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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

The only scenario I can think of is that they were dropped off by somebody else, so the Mods were expecting that vehicle to return-- but that leaves a whole other character unaccounted for by the plot.
The whole moment of Greer idiocy came up because he was in denial that there would be a fourth man / driver at all.

Linc: Well, it could tie into the thieves at the fur exchange.
Greer: How? There are three of them. Two are in jail, the other one's still unconscious, they're all accounted for.
Linc: Maybe not. We overlooked one thing. Now we know they wanted fur pelts. Well, they had to cart it away in something, there had to be a vehicle of some kind standing by.
[Greer sighs in exasperation offscreen.]
Pete: A white van would fit the bill.
Julie: And someone driving it.
Linc: It could be a fourth man.
Greer: Alright, I'll buy it...to a point.​

And I just rewatched the first scene...the driver was facing the front of the building, and drove off while everyone's attention was on his brother's body...but you'd think someone would have noticed, if not for plot-dependent ignorance.

Which is odd, but not impossible-- there was that much of an age difference between me and my Brother.
The same as the age difference between my sister and nephew.

And I can't see any plot reason for her to have been born blind-- she could have had an accident when she was ten or something.
True.

He does have kind of an Evil Transporter Duplicate look about him.
:techman:

However, the likelihood of her really being the spouse of our beloved Lt Columbo is about equal to Discovery being a legitimate prequel to TOS.
Please, don't bring the flash mob in here! I deal with that never-ending argument enough in my forums. :ack:
 
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The whole moment of Greer idiocy came up because he was in denial that there would be a fourth man / driver at all.

Linc: Well, it could tie into the thieves at the fur exchange.
Greer: How? There are three of them. Two are in jail, the other one's still unconscious, they're all accounted for.
Linc: Maybe not. We overlooked one thing. Now we know they wanted fur pelts. Well, they had to cart it away in something, there had to be a vehicle of some kind standing by.
[Greer sighs in exasperation offscreen.]
Pete: A white van would fit the bill.
Julie: And someone driving it.
Linc: It could be a fourth man.
Greer: Alright, I'll buy it...to a point.​

And I just rewatched the first scene...the driver was facing the front of the building, and drove off while everyone's attention was on his brother's body...but you'd think someone would have noticed, if not for plot-dependent ignorance.
I'd like to know how Greer thought they got there to begin with, and how they would escape. "Clearly, they were going to walk home wearing the furs!" :rommie:

Please, don't bring the flash mob in here! I deal with that never-ending argument enough in my forums. :ack:
Oops, sorry. I don't really want to deal with that either. :rommie:
 
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Post-50th Anniversary Viewing

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The Mod Squad
"Good Times Are Just Memories"
Originally aired October 26, 1972
IMDb said:
A dirty cop frames Pete for the murder of a confederate in crime.

While a singer and guitar player perform a folksy song at the park, Pete's waiting for a meeting with Georgy Felker (Frederick Herrick), who seems to know that he's an undercover cop and wants to discuss immunity. But in a concealed spot, Georgy is shaken down by crooked cop Lt. Jerry Price (Leif Erickson) over some stolen jewels. Georgy tells Price that he wants out, an altercation ensues, and Georgy's head lands on the obligatory rock. Georgy's waiting girlfriend, Prudence Gordon (Tyne "or Lacey" Daly), sees Price coming out of the hiding place, then goes in to find Georgy's body just as Pete's jumping in, which sends her running and screaming. Pete is arrested, and while Greer's trying to get him released, Price leans on an accomplice, a travel agent named McCleary (Clifford David), to learn Prudence's name and address, the latter of which he searches. Price subsequently learns from his son, Rick (Sam Elliott)--Greer's liaison with the D.A.'s office--that one of Greer's undercover kids has been arrested in connection with the killing. Price forges some incriminating evidence, including tracing and altering a note Georgy left about his meeting with Pete, and breaking into Pete's place to leave a key taped under a drawer.

After Pete's released, Price visits Greer to cast some doubt in Pete's direction. Price is present as both pieces of evidence are found. Meanwhile, the Mods are trying to track down Prudence--first roughing up an auto mechanic where Georgy worked, who leads them to her job at a jewelry making shop, where they talk to co-worker Johnny (pre-perm future General Hospital heartthrob Tony Geary). Outside, a pair of uniformed CLE approach to arrest Pete and he unprofessionally runs for it. The key leads to a locker where the stolen jewelry is found, and Greer blames Price for having pushed the investigation. The other Mods find Pete searching Prudence's place, and they lampshade a bit in arranging to have Pete "hide out" at Julie's place (which doesn't go anywhere anyway). Meanwhile, Price breaks into and searches Johnny's pad, where Pru is hiding out...seeing evidence that she's been there (her shoes), but is interrupted in searching for her by Johnny's return. After Price leaves, Pru cries to Johnny that he'll kill her.

McCleary calls Johnny wanting to know why the heat's on and looking for Pru, and learns about how Price killed Georgy. A police graphologist named Charlie (A. B. Mingleton) turns up evidence of how the incriminating note was traced, and Greer calls off the APB on Pete. Price goes to McCleary, who's the ringleader of the jewelry thieving operation, looking for his cut, but McCleary holds his knowledge of the murder over Price's head. The assembled Mods work out that McCleary's agency, which also sells theater tickets, scopes out the houses to rob, and the jewelry store cuts up the stolen jewels. Price meets with his son to protest about Pete being let off the hook, and we learn how Price is resentful of Greer's success on the force relative to his own, and even resents his son making more money than he does. McCleary instructs Johnny and Pru about the next house to be hit, and calls Price for intel about police patrols.

After an all-night stakeout of the jewelry store, the Mods witness Johnny meeting up with McCleary and tail them as they head for the next house by day on a sidecar motorcycle disguised as being for a blade sharpening service. Pru calls the police and goes to Greer's office to tell him what she saw and how McCleary approached Georgy and her months back after getting Price in his pocket. Not wanting to believe that Price is on the take and killed Georgy, Greer presses her for details and her story holds up. Greer then goes to a disbelieving Rick with what he knows. As McCleary is cracking the safe in the targeted home, Price shows up and tries to arrest him, knowing that he'll be fingered but wanting to go out on his own terms, as "top dog" (following up on a story he was telling Greer in a previous scene); but Johnny takes Price by surprise and the thieves split. The Mods chase after them on foot, intercepting them by running downhill as the cycle navigates a winding road and subduing them. Then Price pops up again holding his piece on all of them, but hands it over to Pete...coolly noting, "In the old days, cops carried guns."

Rick breaks into tears at seeing his father in cuffs at police HQ, and the senior Price grumbles some more about scraping by for 29 years. The freeze-framed last shot is uncharacteristically not a pull-out of the Mods exiting the scene, but of Greer hitting his office door in frustration.
Mod102.jpg

_______

Ironside
"Camera...Action...Murder!"
Originally aired October 26, 1972
Wiki said:
Ironside must figure out who's sending him films of future murder victims.

Mark shows up at the Cave in his new uniform, complete with gun belt, while the Chief is opening mail in Fran's absence. (It's later mentioned that he's attending the academy.) One of the packages contains a roll of silent 8mm film showing a woman (Erena Radich) being shot in the park from the direction of the camera. Our top-billed guests are Joe Don Baker and Dennis Patrick--both good suspects.

We quickly meet Baker's character, Eric Blair, in the back of a squad car that Fran is riding shotgun in, filming a documentary about a day in the life of a policewoman. Fran is upset by Blair's cavalier attitude while shooting on a pier as Fran looks at a woman's body that's been fished out of the drink; Blair explains that he was a combat photographer in 'Nam, so he's seen it all. Back at the Cave, Fran recognizes the woman in the film as the corpse, who's identified as Ann Simonson. Blair continues to follow Fran as she goes to Simonson's home to question her flakey roommate (Linda Gillin), covertly slipping in some filming against Fran's wishes. The Chief drives to the park to inspect the murder scene, questioning a young jogger who happens to be brandishing an 8mm camera (Elliott Street--both too obvious and not in the post-opening credits).

Back at the Cave, when another reel of film comes in, the Chief takes it more seriously. Eric recognizes this victim (Fleur H. Powell)--who waves at the camera before a gun is pulled in frame--as an old girlfriend, Rosemary Forrest. Her body is found, and when the team visits her home, Ironside finds that Rosemary's brother, Thatcher, is the jogger he met. They're joined by Arnold Gardner (Patrick), the executor of the estate that the Forrest siblings inherited from their parents, and Ironside breaks the news of why they've come. Afterward, Fran and Eric pay a call on Antonio Fazzi (Anthony Caruso), the owner of a hot dog stand that Simonson was walking away from in the film, and Eric's experience filming in the man's region of Italy helps get them in the door. Fazzi tells them that he always saw a young man running around in the park with a small camera. Back at the Cave, another reel arrives special delivery, showing another young woman (Emily St. Michael) being killed.

After questioning how well she knows Blair, Ironside sends Fran to question Thatcher. Believing Thatcher to be their #1 suspect, Mark objects to Ironside's cavalier attitude about sending her alone into danger. Thatcher comes off as awkward and sensitive, and Fran tells him to call her if he needs to talk about the loss of his sister. Gardner, who paints himself as a surrogate parent to the Forrest siblings, promptly visits the Cave to object to Thatcher being badgered in his current state of mind and promises to obtain a court order. Meanwhile, a budding attraction between Eric and Fran blossoms into romance, and he probes about whether she's too dedicated to her career to consider alternatives. A new film comes to the cave--this time 16mm and showing footage of the still-living Fran, who's of a similar type to the other girls, that Fran confirms was shot by Eric.

The Chief visits Eric's editing room, where it's found that the footage in question is missing, and he acknowledges that he's a suspect. While the Chief studies footage of the victims via a film editor/viewer that he's ordered and assembled and has Mark recreate the shooter's actions, Eric calls Fran to ask her to sneak out of her building--now staked out by a swarm of police--for a rendezvous with him, in which he asks her to come with him on a new assignment to Hawaii. While Ed is still trying to track down the body of the last victim, back at the Cave, the Chief voices to Mark a suspicion that the murders aren't the work of a deranged serial killer, but meant to cover up a killing with a more specific motive. Sneaking back to her apartment, Fran's approached in the dark by Thatcher, and her scream brings the CLE swarm down on him. When the Chief learns that the "wrong man" was arrested and the stakeout pulled, he, Mark, and Ed converge on Fran's place, arriving just in time to tackle a ski-masked assailant, who's taken down by a roundhouse kick from ESD and Scooby Doo'd to reveal...Mr. Gardner, the attorney!

In the coda, the Chief explains that he noticed a movement in all of the films when the killer switched the film to his right hand to fire with his left, and that Gardner was the only left-handed suspect...and he would have gotten away with it, too, if not for those meddlesome dicks! Eric drops in with a plan to get hitched with Fran while on his next assignment and have his subsequent globetrotting jobs double as their honeymoon, but she gently turns him down, telling him that she's not ready to disappear to the Great White North.

_______
 
"Good Times Are Just Memories"
True, but so are bad times.

Lt. Jerry Price (Leif Erickson)
Famed explorer.

Prudence Gordon (Tyne "or Lacey" Daly)
I get it. :rommie:

Rick (Sam Elliott)
Character actor of the monumental mustache.

Price visits Greer to cast some doubt in Pete's direction.
This should have set off alarm bells for Greer right there.

first roughing up an auto mechanic where Georgy worked
Aren't the Mods supposed to believe in peace and love and stuff?

a pair of uniformed CLE approach to arrest Pete and he unprofessionally runs for it.
Drama! But shouldn't Greer have just called him in?

turns up evidence of how the incriminating note was traced
I'm glad that didn't fool them for long.

The assembled Mods work out that McCleary's agency, which also sells theater tickets, scopes out the houses to rob, and the jewelry store cuts up the stolen jewels.
This is very reminiscent of the doggy episode.

we learn how Price is resentful of Greer's success on the force relative to his own
And this sounds like the Ed Asner episode.

a sidecar motorcycle disguised as being for a blade sharpening service
This seems likely to draw attention. :rommie:

Pru calls the police and goes to Greer's office to tell him what she saw
Hey, somebody does something smart. :rommie:

McCleary approached Georgy and her months back after getting Price in his pocket
So who's the boss? First it seemed like Price was the mastermind.

Not wanting to believe that Price is on the take and killed Georgy, Greer presses her for details and her story holds up.
"Okay, I'll buy it... up to a point!"

Price shows up and tries to arrest him, knowing that he'll be fingered but wanting to go out on his own terms, as "top dog"
A nice little redemptive moment for a character who's not much more than a whiner.

The Mods chase after them on foot, intercepting them by running downhill as the cycle navigates a winding road and subduing them.
That sounds pretty good. :rommie:

Then Price pops up again holding his piece on all of them, but hands it over to Pete...coolly noting, "In the old days, cops carried guns."
"Now we have super stunt doubles magically embedded in our breastbones, sir."

and the senior Price grumbles some more about scraping by for 29 years.
But there he is, back to whining.

The freeze-framed last shot is uncharacteristically not a pull-out of the Mods exiting the scene, but of Greer hitting his office door in frustration.
Sounds like more unearned drama. Their plotlines are getting a bit repetitive. They need to shake up the writer's room a bit, I think.

a squad car that Fran is riding shotgun in, filming a documentary about a day in the life of a policewoman.
Not a backdoor pilot.

Blair explains that he was a combat photographer in 'Nam, so he's seen it all.
Nice character touch, while also subtly raising suspicion.

covertly slipping in some filming against Fran's wishes.
More suspicious behavior.

Eric recognizes this victim (Fleur H. Powell)--who waves at the camera before a gun is pulled in frame--as an old girlfriend
This takes it a bit too far.

Her body is found
How does the cynical Eric take that?

Meanwhile, a budding attraction between Eric and Fran blossoms into romance
Cool, Fran gets a little action-- except it's just to point more suspicion at Eric. :rommie:

A new film comes to the cave--this time 16mm and showing footage of the still-living Fran
Blatant change in the MO. This will fool no one! :rommie:

Eric calls Fran to ask her to sneak out of her building--now staked out by a swarm of police--for a rendezvous with him
Suddenly Eric is stupid.

When the Chief learns that the "wrong man" was arrested and the stakeout pulled, he, Mark, and Ed converge on Fran's place, arriving just in time to tackle a ski-masked assailant, who's taken down by a roundhouse kick from ESD and Scooby Doo'd to reveal...Mr. Gardner, the attorney!
Not a bad twist. Presumably he's after the estate. But was he also planning to off Thatcher at some point? And why was he sending the films to the Chief? Was Gardner somehow aware of him because Eric was involved with Rosemary and was also working with Fran? It didn't seem like that timeline overlapped.

the Chief explains that he noticed a movement in all of the films when the killer switched the film to his right hand to fire with his left, and that Gardner was the only left-handed suspect
Good one.

...and he would have gotten away with it, too, if not for those meddlesome dicks!
:rommie:

Eric drops in with a plan to get hitched with Fran while on his next assignment and have his subsequent globetrotting jobs double as their honeymoon, but she gently turns him down, telling him that she's not ready to disappear to the Great White North.
You mean "take off." :rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week


June 2
  • Algeria became the first of the Arab OPEC nations to split with the rest of the Arab world, and ended its partial embargo on the export of oil to the Netherlands, almost eight months after curtailing oil production in October.
  • Luna 22, an exploratory probe launched form the Soviet Union on May 29, entered orbit around the Moon and would return photographs and data until September 2, 1975.

June 3
  • Yitzhak Rabin became the fifth Prime Minister of Israel after the Knesset, by a margin of 61 to 51, voted confidence in the ministers selected for his coalition government. Born in Jerusalem on March 1, 1922, Rabin was the first premier to have been born in what would become Israel, the other three having been born in Eastern Europe before immigrating to Palestine.
  • After a 40-day minesweeping operation, the U.S. Navy command office at Ismailia declared that the Suez Canal had been cleared of all active mines.
  • The American military presence in the southeast Asian kingdom of Laos ended after 15 years, as the last three U.S. military personnel arrived in Thailand on the final Air America flight.

June 4
  • The infamous "Ten Cent Beer Night" promotion at the Cleveland Stadium, for a game between the Cleveland Indians and the visiting Texas Rangers degenerated into a riot by drunken fans. With the price of 12-ounce (355 ml) cups of low-alcohol Stroh's beer reduced from 65 cents to 10 cents (equivalent in 2023 to 60 cents), servings of as many as six cups at time, and no limit to the number of purchases that could be made, the game attracted 25,134 paying customers, twice as many as expected. In the ninth inning, with the score tied, 5 to 5, an inebriated teenager ran onto the field and attempted to steal the cap off of one of the Rangers outfielders, Jeff Burroughs, who stumbled. The rest of the Rangers team, thinking Burroughs had been attacked, rushed to the outfield, and an estimated 200 fans came out of the stands to confront the visiting team. The Indians team grabbed bats to defend the besieged Rangers, and the umpiring crew ordered the game to be forfeited to Texas, which was credited with a 9 to 0 win under MLB rules at the time. Cleveland police arrested nine fans.
  • Construction began of the first Space Shuttle, OV-101, later given the name Enterprise, with Rockwell International building the test vehicle to specifications and finishing construction by September 17, 1976.

June 6
  • As part of the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Syria, the last 382 Syrian prisoners of war were returned from Israel to Damascus on a jumbo jet chartered by the International Red Cross while the remaining 56 Israeli POWs arrived at Tel Aviv after being released by Syria.

June 7
  • After 205 days (almost seven months), hunger strikers at Brixton Prison ended their refusal, since November 15, to voluntarily eat, in return for some concessions within the prison. Force feeding of the strikers had started on December 23.

June 8
  • An outbreak of 36 tornadoes, at least 18 of them F2 or higher, killed 22 people. Of the dead, 12 lived in Drumright, Oklahoma and six more in Emporia, Kansas.
  • Representatives of the United States and Saudi Arabia signed a wide‐ranging military and economic agreement, the first between the U.S. and an Arab nation, in hopes of giving incentives to the Saudis to increase their oil production.
  • Jon Pertwee made his last appearance as Doctor Who in the final episode of "Planet of the Spiders" and was replaced by Tom Baker.
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T-minus 62 days and counting.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
https://www.billboard.com/charts/hot-100/1974-06-08
1. "Band on the Run," Paul McCartney & Wings
2. "The Streak," Ray Stevens
3. "You Make Me Feel Brand New," The Stylistics
4. "Dancing Machine," Jackson 5
5. "Sundown," Gordon Lightfoot
6. "Billy, Don't Be a Hero," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods
7. "Help Me," Joni Mitchell
8. "The Entertainer," Music from "The Sting" feat. Marvin Hamlisch on Piano
9. "Midnight at the Oasis," Maria Muldaur
10. "For the Love of Money," The O'Jays
11. "Be Thankful for What You Got," William DeVaughn
12. "My Girl Bill," Jim Stafford
13. "Oh Very Young," Cat Stevens
14. "The Loco-Motion," Grand Funk
15. "If You Love Me (Let Me Know)," Olivia Newton-John
16. "The Show Must Go On," Three Dog Night
17. "Hollywood Swinging," Kool & The Gang
18. "I Won't Last a Day Without You," Carpenters
19. "I'm in Love," Aretha Franklin
20. "You Won't See Me," Anne Murray
21. "Haven't Got Time for the Pain," Carly Simon
22. "Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing," Stevie Wonder
23. "(I've Been) Searchin' So Long," Chicago
24. "Save the Last Dance for Me," The DeFranco Family feat. Tony DeFranco
25. "Just Don't Want to Be Lonely," The Main Ingredient
26. "Bennie and the Jets," Elton John
27. "TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)," MFSB feat. The Three Degrees
28. "One Hell of a Woman," Mac Davis
29. "On and On," Gladys Knight & The Pips
30. "I'm Coming Home," The Spinners

32. "Another Park, Another Sunday," The Doobie Brothers
33. "Mighty Mighty," Earth, Wind & Fire
34. "Come and Get Your Love," Redbone
35. "The Air That I Breathe," The Hollies
36. "The Payback, Pt. 1," James Brown

38. "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," Steely Dan

40. "Sideshow," Blue Magic

42. "Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me," Gladys Knight & The Pips
43. "Rock and Roll Heaven," The Righteous Brothers
44. "(We're Gonna) Rock Around the Clock," Bill Haley & His Comets
45. "Rock the Boat," Hues Corporation
46. "Already Gone," Eagles
47. "Train of Thought," Cher

52. "Oh, My My," Ringo Starr
53. "Tubular Bells," Mike Oldfield

56. "La Grange," ZZ Top
57. "My Mistake (Was to Love You)," Diana Ross & Marvin Gaye
58. "Hooked on a Feeling," Blue Swede

60. "Annie's Song," John Denver

62. "Rock Your Baby," George McCrae

65. "Radar Love," Golden Earring
66. "Waterloo," ABBA

69. "Takin' Care of Business," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
70. "Come Monday," Jimmy Buffett
71. "Finally Got Myself Together (I'm a Changed Man)," The Impressions

74. "Keep on Smilin'," Wet Willie

77. "If You Talk in Your Sleep," Elvis Presley

81. "Rebel Rebel," David Bowie

89. "Please Come to Boston," Dave Loggins


Leaving the chart:
  • "I'll Have to Say I Love You in a Song," Jim Croce (14 weeks)
  • "Keep On Singing," Helen Reddy (13 weeks)
  • "Let It Ride," Bachman-Turner Overdrive (15 weeks)
  • "Seasons in the Sun," Terry Jacks (21 weeks)


Recent and new on the chart:

"Rebel Rebel," David Bowie
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(June 1; #64 US; #5 UK)

"If You Talk in Your Sleep," Elvis Presley
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(#17 US; #6 AC; #6 Country)

_______

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

_______

Character actor of the monumental mustache.
Not at this point, which was not long after his brief stint as a main credits regular on M:I.

This is very reminiscent of the doggy episode.
Now that you mention it, yeah.

And this sounds like the Ed Asner episode.
That, too.

Hey, somebody does something smart. :rommie:
If she'd done it two or three acts sooner, it would've saved Pete a lot of trouble.

A nice little redemptive moment for a character who's not much more than a whiner.
More of a grumbler.

Their plotlines are getting a bit repetitive. They need to shake up the writer's room a bit, I think.
Not much time left for that...this is the last season.

Not a backdoor pilot.
It was odd that she seemed to be serving in a capacity in which she didn't normally for the sake of having a documentary filmed around her.

How does the cynical Eric take that?
The body was found offscreen, he wasn't present. Overall, he seemed relatively matter-of-fact about his relationship with her when he saw the film of her being killed.

Not a bad twist. Presumably he's after the estate. But was he also planning to off Thatcher at some point? And why was he sending the films to the Chief?
They didn't explain it all, but the implication was that Gardner's plan was to off Fran and set up Thatcher to take the fall for it; and that he'd steered Thatcher into being caught by the police at Fran's. Presumably the films were to make Thatcher a suspect.

Good one.
But before he'd worked all of that out, he'd literally seen the gun in the killer's left hand in the film of Rosemary being killed.

You mean "take off." :rommie:
Ah, yes...I didn't think that one through.
 
Luna 22, an exploratory probe launched form the Soviet Union on May 29, entered orbit around the Moon and would return photographs and data until September 2, 1975.
Hey, it worked!

With the price of 12-ounce (355 ml) cups of low-alcohol Stroh's beer reduced from 65 cents to 10 cents (equivalent in 2023 to 60 cents), servings of as many as six cups at time, and no limit to the number of purchases that could be made
Imagine how many stupid people it took to approve this stupid idea. :rommie:

Construction began of the first Space Shuttle, OV-101, later given the name Enterprise, with Rockwell International building the test vehicle to specifications and finishing construction by September 17, 1976.
There were such high hopes for the space shuttle....

Jon Pertwee made his last appearance as Doctor Who in the final episode of "Planet of the Spiders" and was replaced by Tom Baker.
Well, that was different.

"Rebel Rebel," David Bowie
Good early Bowie, but his best period is coming up soon.

"If You Talk in Your Sleep," Elvis Presley
I don't think I ever heard this one. It's actually kinda cute.

Not at this point, which was not long after his brief stint as a main credits regular on M:I.
Still a little shaver, huh? :rommie:

If she'd done it two or three acts sooner, it would've saved Pete a lot of trouble.
So many bad decisions on these shows.

Not much time left for that...this is the last season.
I guess I can see why.

The body was found offscreen, he wasn't present. Overall, he seemed relatively matter-of-fact about his relationship with her when he saw the film of her being killed.
Not really a very sympathetic character to give Fran for a love interest, but he had to be suspicious.

They didn't explain it all, but the implication was that Gardner's plan was to off Fran and set up Thatcher to take the fall for it; and that he'd steered Thatcher into being caught by the police at Fran's. Presumably the films were to make Thatcher a suspect.
Which would effectively give him control of the estate. Makes sense.

But before he'd worked all of that out, he'd literally seen the gun in the killer's left hand in the film of Rosemary being killed.
Oh, well then. :rommie:

Ah, yes...I didn't think that one through.
The things I remember.... :rommie:
 
Jon Pertwee made his last appearance as Doctor Who in the final episode of "Planet of the Spiders" and was replaced by Tom Baker.

Up until Tom Baker's tenure as The Doctor, Pertwee was the longest serving actor in the role. What's even more interesting is that Tom Baker was filming his first serial, "Robot", while Pertwee was filming "Planet of the Spiders" as part of the same production block in an order for the BBC to save money. Elizabeth Sladen and Nicholas Courtney, amongst others, had to run between set-ups and locations for the two serials.
 
"Rebel Rebel," David Bowie (June 1; #64 US; #5 UK)

Good early Bowie, but his best period is coming up soon.

In a strange coincidence, I was at the library after work the other day, and I was browsing through the music section, when I started flipping through the 'B's and came across almost the entire David Bowie seventies output on CD. I checked them out and have been slowing working/listening my through his back catalogue and I'm on 'Diamond Dogs'. He's quite an interesting musical chameleon. I don't know yet if I like him or not.
 
Up until Tom Baker's tenure as The Doctor, Pertwee was the longest serving actor in the role. What's even more interesting is that Tom Baker was filming his first serial, "Robot", while Pertwee was filming "Planet of the Spiders" as part of the same production block in an order for the BBC to save money. Elizabeth Sladen and Nicholas Courtney, amongst others, had to run between set-ups and locations for the two serials.
That's interesting. I wonder if they had to go back and forth in the same day. It must have been a challenge to keep their heads in the right place for their performances.

In a strange coincidence, I was at the library after work the other day, and I was browsing through the music section, when I started flipping through the 'B's and came across almost the entire David Bowie seventies output on CD. I checked them out and have been slowing working/listening my through his back catalogue and I'm on 'Diamond Dogs'. He's quite an interesting musical chameleon. I don't know yet if I like him or not.
He definitely went through various stages. I do like most of them to some degree, but his mid 70s stuff is what I like best. "Changes," "Fame," "Golden Years," "Young Americans," and my favorite, "Sound and Vision."
 
Well, that was different.
I was never a Whovian myself, but I used to hang out with some, and I remember them playing that scene on VHS. And it's the arrival of the most iconic actor in the role (or at least he was in the day).

Good early Bowie, but his best period is coming up soon.
Nice little rocker.

I don't think I ever heard this one. It's actually kinda cute.
Not one of his more memorable or distinctive hits.

Still a little shaver, huh? :rommie:
More of a young, hunky type at this point.
Mod103.jpg

Not really a very sympathetic character to give Fran for a love interest, but he had to be suspicious.
He came off better in context, but they were definitely playing him up as a suspect...including a tease just before Gardner's attack on Fran of him ominously watching Fran's window from a distance.

Which would effectively give him control of the estate. Makes sense.
Actually, I realized that the attack on Fran made no sense at that point if he was trying to implicate Thatcher. There was some conspicuous handwaving from the Chief at one point about how the killer may have a motive but still be deranged. This episode was uncharacteristically nonexplanatory at the end.

He definitely went through various stages. I do like most of them to some degree, but his mid 70s stuff is what I like best. "Changes," "Fame," "Golden Years," "Young Americans," and my favorite, "Sound and Vision."
"Changes" was originally released in '72, though apparently a reissue in late '74 charted higher.
 
I was never a Whovian myself, but I used to hang out with some, and I remember them playing that scene on VHS.
When I was a teenager, everything was Star Trek and Doctor Who. I tried a few times, but I couldn't get into Who for some reason. Then I tuned in to see the Baker-to-Davison regeneration and got a little hooked. Like David Tennant said in that short film, Davison is "my" Doctor.

And it's the arrival of the most iconic actor in the role (or at least he was in the day).
Yeah, he was the David Tennant of the first era. Or David Tennant was the Tom Baker of the second era. That's why the "Curator" scene is my favorite thing about the new era.

More of a young, hunky type at this point.
View attachment 39989
Wow, he kinda favors Dr Brackett a little bit in that pic.

Actually, I realized that the attack on Fran made no sense at that point if he was trying to implicate Thatcher.
I figured the idea was we were supposed to think Fran's earlier kindness had turned him on and thus triggered his pathology. Gardner would have been in a position to play up that scenario.

There was some conspicuous handwaving from the Chief at one point about how the killer may have a motive but still be deranged.
I figure if somebody cold-bloodedly kills a few people, derangement is a given. :rommie:

"Changes" was originally released in '72, though apparently a reissue in late '74 charted higher.
Yeah, I definitely associate it with '74.

I was looking at his filmography and I don't think the mustache was well and truly established until the movie 'Lifeguard' filmed in 1975 and released in 1976. It's been pretty much a part of him since then.
I think it took over and controlled him for the rest of his life, like some creature out of an EC comic. :rommie:
 
_______

Post-50th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Mod Squad
"Corbey"
Originally aired November 2, 1972
Wiki said:
When Greer is framed as being on the take, the Squad begins an investigation to clear his name.

A drug dealer and informant named Tipper Saxon (Eddie Ryder) is rounded up by a couple of hoods to talk to their boss, Nick Master (Nehemiah Persoff doing Brando), who offers to let Tipper get out of debt by doing him a favor. Greer is brought into the interrogation room as Tipper tells Chief Metcalf that Greer's on the take for a hood named Benny Tarkin. As proof, he takes Metcalf and Greer out to the parking garage and opens the air filter to reveal a bag of dope. While Metcalf is sure that it's a set-up, a past incident in which Greer called off a bust of Tarkin causes him to begin a formal investigation. Metcalf forbids the Mods from getting involved, and Greer backs him up on it when they offer to do so off the books. Elsewhere, Tarkin (Stack Pierce) wants to get to the bottom of things because this somehow puts the heat on him, and sends his hoods to find Tipper so he can make the informant "an offer he can't refuse". (See the pattern?) After calling a woman named Laura Johnson (Jeane Byron) to inform her that he'll have to miss the party of a titularly named boy, Greer goes to Julie's to confront the male Mods about an offscreen search for Tipper that they've been conducting, and Linc suggests that whoever Tipper's working for may have disposed of him.

This sends Greer drinkside to force his way onto Master's yacht. As the captain questions Master about what he's pulling, we learn that Master is trying to get leverage on Greer concerning Corbey on behalf of someone named Vince, which causes Greer to make threats. At his party, the tow-haired boy in question (Mitchell Silberman) asks about Uncle Adam, and a Mrs. Parker (Barbara Dodd) informs Laura and her husband, Frank (Russell Arms), of the allegations against Greer. The kids at the party tease Corbey, who dives off his chair to the floor and hobbles out of the room on crutches. Back at HQ, the Mods take more heat from Metcalf about the investigation that we're not even seeing, but the chief then lets them in on a mysterious bank account that Greer's supposed to be holding for a minor named C. Johnson, to which a potentially incriminating deposit has recently been made. Julie gets ahold of Greer's file and isn't able to find anything on a Johnson, but takes interest in how a brother of Nick Master named Vince was killed while Greer was attempting to arrest him. After we see Nick giving the order on the phone to off Tipper, Tarkin's hoods find Saxon's body and decide to split town to get out of a potential crossfire between their boss and Master.

After some more offscreen legwork, the Mods track down Greer to a park and ask him about a bicycle he ordered and whether a kid named Corbey they learned about is C. Johnson, and air their theory of how Master is after Greer for killing his brother, but the captain asks them to lay off. After Tipper is found by the authorities, Metcalf has the Mods hit the streets to try to find Tarkin in order to clear up that Greer wasn't involved. The Mods, unable to keep the plot straight, track down the bicycle shop and learn the address that it's being delivered to...but are tailed by Master's henchman, Case (Nick Georgiade), to the Johnson home, where they find Greer overseeing the bike delivery.

After telling the Mods to get off his back, Adam is persuaded by their familial bond to flash back to his attempted arrest of Vince Master (Lee Stanley) without backup at the hood's fleabag room. Master went for a gun, was shot by Greer, and his last words were to make Greer promise to keep Nick away from his kid. Hearing a thud, Greer found Corbey wounded in the next room, Vince's bullet having gone through the door. Greer explains to the Mods how a judge arranged for Greer to become Corbey's temporary guardian and he found the Johnsons to adopt the boy. The Mods tell him about the recent conspicuous $5,000 deposit and Greer realizes that it's another attempt by Master to implicate him. Master and his hoods then arrive, hold everyone at gunpoint, and wait for Corbey to return with Mr. Johnson. When they do and honk the horn at seeing Uncle Adam's car, the MSDs seize the distraction to go into action...
Mod104.jpg
Master is wounded in an exchange of fire with Greer, who rushes out when he finds that Master's shot has gone through the front door that Corbey is on the other side of...but it missed and the boy is fine.

In the coda, the Mods and Johnsons watch as Greer helps Corbey learn how to ride his bike. After a bit of exposition wraps up the dangling Tarkin thread that went nowhere and really didn't serve a purpose, the titular child rides down the street unaided on two wheels.

One of Master's hoods was an uncredited Charles Napier.

_______

Ironside
"Riddle Me Death"
Originally aired November 2, 1972
Wiki said:
When a package is stolen, a series of Oriental ideograms give clues to the contents.

Jake Spencer (William Bryant) is showing his daughter Jane (Sian Barbara Allen) around Frisco when he notices somebody watching him on the trolley and abruptly gets off to deliver a package. Acting paranoid about being seen by police and his head on a swivel for whoever may be following him, he ends up being fatally hit by a car and the package gets lost in the commotion. Fran is at the morgue when Jane picks up his effects, asks about the package, and tells the clerk (Thomas Bellin) that her father was murdered.

After a post-teaser credits song, a seemingly friendly cab driver (William Devane) lets Jane put her father's thing in his front seat only to drive off with them. Fran takes her to the Cave, where she shares a cryptic letter from her father that she found before learning of his death, which tells her that if anything should happen to him, she should wait for someone named Whitetree and "drink all of the wine". She explains how her father had just come back into her life after fifteen years, during which time she'd been raised by an aunt. When Ironside asks skeptical questions, Jane storms out upset and Fran, feeling a sympathetic bond based on her own origin story, gets sore at the Chief.

At Jane's hotel, the cab driver forces his way into her room and asks her where "it" is. While he's making Jane show him everything in the room, Fran arrives with the desk clerk (Joe Ponazecki) and he exits via window with the note. The cab is found with the body of its actual driver and the package that Jane put in it, which contains odd trinkets; and Jane produces a set of initialed cufflinks from her father's bag. The team learns that Spencer was looking into sending a couple of packages to L.A. Tracking the cabs previous stop, an unpleasant motel manager who tries the Chief's patience (Anne Ramsey) identifies the phony driver as a former guest named Al Chambers. An airline tag she recalls seeing is for a company that charters flights to the Orient; a wall calendar with a missing current page reveals an imprint of an appointment note; and Ed turns up that Spencer recently returned from a construction job on Okinawa with Al Chambers. The Chief realizes that the clues they've been studying are a sort of ideograph puzzle, and that the appointment was the arrival of a Japanese ship, the Dan Maru.

Jane learns from Ed that prior to his eight-year job on Okinawa, her father served time for robbery. The Chief works on mapping out an ideograph of characters for things that the trinkets represent, hoping to form a larger picture. The captain of the Dan Maru (Yuki Shimoda) tells Ed of a crewman who jumped ship named Skiraki--which means "white tree"--and the Chief realizes that this is who Spencer was trying to relay his cryptic message to. While the Chief is narrowing down the message to being about a citizen of a particular nation (kuni hito), he gets a call from Spencer's hotel desk clerk that a man named Shiraki (Ernest Harada) is there asking him about Spencer. Also taking a seat in the lobby as he waits is Chambers.

By the time Ed arrives, Shiraki has been taken to a pier by Spencer and is found beaten and left for dead. Questioned before medication puts him out, Shiraki points Ironside to a cemetery, where they find a grave for a person named Kunihito that has a package hidden in a hole covered by a patch of turf...which contains a priceless idol stolen from a temple. Spencer pops up with a gun to take it, but the arrival of CLE backup serves as a distraction that allows ESD to subdue him. It turns out that the cemetery gatekeeper (Tad Horino) tipped off the Chief that he was under duress from Spencer with a symbolic message conveyed by a cufflink of a samurai sword...as the Chief explains in the coda prior to Ed taking Jane out to dinner, the two of them having been getting friendly over the course of the episode.

The whole ideograph angle pretty much went over my head. We see Mark studying and coming home from directing traffic.

_______

When I was a teenager, everything was Star Trek and Doctor Who. I tried a few times, but I couldn't get into Who for some reason. Then I tuned in to see the Baker-to-Davison regeneration and got a little hooked. Like David Tennant said in that short film, Davison is "my" Doctor.
He was the current Doctor during my brief attempt at watching the show, at which point Baker's shadow loomed very large.

I figured the idea was we were supposed to think Fran's earlier kindness had turned him on and thus triggered his pathology. Gardner would have been in a position to play up that scenario.
But Thatcher was in custody at this point, so attacking Fran would only get Thatcher off the hook. He may have been trying to implicate Eric, but if so, I'm not sure why.
 
In terms of heterosexual man crushes, Sam Elliott is pretty high on the list; Paul Newman as well.
Heh. I can see Paul Newman.... :rommie:

he takes Metcalf and Greer out to the parking garage and opens the air filter to reveal a bag of dope
So the accusation is that Greer is being paid off in dope, which he keeps in the air filter of his car at work, risking both his career and his miles per gallon.

Metcalf is sure that it's a set-up
Smart. This is why they made him Chief.

Metcalf forbids the Mods from getting involved
On the other hand....

Greer goes to Julie's to confront the male Mods about an offscreen search for Tipper that they've been conducting
"I told you guys not to do your jobs! Look at Julie! She's not helping at all!"

This sends Greer drinkside to force his way onto Master's yacht.
This is much smarter than letting the Mods go to work.

the Mods take more heat from Metcalf about the investigation that we're not even seeing
"All this progress will reflect poorly in your annual performance evaluations."

Tarkin's hoods find Saxon's body and decide to split town
"Ugh! I just stepped in some Tipper gore!"

Metcalf has the Mods hit the streets to try to find Tarkin in order to clear up that Greer wasn't involved.
"That'll keep them busy so they stop helping... wait...."

After telling the Mods to get off his back
And his lawn!

Greer explains to the Mods how a judge arranged for Greer to become Corbey's temporary guardian and he found the Johnsons to adopt the boy.
The law sure does work funny in Modworld.

Master and his hoods then arrive, hold everyone at gunpoint, and wait for Corbey to return with Mr. Johnson.
So Master is looking to both wreak vengeance on Greer and illegally assume custody of Corbey?

Master is wounded in an exchange of fire with Greer, who rushes out when he finds that Master's shot has gone through the front door that Corbey is on the other side of...but it missed and the boy is fine.
That's a nice bit of circularity. I actually like the backstory of Greer being asked a dying favor by the man he killed. Of them all, Greer got the best spotlight episode, but this trope of keeping secrets and angrily refusing help is really irritating.

he notices somebody watching him on the trolley
For real, or is he just being paranoid?

Acting paranoid about being seen by police
Because I don't see any reason for the police to be looking for him at this point.

he ends up being fatally hit by a car and the package gets lost in the commotion.
So is this the idol or the package that ends up with the police clerk?

she shares a cryptic letter from her father that she found before learning of his death, which tells her that if anything should happen to him, she should wait for someone named Whitetree and "drink all of the wine".
I think dad watches too many old movies.

Shiraki has been taken to a pier by Spencer and is found beaten and left for dead.
I take it that was supposed to be Chambers, otherwise this has really taken a turn for the weird. :rommie:

which contains a priceless idol stolen from a temple.
The Temple of Doom apparently.

The whole ideograph angle pretty much went over my head.
None of it made any sense to me whatsoever. Who stole the idol and why? Why was it hidden in Kunihito's grave? Who was Kunihito? What was the relationship between Spencer, Chambers, and Shiraki? Who was meeting the Dan Maru? Does Shiraki survive? Why did he jump ship? Why was Jane supposed to drink wine with Shiraki? Who was Spencer going to send the packages to in LA? Et cetera, et cetera... :rommie:

But Thatcher was in custody at this point, so attacking Fran would only get Thatcher off the hook.
Ohh, okay. I didn't catch that.
 
Smart. This is why they made him Chief.
He was basically playing Substitute Greer in this one.

On the other hand....
Because they're too attached.

This is much smarter than letting the Mods go to work.
Mod105.jpg

"Ugh! I just stepped in some Tipper gore!"
:o

The law sure does work funny in Modworld.
Greer just better keep his eye on Julie...

So Master is looking to both wreak vengeance on Greer and illegally assume custody of Corbey?
Yep.

For real, or is he just being paranoid?
For real, it was Chambers.

So is this the idol or the package that ends up with the police clerk?
Unclear, but I don't think this package was ever recovered.

I take it that was supposed to be Chambers, otherwise this has really taken a turn for the weird. :rommie:
Ah, yes.

Who stole the idol and why?
Presumably Spencer and Chambers to get rich.
Why was it hidden in Kunihito's grave?
Unclear.
Who was Kunihito?
Not sure that was important. His name was a convenient clue.
What was the relationship between Spencer, Chambers, and Shiraki?
Spencer and Chambers had worked together in Okinawa. I got the impression that they were former partners in crime who turned against each other. They probably knew Shiraki in Okinawa as well.
Who was meeting the Dan Maru?
Spencer to rendezvous with Shiraki.
Does Shiraki survive?
I'd assume, if they didn't tell us otherwise.
Why did he jump ship?
Unclear, unless that was just the captain's way of saying that he went AWOL when they got to port.
Why was Jane supposed to drink wine with Shiraki?
It slipped past me when I was watching, but the buried idol was in a sake box.
Who was Spencer going to send the packages to in LA?
Unclear.
 
Because they're too attached.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.... :rommie:

I'm assuming this never got back to Internal Affairs.

Greer just better keep his eye on Julie...
They should have had a bonding moment. :rommie:

Unclear, but I don't think this package was ever recovered.
A dangling thread....

Presumably Spencer and Chambers to get rich.
It just seems an odd crime for those two to commit, and then to smuggle it out of the country. Actually, it just occurred to me that maybe Shiraki hired them.

Unclear, unless that was just the captain's way of saying that he went AWOL when they got to port.
Yes, that's probably what it was.

It slipped past me when I was watching, but the buried idol was in a sake box.
Makes sense. A wobbly plot, but maybe not as bad as it first seemed.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


June 9
  • Meeting in Egypt, the Palestinian National Council, legislative body for the terrorist Palestine Liberation Organization, voted to adopt the "Ten Point Program", including the establishment of an Arab-Palestinian state in the entire region of Palestine within the pre-1948 borders, and the return to their original homes of all Palestinian refugees who fled Israel.
  • The new Northrop YF-17A American fighter jet made its first flight. The next day, it would become the first U.S. jet to break the sound barrier in level flight when not in afterburner.

June 10
  • U.S. President Richard Nixon began a five-nation tour of Austria and the Middle East, as the presidential airplane, Air Force One, landed in Salzburg, along with his wife, Pat Nixon, and U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Nixon was greeted on landing by Austria's Chancellor Bruno Kreisky and Foreign Minister Rudolf Kirchschlaeger, and then traveled by motorcade to his lodgings at the Schloss Klessheim palace.

June 11
  • Bill Clinton, a 27-year-old law professor at the University of Arkansas, won his first election, the Democratic Party runoff for the nomination for U.S. Representative of the Arkansas Third District, defeating state senator Gene Rainwater. Bill Clinton and W. E. "Gene" Rainwater had been the top two finishers in a May 28 election. The future U.S. President would lose in November to the incumbent, Congressman John Paul Hammerschmidt.

June 12
  • Citing "the changing social climate" in the U.S., Little League Baseball, Inc., by its CEO, Peter J. McGovern, announced from its headquarters in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, that it would allow girls to enroll in the baseball program formerly limited to boys from 4 to 16 years old. The Board of Trustees of the Little League Foundation, and the Board of Directors of the corporation voted that girls would be allowed in the program, but that "Whether they play or not would depend on managers and coaches of the individual teams. The girls would have to provide equal competency in baseball skills, physical endowments and other attributes scaled as a basis for team selection."
  • Rioting began in the South Jamaica section of Queens in New York City, after NYPD policeman Thomas Shea was acquitted of all charges arising from his fatal shooting of Clifford Glover, a 10-year-old African-American child, on April 28, 1973. Over the next few days, 10 civilians and 14 policemen were injured.
  • U.S. President Nixon was greeted by a cheering crowd estimated at two million people in Egypt as he and his wife were escorted in a motorcade through the streets of Cairo.

June 13
  • In his capacity as Earl of Chester, Prince Charles, the future King Charles III of the United Kingdom, delivered his first speech in the House of Lords, becoming the first royal to speak from the floor of the House since Albert, Duke of Saxony, the future King Edward VII, had spoken in 1884.
  • Richard Nixon became the first U.S. President to visit Saudi Arabia, where he was greeted in Jiddah by King Faisal, but not by large crowds similar to the millions who had welcomed him to Egypt.
[T-minus 57 days and counting.]​

June 14
  • The Lunar Surface Magnetometers placed on the Moon by the Apollo 12 mission (at the Oceanus Procellarum in 1969) and the Apollo 15 mission (at the Palus Putredinis lava plain on the edge of the Mare Imbrium in 1971) were deactivated by NASA.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Billy, Don't Be a Hero," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods
2. "You Make Me Feel Brand New," The Stylistics
3. "Sundown," Gordon Lightfoot
4. "The Streak," Ray Stevens
5. "Band on the Run," Paul McCartney & Wings
6. "Dancing Machine," Jackson 5
7. "Be Thankful for What You Got," William DeVaughn
8. "The Entertainer," Music from "The Sting" feat. Marvin Hamlisch on Piano
9. "For the Love of Money," The O'Jays
10. "Midnight at the Oasis," Maria Muldaur
11. "If You Love Me (Let Me Know)," Olivia Newton-John
12. "Help Me," Joni Mitchell
13. "Hollywood Swinging," Kool & The Gang
14. "My Girl Bill," Jim Stafford
15. "The Loco-Motion," Grand Funk
16. "Haven't Got Time for the Pain," Carly Simon
17. "The Show Must Go On," Three Dog Night
18. "You Won't See Me," Anne Murray
19. "Oh Very Young," Cat Stevens
20. "I Won't Last a Day Without You," Carpenters
21. "Save the Last Dance for Me," The DeFranco Family feat. Tony DeFranco
22. "On and On," Gladys Knight & The Pips
23. "Rock the Boat," Hues Corporation
24. "I'm Coming Home," The Spinners
25. "One Hell of a Woman," Mac Davis
26. "(I've Been) Searchin' So Long," Chicago
27. "The Air That I Breathe," The Hollies

29. "Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing," Stevie Wonder

31. "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," Steely Dan
32. "Sideshow," Blue Magic
33. "Rock and Roll Heaven," The Righteous Brothers
34. "Rock Your Baby," George McCrae
35. "I'm in Love," Aretha Franklin
36. "Just Don't Want to Be Lonely," The Main Ingredient
37. "Annie's Song," John Denver
38. "Bennie and the Jets," Elton John
39. "Train of Thought," Cher
40. "TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)," MFSB feat. The Three Degrees
41. "Another Park, Another Sunday," The Doobie Brothers
42. "Already Gone," Eagles
43. "Come and Get Your Love," Redbone
44. "Mighty Mighty," Earth, Wind & Fire

47. "The Payback, Pt. 1," James Brown

50. "La Grange," ZZ Top

52. "Waterloo," ABBA

54. "Radar Love," Golden Earring

56. "Takin' Care of Business," Bachman-Turner Overdrive

59. "(We're Gonna) Rock Around the Clock," Bill Haley & His Comets
60. "Come Monday," Jimmy Buffett
61. "Finally Got Myself Together (I'm a Changed Man)," The Impressions
62. "If You Talk in Your Sleep," Elvis Presley

64. "Keep on Smilin'," Wet Willie

72. "Rebel Rebel," David Bowie

76. "Please Come to Boston," Dave Loggins

79. "Tell Me Something Good," Rufus

87. "You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy

98. "The Night Chicago Died," Paper Lace
99. "Wild Thing," Fancy


Leaving the chart:
  • "Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me," Gladys Knight & The Pips (17 weeks)
  • "Hooked on a Feeling," Blue Swede (17 weeks)
  • "My Mistake (Was to Love You)," Diana Ross & Marvin Gaye (16 weeks)
  • "Oh, My My," Ringo Starr (14 weeks)
  • "Tubular Bells," Mike Oldfield (16 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Wild Thing," Fancy
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(#14 US; #52 UK)

"You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy
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(#9 US; #1 AC)

"Tell Me Something Good," Rufus
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(#3 US; #3 R&B; #52 UK)

"The Night Chicago Died," Paper Lace
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(#1 US the week of Aug. 17, 1974; #27 AC; #3 UK)

_______

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

_______

It just seems an odd crime for those two to commit, and then to smuggle it out of the country. Actually, it just occurred to me that maybe Shiraki hired them.
I didn't get that impression. Spencer and Shiraki seemed to be friendly conspirators, while Chambers was in the know and after their pilfered treasure. His role in its theft was unclear, but the implication was that he was a former associate.
 
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