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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

So much for "uncharted" desert isle.
And somebody maybe should have surveyed the place a bit more closely before using it. They could easily have been feeding the contestant to headhunters.

The power pack. Later versions would be used on Environmental Control Robots.
I assume that's a reference to something specific.

Which also should have seen the clearing and huts.
Also, I think it was the episode with the search plane that gave us a good ariel view of the island...I didn't see anything like a mountain or volcano.

Have their been previous attempts on his life? What's his importance to the Secret Service?
He was in munitions and designing a new weapon. That was more or less covered in the episode description.

What's the business? How did this eclectic group ever get together in the first place?
Not specified, but apparently tontines were a thing in the day.
If the subject of the meeting is group members being killed, getting together in one place to talk about it is probably the worst idea ever. :rommie:
Perhaps...but it also got to the bottom of the affair.

Because none of them thought to bring a gun. :rommie:
Where's the fun in that?

"Hello, Amenhotep speaking. What? How the hell would I know?"
Yep.

During the seance, there was a shot of the camera panning around from the table to a close-up of each participant's face...kinda like That '70s Show.

Sounds like everybody's dead, except Amelia and two hooded figures. :rommie:
Raven, Maurice, and Grevely were also still around for the climax. The identities of the other hooded figures were left vague. When Jim was fighting them, hoods were coming off, but no faces were shown. Perhaps just no-name underlings lurking around downstairs.

Why the sirens, I wonder.
Speedy clearing of roads.

Is that really a thing? :rommie:
I guess he'd be the equivalent of the superior generals in 12OCH. Precision daylight bombing was their business...the riskier option of being able to accurately sight and hit specific targets as opposed to nighttime carpet bombing.

I'm thinking it would probably take days, at least, to relocate him to England. Did they account for that at all?
Who can tell? Passage of time in these shows is impressionistic at best.

That's a nice touch.
I have to wonder why Barton wouldn't know of Hogan's operation, given how many men under his command must've gone through the stalag.

The colonel was another random and atypical plot element-- he treated Jim and Artie pretty poorly for top-tier agents.
The superior colonels of the week were just a recurring element of the show...but his presence was to justify why Jim and Artie would just keep this knowledge to themselves.
 
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And somebody maybe should have surveyed the place a bit more closely before using it. They could easily have been feeding the contestant to headhunters.
Maybe they were hoping for that. The guy was kind of a jerk. And I have no interest in redeeming him! :rommie:

I assume that's a reference to something specific.
The Robot on Lost in Space. Remember how he had that power pack conveniently attached to the side of his torso that could be pulled off whenever he went berserk?

Also, I think it was the episode with the search plane that gave us a good ariel view of the island...I didn't see anything like a mountain or volcano.
You have to have line of sight through the dimensional warp.

He was in munitions and designing a new weapon. That was more or less covered in the episode description.
Yep, that slipped right by me.

Not specified, but apparently tontines were a thing in the day.
Yeah, but in the ones I've seen or read about the people had some kind of personal relationship. On M*A*S*H, for example, Potter once talked about a tontine he had with his colleagues from the first war.

During the seance, there was a shot of the camera panning around from the table to a close-up of each participant's face...kinda like That '70s Show.
Nice. :rommie:

Raven, Maurice, and Grevely were also still around for the climax. The identities of the other hooded figures were left vague. When Jim was fighting them, hoods were coming off, but no faces were shown. Perhaps just no-name underlings lurking around downstairs.
Minions. Mere minions.

Speedy clearing of roads.
Why the hurry? And aren't they way out in the country? I think they were just being drama queens.

I guess he'd be the equivalent of the superior generals in 12OCH. Precision daylight bombing was their business...the riskier option of being able to accurately sight and hit specific targets as opposed to nighttime carpet bombing.
He needs a better title. :rommie:

Who can tell? Passage of time in these shows is impressionistic at best.
It's like making it back from the Romulan border in two hours. :rommie:

I have to wonder why Barton wouldn't know of Hogan's operation, given how many men under his command must've gone through the stalag.
That's true.

The superior colonels of the week were just a recurring element of the show...but his presence was to justify why Jim and Artie would just keep this knowledge to themselves.
Yeah, but this one seemed oddly antagonistic, like he considered the boys to be bad apples or something. The professionals usually get along well on this show, I think.
 
50 Years Ago This Week

May 27
  • Died: Herman A. Barnett, 47, American surgeon and former aviator of the Tuskegee Airmen, was killed in a plane crash.
  • Wings play at the Odeon Cinema, Hammersmith, the final night of the UK tour. Afterwards the group throw a celebration party at the Cafe Royal, London, which soon develops into a jam session with Elton John and others.

May 28
  • The Salyut 2 space station, which had been damaged soon after being launched into orbit by the Soviet Union on April 3, 1973, fell out of orbit after 56 days and burned up in Earth's atmosphere over the south Pacific Ocean.
  • The 1973 Indianapolis 500, already marked by the death of a driver in qualifications, started as scheduled on Memorial Day and soon was halted because of a pileup of 11 cars and the serious injury of Salt Walther in a fiery crash. In addition, 12 spectators received injuries after stricken by debris from the crash.

May 29
  • Princess Anne, the only daughter of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, announced her engagement to Olympic equestrian champion and British Army Lieutenant. Mark Phillips.
  • Los Angeles, California, became the largest U.S. city to elect an African-American mayor, as city councilman Tom Bradley defeated incumbent Sam Yorty, who had been the mayor for 12 years.
  • Huang Zhen became the first diplomatic representative to the U.S. from the People's Republic of China as the liaison in Washington DC. He presented his credentials to President Nixon the next day.

May 30
  • The Indianapolis 500, associated with three deaths, was won by Gordon Johncock, after heavy rains had canceled the event twice. Less than an hour after the race was started at 2:10 in the afternoon, on the 59th lap, David "Swede" Savage was fatally injured in a fiery crash after losing control of his car. Armando Teran, a member of the pit crew for another driver, Graham McRae, stepped out on to the track and was killed by a truck racing to the scene of the crash. Because of the weather and delays that had prevented the race from being run on Memorial Day, attendance at the race was only 35,000. Johncock left shortly after his victory to visit Savage in the hospital. Savage would die of complications from his injuries on July 2.

June 1
  • General Georgios Papadopoulos, who had served as Prime Minister of Greece since shortly after leading the overthrow of the government on April 21, 1967, proclaimed the abolition of the monarchy of Greece and the establishment of a republic with himself as President.
  • Died: Mary Kornman, 57, American child actress in the early Our Gang installments during the 1920s, died of cancer.
  • First UK release of Wings' "Live and Let Die" single.

June 2
  • Fifteen people died when the supertanker Esso Brussels was struck by the container ship Sea Witch in New York Harbor. The oil tanker ship fire killed 13 crew, and two crew were lost from the container ship.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "My Love," Paul McCartney & Wings
2. "Daniel," Elton John
3. "Frankenstein," The Edgar Winter Group
4. "Pillow Talk," Sylvia
5. "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree," Dawn feat. Tony Orlando
6. "You Are the Sunshine of My Life," Stevie Wonder
7. "I'm Gonna Love You Just a Little More Baby," Barry White
8. "Little Willy," The Sweet
9. "Hocus Pocus," Focus
10. "Playground in My Mind," Clint Holmes
11. "Drift Away," Dobie Gray
12. "Reelin' in the Years," Steely Dan
13. "Wildflower," Skylark
14. "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)," George Harrison
15. "Stuck in the Middle with You," Stealers Wheel
16. "Right Place, Wrong Time," Dr. John
17. "Steamroller Blues" / "Fool", Elvis Presley
18. "I'm Doin' Fine Now," New York City
19. "Will It Go Round in Circles," Billy Preston
20. "Thinking of You," Loggins & Messina

22. "Long Train Runnin'," The Doobie Brothers
23. "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia," Vicki Lawrence
24. "One of a Kind (Love Affair)," The Spinners
25. "No More Mr. Nice Guy," Alice Cooper
26. "The Right Thing to Do," Carly Simon
27. "Funky Worm," Ohio Players
28. "Kodachrome," Paul Simon

31. "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown," Jim Croce

33. "The Cisco Kid," War

36. "Shambala," Three Dog Night

38. "Daddy Could Swear, I Declare," Gladys Knight & The Pips

41. "Natural High," Bloodstone

43. "Behind Closed Doors," Charlie Rich
44. "Daisy a Day," Jud Strunk
45. "You Can't Always Get What You Want," The Rolling Stones

49. "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," Bette Midler

51. "Diamond Girl," Seals & Crofts

55. "Money," Pink Floyd

57. "Out of the Question," Gilbert O'Sullivan

59. "Why Me," Kris Kristofferson

61. "So Very Hard to Go," Tower of Power

66. "I Like You," Donovan
67. "Monster Mash," Bobby "Boris" Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers

69. "Smoke on the Water," Deep Purple

77. "Time to Get Down," The O'Jays

79. "Yesterday Once More," Carpenters

89. "Touch Me in the Morning," Diana Ross


Leaving the chart:
  • "Masterpiece," The Temptations (14 weeks)
  • "Peaceful," Helen Reddy (17 weeks)
  • "Sing," Carpenters (14 weeks)
  • "The Twelfth of Never," Donny Osmond (13 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Yesterday Once More," Carpenters
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(#2 US; #1 AC; #2 UK)

"Touch Me in the Morning," Diana Ross
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(#1 US the week of Aug. 18, 1973; #1 AC; #5 R&B; #9 UK)

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month and Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day, with minor editing as needed.

_______

Maybe they were hoping for that. The guy was kind of a jerk. And I have no interest in redeeming him! :rommie:
Good to hear.

The Robot on Lost in Space. Remember how he had that power pack conveniently attached to the side of his torso that could be pulled off whenever he went berserk?
Ah...never paid much attention to that show. Used to put it on in the background on Me when it was on earlier.

Why the hurry? And aren't they way out in the country? I think they were just being drama queens.
There's a lot of underground activity in the area...

He needs a better title. :rommie:
That probably wasn't his official title, just how they described his job.
 
Afterwards the group throw a celebration party at the Cafe Royal, London, which soon develops into a jam session with Elton John and others.
I wonder if anyone got a recording of that. :rommie:

Johncock left shortly after his victory to visit Savage in the hospital.
That was nice. I wonder if the guy was aware of his presence, given how badly hurt he was.

"Yesterday Once More," Carpenters
Classic Carpenters. A song about nostalgia is now a nostalgic song.

"Touch Me in the Morning," Diana Ross
Diana Ross. 'nuff said.

Ah...never paid much attention to that show. Used to put it on in the background on Me when it was on earlier.
Oh, okay. I just assumed you watched it as a kid. :rommie:
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 18
Originally aired January 8, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • Ethel Merman sings "Some People"
  • Ethel Merman and Gordon MacRae - "You're Just in Love" (a.k.a. "You're Not Sick, You're in Love") duet
  • Gordon MacRae - Soliloqy from "Carousel"
  • The Serendipity Singers - "If I Were a Carpenter" & a medley of folk songs
  • The Royal Highlanders (pipe and drum corps)
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  • Flip Wilson - stand-up routine
  • Myron Cohen (comedian) - toll booth routine
  • Jose Greco (dancer, with his flamenco troupe) - dance to "The Horseman"
  • Malmo Girls (gymnasts from Sweeden) - girls juggle in unison
  • The King Toys (acrobatic act)
  • clown act
_______

Gilligan's Island
"Court-Martial"
Originally aired January 9, 1967
IMDb said:
The Professor recreates the Minnow voyage to disprove a Maritime Board charge that The Skipper was responsible for the wreck of the Minnow, but their efforts prove that the person to blame for the wreck is actually Gilligan.

Aired four TV weeks before the Trek episode, FWIW. This one has a teaser with an opening logo. The Skipper and Gilligan are lying on the beach listening to the radio when they hear a news report about Skipper being blamed by a board of inquiry for the loss of the Minnow, which has him so despondent that he fashions a noose from vines, but Gilligan stops him; then considers jumping from the cliff, but Ginger and Mary Ann stop him. The other castaways are sure that the Skipper isn't to blame, and Ginger comes up with an idea from a movie again--to recreate the incident, for which they create crude bamboo mockup of the Minnow's deck, with the girls simulating the weather starting getting up and the Professor pulling ropes to simulate the tiny ship being tossed. The takeaway is that the Skipper realizes that when the fearless crew was trying to avoid hitting a reef, Gilligan tossed an anchor that didn't have a line attached.

It's Gilligan's turn to fashion a vine noose, but the Skipper insists on taking responsibility for his crew, so the two of them decide to move to the other side of the island together, though the others all try to get them to stay. Sleeping in a lean-to, Gilligan dreams of being a young admiral on a sailing ship, with Queen Lovey and her daughters, Ginger and Mary Ann, as passengers. Their ship is boarded by pirates--Skipper, Mr. Howell, and the Professor. Lord Admiral Gilligan is locked in a cage on deck, but frees himself to rescue the ladies by taking on all three scoundrels in a sword fight...though his comical derring-do ends when his rapier is broken and he's forced to walk the plank. Gilligan awakes to the Professor running to him and the Skipper with the radio to share an announcement about how the board has found Skipper blameless because the radio operator in Honolulu had issued the weather report from the previous day, giving no warning of the storm.

In the coda, Gilligan plays skipper on the mockup.

_______

WWWs2e17.jpg
"The Night of the Feathered Fury"
Originally aired January 13, 1967
Wiki said:
Jim and Artie encounter Count Manzeppi again. This time around the count is attempting to acquire a wind-up bird that contains the Philosopher's Stone.

Colonel Armstrong (Oliver McGowan) is introducing Jim and Artie to Gerda Sharff (Michele Carey), a defector from Count Manzeppi's organization, when Manzeppi (Victor Buono reprising his role from a previous episode) sends in a grinder monkey named Loki who tosses a flash bomb, with Gerda disappearing in the commotion. The organ box that Manzeppi leaves behind plays a taunting message when cranked. Jim returns to the train to find Gerda there, who holds him at gunpoint wanting a toy chicken that she left behind at the scene. (Jim loads his horse into one of the train cars...I didn't realize they were bringing along their own steeds.) Manzeppi subsequently enters, wanting what Gerta stole from him. Manzeppi is followed by his henchmen of the episode, Luther Coyle (George Murdock), whose weapon of choice is a cup and ball that fires the ball with explosive force; and Dodo Le Blanc (Perry Lopez), a kick-oriented martial artist (possibly meant to be a capoeirista, though I don't know the art well enough to say). West holds each of them off in turn, and when they threaten to team up, Artie comes to the rescue via the fireplace entrance with an extra gun for Jim. They give Gerta the opportunity to leave. Then they become concerned about the third henchman in the room...

Artie: I never thought I'd hear myself say this--ahem--let's search the monkey.​

Loki obligingly lets the agents inspect his cup, but afterward tosses a smoke bomb that he was hiding under his hat, allowing Manzeppi and his men to escape.

Back at Armstrong's office, the toy chicken taps out a name in Morse code, leading Jim to the toy shop of Heinrich Sharff, where he's confronted by Dodo; Luther; a third henchman, Benji (Hideo Imamura); and the Count, who lowers himself on a hanging crescent moon while playing violin and reveals that Sharff is dead. West escapes into a back corridor long enough to stick the bird on a ceiling with putty before falling via trap door into Manzeppi's obligatory underground lair, where he's shot by a gun-brandishing hand that pops out of a dinner platter. Jim wakes up from the drugged projectile in a hanging bird cage. Manzeppi tells him that the chicken contains the Philosopher's Stone, producing several small metal objects that have been turned to gold by it. He then leaves Jim to be interrogated via surgical skin removal by Benji.

Meanwhile, Artie--after having lured Gerda out of hiding to enlist her cooperation--enters the shop disguised as Sharff's visiting uncle, knocking out Dodo and Luther with sleep-inducing seltzer. Artie makes his way to where Jim is being held and helps him to escape while holding off Benji. Jim takes him to retrieve the bird, then Manzeppi appears with Gerta at his side to confiscate the item, but Jim and Artie coax her into turning her gun on Manzeppi to take the item for herself. The agents pursue her upstairs after a delay from Manzeppi, to hear a scream and find her, having been exposed to the moonlight, turned into gold. Then ensues an odd bit of business in which Manzeppi tosses a bomblet that reduces her and the chicken to bits of gold leaf, before making his escape in a hidden hot air balloon.

In the train coda, after Jim and Artie leave with their dates, their cook, Mama Angelina (a familiar-looking uncredited actress), opens the shades, the moonlight turns the gold leaf back into the toy chicken, and she takes it.

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"The Great Brinksmeyer Robbery"
Originally aired January 13, 1967
IMDb said:
When the gang's hidden cache of money - needed to purchase a secret map - goes up in smoke, the men of Stalag 13 must come up with a way to replace the cash - and decide to pull off a bank heist in the nearby town.

A mishap involving mislabeled nitro going off in the tunnel shakes the barracks and put the radio out of commission, so Hogan has to find a way to listen to the BBC for a message he's expecting. The prisoners let Klink overhear them talking about how the kommandant is too afraid to listen to the BBC so that he turns it on loudly to prove them wrong. They get their coded message to retrieve an airdrop of 100,000 marks that's to be used to pay a Ludwig Strasser for a map of German rocket sites. But when Klink makes a surprise inspection of the barracks, they hurriedly stash the money in the stove, and Klink sets fire to Schultz's three-day pass for not seeing that lights were out on schedule, and tosses it in the stove, burning the money. After Hogan pays a visit to Strasser (Theo Marcuse) to inform him that he'll need more time, he arranges for himself, Newkirk, and LeBeau to be put in solitary so they can slip into town for a while, where they hit the local bank to scope it out...finding that it's well protected.

Schultz sees the guys at a restaurant and confronts them, but Hogan scares him off by pointing out that he's in town without a pass. Proceeding with their heist brainstorming, they find that the vault's weak spot is that it shares an ordinary wall with an apartment belonging to a lovelorn young woman named Mady Pfeiffer (Joyce Jameson); so mustached Hogan pays her a romantic visit and keeps her preoccupied--which includes playing the radio very loudly and drinking her under--while Newkirk and LeBeau slip in and work on the bedroom wall to break into the vault. In a manner that must have been inspirational to Barney, they take what they need--including an extra 1,000 for Mady--and get the wall all back in place before they leave their unconscious hostess.

In the coda, Schultz is relieved to find the trio of prisoners back in solitary in time to be let out, and informs them that the man believed to be the robber was caught trying to deposit the stolen money at the same bank--presumably Strasser getting his comeuppance for being a mercenary who wouldn't spot Hogan the map in advance of his payment.

_______

Get Smart
"Someone Down Here Hates Me"
Originally aired January 14, 1967
Wiki said:
KAOS puts up a reward to kill Max and announces that their annual party will be canceled if they don't kill him, creating more incentive and more peril for Max.

A couple of attempts on Max are made by KAOS agents. In the first attempt, he's eating at a table that looks more like it's in a house than his usual apartment. In the second, an agent is captured (Dort Clark) and informs Max that he has a $250,000 price on his head.

Max: Anybody who tries to collect that reward is gonna have to do it over my dead body! [Stops to think about what he just said.]​

Seigfried berates an assembly of KAOS operatives because he's lost eleven agents in the bungled attempts. Max becomes so paranoid that he even suspects the Chief and 99. Max consults Agent 13 in an ice machine, who entertains what he could do with the reward. Max then starts attacking innocent people on the street whom he suspects of being KAOS agents for various reasons.

The price is raised to $500,000, and the Chief convinces Max to take a vacation. At Max's apartment, 99 is visiting to say goodbye when Agent 63, Joe Froebus (Craig Huebing), drops in to be jumped by Max, who doesn't recognize...and we get our Frndly mid-scene interruption. (This is from the same batch of recordings that I was watching last year, which start expiring today.) Skip to Max visiting a Dr. Noodelman (Charles Irving) in an obvious redress of the Chief's office to learn about his fast-healing plastic surgery technique, which Max suspects KAOS agents may be using. Noodelman secretly calls his KAOS contact to confirm the reward, then straps Max into a chair under the pretense of examining him, but the Chief and Larabee pop in for a rescue.

Noodelman's files provide CONTROL with the pictures of a hundred KAOS agents who had Noodelman's surgery, and the Chief informs a still-paranoid Max that the reward will be expiring at midnight.

_______

Mission: Impossible
"The Reluctant Dragon"
Originally aired January 14, 1967
Paramount Plus said:
Dr. Cherlotov, a scientist of an enemy power, failed to defect to the West when his wife did. Now that he has developed a cheap, effective anti-ballistic system, the IMF are ordered to get him out.

The clear eight-track tape from the glove compartment of a parked car said:
Good morning, Mr. Briggs. The man you're looking at is Helmut Cherlotov [Joseph Campanella], the Iron Curtain's expert in rocket control. A year ago, his wife, Karen [Mala Powers], defected to the West. He was supposed to follow, but never made it. Since then, Cherlotov has been under suspicion by Taal Jankowski [John Colicos], the head of security. On his own, Cherlotov has developed the key to a simple yet extremely effective anti-ballistic-missile system. A system of that sort, in the wrong hands, could completely destroy the balance of power in the world.

Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to get Cherlotov out before his government discovers what he has achieved. As always, should you or any of your IM Force be caught or killed, the Secretary will disavow any knowledge of your actions. Please destroy this recording in the usual manner. Good luck, Dan.

Incinerated! Cut to a pretty short portfolio--just Rollin and Barney. (A reminder that Landau wasn't even in the main credits this season, but billed as a "special appearance". Apparently Bain and Lupus have the week off. And as was often the case later in the season, Steven Hill is barely in it.) Our unusually small contingent of IMFers consult Mrs. Cherlotov at the briefing about her husband's current whereabouts and the circumstances of his failed defection. Fortunately, she doesn't ask to see Dan's manager.

Posing as the deputy commissioner of police from East Germany, Rollin infiltrates a group of colleagues named Duchinoff (Alex Rodine), Berkov (Norbert Meisel), and Lukowski (Allen Bleiweiss) who are at the university where Cherlotov works to exchange security ideas with Jankowski, who's aided by a uniformed officer named Lupesh (Michael Forest); while Barney is nearby as an African exchange student. (He seems a little old for that.) When Rollin finds an opportunity to break from the group near Cherlotov's modest lab, an altercation ensues in which Jankowski slaps the horn-rimmed glasses from the scientist's face, and Rollin takes the opportunity to play "good cop" while dropping the hint that he's there to help Cherlotov get out. Later Rollin finds Cherlotov hiding in his suite, but when Rollin tries to discuss a plan for defection, he finds that Helmut is a loyal citizen who's interested in being allowed to officially continue his work behind the Curtain rather than defecting.

Back in L.A., Dan learns that Karen was always more interested in defection than her husband was; and decides that he has to get her involved in the mission to motivate Helmut. Rollin reports Cherlotov to Jankowski, who still thinks that the scientist is ultimately motivated to defect. Rollin persuades him to lock Cherlotov up as a political prisoner for a while to make him grateful for what he's got. Helmut finds himself sharing a cell with an old colleague, Professor Lauchek (Norbert Schiller), and an elderly professor emeritus named Yablonski (Felix Locher), both of whom show signs of having been re-educated.

After a visit to the prison in which Helmut asks why Rollin didn't tell Jankowski about the plans he's been working on, Rollin recommends that Cherlotov be released. Meanwhile, Barney discovers that an additional level of passport verification involves a paper with metal fibers in it that will be hard to duplicate--Dan's plan being to get Cherlotov out via the route that seems too obvious, right through the border checkpoint. Back at security HQ, the ambitious Lupesh learns of a communique from East Berlin signed by the official whom Rollin is posing as, and keeps it from Jankowksi. Rollin is surprised to run into Karen, now in town in disguise. He and Barney determine that they have to get Helmut out ASAP, while he's being released from prison. Rollin is trying to get Cherlotov to accompany him when Lupesh intercepts Rollin to arrest him as an imposter.

Rollin makes a break for it and flees into a stadium, where Lupesh takes shots at him, but Rollin turns it into a brawl and Landau's stunt double sends Forest's fatally tumbling down a flight of stairs. Elsewhere, Barney takes Helmut with him at gunpoint to the lab, where Helmut is surprised to find Karen waiting for him. While she's convincing him that defection is the right thing to do, Rollin uses a demonstration of magic tricks at an ongoing party being held in his suite as an opportunity to lift the passports from his drinking colleagues, but finds they've already been lifted by one of the female attendees, a barmaid named Sophia (Elisa Ingram). In private, he convinces Sophia to let him help her avoid the consequences, and she turns over the pilfered goods. Afterward Jankowski takes Rollin with him to apprehend Cherlotov at his lab, where Jankowski gets the drop on Barney and holds Rollin at Luger-point with the others, having seen through his ruse. Barney comes to and a brawl ensues in which Jankowski is shot in a struggle over his gun. Rollin makes a gesture of helping the still-conscious Jankowski tend to his wound before slipping out with the others for a drive to the border.

Mission: Apparently Accomplished. This was a good example of Season 1 having not found the formula yet...it was infiltration and improvisation with a loose plan rather than an intricately woven scheme.

_______

That was nice. I wonder if the guy was aware of his presence, given how badly hurt he was.
Quite likely...apparently he was conscious when taken to the hospital.
Swede Savage - Wikipedia

Classic Carpenters. A song about nostalgia is now a nostalgic song.
On its album, this was the framing song of a side-long medley of oldies covers. The album version segues into "Fun, Fun, Fun".

Diana Ross. 'nuff said.
She's in good classic form here. Her most recent single before this made the Top 40, but wasn't covered here, though it's been in the album end of my playlist for a while as a representative track from the Lady Sings the Blues soundtrack.
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(charted Jan. 19; #34 US; #8 US; #20 R&B; #53 UK)

It'll be interesting to see what pops up on the chart the next couple of weeks, as I have nothing from them in my collection.
 
The Royal Highlanders (pipe and drum corps)
I thought there could only be one.

they hear a news report about Skipper being blamed by a board of inquiry for the loss of the Minnow
That took a while. Must have been a Congressional investigation. :rommie:

which has him so despondent that he fashions a noose from vines, but Gilligan stops him; then considers jumping from the cliff, but Ginger and Mary Ann stop him.
That's a bit grim.

The other castaways are sure that the Skipper isn't to blame
Again, this is what I love about the show. They're going through this terrible ordeal, but they're not going to believe Skipper was to blame.

It's Gilligan's turn to fashion a vine noose, but the Skipper insists on taking responsibility for his crew
And this too.

Gilligan dreams of being a young admiral on a sailing ship
I remember the episode, but I barely remember this dream for some reason.

the board has found Skipper blameless because the radio operator in Honolulu had issued the weather report from the previous day, giving no warning of the storm.
That doesn't really negate the anchor thing. :rommie:

Manzeppi (Victor Buono reprising his role from a previous episode)
A recurring villain in two shows! Good deal!

The organ box that Manzeppi leaves behind plays a taunting message when cranked.
Good thing that's all it did. I would not have touched it.

(Jim loads his horse into one of the train cars...I didn't realize they were bringing along their own steeds.)
Makes sense, I guess. Otherwise they'd have to make arrangements everywhere they go. I wonder what the crew complement of that train is, since they must have people to take care of the horses, too.

Luther Coyle (George Murdock)
Among a million other things, the admiral who told Shelby about Picard's days at the academy.

Back at Armstrong's office, the toy chicken taps out a name in Morse code
Okay. Our story thus far: The boys are introduced to Gerda the defector, perhaps because she needs Secret Service protection, Manzeppi appears, apparently to retrieve Gerda, Gerda escapes or is taken, but then turns on the boys because she lost her chicken, Manzeppi and his gang turn up because apparently the chicken is theirs, Gerda is let go for no apparent reason, and the Manzeppi gang escapes. Then the chicken speaks in code. Let's continue.

Manzeppi tells him that the chicken contains the Philosopher's Stone
Okay, so the code-talking chicken belongs to a toymaker who is, presumably, Gerda's father. Manzeppi has apparently killed him and given the toy shop an extreme makeover, complete with a Hollywood-musical moon and a dungeon. Do we have any idea where the Philosopher's Stone came from, how Gerda's father got it, why he put it in a chicken, why the chicken talks, how Manzeppi got involved, or if Gerda is the slightest bit concerned about her father's death?

He then leaves Jim to be interrogated via surgical skin removal by Benji.
For the love of...! :eek:

Jim and Artie coax her into turning her gun on Manzeppi to take the item for herself.
I have a feeling she would have done that anyway. :rommie:

The agents pursue her upstairs after a delay from Manzeppi, to hear a scream and find her, having been exposed to the moonlight, turned into gold.
If I wasn't before, I am now well and truly lost.

Then ensues an odd bit of business in which Manzeppi tosses a bomblet that reduces her and the chicken to bits of gold leaf
I'm not even asking questions anymore.

before making his escape in a hidden hot air balloon.
Nice trick, hiding a hot air balloon-- especially one that can lift Victor Buono. :rommie:

Mama Angelina (a familiar-looking uncredited actress), opens the shades, the moonlight turns the gold leaf back into the toy chicken, and she takes it.
We're still in the Ricardo Montalban episode, aren't we? And we're never getting out.
mellow.gif


A mishap involving mislabeled nitro going off in the tunnel shakes the barracks and put the radio out of commission
The mishap involved an extra, I assume. :rommie:

Schultz sees the guys at a restaurant and confronts them, but Hogan scares him off by pointing out that he's in town without a pass.
Everybody sees noTHINK!

In a manner that must have been inspirational to Barney, they take what they need--including an extra 1,000 for Mady--and get the wall all back in place before they leave their unconscious hostess.
Did we already tie in Hogan's ops with the origin of the IMF at some point? :rommie:

the man believed to be the robber was caught trying to deposit the stolen money at the same bank--presumably Strasser getting his comeuppance for being a mercenary who wouldn't spot Hogan the map in advance of his payment.
Nice touch.

Max: Anybody who tries to collect that reward is gonna have to do it over my dead body! [Stops to think about what he just said.]
:rommie:

Seigfried berates an assembly of KAOS operatives because he's lost eleven agents in the bungled attempts.
CONTROL should offer a higher reward-- KAOS would be out of business in a week. :rommie:

Max then starts attacking innocent people on the street whom he suspects of being KAOS agents for various reasons.
Eh, they probably deserve it.

Noodelman's files provide CONTROL with the pictures of a hundred KAOS agents who had Noodelman's surgery, and the Chief informs a still-paranoid Max that the reward will be expiring at midnight.
That's convenient. :rommie:

Mission: Impossible
This past Saturday, we watched the series premiere. I forget if this came up before, but the voice on the LP said something like, "Welcome back, Dan. It's been a while." Apparently he had been choosing not to accept missions. I wonder what that was about.

Incinerated!
An eight-track tape. They should have had the voice fade out in the middle of a sentence, click, and then fade back in. :rommie:

(He seems a little old for that.)
You're never too old to finish your education.

Rollin uses a demonstration of magic tricks at an ongoing party being held in his suite as an opportunity to lift the passports from his drinking colleagues, but finds they've already been lifted by one of the female attendees, a barmaid named Sophia (Elisa Ingram).
Kind of random. Is she part of an underground movement or something?

Rollin makes a gesture of helping the still-conscious Jankowski tend to his wound before slipping out with the others for a drive to the border.
That's a nice little Trekkish touch.

This was a good example of Season 1 having not found the formula yet...it was infiltration and improvisation with a loose plan rather than an intricately woven scheme.
That's what the pilot was like. Most of it was them having to deal with glitches in the plan.

Quite likely...apparently he was conscious when taken to the hospital.
Swede Savage - Wikipedia
What a nightmare. That other guy was killed because he was trying to save Savage.

On its album, this was the framing song of a side-long medley of oldies covers. The album version segues into "Fun, Fun, Fun".
Wow, I didn't even know that. I've never heard the album.
 
They're going through this terrible ordeal
Yeah, they've just got it so rough on that island... :lol:

I remember the episode, but I barely remember this dream for some reason.
Not as cleverly spoofy as some dreams...just doing Errol Flynn schtick.

That doesn't really negate the anchor thing. :rommie:
I think that was supposed to fall under the "given no warning to prepare" excuse, though I don't know if it's actually common to go to sea with an anchor that's not on a line.

Good thing that's all it did. I would not have touched it.
True.

Makes sense, I guess. Otherwise they'd have to make arrangements everywhere they go. I wonder what the crew complement of that train is, since they must have people to take care of the horses, too.
A scene takes place inside the stable car in a subsequent episode. It's very well-lit and tidy.

Okay. Our story thus far: The boys are introduced to Gerda the defector, perhaps because she needs Secret Service protection, Manzeppi appears, apparently to retrieve Gerda, Gerda escapes or is taken, but then turns on the boys because she lost her chicken, Manzeppi and his gang turn up because apparently the chicken is theirs, Gerda is let go for no apparent reason, and the Manzeppi gang escapes. Then the chicken speaks in code. Let's continue.
Okay, so the code-talking chicken belongs to a toymaker who is, presumably, Gerda's father. Manzeppi has apparently killed him and given the toy shop an extreme makeover, complete with a Hollywood-musical moon and a dungeon. Do we have any idea where the Philosopher's Stone came from, how Gerda's father got it, why he put it in a chicken, why the chicken talks, how Manzeppi got involved, or if Gerda is the slightest bit concerned about her father's death?
Keep in mind that I watched this several weeks ago; the episode recorded again from Me a couple of Saturdays ago, but I don't think I'm going to rewatch it to try to answer questions. I think Gerda was just being opportunistic, wanting the chicken for herself; and Jim and Artie let her go so they could track her down and learn more about what was going on. If I didn't say that she was the toymaker's daughter, then the episode probably didn't either. The toy shop was presumably already like that, perhaps a front for Manzeppi operations. I don't think they got into where the stone came from or why it was in the chicken.

For the love of...! :eek:
Any excuse to get his shirt off...though in this case, I don't think they got around to it.

If I wasn't before, I am now well and truly lost.
I'm not even asking questions anymore.
That's pretty much where I was by the end of the episode.

The mishap involved an extra, I assume. :rommie:
Apparently Kinch himself, though he got out no worse for the wear somehow.

Did we already tie in Hogan's ops with the origin of the IMF at some point? :rommie:
It's become a recurring joke.

CONTROL should offer a higher reward-- KAOS would be out of business in a week. :rommie:
Don't give the Chief any ideas...

This past Saturday, we watched the series premiere. I forget if this came up before, but the voice on the LP said something like, "Welcome back, Dan. It's been a while." Apparently he had been choosing not to accept missions. I wonder what that was about.
Or it could have meant that the IMF gig was new, but Dan was a former agent for a legit agency who was coming back into the fold for this assignment. I recall @DarrenTR1970 posting some unaired series background info about the origins of the IMF, though I don't recall the details or if the source was official. In that version, as I recall, Dan formed the IMF during the war but had been out of action for a while prior to the series premiere.

Kind of random. Is she part of an underground movement or something?
Just an opportunistic klepto whom Rollin convinced was in over her head with these people.

That's a nice little Trekkish touch.
"In another life, we could have been..."--wait, wrong Trek guest. "It would have GLORIOUS."

Wow, I didn't even know that. I've never heard the album.
Nor have I, but read about it while looking into choosing the right clip for the song.
 
This past Saturday, we watched the series premiere. I forget if this came up before, but the voice on the LP said something like, "Welcome back, Dan. It's been a while." Apparently he had been choosing not to accept missions. I wonder what that was about.

Or it could have meant that the IMF gig was new, but Dan was a former agent for a legit agency who was coming back into the fold for this assignment. I recall @DarrenTR1970 posting some unaired series background info about the origins of the IMF, though I don't recall the details or if the source was official. In that version, as I recall, Dan formed the IMF during the war but had been out of action for a while prior to the series premiere.

So, the original outline/draft of 'Briggs' Squad' was that they were Korean war veterans who had been used for 'Special Assignments' under the command of David (later Dan) Briggs, who, when returned to civilian life, found themselves unable to cope and then turned to various criminal activities to recapture the thrill they had back in Korea.

Even then, they had unknowingly been working for 'the Secretary'. Only Dan Briggs knew this. Dan Briggs had been keeping the Squad under surveillance since the war ended, intervening covertly when necessary, to prevent any one of them from going to jail.

The original script involving the theft/recovery of a country's crown jewels from a boat in the middle of the ocean, (before it was changed to the theft of nuclear warheads) would have been the first time the team had reunited in five years.

"Welcome back Dan", is a remnant of the original draft, where Dan was brought back to work for 'the Secretary' after returning to civilian life to watch over his former squad members. (So that means that there must have been a previous, unseen meeting between Briggs and an unnamed official, where Briggs is convinced to come back to work for 'the Secretary'.)

This all comes from the original outline, reprinted in "The Complete 'Mission: Impossible' Dossier."
 
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Yeah, they've just got it so rough on that island... :lol:
Well, I mean in theory. They want to go home! :rommie:

I don't know if it's actually common to go to sea with an anchor that's not on a line.
Seems to defeat the purpose.

A scene takes place inside the stable car in a subsequent episode. It's very well-lit and tidy.
Those horses are government agents, you gotta treat them well.

the episode recorded again from Me a couple of Saturdays ago, but I don't think I'm going to rewatch it to try to answer questions.
No, don't do that. :rommie:

I don't think they got into where the stone came from or why it was in the chicken.
It's just the kind of world they live in. :rommie:

Any excuse to get his shirt off...though in this case, I don't think they got around to it.
Actually, that was a little Benji joke. Once again I slid to the far end of the obscurity spectrum.

Apparently Kinch himself, though he got out no worse for the wear somehow.
Lucky guy, if it shook the foundations.

It's become a recurring joke.
I wonder if that guy who stole Father Mulcahy's identity was ever in the IMF, especially considering its origins in the Korean War.

"In another life, we could have been..."--wait, wrong Trek guest. "It would have GLORIOUS."
:rommie:

So, the original outline/draft of 'Briggs' Squad'
Lucky thing they changed that title.

Even then, they had unknowingly been working for 'the Secretary'. Only Dan Briggs knew this. Dan Briggs had been keeping the Squad under surveillance since the war ended, intervening covertly when necessary, to prevent any one of them from going to jail.
I like this idea, but it's a different show. I'm glad they modified it.

"Welcome back Dan", is a remnant of the original draft, where Dan was brought back to work for 'the Secretary' after returning to civilian life to watch over his former squad members. (So that means that there must have been a previous, unseen meeting between Briggs and an unnamed official, where Briggs is convinced to come back to work for 'the Secretary'.)
Given the change in format, his backstory is ripe for retconning. Since he was only on the show for a year, we could say that the previous IMF leader was killed or whatever, and Briggs agreed to temporarily unretire until a suitable permanent replacement could be found.
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 19
Originally aired January 15, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • The Rolling Stones - "Ruby Tuesday" & "Let's Spend Some Time Together" (censored version of "Let's Spend the Night Together")
The Sullivan account doesn't have this posted, but we're not gonna miss out on one of the show's most infamous moments. 32:14:
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  • Sisters '67 (Sisters of St. Benedict, Nuns from Erie, Pennsylvania) - sing a medley of show tunes: "It's A Lovely Day," "Consider Yourself" & "Kumbaya."
  • Allan Sherman (stand-up comedian) - does song parodies
    "Strange Things in My Soup"
    "There's No Governor Like Our New Governor":
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    "Westchester Hadassah"
  • Alan King (stand-up comedian) - routine about family members
  • The Muppets - Kermit plays the piano and sings "Tea for Two"
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  • The Michael Bennett Dancers - perform a clog dancing routine
  • Monroe/The Monroes (balancing act from Madrid, Spain)
  • On film: Footage of a 14-year-old water-skier, Ricky McCormick, doing stunts at Cypress Gardens, Fla.
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  • Audience bow: Miriam Colon (Puerto Rican star)
_______

Gilligan's Island
"The Hunter"
Originally aired January 16, 1967
Frndly said:
A big-game hunter offers to rescue the castaways, provided his quarry---Gilligan---can elude his bullets for 24 hours.

The last Gilligan's Island episode in my current batch opens with the logo over a groovy shot of a helicopter approaching over the lagoon behind Gilligan while he listens to calypso on the radio. Gilligan rushes to meet Jonathan Kincaid (Rory Calhoun) and his aide, Ramoo (former hat-tosser Harold Sakata). When Kincaid asks about game on the island--specifically wild boar--Gilligan says there is none! Bad continuity! Kincaid promptly decides that the situation is right to try that most dangerous game he's always wanted a shot at.

Kincaid announces to the ecstatic castaways that he's summoned a boat to arrive the following morning...then tries to scope out which of them will provide the most challenge. Gilligan ends up getting his attention for his youth and agility. At another going-away party, Kincaid announces his deal with the castaways and choice of quarry. Ginger throws herself at Kincaid in an attempt to slip him a mickey...but he sets his cup aside and Gilligan drinks it.

The next morning, Kincaid sets his watch and gives Gilligan a 15-minute head start. Gilligan loses time when he literally jumps out of his shoes and has to put them back on. Kincaid locks the other castaways in the bamboo-caged cave and leaves Ramoo with the odd job of guarding them. While Gilligan manages to elude Kincaid for hours with some highlighted comical stunts, Mrs. Howell unbinds the cell door and walks out, serving as a distraction so the Skipper can overpower Ramoo. The Skipper and the Professor help Gilligan hide in a hollow tree trunk, but Kincaid then wants to use it for target practice to test his rifle, which got waterlogged in one of the stunts. After confusing Kincaid by moving around when he's trying to aim, Gilligan tries to make a break for it, and the Skipper tries to hold down Kincaid's gun, which buys just enough time for the hunter's watch alarm to go off. Kincaid keeps the part of the deal about stopping the hunt, but reneges on the part where he's supposed to take the castaways with him, because hunting people is illegal.

In a coda that takes place a month later, the Skipper and Mr. Howell are wagering bananas on baseball when they and the other guys hear a report of Kincaid having had a public mental breakdown--taken to a mental ward while muttering "Gilligan, Gilligan, Gilligan."

_______

The Wild Wild West
"The Night of the Gypsy Peril"
Originally aired January 20, 1967
Wiki said:
The Sultan of Ramapur brings a sacred white elephant as a gift to President Grant. When bandits steal the elephant from Jim and Artie's train the outraged Sultan demands a compensation of $1 million. Events take an interesting turn when Jim follows the trail to a gypsy camp.

In San Francisco, Jim and Artie meet the Sultan of Ramapur (Ronald Long), who's persuaded to leave his harem girl bodyguards behind for the trip to Washington, but insists on bringing his gift, Akbar, a white baby elephant. We now see the inside of the stable car, which is very clean and brightly lit, and even has a telegraph desk. The train is blocked in a canyon and held up by a group of bandits led by Scullen (Arthur Batanides), who take the elephant apparently because they think it will be of value as an elephant, but later talk of ransoming it without seeming to know of its importance in the first place. While Jim goes after them, Artie is left to mind the Sultan, who demands a damage payment of $1 million and has Americans in Ramapur seized as hostages.

Jim is caught sneaking into the bandits' camp, and Artie goes after him. (Say, who's guarding the Sultan at this point...?) Bandit Hillard (Mark Slade) is sent to off and bury the elephant as standard hostage ransoming procedure, and is spotted leading the elephant by Zoe Zagora (Ruta Lee) and Mikolik (Johnny Seven), who are interested in obtaining the elephant for their Zagora Family Circus. Zoe convinces Hillard to sell the elphant for $750, then knocks him out with gas while telling his fortune.

Hillard returns to camp pretending to have killed the elephant, and Artie provides a distraction with firecrackers that enables him and Jim to send the bandits running...except for Hillard, who tells them what happened upon being questioned. Jim proceeds to the circus camp, and is caught snooping again. He claims to be looking for a job and auditions for Zoe with acrobatics. Zoe takes to Jim, and he's soon practicing shirtless and backed into a "dance of death" fight with Mikolik, whom he spares. Artie then enters the camp posing as a traveling peddler. Jim wants to avoid bloodshed, so he and Artie try to steal Akbar by night, but are...you guessed it.

Jim and Artie are tied up, and Jim tells Zoe the truth about who they and Akbar are. They try to prove that Akbar is really white by scrubbing off what they assume is gray paint, only to find that it's his actual color, and realize that the Sultan is pulling a con in cahoots with the bandits. Scullen reports to the Sultan, who's now reunited with his guards in San Francisco. Jim and Artie drop in to fight off the Sultan's men (the women conveniently no longer present). Cut to Jim explaining to Zoe how the Sultan had bankrupted his government, and agreeing to let the circus keep Akbar.

In the coda, Jim and Artie escort the Sultan to Washington and receive a wire that his monarchy has been overthrown. In an inexplicable gesture of goodwill, the Sultan leaves Jim with the harem girl guards as gifts.

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"Praise the Führer and Pass the Ammunition"
Originally aired January 20, 1967
IMDb said:
Nearby war games inspire Hogan to replace some of the blank German ammunition with live ammo, using Klink's birthday as a diversion.

In lineup, the prisoners take interest in the arrival of SS Colonel Deutsch (Frank Marth) to inform Klink that his men will be conducting training exercises in the area. The SS colonel makes a point of telling Klink that he doesn't take prisoners, and tosses a dummy grenade into the lineup...which sends everyone ducking except Hogan, who picks up the grenade and uses the opportunity to chest the Gestapo officer. Afterward Hogan gets the idea to slip some live ammo among the SS's dummies, but needs a diversion because of increased security. (This seems like something that would be an out-and-out war crime, but they lampshaded it with Deutsch's behavior.) When Schultz comes to Newkirk to buy a black market gift for what turns out to be Klink's 50th birthday, Hogan finds one. He informs Klink that the men want to throw him a celebration, and suggests that he invite Deutsch to come. Then Hogan arranges for Schultz to catch Newkirk smuggling ammo out of the arsenal as a way of maneuvering Schultz into being in charge of guarding it during the party.

The prisoners put on a little talent show in the rec hall, which Klink finds delightful, though Deutsch is less than amused. In addition to the prisoners singing and dancing to the accompaniment of bass, acoustic guitar, and accordion, Newkirk does a sketch in which he impersonates Bogart, Greenstreet, and Lorre. While all of this is going on, Hogan brings Schultz some cake and men in German uniforms slip out ammo and put it in a truck; following which Hogan slips into a uniform to take the truck out the gate. Newkirk keeps Deutsch from leaving early by performing a trick in which the eggs he cracks in Klink's hat don't disappear, which is the one thing that the SS colonel finds amusing.

Hogan's in Klink's office the next day when he Klink learns of Deutsch's command post having been wiped out by live ammo in the war games. The coda continues a gag of some of the prisoners' black market goods having the initials of prominent Nazi officials on them...this time, a beer stein engraved "A.H."

DIIIIIISSS-miiised!

_______

Get Smart
"Cutback at CONTROL"
Originally aired January 21, 1967
Wiki said:
As a Senate sub-committee threatens to shut down CONTROL, Siegfried invites Max to become an agent for KAOS.

Max is staking out a KAOS agent outside a theater while being observed by Perkins from accounting (Paul B. Price). A gunfight ensues in which the accountant cites Max for using too many bullets, even though the enemy agent gets up twice after being shot. When Max tries to report in via shoe phone, he finds that the number has been disconnected; and a finance agent (Mickey Deems) approaches him about repossessing his car, as CONTROL hasn't been making the payments. Max warns the agent about various dangerous gadgets, but forgets one and the car blows up offscreen.

The Chief has to confiscate all of Max's weapons and gadgets because of the cutbacks. Max testifies before a Senate subcommittee--no wonder they're taking away CONTROL's financing! When Max gets a letter from Siegfried asking for a meeting about defecting to KAOS, the Chief, now in an office empty of everything but the chairs, encourages Max to play along to infiltrate the enemy organization. Max meets Siegfried in the park, the two of them disguised as an old man and an old woman, respectively, and Max agrees to join. (Alas, Siegfried doesn't beat Max with his handbag.)

The location of KAOS HQ is so secret that not only is Max blindfolded, but the driver is, too! :lol: Our Frndly interruption occurs while Max is attending a class in advanced torture. When we return, Max is caught searching Siegfried's desk, and claims he was looking for a copy of the next day's exam. Over drinks, Max and Dietrich reminisce about past encounters like old pals, until Siegfried succumbs to a mickey that Max slipped in his cup. Max takes a call meant to inform Siegfried that Max's defection is a ruse. Max escapes KAOS HQ to appear at another subcommittee hearing, and something that the chairman, Dietrich (Harry Bartell), says gives him away as the man Max spoke to on the phone. Max corners Dietrich into admitting that he's working for KAOS, and when the infiltrator tries to escape, he falls down an elevator shaft.

In the coda, Max comes across Siegfried selling ice cream in a park, and learns that it's not a cover, it's his day job.

_______

Mission: Impossible
"The Frame"
Originally aired January 21, 1967
Paramount Plus said:
Gangster Jack Wellman is moving syndicated crime into politics, killing off certain politicians and replacing them with men more sympathetic to the Syndicate. To stop him, Briggs and his team must discredit Wellman in the eyes of the Syndicate by making it appear that he's skimming funds from them.

The aptitude test machine after putting in a couple of wrong answers said:
Good morning, Mr. Briggs. In each of the accidents you're looking at, an important elected official was killed--two congressmen and two state attorneys general. Their deaths had one thing in common: their succesors were, in every case, known to be favorably disposed toward organized crime. The Syndicate has a finger in every other legitimate business; now they're moving into government. This move is the brainchild of Jack Wellman, acknowledged head of the Syndicate in the United States. He must be stopped. Officially, he's beyond the reach of the law.

Your mission, Dan, should you choose to accept it, is to stop Wellman. As always, should you or any of your IM Force be caught or killed, the Secretary will disavow any knowledge of your actions. This film strip will self-destruct when you stop the machine. Good luck, Dan.

This week has a full team in the portfolio, including guest agent Tino (Arthur Batanides), who runs a restaurant. Wellman (Oh, fine, he can be that editor guy from Kolchak this time if it makes you happy.) is hosting a meeting over dinner with three of his partners: Vito Scalisi (Joe De Santis), Frank Bates (Joe Maross), and Al Souchek (Mort Mills). Dan pulls strings to make sure Tino's gets the catering gig, with the catering team consisting of Dan, Rollin, and Willy, while Barney and Cinnamon are snuck in from the back of the van. Cinnamon goes upstairs to work on a wall while Willy and Barney take cases down into the cellar, where Barney later finds the hidden vault and goes to work with Willy atop it. Meanwhile, Rollin's bad poker face gets him into trouble when, posing as a deaf waiter, he reacts to something in front of Scalisi...who tests him by firing a pistol directly behind his head, and has to hold in the pain that it causes.

Wellman's compatriots aren't entirely onboard with his new methods, thinking that he's motivated primarily by greed while they believe in maintaining work/life balance by having families and stuff; and that knocking off congressmen may be going too far. Wellman starts getting suspicious when he find the caterers lurking around everywhere but the kitchen. Rollin spills soup on Scalisi so that Wellman has to take him upstairs to change...where Scalisi comes upon Cinnamon sitting at a dressing table in lingerie. When Cinnamon does her overreaction face, it's on purpose. Acting frightened, she explains that she's a friend of Jack's whom he wants to keep out of sight. Meanwhile, most of the boys work on the vault, placing charges in holes they've drilled in the concrete, then rigging up a contraption apparently meant to muffle the noise and vibration of the blast, which Dan sets off remotely while lighting the main course in the dining room.

Thus far, Rollin's ability to hear everything the criminals are discussing doesn't seem to serve any purpose beyond trying not to give himself away. Barney gets to work digging through the shattered concrete, but Wellman finds that the wine has gone bad and heads down to the cellar to get a fresh bottle. Rollin finally makes himself useful by using the remote device to signal Barney, who basically has to lay low while hastily unplugging a cord and hoping that Wellman doesn't see it, while Dan follows Wellman down to distract him by offering to help. The IMFers find that their timetable is squeezed when Wellman announces that he wants them out ASAP and to come back to clean up the next day. While Barney gets to work on the vault ceiling with a torch, Willy takes ice cream containers upstairs that turn out to contain a cylindrical safe for the hole that Cinnamon has made in the wall behind a picture; and Rollin encourages Tino to go against his professional instincts by stalling about serving his customers dessert.

Barney gets into the vault and they take out the money that Wellman keeps there in a large case. As the catering crew makes a show of leaving, Wellman takes the others down to the cellar to show them the money that his scheme has made, only to find an empty case...while Dan listens from atop the vault, because he stayed behind to clean things up. The others want to know where the money is, and a desperate Wellman finds the hole cut in the ceiling, now with the removed piece back in, but everyone assumes that the heist must have taken place at an earlier time. When Wellman insists that nobody would have been in the house but him and the servants, Scalisi takes the fellas up to Jack's bedroom to meet Cinnamon, who makes it look like Jack's plan isn't working while backing up toward the picture on the wall so that the suspicious partners find the safe. They conveniently let Cinnamon go while ordering Jack at gunpoint to open his safe. Cinnamon runs out to catering van, now waiting on the far edge of the property, which seems a little too far for the offscreen gunshot to have carried so loudly and clearly.

This one seemed pretty fillerish...there were long stretches of cutting back to the IMFers working on stuff without any short-term payoff, and it all amounted to a relatively simple heist scheme.

_______

No, don't do that. :rommie:
It's just the kind of world they live in. :rommie:
The episode generally had a pretty surreal, nonsensical vibe.
 
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The Sullivan account doesn't have this posted, but we're not gonna miss out on one of the show's most infamous moments. 32:14:
I wonder if the audience could even hear it. Indoor voices, ladies!

The Muppets - Kermit plays the piano and sings "Tea for Two"
Nothing like those classic Muppet monsters. :rommie:

When Kincaid asks about game on the island--specifically wild boar--Gilligan says there is none! Bad continuity!
They're extinct now. Skipper has a voracious appetite.

Kincaid promptly decides that the situation is right to try that most dangerous game he's always wanted a shot at.
It's got to be the most homaged story ever. :rommie:

That's a great scene for the Skipper.

and the Skipper tries to hold down Kincaid's gun, which buys just enough time for the hunter's watch alarm to go off.
And the Skipper does it again. This is his episode, man!

but reneges on the part where he's supposed to take the castaways with him, because hunting people is illegal.
A little known provision of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

Kincaid having had a public mental breakdown--taken to a mental ward while muttering "Gilligan, Gilligan, Gilligan."
"You did it again, Little Buddy." :rommie:

who's persuaded to leave his harem girl bodyguards behind for the trip to Washington
I see no logic to this whatsoever.

We now see the inside of the stable car, which is very clean
Until the elephant gets done with it. :ack:

who take the elephant apparently because they think it will be of value as an elephant, but later talk of ransoming it without seeming to know of its importance in the first place.
The white elephant sale in Albuquerque was canceled.

Bandit Hillard (Mark Slade) is sent to off and bury the elephant as standard hostage ransoming procedure
Geez, just let him go. He's not going to talk.

Zoe Zagora (Ruta Lee)
Omnipresent character actor.

Zoe convinces Hillard to sell the elphant for $750, then knocks him out with gas while telling his fortune.
"You will abruptly lose consciousness."

Jim wants to avoid bloodshed, so he and Artie try to steal Akbar by night, but are...you guessed it.
Because identifying themselves as government agents looking for a stolen elephant is just too straightforward. :rommie:

and realize that the Sultan is pulling a con in cahoots with the bandits.
Wouldn't this have been obvious when the bandits were talking amongst themselves?

Jim and Artie drop in to fight off the Sultan's men (the women conveniently no longer present).
The women would have just surrendered to Jim's shirtless torso.

Cut to Jim explaining to Zoe how the Sultan had bankrupted his government, and agreeing to let the circus keep Akbar.
Despite their various crimes.

In the coda, Jim and Artie escort the Sultan to Washington and receive a wire that his monarchy has been overthrown. In an inexplicable gesture of goodwill, the Sultan leaves Jim with the harem girl guards as gifts.
Now that he's deposed, there's nothing preventing them from killing him. :rommie:

SS Colonel Deutsch
That's a bit on the nose. Is he a product of their super-soldier program? :rommie:

tosses a dummy grenade into the lineup...which sends everyone ducking except Hogan, who picks up the grenade and uses the opportunity to chest the Gestapo officer.
Cool as a cucumber.

(This seems like something that would be an out-and-out war crime, but they lampshaded it with Deutsch's behavior.)
Interesting. I wonder if it would.

Newkirk keeps Deutsch from leaving early by performing a trick in which the eggs he cracks in Klink's hat don't disappear, which is the one thing that the SS colonel finds amusing.
:rommie:

Max warns the agent about various dangerous gadgets, but forgets one and the car blows up offscreen.
Ouch. There's some collateral damage.

The Chief has to confiscate all of Max's weapons and gadgets because of the cutbacks.
Sounds more like they're closing down.

Max testifies before a Senate subcommittee--no wonder they're taking away CONTROL's financing!
Yeah, shouldn't the Chief be handling that?

(Alas, Siegfried doesn't beat Max with his handbag.)
He would have missed him by that much.

When we return, Max is caught searching Siegfried's desk, and claims he was looking for a copy of the next day's exam.
Cheating! Siegfried approves! :rommie:

Max corners Dietrich into admitting that he's working for KAOS, and when the infiltrator tries to escape, he falls down an elevator shaft.
I wonder what State he represented. :rommie:

In the coda, Max comes across Siegfried selling ice cream in a park, and learns that it's not a cover, it's his day job.
99 must have been laid off early on in the cutbacks. She seems to have been MIA.

Wellman (Oh, fine, he can be that editor guy from Kolchak this time if it makes you happy.)
It does. :D

Meanwhile, Rollin's bad poker face gets him into trouble when, posing as a deaf waiter, he reacts to something in front of Scalisi
Bad writing. That's not a mistake that Rollin would make.

Wellman's compatriots aren't entirely onboard with his new methods, thinking that he's motivated primarily by greed while they believe in maintaining work/life balance by having families and stuff
That's rather forward thinking of them.

and that knocking off congressmen may be going too far.
Also a valid point. It would have been funny if they had successfully talked him out of it and the IMF team ended up standing around with nothing to do. :rommie:

...where Scalisi comes upon Cinnamon sitting at a dressing table in lingerie.
Seems like Cinnamon had some sexy scenes in the first season. She was in a skimpy towel in the pilot.

Cinnamon runs out to catering van, now waiting on the far edge of the property, which seems a little too far for the offscreen gunshot to have carried so loudly and clearly.
Was this the inaugural off-screen gunshot?

This one seemed pretty fillerish...there were long stretches of cutting back to the IMFers working on stuff without any short-term payoff, and it all amounted to a relatively simple heist scheme.
One interesting thing is that pretty much the whole episode was essentially one extended scene that happened somewhat in real time.

The episode generally had a pretty surreal, nonsensical vibe.
Yeah, the last couple were like that. This week's was better.
 
I wonder if the audience could even hear it. Indoor voices, ladies!

Mick: Let's spend :rolleyes: some time :rolleyes: together...

They're extinct now. Skipper has a voracious appetite.
Or they killed the only one on the island. Too bad the castaways didn't know about the giant spider yet...

I see no logic to this whatsoever.
Jim was concerned that the harem girl guards would be the center of unwanted attention in Old Western society.

Until the elephant gets done with it. :ack:
:D

Geez, just let him go. He's not going to talk.
True.

Omnipresent character actor.
Indeed, she'll be appearing in the following week's Hogan's Heroes.

Wouldn't this have been obvious when the bandits were talking amongst themselves?
Possibly the underlings weren't in on it...I don't recall.

Cool as a cucumber.
HH02.jpg

I wonder what State he represented. :rommie:
Delaware. The "Pay up and get out" toll road scam is a KAOS front.

99 must have been laid off early on in the cutbacks. She seems to have been MIA.
She was indeed off for the week.

Bad writing. That's not a mistake that Rollin would make.
Actually, he does that all the time, so it was nice to see it come up as a plot point.

That's rather forward thinking of them.
It was a thing even back in the day...which you'd know if you watched The Godfather. :p

Also a valid point. It would have been funny if they had successfully talked him out of it and the IMF team ended up standing around with nothing to do. :rommie:
Not nothing--they'd have to finish the catering job. :D

Was this the inaugural off-screen gunshot?
Possibly. It's been years since I watched most of Season 1, so I couldn't say for sure.
 
Mission: Impossible "The Frame" Originally aired January 21, 1967

The only thing of note the book has to say about this episode is that it praises Steven Hill's performance as Dan Briggs. When confronted in a place where he shouldn't be, Briggs becomes a simpleminded man. After talking his way out of trouble, the slow cook disappears, and Dan Briggs instantly returns.

Which is something the book points out when the switch was made from Steven Hill to Peter Graves. When Steven Hill portrayed Dan Briggs, he played him as far more calculating and ruthless. When Steven Hill/Dan Briggs pointed a gun at you and said he would shoot, you believed him. When Peter Graves/Jim Phelps pointed a gun at you, you knew he was bluffing. As head writer Willian Read Woodfield said, "Peter Graves was successful at playing "the Rotarian", the typically unctuous middle-class American salesman-manufacturer."
 
Mick: Let's spend :rolleyes: some time :rolleyes: together...
I know, I meant I wonder if the studio audience could discern the change in lyrics.

Or they killed the only one on the island. Too bad the castaways didn't know about the giant spider yet...
Kincaid could have at least left the rifle and some ammo, now that I think of it.

Jim was concerned that the harem girl guards would be the center of unwanted attention in Old Western society.
A valid point.

Heh. He was a weird guy but made a good leading man.

Delaware. The "Pay up and get out" toll road scam is a KAOS front.
:rommie:

Actually, he does that all the time, so it was nice to see it come up as a plot point.
Yeah, but he doesn't usually play a deaf guy. He would have been prepared.

It was a thing even back in the day...which you'd know if you watched The Godfather. :p
My lack of education has finally caught up with me. :rommie:

Not nothing--they'd have to finish the catering job. :D
Hopefully underworld types are big tippers.

Which is something the book points out when the switch was made from Steven Hill to Peter Graves. When Steven Hill portrayed Dan Briggs, he played him as far more calculating and ruthless.
It's true, Hill was very intense. But I wonder if that would have played well over time. It seems to me like a Captain Pike versus Captain Kirk situation-- or Commander Sinclair versus Captain Sheridan.

When Steven Hill/Dan Briggs pointed a gun at you and said he would shoot, you believed him. When Peter Graves/Jim Phelps pointed a gun at you, you knew he was bluffing.
Yeah, but Phelps would fix it so you would shoot yourself. He was not entirely lacking in ruthlessness. :rommie:
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 20
Originally aired January 22, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • The Lovin' Spoonful - "Nashville Cats" & "Darlin' Be Home Soon"
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  • Ginger Rogers - "Before The Parade Passes By" (song from "Hello Dolly")
  • Johnny Mathis - medley of hits: "It's Not For Me To Say," "Twelfth Of Never," "Wild Is The Wind," "Chances Are," "Wonderful Wonderful!"
  • Johnny Mathis and Our Young Generation - "I'm Ready For Love"
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  • Abbe Lane (singer) - Spanish medley including "Call Me," "Spanish Flea," "La Bamba"
  • Jerry Stiller & Anne Meara (comedy team)
  • Bob King (stand-up comedian)
  • Topo Gigio (Italian mouse puppet)
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  • Berger's Chimps (trained animal act)
  • The Three Kims (acrobats-tumblers)
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  • Audience bows: Ruby Keeler, Billy Reed

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"Hogan and the Lady Doctor"
Originally aired January 27, 1967
IMDb said:
Hogan nixes a mission to destroy a synthetic fuel plant because the caper is too risky...but he is overruled and forced to participate in the scheme by the ploy's mastermind, a strong-willed, determined female scientist.

Hogan is dismayed that a mission to blow up a research lab is being led by a civilian, but is pleasantly surprised when Kinch brings her in via tunnel--Dr. Suzette Lechay (Ruta Lee), an escaped French scientist who's been living with the underground for a year. She's to look the place over before setting the explosives, but recon by Newkirk and Carter finds that the lab's compound is extremely well protected. Hogan wants to call off the mission because it would be suicide, but reluctantly defers to Lechay when she comes up with the idea of allowing herself to be recaptured so the Germans will put her to work in the plant. The prisoners arrange for Schultz to find her hiding in a barn that they've been working at, but he's about to blow the plan by letting her go until Klink rides up. Lechay and Hogan make sure that Klink learns who she is and what an important capture that makes for, so he summons Burkhalter, and Lechay puts up a show of resistance before agreeing to work for them to avoid Gestapo persuasion.

Lechay is initially set up with her own barracks at the stalag, but the Gestapo wants to take her to stay in the compound itself, which causes Hogan to want to call the mission off again, though the doctor insists on going through with it...while sharing a romantic moment with the colonel.

Hogan: You know something? That's the first time I've ever kissed my commanding officer.​

Hogan, Carter, and LeBeau, dressed as Gestapo officers, hijack the truck that's transporting her and force the Gestapo captain (Curt Lowens) at gunpoint to take them into the compound. The group proceed into the lab through a familiar-looking corridor set...
HH01.jpg
...then Lechay produces plastique explosive from the seams of her skirt, which Carter plants and sets. The party is leaving via the gate when the guard gets a call from the Gestapo guards who were left tied up in the wilderness, and the truck bursts out while being fired at...but the lab going up proves to be a useful distraction.

In the coda, Hogan asks Klink what happened to Lechay, whom he's seen off for England, and Klink finds lipstick on Hogan's cheek.

Auf wiedersehen.

_______

Get Smart
"The Man from YENTA"
Originally aired January 28, 1967
Wiki said:
CONTROL works with Israeli agent #498 (Alan Oppenheimer) to protect an Arab prince (Walker Edmiston), but everything goes awry. (Working title: "He Should Live and Be Well".)

The Chief brings Max to the hotel suite of Prince Abu bin Bubi to protect the prince and his 33 wives (we only see about a half dozen). Agent 13 is also embedded, hiding in a chimney behind a wall panel. A bellhop lights a candle that turns out to be dynamite, and Max tosses it out the window.

Max (calling down through the window): Sorry about that, Chief!​

Suspecting that one of the wives is a KAOS agent, the Chief assigns 99 to go undercover as one of the harem girls. Max meets Agent 498 from Israel's Your Espionage Network and Training Academy at the airport, where 498 is supposed to identify KAOS impersonation expert Le Moco so Max can take him into custody, but Le Moco (Paul Comi) slips by them disguised as a member of the flight crew.

Back at the suite, Max disguises himself as the prince to check out all of the wives by kissing them. We miss Max taking out three CONTROL agents, having mistaken them for KAOS, courtesy of Your Frndly Interruption. Le Moco sneaks in, clocks Max, and shoots him in a bulletproof vest, thinking that Max is the prince. Le Moco disguises himself as the prince and uses his talent for voice mimicry to pose as Max to get into Max's apartment, where the prince is being guarded by 498 disguised as the prince. Some confusion ensues, which worsens when the Chief walks in on all four of them looking like the prince. After a brief To Tell the Truth gag, a struggle ensues among the princes and Max successfully shoots Le Moco with a lucky guess.

Oppenheimer's role involved lots of stereotypical Jewish schtick.

_______

Mission: Impossible
"The Trial"
Originally aired January 28, 1967
IMDb said:
Briggs poses as an American tourist and subjects himself to a show trial in order to discredit a public prosecutor attempting to seize absolute power in his country.

A recording device I don't recognize in an architecht's office said:
Good morning, Mr. Briggs. Joseph Varsh [bearded Carroll O'Connor], public prosecutor and head of his country's secret police, is one of the most dangerous men in Eastern Europe. He heads the political faction which wants to heat up the Cold War. Opposed to him are those who favor co-existence, led by Anton Kudnov [David Opatoshu], a deputy premier. Varsh now plans to stir up feeling against the United States by arresting and charging some innocent American with a serious crime, and then staging a propaganda show trial for the world. He plans to use this to gain absolute power for himself. Should Varsh succeed, not only will the victim lose his freedom, and possibly his life, but the international peace will be threatened.

Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to stop Varsh, and to so discredit him that he will never again be a political threat. As always, should you or any of your IM Force be caught or killed, the Secretary will disavow any knowledge of your actions. This recording will decompose in five seconds. Good luck, Dan.

Another small team this week, as Cinnamon and Barney are off. Dan makes a call to Lisa Goren (Gail Kobe), whose husband Stephen was an agent for the West who was recently betrayed by her and liquated by her boyfriend, Varsh. Dan claims to have a gift for Stephen from someone with Stephen's codename, and arranges a meeting at a restaurant. Lisa immediately calls Varsh about it, and he smells a potential victim. Dan doesn't approach her at the restaurant, but watches as she meets with Varsh's aide, Barsky (Michael Strong), to report that the caller didn't show. Meanwhile, Rollin breaks into Lisa's place and photographs her correspondence with Varsh, including a photo of them together. When Dan calls Lisa again, he allows the call to be traced, and is identified as a tourist named Benton who visited several collective farms in the vicinity of a hydroelectric plant. Rollin disguised as Dan pays an unnanounced visit to Lisa's apartment. She tips off Varsh while pretending to call Stephen, and when she answers the door for Varsh and Barsky, Rollin slips out a window down into a truck being driven by Willy, leaving behind a case in which is hidden a car key...which is eventually matched to a car with explosives hidden in it. At the same time, real Dan keeps an appointment at the home of Deputy Premier Kudnov to discuss a soil conservation program--Dan's alibi. Benton's room is searched and microfilm is found; and when the real Dan returns to the room, he's arrested for conspiracy to commit sabotage.

After meeting with Judge Zubin (Don Keefer), who's in Varsh's pocket, Rollin visits Dan's bugged cell as Dan's defense counsel. The trial commences, with the evidence being presented--including blow-ups of the microfilm, which are photos of the hydroelectric plant. When cross-examined by Rollin, Lisa testifies to what time it was when "Benton" visited her. During a recess, Varsh gets a visit from Kudnov, who accuses Varsh of trying to frame an innocent American, confronting him with the alibi and threatening to expose Varsh in court if he doesn't drop the case.

Varsh privately has Dan brought to him to try to get the truth out him, asking about his meeting with Kudnov and pressing him about his part in a conspiracy. Afterward Varsh orders his men to prevent Kudnov from testifying the next day. Following a visit with Varsh demanding to see his client, Rollin visits Kudnov to tell him of how Benton is being interrogated by Varsh. Then Rollin uses a statuette on a turntable to cast a silouhette on a shaded window that looks a little too realistically like a man pacing around, which Kudnov's man Moisev (Paul Lukather) takes a shot at with a sniper rifle...convincing Kudnov of Varsh's intentions.

The next day at the trial, Barsky reports to Varsh that Kudnov hasn't been found. Rollin quesitons Lisa about her relationship with Varsh, producing the photograph and beginning to read from a letter that Varsh wrote to her after a romantic getaway. To save face, Varsh volunteers testimony that he was and still is using Lisa as a source of information against her husband, bringing her to tears. Rollin calls for a recess to produce his final witness, while Willy replaces one of the guards at the courtroom door. Moisev tails Rollin into the restroom, following which Kudnov enters dressed as a janitor, and Rollin TV Fus Moishev. Rollin reenters the courtroom and takes a seat in the witness stand; then Rollin enters the courtroom again to call his witness, Anton Kudnov, who tears off his Rollin mask on the stand. Kudnov then testifies how Benton was with him at the time of the alleged meeting with Lisa, and how Varsh had an attempt made on his life. Varsh starts losing it, and weighing Varsh's credibility against Kudnov's, the judge has Varsh placed under arrest; then offers an apology to Benton on behalf of the state.

_______

Which is something the book points out when the switch was made from Steven Hill to Peter Graves. When Steven Hill portrayed Dan Briggs, he played him as far more calculating and ruthless. When Steven Hill/Dan Briggs pointed a gun at you and said he would shoot, you believed him. When Peter Graves/Jim Phelps pointed a gun at you, you knew he was bluffing. As head writer Willian Read Woodfield said, "Peter Graves was successful at playing "the Rotarian", the typically unctuous middle-class American salesman-manufacturer."
I can see what they're saying, but still Steven Hill comes off as very wooden to me. Graves brought that something extra that the show needed.

I know, I meant I wonder if the studio audience could discern the change in lyrics.
I was just making an unrelated comment on the same segment...but maybe Mick was trying to signal those who couldn't hear.

Yeah, but he doesn't usually play a deaf guy. He would have been prepared.
But he routinely visibly reacts to things that the character he's playing shouldn't be reacting to.

But I wonder if that would have played well over time. It seems to me like a Captain Pike versus Captain Kirk situation
This.
 
Mission: Impossible "The Trial" Originally aired January 28, 1967

Guest star Carroll O'Connor remembers "The Trial" chiefly "because all the actors were personal friends of mine. They were all splendid actors and I had worked with them previously, so the job was a particular pleasure. The episode itself was not informed fiction but fantasy fiction and rather trivial. The series on the whole was fundamentally trivial, though very well acted and photographed."
 
Guest star Carroll O'Connor remembers "The Trial" chiefly "because all the actors were personal friends of mine. They were all splendid actors and I had worked with them previously, so the job was a particular pleasure. The episode itself was not informed fiction but fantasy fiction and rather trivial. The series on the whole was fundamentally trivial, though very well acted and photographed."
Any idea what the device that played the recording was? Some sort of Dictaphone?
 
"Darlin' Be Home Soon"
One of my all-time favorites.

Topo Gigio (Italian mouse puppet)
Now we know a little bit more about Topo's sexual proclivities. :rommie:

Berger's Chimps (trained animal act)
Better than Chimp Burgers.

Dr. Suzette Lechay (Ruta Lee), an escaped French scientist
Like Savoir Faire, she ees everywhere.

The prisoners arrange for Schultz to find her hiding in a barn that they've been working at, but he's about to blow the plan by letting her go
Good old Schultz. :rommie:

Hogan: You know something? That's the first time I've ever kissed my commanding officer.
You'll be hearing from HR, buddy.

The group proceed into the lab through a familiar-looking corridor set...
View attachment 34630
Apparently the architect defected. :rommie:

In the coda, Hogan asks Klink what happened to Lechay, whom he's seen off for England, and Klink finds lipstick on Hogan's cheek.
Thanks to the Gestapo, Klink's perfect record remains intact! :rommie:

the prince and his 33 wives (we only see about a half dozen)
Presumably they work in shifts.

Max (calling down through the window): Sorry about that, Chief!
Missed him by... oops, maybe not.

Some confusion ensues, which worsens when the Chief walks in on all four of them looking like the prince.
And he thought Spock had it tough. :rommie:

Oppenheimer's role involved lots of stereotypical Jewish schtick.
Well, it's Mel Brooks. :rommie:

Cinnamon and Barney are off.
Wow, I thought Barney was in every episode.

Then Rollin uses a statuette on a turntable to cast a silouhette on a shaded window that looks a little too realistically like a man pacing around
He should have used hand shadows and proven himself a real master of disguise. :rommie:

then Rollin enters the courtroom again to call his witness, Anton Kudnov, who tears off his Rollin mask on the stand
There's something you'll never see on Perry Mason. :rommie:

Graves brought that something extra that the show needed.
He's got a very distinctive face and manner, as well as an almost unique voice. :D

But he routinely visibly reacts to things that the character he's playing shouldn't be reacting to.
I never noticed that. But I don't really watch it that often.

Guest star Carroll O'Connor remembers "The Trial" chiefly "because all the actors were personal friends of mine. They were all splendid actors and I had worked with them previously, so the job was a particular pleasure. The episode itself was not informed fiction but fantasy fiction and rather trivial. The series on the whole was fundamentally trivial, though very well acted and photographed."
As Archie Bunker would say, "Well, Lah dee da." :rommie:
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 21
Originally aired January 29, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • The Woody Herman Orchestra - "Apple Honey"
  • Mel Torme and The Woody Herman Orchestra - "Bring Back Bands" and a medley ("A Taste of Honey," "I Left My Heart in San Fransisco" and "More")
  • Gail Martin (Dean Martin's daughter) - "He Loves Me" & "Rose of Washington Square"
  • Enzo Stuarti sings "Vesti la giubba"
  • Your Father's Mustache (banjo-playing band)
  • The Smothers Brothers (comedy team) - sing "John Henry"
  • George Carlin (comedian)
  • Nipsey Russell (comedian)
  • The Seven Staneks (acrobats) - balancing act

The Sullivan account has nothing from this one.

_______

WWWs2e19.jpg
"The Night of the Tartar"
Originally aired February 3, 1967
Wiki said:
President Grant orders West and Gordon to deliver Rimsky, a political prisoner, to Vladivostok in exchange for Millard Boyer, the American vice-consul. In the course of their duty the two are drugged and end up in Russia—or so it seems. Artemus speaks Russian in this episode (in real life Ross Martin was bilingual including Russian).

The agents open their sealed orders en route to San Francisco, from where they're supposed to take Rimsky to the Siberian port city via ship. Rimsky (Andre Philippe) is escorted aboard at their stop, where they're attacked inside the train by a sniper, giving Rimsky an opportunity to flee. He makes his way to a Russian-American warehouse, but falls from an outside ladder while trying to elude the agents and dies on the operating table. Col. Crockett (Walter Sande) explains to Jim that Rimsky headed a ring that extorted Russian immigrants. Artie offers to impersonate Rimsky to go through with the exchange, and seems to fool a Russian representative named Kuprin (Malachi Throne)--who was overseeing the sniping. Kuprin entertains Jim and Undercover Artie at a Russian grotto, where they're fed drugged caviar.

After futilely attempting to put up a fight, Jim comes to in what he's told is Vladivostok, led to believe that he was shanghaied on a Russian ship ahead of schedule. He and Artie use thermite to slip out of the floor of a coach, which turns up empty when it arrives at the site of the exchange. Jim subsequently visits the Russian in charge of the exchange, Rimsky's cousin, Count Nikolai Sazanov (John Astin, SNAP! SNAP!), to discuss the terms of exchange, and is tossed into the cell of Boyer (Martin Blaine), who tells Jim of how the count fell to disfavor because of gambling debt, sending his cousin to America to raise money with his racket.

West is staked out in a courtyard and threatened by men on horseback to talk, but Artie arrives in character...his lack of disguise beyond a false nose being enabled by a story that his beard was shaved off in America. Rimsky's wife, Anastasia (Susan Odin), greets Artie, and can tell the difference when she kisses him. Now the count wants the $5 million that Rimsky owes him. Artie stalls by claiming that it was taken from him in America, and after Anastasia tries to seduce the location of the money from him, is un-nosed by her. After the agents speculate in the cell that the money must have been in the warehouse, Boyer makes an excuse to be taken to the count to inform him. Jim and Artie escape their cell and listen in on this, but are caught and faced with execution to stop them from outing Boyer, who's ambitious for an ambassadorship.

Not intending to share the money, the count knifes Boyer. Meanwhile, Artie stalls Krupin and Anastasia long enough for Jim to cut his way free from his bonds. The agents escape on horseback, bringing Anastasia with them, and discover that they've been IMFed at a Russian settlement outside of Frisco when they run into a prospector (Chubby Johnson) on the road. Jim returns to the grotto for some undrugged tussling to take the count into custody, but ends up having to toss a knife into him in self-defense instead.

The episode ends on a disturbing note as Artie uses what will one day be known as a disco ball to hypnotize a pair of ladies he and Jim are entertaining on the train.

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"The Swing Shift"
Originally aired February 3, 1967
IMDb said:
Masquerading as German workers, Hogan and the crew have made elaborate and foolproof plans to blow a German cannon factory sky-high--but their plan backfires when Newkirk winds up being drafted into the German army.

The prisoners listen in as Burkhalter brings Hans Spear (Hal Smith), Germany's leading man in converting civilian factories into war plants, to ask Klink for temporary guards to watch a nearby auto plant that's been repurposed to produce cannons. Hogan tries to call in a bombing strike, but finds that there's a six-week waiting list, so the prisoners decide to infiltrate the plant as workers and sabotage it. The prisoners promptly get to work setting the cannons to be very shallow inside, and pulling switcheroos to get them past the inspector. Schultz actually does see nothing when he inattentively checks the prisoners' IDs in the line of incoming workers, but notices them later when they're working on the assembly line, only to be convinced to keep his silence because the prisoners got past him twice to get there.

The plan changes when Carter finds that the place has loads of gunpowder in storage. But then Spear stops the line to announce Newkirk's alias being drafted. The men consider trying to make him fail his physical, but realize that the bar must be pretty low for Schultz to have gotten in. At the induction center, the physical is indeed very brief. Then things take another turn when Klink arrives to take the entire current crop of recruits as replacement guards for Stalag 13--without even going through basic! Newkirk manages to keep his identity obscured by loudly blowing his nose in a handkerchief the entire time. Back at the factory, Hogan shows Spear one of the faulty cannons, claiming that it was only Newkirk being the foremen that kept "errors" like this from happening. Before the recruits are shipped out to the stalag, Newkirk is discharged to return to the factory. The prisoners and Stalag 13 guards are back at the camp when Spears is leaving and he and Klink hear the plant going up offscreen.

In the coda, Klink is boasting about his personally trained new guards to the prisoner line-up when Newkirk repeats his nose-blowing, giving the kommandant something to ponder.

DIIIIIIIIS-MIIIIIIISed.

_______

Get Smart
"The Mummy"
Originally aired February 4, 1967
Wiki said:
Max investigates a Washington museum where KAOS is smuggling agents into the country in mummy cases.

Max meets Agent 24 (Marc London) at a museum suspected of being involved in the disappearance of four CONTROL agents...and 24 become #5 when Max isn't looking, being dragged through a secret door in a sarcophagus. The Chief makes the connection that each agent disappeared on the day that a different pharaoh's mummy arrived at the museum. Max goes back to the museum wearing a mustache and consults Agent 13 hiding in a vase disguised as a plant. Max is then approached by assistant curator Lisa Smith (Lisa Gaye), who recognizes him from having appeared in a secret agent fan magazine and offers to help. We learn that Dr. Ramsey (Laurie Main, who's a man, baby) is working with KAOS, shipping their agents in via sarcophagus and sending CONTROL agents back out the same way. With the Cone of Silence out of commission, Max delivers intel to the Chief using the Coughing Code. Intending to ship Max out next, Ramsey has Smith call Max for a rendezvous.

Smith comes to Max's apartment, where Max puts truth serum in her drink and she puts a mickey in his, but they swap the drinks around a few times and end up with switched drinks. After a very frank conversation with the Chief via shoe phone, a KAOS agent sneaks in to knock Max out and he's taken back to the museum to be wrapped in mummy bandages by the now-conscious Miss Smith. Ramsey injects Max with a serum meant to make him completely rigid for a week for the journey, but the Chief arrives and finds him before it takes effect. Smith ends up getting the better of Agent 13, but the Chief TV Fus Ramsey and CONTROL comes out on top...with the Chief dropping the bandaged Max multiple times along the way.

The Chief: Sorry about that, Max.​

In the coda, Max is still under the effects of the serum, able to talk but standing up straight as a board, being carried into and out of the Chief's office...and the Chief is still knocking him over.

_______

Mission: Impossible
"The Diamond"
Originally aired February 4, 1967
IMDb said:
Briggs and company pretend to have found a means of synthesizing diamonds in order to con a dictator out of a priceless uncut diamond that will finance his government and secure his power.

The reel-to-reel tape in an autograph collector's shop said:
Good morning, Mr. Briggs. The man you're looking at is Henrik Durvard [John van Dreelen]. He seized power in Lombuanda, a small country on the Gulf of Guinea, and has given himself the title of Prime Minister. He is, in fact, a dictator who rules with an iron hand, keeping two million natives half-starved, with no schools, hospitals, or any voice in government. Recently, native tribesmen in the northern part of the country discovered a natural diamond that is rumored to be the largest ever found--nearly 27,000 karats, worth about $30 million. Durvard has confiscated the stone and intends to sell it, using the proceeds to take over other independent tribal areas.

Your mission, Dan, should you decide to accept it, is to stop Durvard, and return the diamond to its rightful owners. As always, should you or any of your IM Force be caught or killed, the Secretary will disavow any knowledge of your actions. Please dispose of this tape by the usual means. Good luck, Dan.

The usual means is dropping it in the well of a water cooler, which appears to be filled with ACID, MAN! We have a full portfolio this week with a couple of guest agents--diamond expert Hans Van Meer (Harry Davis), who's at the briefing, and Scotland Yard man / author Ian McCloud (Ivor Barry), who's waiting in London. The IMFers with Van Meer attend as Durvard makes an appearance at a diamond mart in London to announce the auction, offering a gem that he's had cut from the mother stone for examination. Dan and Rollin take pictures of it with their eyepieces, with the intent of having Van Meer make a forgery. Cinnamon, wearing a diamond necklace showcased in the briefing, approaches Durvard, claiming to represent a syndicate and wanting him to meet with her associate, who has a proposition. On their way to the meeting, their limo is hijacked by Pinstripe Willy and Stocking-Masked Barney, who robs the passengers, taking Cinnamon's jewelry. Cinnamon doesn't want to report it to the police, insisting that they proceed to Durvard's suite for the meeting.

The visiting associate turns out to be Rollin, who offers to top Durvard's highest bid by $500,000, with the stipulation that Durvard announce a second, nonexistent diamond find in his country, which will be used as a front for the syndicate to sell its own diamonds. (Both he and Cinnamon are using their real names.) Durvard and his diamond expert, Henks (Woodrow Parfrey), speculate that the syndicate are looking to sell stolen gems. Later, Barney and Willy access an electrical socket from the room next to Henks's, using it to dispense gas into the room, putting Henks and his guard (Peter Bourne) to sleep; then, with the hole in the wall fully open, use a long pole with a grabber to nab the gem from the case that Henks has attached to his person by a chain and replace it with the fake. This operation is complicated by a frisky cat who wasn't affected by the anesthetic because it rises, so they spray some more in its general direction and finish the job, putting the sockets back into place. (If the gas it so potent, they should have been getting some of it themselves through the fully open socket holes when they gassed the cat. They weren't wearing any breathing equipment.)

Dan is present for the next meeting at Durvard's suite, during which McCloud drops in to return Cinnamon's jewels, which the robbers attempted to pawn. Durvard is intrigued by two diamond rings having identical stones, and surmises that the syndicators have developed a process to make synthetic diamonds. The IMFers take Durvard and Henks to their warehouse, where Dan operates a machine to create fake duplicate diamonds, using a process that he developed and is very secretive about. Durvard wants them to make a duplicate of his gem from the mother stone, and they produce the already-made forgery. Rollin then destroys it, insisting that having a duplicate of such a unique stone would endanger their entire operation.

Durvard has the IMFers come to Lombuanda, where he sets them up with a factory in a well-guarded compound and makes a point of mistreating his native workers a little for the benefit of the audience. The IMFers set up their machine, which comes with an added bonus smuggled inside--Barney, natch! Durvard shares with Henks his intention to dispose of the IMFers once the machine is up and running and Henks has a chance to observe how it's operated. Then Durvard has the mother stone brought in for duplication, which Barney nabs from the other side of the machine and passes through a hole in the wall cut by Willy, who has a truck backed up against it outside. The machine subsequently goes into malfunction mode, and in all the confusion of spraying steam and Durvard's men trying to get the machine under control, the IMFers slip out the hole in the wall and drive the truck out of the gate as the plant goes up behind them.

_______

One of my all-time favorites.
Ed got my request!

Missed him by... oops, maybe not.
Must've missed him by some.

Well, it's Mel Brooks. :rommie:
True...I hadn't thought of that. Nevertheless, it was pretty cliched.

Wow, I thought Barney was in every episode.
Every season, at least.

He should have used hand shadows and proven himself a real master of disguise. :rommie:
"Boss, did you want me to hit Abe Lincoln?"

There's something you'll never see on Perry Mason. :rommie:
Someone on IMDb pointed out that by showing off the disguise tech in court, they inadvertently demonstrated how Briggs could be in two places at once.

He's got a very distinctive face and manner, as well as an almost unique voice. :D
And hair! But most of all, he brought personality/charisma that Hill as Briggs sorely lacked, as I'm being reminded in this batch of episodes. If, as described in the book, Graves was more like a salesman, that's exactly what the show needed given the convoluted scheme formula it eventually settled into. The IMF didn't get its job done through direct intimidation / threat of violence.

I never noticed that. But I don't really watch it that often.
I've definitely had occasion to reference it in the past.

As Archie Bunker would say, "Well, Lah dee da." :rommie:
Indeed! :lol:
 
Any idea what the device that played the recording was? Some sort of Dictaphone?

Sorry, the book doesn't give a description in the episode summary. Somewhere in the book is a partial list of devices used when Briggs/Phelps received their instructions. I'll have to look later.
 
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