates a response letter to Moose's new psychologist in Japan...and we learn that sports fans there have taken to calling Moose the Japanese equivalent of his Chicago epithet, "bum".

_______

A controversial event for both fans and creators.
A couple of decades before "fridging" became a buzz-phrase, we had Gwen. I understand the reasoning behind the new creative team's decision, though. I love Stan, he gave us so much, but in his later years of active writing, he'd gotten noticeably stale...particularly in endlessly regurgitating the same old plot contrivances between heroes who kept secret identities and their supporting casts. He was pulling tricks to keep Pete from letting Gwen get too close that he'd originally pulled with Betty Brant when Ditko was drawing the series. The new creators didn't see anywhere left to go but what Stan had been trying to avoid, so they cut the Gordian Knot and gave us a seminal turning point in Spidey lore that informed the character for years to come.

Alas, my comic reading is roughly just as behind as my TV viewing, so I won't be getting to this issue on schedule unless I skip ahead.

Too bad, but that's what they get for killing Star Trek. :mad:
Please tell me you're not one of those who holds Laugh-In responsible for not surrendering the timeslot in which they'd become a smash hit! Trek was already living on borrowed time in its third season, and NBC was only going to put it in that slot because it was TMFU's death slot before Laugh-In came in as the mid-season replacement. The needs of the breakout hit outweighed the needs of the show that was on the chopping block either way.

Lots of guys coming home from Vietnam and China this year.
Maybe Tricky Dick deserves some credit for that.

Never heard this one before. Good chance I never will again.
It's a new one to me...and notable for being the Jacksons' first single to chart below the top 20.

Stone-Cold Classic.
Verily!

Yeah, definitely a completely different situation. I still think shooting first is only asking for trouble, though. :rommie:
You and 1990s George Lucas--who forgot what he already knew about justified self-defense in the '70s.
 
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ELO 2 - Wikipedia

I'm a bit late in posting this, but March 2nd marked the 50th anniversary release of the album 'ELO 2'.

'ELO 2' is the first album recorded after the departure of co-founder Roy Wood; leaving Jeff Lynne in charge.

Initially announced to the press as a concept album called 'The Lost Planet', Roy described the album thusly, "The album is based on one theme about this guy in years to come, whose job each day is to go out and search for the lost planet, and each track will represent what happens to him and what he sees and who he meets."

Recording began in May 1972, with Roy Wood, Jeff Lynne and Bev Bevan laying down two tracks, 'From The Sun To The World (Boogie No. 1)' and 'In Old England Town (Boogie No. 2)'.

Tensions between Roy and Jeff were fraught, following a disastrous live debut/tour, where the cellos and violin fought to be heard over the electric guitars and the long pauses between songs as Roy would switch instruments as well as Roy telling the press he wanted to expand the Electric Light Orchestra by adding a horn section.

After one particularly tense recording session, where an argument erupted over Roy's cello playing, Roy told Jeff where he could stick his bow and left the studio, taking with him ELO's pianist Bill Hunt and cello player Hugh 'H' McDowell.

Roy soon found himself wandering into a nearby pub where he happened to chance upon his old Move bandmate, Rick Price, who was rehearsing with his new band 'Mongrel'. Roy quickly co-opted Rick and his bandmates into his new band 'Wizzard'.

Jeff and Bev, with manager Don Arden's support, reconstituted ELO, adding cellist Colin Walker to supplement cellist Mike Edwards and violinist Wilf Gibson, and bassist Michael De Albuquerque, while Richard Tandy switched from bass to keyboards.

Thus reformed, ELO took on an extensive series of tours in the UK and US, debuting songs that would appear on their next album 'On The Third Day', not returning to the studio until September 1972.

The touring paid off as the band had gelled together as a live unit and they quickly recorded the last three songs, 'Momma', 'Roll Over Beethoven', and 'Kuiama', live, in the studio, usually in one take; in contrast to the multiple overdubs Roy had done for the first two songs recorded.

"ELO 2' finds Jeff at a crossroads, not knowing what to do with the band he has been left in sole control of. It is the most 'progressive' of the Electric Light Orchestra albums, consisting of only five songs, the shortest ('In Old England Town (Boogie No. 2)') being a shade over six minutes, and the longest ('Kuiama') lasting over eleven.

One single, the aforementioned 'Roll Over Beethoven' was released in various edits. The longest being the US version, lasting 8:10. The UK version runs 7:03 and shortens some of the instrumental passages, while a radio single edit runs 4:32.

The album would peak at No. 35 in the UK and No. 62 in the US.

Bit of trivia: The song 'From The Sun To The World (Boogie No. 1)', lasts exactly 8 minutes and twenty seconds, the exact time it takes light to travel from the Sun to the Earth.
 
Emergency!
"Seance"
Originally aired February 24, 1973


Mrs. Butler (Suzanne Charny)

Charny was not quite finished with the spooky stuff at Universal; over a year later, she guest starred on an early episode of Kolchak: The Night Stalker titled "The Vampire" (airdate: 10/4/74) as the titular monster--

dJcNHLz.jpg


--or "Catherine Rawlins" in the episode. "The Vampire" was a direct sequel to The Night Stalker movie, as Rawlins had been a prostitute murdered / vampirized by Janos Skorzeny in Las Vegas, and after she resurrected, made her way back to her native Los Angeles to use her former job as a means to feed on easy prey. Excellent episode, BTW.

The new creators didn't see anywhere left to go but what Stan had been trying to avoid, so they cut the Gordian Knot and gave us a seminal turning point in Spidey lore that informed the character for years to come.

Originally, John Romita (one of comicdom's Mount Rushmore of legendary artists and was a longtime co-plotter on The Amazing Spider-Man) wanted to kill Aunt May, but the victim ended up being Gwen, which was a far more devastating blow to Peter Parker (and readers). Before Gwen's death, ASM was one of the few Marvel books that grew with the darkness of the late 60s / early 70s of American life, with some sociopolitcal issues of the day being a part of ASM's narrative landscape, so the brutality of an innocent young woman's murder played right into the grim tone / daily life threats of the period, perhaps more than any of the other supporting cast from that comic.
 
General Weston (Frank Maxwell) is driven into a reclamation project, shot by Gunnar Malstrom (Stockwell), and buried with a bulldozer.
Green assassination. Very sign-of-the-timesy.

Malstrom reports to the directors of Pendulum--a really small-scale SPECTRE whose evil boardroom table is more of an evil card table
Clearly amateurs. They don't even use all caps.

whose leader known only as Leader
Not Fearless Leader? These guys should have hired a consultant.

Casey is already seeing Malstrom, who's a young electronics genius by day.
What exactly is Pendulum's motivation?

On his next date with Casey
Uh oh! Third date! Better wrap up this mission quick.

Geisel Library - Wikipedia
Named after Dr. Seuss, no less!
Nice. Now there's a grand genius.

Malstrom is taken to see the organization's Chief--Jim, of course, who'd look great with a white cat.
Would have been a cool touch. :rommie:

IMF agent: What if Malstrom starts askin' me any questions?
Barney: Don't worry, Willy'll kill you...using blood-capsule bullets, of course.​
:rommie:

While Willy's taking care of him via firefight
Is it unusual for Willy to use a gun? Suddenly it seems weird for some reason.

Beverly Hills, where military VIPs are known to live.
Swimming pools! Movie stars! Military brass!

and hear the Leader shooting Malstrom with a silenced pistol--boy, is Jim gonna be jealous!
Now they've gone too far! :rommie:

I was disappointed that no repertory agents were fake-electrocuted or fake-fed to piranhas.
If only there had been another season. The minor and vaguely motivated threat of Pendulum is not over yet!

who make house calls (I'm pretty sure it never worked like that)
Not unless they're cops or social workers. Or a cover for an escort service.

While Steve talks to her, Sydney wanders the apartment exhibiting the symptoms that Steve described on the phone, including nervous hiccups and distractedly putting his food in his seat and sitting on it. Sydney ends up going out on the ledge, considering himself hopeless. Peggy goes out after him and brings him back in. At this point she's more interested in talking to Sydney, and when she admits to her own hang-ups, Sydney offers to listen and the two experience mutual attraction. Steve goes out on the ledge for attention, but Janet drops in and enthusiastically goes out after him.
Well, there's a story that should have ended with an onscreen invitation to call the Suicide Hotline.

Jane (Sian Barbara Allen)
This episode must be a special tribute to three-named actresses.

Ruth (Kim Hunter)
Doctor Zira.

(Do I sense some shade being thrown in the general direction of The Brady Bunch?)
Probably, because the whole thing kinda went nowhere.

he hasn't been able to sleep in a bed since his brother trapped him in a convertible sofa as a kid, so he sleeps leaning against a wall.
Okay, now we're back to Love, American Style. :rommie:

Elizabeth pushes the button to retract their pull-down bed into the wall
A good old Murphy bed, they used to call 'em.

so that they're lying in bed while standing up...the catch being that she suffers from claustrophobia.
That's more like it. One out of three this week, although I'm not sure if that first one was intended to deliver a more serious message or not.

when the mailman (on Sunday?) delivers a package
Amazon Delivery.

Paul Benjamin (Gregory Sierra)
One of the detectives on Barney Miller.

Benjamin reveals that he's with the Hebrew Defense Association, a vigilante group, and some heated argument ensues with Mike and Gloria over his group's violent methods, with Archie backing Benjamin
Now there's an interesting dynamic. Two violent vigilante groups, so there are no good guys-- while Archie is opposing the Nazis and Mike is against violence, so they're both in the right. This is some excellent writing.

After Benjamin leaves, the family hears an explosion outside and, in an unexpectedly grim ending, look out the door to find that Paul's been the victim of a car bombing...soberly underscoring Mike's argument that violence only begets more violence.
A lesson for the ages. This is some quintessential AITF.

At Rampart, the conscious Dorothy explains that she was trying to reach her recently deceased sister, and insists on returning home rather than seeing a shrink.
If everybody who believes in ghosts was sent to a shrink, they'd be a long line at the Funny Farm. :rommie:

Brackett gets Ken to admit that he's been taking his mother's prescription tranquilizers
Bruno's Little Helper.

The paramedics are awakened in the middle of the night by a call to return to the Teal home
Who ya gonna call? Not Squad 51. They don't do hauntings. :rommie:

Later, the station is called to a fire at the Teal home. They find the drapes burning and Harry lying unconscious from smoke inhalation with burned hands. When he's revived, he says that Dorothy set the fire, though she blames Alice.
I blame Mrs Butler. She starts with the seance, stages the haunting, and then charges for the exorcism.

Roy and Johnny dive in to find the driver trapped in his VW with a small pocket of air. Rescue boats arrives to assist, and the paramedics go back down to insert an air hose through the small roll-out window; then come back down with the jaws to pry the door open and, taking turns diving all the while, help the driver to the surface.
That's a cool rescue. It seems like we haven't had a dramatic rescue like that in a while.

Mary has trouble securing a date
This exceeds my ability to suspend my disbelief.

Rhoda comes to enjoy letting Mary be the miserable one for a change.
Rhoda's jealousy of Mary has reached a level where it let in a demon of chaos from the Lower Depths of Hell itself.

(Ask me about my spelling bee placement trophies!)
Say, what's this I hear about your spelling bee placement trophies?

In a tie-in with a gag earlier in the episode, the ending MTM logo features Mary imitating Porky Pig.
Well, I hope I can find that on YouTube. :rommie:

also from his mother (who really shouldn't have appeared so early as she's better unseen in the phone gags).
They probably should have saved her for the last episode, if at all.

The new creators didn't see anywhere left to go but what Stan had been trying to avoid, so they cut the Gordian Knot and gave us a seminal turning point in Spidey lore that informed the character for years to come.
I wonder what other options they discussed, if any, and if Stan signed off on it.

Please tell me you're not one of those who holds Laugh-In responsible for not surrendering the timeslot in which they'd become a smash hit!
Fear not, I was actually just mocking that whole thing. :rommie:

Maybe Tricky Dick deserves some credit for that.
People deserve whatever credit or blame comes their way, no matter who they are.

You and 1990s George Lucas--who forgot what he already knew about justified self-defense in the '70s.
Ah, but a cop in the city is not the same as a mercenary in lawless space. Jim shouldn't have shot first, but Solo should have.

Too saccharine. But not as saccharine as this version.

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Not a good fit. But I don't think any cover version would really sound right.

Initially announced to the press as a concept album called 'The Lost Planet', Roy described the album thusly, "The album is based on one theme about this guy in years to come, whose job each day is to go out and search for the lost planet, and each track will represent what happens to him and what he sees and who he meets."
That sounds like it would have been interesting.

Bit of trivia: The song 'From The Sun To The World (Boogie No. 1)', lasts exactly 8 minutes and twenty seconds, the exact time it takes light to travel from the Sun to the Earth.
Nice. We've got some well-read Rockers here. :rommie:

Charny was not quite finished with the spooky stuff at Universal; over a year later, she guest starred on an early episode of Kolchak: The Night Stalker titled "The Vampire" (airdate: 10/4/74) as the titular monster--

dJcNHLz.jpg


--or "Catherine Rawlins" in the episode. "The Vampire" was a direct sequel to The Night Stalker movie, as Rawlins had been a prostitute murdered / vampirized by Janos Skorzeny in Las Vegas, and after she resurrected, made her way back to her native Los Angeles to use her former job as a means to feed on easy prey. Excellent episode, BTW.
They were all excellent. :D The thing I remember most about "The Vampire" is when Kolchak drew the cross on the back of the door, essentially planning to trap her in the room with him. Holy crap, talk about a do-or-die scenario. This is the sort of thing that made Kolchak a great hero.
 
Too saccharine.
I think it's great as-is, though having other band members sing the opening lines is an odd choice for such an intimate song.
But not as saccharine as this version.

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Jim's singing voice is like Jean Stapleton out of character... :eek: I recall one of my great aunts having some of his albums.

Bit of trivia: The song 'From The Sun To The World (Boogie No. 1)', lasts exactly 8 minutes and twenty seconds, the exact time it takes light to travel from the Sun to the Earth.
That's nifty. I may have to listen that up.

Before Gwen's death, ASM was one of the few Marvel books that grew with the darkness of the late 60s / early 70s of American life, with some sociopolitcal issues of the day being a part of ASM's narrative landscape, so the brutality of an innocent young woman's murder played right into the grim tone / daily life threats of the period, perhaps more than any of the other supporting cast from that comic.
A couple of interesting tidbits about Gwen's death that I didn't think to reference before...

There's a disconnect between artist and writer in the bridge that it happens on. It's referenced in the story as the George Washington Bridge, complete with a wisecrack about dollar bills; but what's drawn is very distinctively the Brooklyn Bridge and its surroundings, in a completely different part of Manhattan on the opposite river.

While the Goblin exposits in-story that the fall alone killed her before Spidey's webbing reached her, as originally published, there's a small "SNAP!" balloon near her neck as it makes contact. Reportedly, subsequent reprintings removed that bit of disturbing ambiguity. Likewise, the What If...? issue about Gwen living had Spidey trying a different tactic that, as I recall, involved diving after her, which succeeded.

I originally read the story in its Marvel Tales reprint, ca. 1978.

What exactly is Pendulum's motivation?
Somewhere in the spectrum between "power" and "world domination," I'm sure.

Uh oh! Third date! Better wrap up this mission quick.
:D

I should note that there's a nice pregnant pause with reaction where I put those ellipses.

Is it unusual for Willy to use a gun? Suddenly it seems weird for some reason.
It used to be unusual for any of the IMF to engage in gunplay, but became a lot more common by this season...no doubt informed by the attempt to switch them from spies to unconventional-but-avowed law enforcement.

Okay, now we're back to Love, American Style. :rommie:
Not sure why he didn't just use a sleeping bag at home.

That's more like it. One out of three this week, although I'm not sure if that first one was intended to deliver a more serious message or not.
It was played strictly for laughs, with Radar doing physical comedy and getting the girl.

Now there's an interesting dynamic. Two violent vigilante groups, so there are no good guys-- while Archie is opposing the Nazis and Mike is against violence, so they're both in the right. This is some excellent writing.
Good observation.

If everybody who believes in ghosts was sent to a shrink, they'd be a long line at the Funny Farm. :rommie:
But it goes too far when the person who believes in the haunting starts acting out the ghost's mission of vengeance.

Who ya gonna call? Not Squad 51. They don't do hauntings. :rommie:
The squad constantly getting called back to the same house felt like an Adam-12 story.

I blame Mrs Butler. She starts with the seance, stages the haunting, and then charges for the exorcism.
I was surprised that she didn't appear again later. Substitute Artie #1 did say that he'd considered bringing her back, but didn't want to feed into his wife's obsession.

This exceeds my ability to suspend my disbelief.
One guy did accept, but it was an old boyfriend who'd since gotten married, so Mary refused.

Say, what's this I hear about your spelling bee placement trophies?
In an elementary school that I'd been going to temporarily right after the family moved from Indiana to Florida--hence potential accent issues--I was disqualified for misspelling a word (don't ask me what it was now) that I was sure I'd spelled the same as the kid after me who got it. I had to "sign out," and my last name is just unusual enough that it tends to trip people up, so I went out of my way to try to spell it for the guy at the desk, who cut me short in a "yeah, we got it" fashion. To this day, I've got two little spelling bee runner-up trophies with my name misspelled on them! File under "You Can't Make This Shit Up".

Well, I hope I can find that on YouTube. :rommie:
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They probably should have saved her for the last episode, if at all.
She's like Jenny Piccalo in reverse.

I wonder what other options they discussed, if any, and if Stan signed off on it.
Technically he was signing off on everything in these days, with that "Stan Lee presents:" banner on the splash pages.

Fear not, I was actually just mocking that whole thing. :rommie:
Whew--I figured it would have come up by now if you'd been harboring a Trekkie grudge against LI.

Jim shouldn't have shot first, but Solo should have.
I totally disagree. Being actively threatened with a gun changes the situation. In that scenario, you don't have the luxury of letting the other guy get off the first shot.

It's belatedly occurred to me that this episode of A12 could have benefitted from a Dragnet-format mugshot scene, so the narrator could clue us in on the perps' motivations.
 
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Jim's singing voice is like Jean Stapleton out of character... :eek: I recall one of my great aunts having some of his albums.
It's mind blowing to hear that voice come out of Gomer's face.

Somewhere in the spectrum between "power" and "world domination," I'm sure.
Ah, well. Better than organized crime, anyway.

I should note that there's a nice pregnant pause with reaction where I put those ellipses.
A rare touch of humor. :rommie:

It used to be unusual for any of the IMF to engage in gunplay, but became a lot more common by this season...no doubt informed by the attempt to switch them from spies to unconventional-but-avowed law enforcement.
That's true.

Not sure why he didn't just use a sleeping bag at home.
I was thinking about that. If he can sleep on the ground, he can sleep on the floor.

But it goes too far when the person who believes in the haunting starts acting out the ghost's mission of vengeance.
If she was.
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In an elementary school that I'd been going to temporarily right after the family moved from Indiana to Florida--hence potential accent issues--I was disqualified for misspelling a word (don't ask me what it was now) that I was sure I'd spelled the same as the kid after me who got it. I had to "sign out," and my last name is just unusual enough that it tends to trip people up, so I went out of my way to try to spell it for the guy at the desk, who cut me short in a "yeah, we got it" fashion. To this day, I've got two little spelling bee runner-up trophies with my name misspelled on them! File under "You Can't Make This Shit Up".
That's hilarious. In the early 80s, I subscribed to some magazines through Publisher's Clearinghouse and ended up winning a lifetime subscription to Rolling Stone (which I still get to this day, because I'm still alive). But they spelled my name "Huthcins" on the address label. So I called the customer service line and said, "You spelled my name H-U-T-H-C-I-N-S. That should be H-U-T-C-H." The girl agreed to fix it and ever since then my Rolling Stone has been addressed to "RJ Hutch." :rommie:

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That's adorable. :rommie:

Technically he was signing off on everything in these days, with that "Stan Lee presents:" banner on the splash pages.
Oh, yeah. I wonder when they stopped doing that.

Whew--I figured it would have come up by now if you'd been harboring a Trekkie grudge against LI.
Against one of my favorite shows? :D Even if that time slot would have made a difference, it's not the show's fault. A similar thing happened some years ago when Farscape was cancelled and its fans boycotted Tremors. You're not making sense, kids.

I totally disagree. Being actively threatened with a gun changes the situation. In that scenario, you don't have the luxury of letting the other guy get off the first shot.
Maybe so. I wonder what the actual protocol is, and if it's changed over the years.

It's belatedly occurred to me that this episode of A12 could have benefitted from a Dragnet-format mugshot scene, so the narrator could clue us in on the perps' motivations.
It would have been nice to know what was going on. It could have been part of a larger conspiracy that conventional law enforcement is not equipped to handle.

It couldn't be worse than James Earl Jones singing STAYIN' ALIVE, which explains why he never did.:borg:
Wise man. Although I'm not sure that James Earl Jones wouldn't make anything sound better. :rommie:
 
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