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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

"(You're) Having My Baby," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates
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(#1 US the weeks of Aug. 24 through Sept. 7, 1974; #5 AC; #6 UK)

Strong nostalgia factor with this one.

It occurs to me that both Paul Anka and Neil Sedaka both are having a mid-career musical renaissance at around the same time. Paul Anka with "(You're) Having My Baby" and Neil Sedaka with the upcoming "Laughter In The Rain".
 
Food rationing in Great Britain ends with the lifting of restrictions on sale and purchase of meat, 14 years after it began early in World War II and nearly a decade after the war's end.
It's easy to forget how devastating that war was in Europe.

Dewey Phillips of WHBQ (AM) in Memphis is the first radio announcer to broadcast a recording of Elvis Presley. The track "That's All Right" (later pressed as Sun 209) was recorded two days earlier.
One minute and 58 seconds later, the history of music is changed forever.

Upon hearing that his debut record was about to be aired, Presley hid in a movie theater, thinking he would become a laughingstock.
That will sadly come later.

In Charles M. Schulz' Peanuts, Pig-Pen makes his debut.
And we still don't know his real name.

Also on July 15, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, starring Jane Powell and Howard Keel, premieres in Houston.
I know I saw this on one of the local UHF channels as a kid, but I have no recollection of it whatsoever.

Died: Machine Gun Kelly (George Kelly Barnes), 59, US gangster (heart attack)
I wonder how he felt about that. :rommie:

On July 28, On the Waterfront, starring Marlon Brando, Karl Malden, Lee J. Cobb, and introducing Eva Marie Saint, premieres in New York.
I saw this, too, but my memory is similarly spotty.

"Evil Is Goin' On," Howlin' Wolf
I like this one. :rommie:

"Oh What a Dream," Ruth Brown
Nice and mellow.

Might wanna fix the quote tags for posterity. It looks like you're continuing to reply to Darren.
Aw, man, this new interface is driving me crazy. :rommie:

Herb saw them coming and tried to slip away unnoticed. Herb's wife wasn't there. Chuck's was in back somewhere.
Sorry, I meant Chuck's wife. I figured she was back in the kitchen, but she didn't hear a couple of guys pummelling her husband to within an inch of his life?

He saw them leaving and could identify them.
Ah, I didn't realize Linc saw them.

And unfortunately, the difference is too common.
Ain't that the truth.

I should note that obtaining not just police uniforms, but even squad cars, is a bit too common in ModWorld.
I think they even did it on Adam-12 once, didn't they?

Greer actually gave a sort of amused-looking head-nod.
:D

Yes. Burr wasn't absent from the episode, just on the sidelines.
Overall, a strange situation.

:lol: Don't forget the torches!
Indeed. :rommie:

Reminded me of The Green Hornet. :D
Was there a similar scene on Green Hornet? I don't remember.

The conspiracy was to cover up the townsfolks' role in his death
Yeah, but wasn't Ollinger's original communication to the Chief about uncovering a conspiracy?

I was wanting to connect him with the Green Lantern Corps, but wasn't finding inspiration.
He's a former alternate Lantern who hired the Mods as a way of forming his own Corps. :rommie:

Covers have to be maintained. And other linens.
Nice. :rommie:

...comrade?
Stranger things have happened. Most of them recently.

ETA: It is done. :p
May you have no regrets. :rommie:

What's even funnier is something I found years later when I purchased the 'San Francisco Nuggets' box set. When Johnny is announcing the previous song 'How Can I Miss You When You Won't Go Away?' that's an actual song from the band Dan Hicks and his Hot Licks, that was a regional hit in the Bay Area about ten years earlier.
You know, I've heard this before. I wonder if one of the local stations played it because of WKRP. Or maybe it was on Dr Demento or Lost 45s or something.

It occurs to me that both Paul Anka and Neil Sedaka both are having a mid-career musical renaissance at around the same time. Paul Anka with "(You're) Having My Baby" and Neil Sedaka with the upcoming "Laughter In The Rain".
I like "Laughter in the Rain," too. Neil Sedaka also wrote "Love Will Keep Us Together," performed by Captain and Tennille-- at the end of the song you can hear Toni Tennille singing, "Sedaka is back." :D
 
One minute and 58 seconds later, the history of music is changed forever.
Not quite that fast. He wouldn't break out for another couple of years. This single only charted locally in Memphis.

I like this one. :rommie:
Howlin' Wolf is pretty fun as blues goes.

Nice and mellow.
S'alright, good period sound.

Sorry, I meant Chuck's wife. I figured she was back in the kitchen, but she didn't hear a couple of guys pummelling her husband to within an inch of his life?
Guess not. Doing dishes really loudly?

I think they even did it on Adam-12 once, didn't they?
Don't recall that.

Was there a similar scene on Green Hornet? I don't remember.
There was an episode where the bad guy gimmick of the week was frogmen coming out of the water to attack people in a marina.

Yeah, but wasn't Ollinger's original communication to the Chief about uncovering a conspiracy?
Ah...guess that would be whatever was going on with the woman's car accident/murder.

He's a former alternate Lantern who hired the Mods as a way of forming his own Corps. :rommie:
Lucy don't need no stinkin' power ring!

:D
 
Last edited:
"Evil Is Goin' On," Howlin' Wolf
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(B-side of "Baby How Long?")

Eric Clapton/Derek and the Dominos recorded a version of this song for their aborted second album.

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It was a staple of the Dominos set and Eric's solo set for a while.
 
Not quite that fast. He wouldn't break out for another couple of years. This single only charted locally in Memphis.
Still, this is the start of it all.

Guess not. Doing dishes really loudly?
Singing "Having My Baby" to herself?

Don't recall that.
Now you're having memory issues. :rommie: I'm almost positive that there was an episode where fake cops were pulling off robberies using a fake police car. Or something.

There was an episode where the bad guy gimmick of the week was frogmen coming out of the water to attack people in a marina.
We need more of that.

Ah...guess that would be whatever was going on with the woman's car accident/murder.
Okay, that makes sense.

Lucy don't need no stinkin' power ring!
He's more like that guy in DP 7, if you remember that. :rommie:

Eric Clapton/Derek and the Dominos recorded a version of this song for their aborted second album.

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It was a staple of the Dominos set and Eric's solo set for a while.
That's pretty good, but in this case I actually like the original better.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



Ironside
"A Special Person"
Originally aired January 11, 1973
Frndly said:
Suspects abound in the attempted murder of a magazine editor.

The Chief and Ed cross the bay to attend a shindig at the palatial estate of Not Heff Wayne Dorian (Sandy Baron), whose magazine, The Bachelor, Ironside has agreed to do an interview for. We quickly meet what's actually a fairly modest list of credited suspects--burly personal trainer and houseboy Joey Galardo (Robert Viharo); Rona Bartlet (Melendy Britt), a ladyfriend who has something to discuss with Dorian; Wayne's partner, Howard Jameson (Barry Sullivan); and Wayne's girlfriend and Howard's daughter, Nikki (Leslie Charleson). While discussing the conditions of the interview, Dorian falls to his knees from what he passes off as chronic back pain; but the Chief asks him to turn around and finds a bullet hole in his clothing, and informs Dorian that he's been shot.

While an unidentified song presumably written by the Paiches and sung by Carol Carmichael plays, Ed investigates the area and finds motorcycle tracks and a shell casing just over the wall. It turns out that the brace that Wayne wears for his back pain is what stopped the bullet. Dorian tries to play it down, producing examples of the sort of hate mail that he routinely receives, but ultimately agrees to cooperate in providing a guest list.

While the shooting is kept under wraps, Ed attracts Joey's attention by diving around in the pool, where he finds the bullet. In a scene between Wayne and Howard, we learn that Jameson doesn't approve of the subject matter of some of the magazine's recent articles, even though circulation has gone up; and that he has reservations about his daughter seeing Wayne, given Dorian's playboy lifestyle. Ironside turns up that an expose written by Dorian ruined Joey's boxing career, and a mismatch between the bullet and the casing indicates that somebody planted the latter to make it look like the bullet was fired from over the wall. Outside, Rona briefly takes Nikki aside to indicate that she was once in Nikki's place; then Rona has a friendly talk with Joey, trying to convince him that Wayne is using him. Dorian lets Ironside make an announcement to the guests about the assassination attempt, informing them that they're all suspects and that nobody can leave. The Chief's subsequent questioning of Rona reveals that she's a past-her-prime former model for the magazine and that she came to confront Wayne about a recent attempt to use her to "entertain" important clients. Back in Frisco, Fran turns up that Joey did time for armed robbery between boxing and working for Dorian; and that Howard is an expert marksman. When asked about the latter, Wayne tells Ironside that Jameson designed the estate's target range.

Fran brings a rifle to the estate so that the Chief can use the range to conduct some ballistics tests on the brace, determining that the ammunition was only half-loaded, or it would have penetrated. Snooping around the grounds by night, Fran finds Joey's bike, which is a match for the type that made the tracks. Ironside is having Ed climb trees with a ladder when Fran tells them this, and Joey pops up to admit that it's his bike, but tells them that he's grateful to Mr. Dorian for arranging his parole and giving him a job. Inside, Rona takes Mr. Jameson aside to warn him to get his daughter away from Wayne. Wayne and Nikki then inform Jameson privately that they've agreed to marry, and he says that he approves, though he doesn't look happy. Wayne then sits Jameson down at his desk to help him pick pictures for an article about Peruvian temples that will replace one about a Satanic cult that Jameson doesn't approve of. Meanwhile, Ed has made a discovery in a tree that indicates they're dealing with a "smart cookie"; the Chief determines that Wayne was standing in exactly the right spot to get shot; and Ed finds a remote-controlled rifle set up in a boat parked on a trailer, which is aimed directly at the window of Dorian's study, behind his desk.

Ironside goes to the study to announce that he's dismissed the guests. While Jameson talks about the article they're working on, Ironside's attention is on Jameson clicking a couple of devices--first a pen, then a lighter. At the second use of the lighter, a shot is heard. Ironside explains how they found clamp marks on a tree indicating that the rifle that shot Wayne was set there, then asks Wayne to hand over what turns out to be a remote that was in his pocket. He reveals that the bullet in the boat-planted rifle was replaced with a blank, preventing Jameson from taking the bullet through the back of Wayne's chair. Wayne explains that he learned that Jameson, who holds controlling interest in the magazine, was planning to get rid of him; and he confesses to wanting to marry Nikki because she'd inherit the interest. After the Jamesons exit, Wayne explains to Ironside that the magazine was all that made him special.

The Chief: In prison, nobody's special.​



The Mod Squad
"Don't Kill My Child"
Originally aired January 18, 1973
Wiki said:
A stepfather of a little boy confesses to beating him; however, the Squad speculates he was covering for the boy's mentally ill mother.

Julie's volunteering at a neighborhood clinic run by a Dr. Marmor (Kirk Mee) when a Mr. Blackwell (Murray MacLeod) comes in with his young son (Ty Wilson) about a head bruise that he says was from Timmy falling out of a car. Marmor takes Julie aside to fill her in that the boy shows signs of having been beaten, including older injuries such as strap marks on his chest; but the father overhears them talking and runs. Julie calls in the other Mods (Linc sporting a cast on his left arm from a previous case), but their attempts to coax info from Timmy only produce a denial that his mommy and daddy spank him. In Timmy's jacket they find a light meter marked as the property of a university cinema department; the guy they return it to indicates that he loaned it to a Dave Pruitt, who's been acting distracted and temperamental lately. At the hospital, Marmor's relieved that X-rays have turned up no internal injuries when an Evelyn Pruitt (Marlyn Mason) comes in about her son, Timmy. She's defensive when confronted about his injuries, explains that she and the boy's father, Dave, are separated, and implies that he's responsible. The male Mods have just approached Dave undercover at a film shoot when uniformed CLE arrive to take Dave into custody on behalf of Captain Greer--mighta been nice to fill him in, huh? Dave makes another run for it, but is tackled by Pete while Linc can only watch helplessly.

Greer interrogates Pruitt, who initially tries to maintain his original story; but when Greer gets shouty, he confesses to having beaten Timmy, but is unconvincing in this and his explanation why. He also indicates that he's Timmy's stepfather, having only met Evelyn a year ago. He signs a confession, but the Mods all think that he's covering for someone and ask to investigate further. Julie approches Evelyn in a friendly manner and chats her up, trying to get to know her, learning that she has esteem issues. When Evelyn expresses anger toward Timmy when asked about him, Julie encourages her to attend a therapy group. The group members (Lillian Lehman, Beverly Powers, and Rosana Soto) are confrontational and accusatory, and Julie joins in with them in trying to get her to admit the truth. When she starts to do that and tearfully expresses her regrets, they're more sympathetic. (This scene was the most aggressive I can recall having seen Julie get.)

The guys summon Evelyn's mother, Mrs. Dykstra (Nina Foch), to ask for her intervention, and they see that her resentful, high-strung personality fuels issues with her daughter that are part of the problem. Greer finds a foster home for Timmy, with elder couple Howard and Millie Lindner (John Zaremba and Joan Tompkins), who have a number of children in their care. Mrs. Dykstra tries to talk to Evelyn, but doesn't approve of her daughter "abandoning" Timmy to foster parents. As a result, Evelyn sneaks to the Lindner's after dark and takes Timmy from the yard as the other children are going in.

The guys visit Dave, who wants a clean break from Evelyn, but is motivated to help when they tell him that she took Timmy. He informs them that she may be taking Timmy to Ventura, her father's hometown. In a hotel room, Evelyn starts losing her cool when Timmy acts frightened and uncomfortable, and ends up repeatedly slamming him against a bed while threatening to kill him, following which she breaks down crying and apologizes. She then returns the sleeping Timmy to the Lindners. The next day, the Mods get a report from Dr. M that Timmy is fine, but they're concerned about Evelyn. They get a call from Mrs. D that Evelyn plans to join her father...who's been dead for twelve years. The Mods head for the Old West studio where Mrs. D previously told them that her husband used to work, often taking Evelyn with him. They find her standing in the third-floor window of a hotel facade, and Julie empathically talks her down, persuading her to give Timmy the chance to know a different side of her.

In the coda, the Mods are having a barbeque picnic with Evelyn and Timmy. Julie encourages the boy that he'll be able to return to his mommy when she's all better, then the two of them rejoin the others.



Now you're having memory issues. :rommie: I'm almost positive that there was an episode where fake cops were pulling off robberies using a fake police car. Or something.
Fake cops with a fake car have come up on Mod Squad before. If they came up on A-12, you'll have to find the episode. :p Conventional law enforcement yada yada, please dispose of this post in the usual manner.

He's more like that guy in DP 7, if you remember that. :rommie:
I tried a couple of issues. Which guy would that be?
 
whose magazine, The Bachelor, Ironside has agreed to do an interview for.
As if he wasn't famous enough. :rommie:

Howard Jameson (Barry Sullivan)
Another character actor who popped up everywhere for about a hundred years.

While discussing the conditions of the interview
"I get to pick the three little black-and-white photos on the first page."

the Chief asks him to turn around and finds a bullet hole in his clothing, and informs Dorian that he's been shot.
"Trust me, I know about being shot in the back."

While an unidentified song presumably written by the Paiches and sung by Carol Carmichael plays, Ed investigates
Team Ironside should investigate all this music that's always floating through the air.

we learn that Jameson doesn't approve of the subject matter of some of the magazine's recent articles
Do they go into any details about this?

and a mismatch between the bullet and the casing indicates that somebody planted the latter to make it look like the bullet was fired from over the wall.
In that case, forensics would quickly determine that the bullet was not deformed in the expected way, and there also should have been another bullet. Kind of silly mistakes for such an elaborately orchestrated scheme.

informing them that they're all suspects and that nobody can leave.
He loves doing that. :rommie:

the ammunition was only half-loaded, or it would have penetrated.
This is a new one on me. How do you half load ammo?

an article about Peruvian temples that will replace one about a Satanic cult that Jameson doesn't approve of.
So it's tabloid stuff that offends him?

they're dealing with a "smart cookie"
I might dispute this. :rommie:

Wayne explains that he learned that Jameson, who holds controlling interest in the magazine, was planning to get rid of him
Based on Barry Sullivan's age, he must have been the one who founded the magazine and hired the other guy later, so he was more of the Heff. But they didn't seem to be going for anything satirical, anyway.

After the Jamesons exit, Wayne explains to Ironside that the magazine was all that made him special.
Aside from some wonkiness with the plan itself, this wasn't bad. No flashbacks, though. :rommie: Also kind of notable that there were no actual murders.

Julie's volunteering at a neighborhood clinic
Where does she find the time?

(Linc sporting a cast on his left arm from a previous case)
Is this actual continuity, or did he hurt himself in real life?

their attempts to coax info from Timmy only produce a denial that his mommy and daddy spank him.
"But there's this Medieval torture chamber in the basement...."

The male Mods have just approached Dave undercover at a film shoot when uniformed CLE arrive to take Dave into custody on behalf of Captain Greer--mighta been nice to fill him in, huh?
They definitely have communication issues.

Dave makes another run for it, but is tackled by Pete while Linc can only watch helplessly.
You always get the best action, Linc, give somebody else a chance. :rommie:

(This scene was the most aggressive I can recall having seen Julie get.)
Interesting. She always gravitates toward children, but I don't remember if she's dealt with actual child abuse before.

The guys summon Evelyn's mother, Mrs. Dykstra (Nina Foch), to ask for her intervention, and they see that her resentful, high-strung personality fuels issues with her daughter that are part of the problem.
Yeah, might have seen that coming. :rommie:

Mrs. Dykstra tries to talk to Evelyn, but doesn't approve of her daughter "abandoning" Timmy to foster parents.
Kind of interesting that she didn't get custody.

repeatedly slamming him against a bed while threatening to kill him
Let's not forget that the actor is actually a child.

She then returns the sleeping Timmy
"Sleeping?"
unsure.gif


the Mods get a report from Dr. M that Timmy is fine
Whew.

The Mods head for the Old West studio where Mrs. D previously told them that her husband used to work, often taking Evelyn with him.
That's a bit of a stretch, but okay.

They find her standing in the third-floor window of a hotel facade, and Julie empathically talks her down, persuading her to give Timmy the chance to know a different side of her.
Well, that was certainly one of their better episodes. And also notable for no deaths and not much in the way of action.

Fake cops with a fake car have come up on Mod Squad before. If they came up on A-12, you'll have to find the episode. :p Conventional law enforcement yada yada, please dispose of this post in the usual manner.
I did Google a bit and didn't find anything. My vague memory includes something like them parking the fake police car in the actual police garage or something, which I found far fetched. It could have been a Mod Squad.

I tried a couple of issues. Which guy would that be?
The character's name was Antibody, and he had sort of a black astral form that emerged from his chest.
 
How about MTV's first ever video broadcasted? So, feel the nostalgia. I am an 80's kid. I remember waiting up for the premier.

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^^ Great song and video. Especially since I always loved OTR.

I didn't get to see the premiere, unfortunately. Not many people had cable in those days-- not that I knew, anyway. The apartment complex where I lived didn't install cable until about 1985 or 1986.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



The Mod Squad
"Death in High Places"
Originally aired January 25, 1973
Edited Wiki said:
After Linc's friend is murdered at a construction site, he goes undercover as a worker, only to find that union heavies--and trouble--also roam the sites.

Linc's arriving at the construction site in a station wagon when boxes start falling due to a scuffle between unidentifiable figures on the twelfth floor. As Linc's taking the elevator up, a body passes him in the other direction. When Linc gets to the top, the other figure clocks him with a wrench.

Cut to the other Mods being met by Teresa Vega (Priscilla Garcia) as Linc is in a brownstone testifying before a community council known as a consejo about how the deceased, his friend Ernie Gomez, called him to meet there. The consejo chair (Rodolfo Hoyos) then questions their chief suspect, Tomas Roca (Joe Renteria), who was known to be an enemy of Ernie. Roca refuses to speak, causing the chair to declare him guilty. Greer arrives on the scene to take Roca into custody, as a witness heard Tomas calling Gomez to arrange a meeting on the top of the building under construction. Roca also refuses to talk to Greer, and Teresa, who was Ernie's girlfriend, explains to the Mods that the declaration of guilt by the consejo makes him an outcast of the community, which she believes can result in death. After the Mods talk to the grieving mother, Mrs. Gomez (Carmen Zapata), in an attempt to learn of anyone who may have had a motive, Linc--who doesn't think things add up, in part because Tomas wasn't a physical match for Ernie--has Greer arrange to get him a job as a replacement worker, which involves going through the local union boss, Arturo Roca (Fernando Lamas)--Tomas's older brother.

After meeting Linc, Arturo visits Tomas in jail, where he explains to his little brother--whose meeting arrangement was a lure--that Ernie's death was an accident, and indicates that a man named Havlicek was involved. Next we see Arturo visit former union president Emile Wade...
Mod128.jpg
...whose one-time position Roca negotiates to buy with the influence that Wade still holds over the board despite being a fugitive after embezzling from them. At the site, the foreman (William "Mac" Boyett) introduces Linc to his crew boss, Kerner (Bing Russell), who, along with another worker, is suspicious of the fresh blood.

Teresa and the other Mods visit Tomas to offer help, and learn that he's been feeling weak, though he doesn't believe in Teresa's Indigenous "mumbo jumbo". At lunch on the site, Linc blatantly starts asking questions about who killed Ernie, claiming that it's so he'll know who to avoid crossing. His implications lead to a fight with Kerner, which Arturo breaks up when he brings Havlicek up to get the project, which is two weeks behind, back on schedule. Arturo visits Wade again at the manor of Emile's mistress, Florinda (Ahna Capri). Pete and Julie search Ernie's apartment, the walls of which are filled with the fruits of his amateur photography, and Teresa notices that a favorite picture that had been displayed immediately above his desk has been replaced. In the darkroom, she and the Mods are unable to find the negative. Linc picks them up to take them to Mrs. Gomez, and is tailed by Havlicek. The Mods come back with a copy of the picture, which is of Ernie and Teresa, from which Linc makes a new negative to blow it up for examination. Eventually they find two men meeting in the background--Arturo and Wade, the latter of whom Greer identifies.

Havlicek breaks into Ernie's place to find the blow-ups, and reports them to Arturo and Wade, who know that Linc and his friends are cops. Greer, Pete, and Julie visit Tomas, who's now hospitalized with a mysterious illness and feverishly begs forgiveness in Spanish. Julie visits Florinda's posing as a cosmetics saleswoman to snap a brooch photo of Wade, which Greer uses to obtain a warrant. At the site, Havlicek arranges some alone time with Linc and tries to push him off, leaving him briefly dangling by his safety harness. Linc climbs back up and goes after him, and following a brief scuffle mirroring the one in the opening, holds Havlicek partly over the edge to threaten him to talk. Kerner witnesses this and reports it to Arturo and Wade, who get to the site after dark, where Linc's been playing a waiting game. Linc gets the drop on an armed Arturo, and stares down Wade.
Mod129.jpg
Meanwhile, after calling on Florinda, Greer, the other Mods, and CLE backup arrive at the site, where Pete takes down Kerner trying to escape, and Arturo and Wade are taken into custody.

In the coda, Tomas--now fully recovered and set free--is exiting Greer's office when Teresa arrives to inform him that the consejo has lifted his sentence...the timing of which closely coincides with Tommy's sudden recovery. After seeing Tommy and Teresa off, Greer and the Mods walk away from police HQ.



Ironside
"The Caller"
Originally aired January 25, 1973
Wiki said:
Fran is plagued by obscene—and threatening—phone calls.

Our situation of the week is that Fran's enjoying the luxury of penthouse-sitting for a friend named Karen. After Ed and Mark leave from checking the place out, she receives an ominous call in which she's addressed by name and the blue dress that she's wearing is described. On the elevator, she has a run-in with a Texan type named Harry Ashton (L. Q. Jones), who comes on to her and mentions a blue dress. The Chief notices that Fran's acting antsy at the Cave, and after having her work late, invites her to dinner at the wharf, where he gently probes regarding what's troubling her. When he takes her home, there are flowers at the door with a card reading "Till death do us part"; and she gets another call, which she records. The Chief listens as the titular persona tells her to get rid of the other guy. After the caller hangs up, the Chief directly asks Fran about the calls she's been getting for the past week.

The Chief says that he was tipped off when she obtained the phone recorder. She describes how the caller has known more details of her activities, such as what she's eating or listening to, and says that she's searched for bugs; while the Chief finds that no apartments directly face her windows. The next day, the team start looking into the other tenants, finding that Ashton is a man of many jobs, mostly involving sales. Posing as Fran's uncle, the Chief accompanies her to the building's rec room, where he gets the dish on some of the others from a tense, awkward young man named Johnny Garber (fourth of three Barry Livingston), who asks the Chief what it's like to be in a wheelchair; only for the Chief to deduce that Johnny is also crippled, though he's currently sitting in a regular chair.

After the team gets word that another woman in the neighborhood was murdered the previous night, the Chief wants to put a second policewoman in with Fran, but she doesn't want to scare the caller off. Ed traces as the caller strikes again, taking credit for the killing. The call came from the apartment of a drunk, philandering neighbor at the party named Rowling (Ray Ballard), who's found to still be at the party. Mark breaks into a utility room to find that Rowling's phone was recently tapped. While he and Fran are leaving, they run into the janitor, Willis Barnes (Paul Lambert), giving him a story. The team finds that since Johnny suffered a spinal injury in an auto accident, he's been in the care of an absentee father and has had a history of tutors leaving him because of behavioral issues. After another creepy run-in with Ashton in the laundry room, Fran returns to the apartment to get another call, this time without a phone. (I remembered this gimmick being used on H5O, and looking it up, the episode in question only aired a week before this one.)

The Chief has the team look into Karen's clients in her job as an illustrator. While scoping out the apartment further, he catches Johnny lurking around and has a talk with the boy. It starts with the Chief encouraging him to get on with living his life despite his handicap, but when he asks to see samples of Johnny's photography hobby, he finds a picture of Fran adjusting her bikini top by the pool, and notices that he's got an article of Fran's clothing stuffed in his wheelchair. He then asks Johnny if he calls people in addition to watching them, which is met with an angry, defensive outburst.

It turns out that a lower penthouse clearly visible through Karen's bedroom window belongs to a tycoon named Cavanaugh, who's one of Karen's clients. At the Cavanaugh Corporation, Ed questions an assistant named Daniel Leary (Dabney Coleman) about his absent boss. Fran turns up that Leary is involved in a power struggle over the corporation, and the Chief orders her to move out while he uses Karen's penthouse to stake out the Cavanaugh penthouse. Down in the garage, Fran finds "DEATH" written on her windshield and is calling the Chief when she's nabbed by a stocking-masked figure. Searching the place, Mark finds Fran tied up in a hair salon near the utility room; while upstairs, the stocking-masked figure uses a key to get into the penthouse. He unmasks and begins to set up a sniper rifle at the window overlooking the other penthouse, only to be held at gunpoint from behind by the Chief. As Mark takes Barnes into custody, he exclaims that he was only trying to scare Fran into moving out, unaware that she was a policewoman. The Chief gets the janitor to admit that he was hired by Leary to take out Cavanaugh; and the Chief shows Fran that the figure walking around in the other penthouse isn't a returned Cavanaugh, but Ed.

In the coda, Fran's packing up to move out when Johnny drops in to say goodbye and to apologize to the Chief, whom he indicates has inspired him to do what he wants with the life ahead of him.



As if he wasn't famous enough. :rommie:
It was in the interest of doing PR for law enforcement.

Another character actor who popped up everywhere for about a hundred years.
Including...
TGs3e01.jpg

Do they go into any details about this?
The satanic cult article was used as the example. Jameson wanted the magazine to do more cultured stuff.

He loves doing that. :rommie:
Something I didn't catch is why Dorian chose to orchestrate his scheme while Ironside was there.

This is a new one on me. How do you half load ammo?
It's got powder in it.

Based on Barry Sullivan's age, he must have been the one who founded the magazine and hired the other guy later, so he was more of the Heff. But they didn't seem to be going for anything satirical, anyway.
I guess they were co-Heffs. Jameson was the money man, Dorian was the one who was living the lifestyle.

Is this actual continuity, or did he hurt himself in real life?
Dunno if Williams was really injured, but there was a brief throwaway about the previous case that he got injured in. I don't think it was the previous episode, in which he injured his hand smashing a fire alarm and sported a bandage on it for the rest of the episode. Possibly it was just Lucy's week off.

That's a bit of a stretch, but okay.
It had been set up earlier in the episode. Mrs. D resented how Evelyn's father took her to the studio.

Well, that was certainly one of their better episodes. And also notable for no deaths and not much in the way of action.
There's an even more gripping drama coming up in the next retro-week.

I did Google a bit and didn't find anything. My vague memory includes something like them parking the fake police car in the actual police garage or something, which I found far fetched. It could have been a Mod Squad.
That's vaguely ringing a bell, but I think it may have been an Ironside or H50.

The character's name was Antibody, and he had sort of a black astral form that emerged from his chest.
I had to look that up to refresh my memory.
 
As Linc's taking the elevator up, a body passes him in the other direction.
And you can't just turn those things around. Or can you? Can't construction elevators be stopped and started at any time? But there was no helping that guy anyway.

the deceased, his friend Ernie Gomez
Another case where the victim being a friend of a Mod added nothing to the story.

Roca refuses to speak, causing the chair to declare him guilty.
No Fifth Amendment in the consejo, apparently. Why doesn't he want to speak?

Arturo Roca (Fernando Lamas)
I'll bet he looked marvelous.

Arturo visits Tomas in jail, where he explains to his little brother--whose meeting arrangement was a lure--that Ernie's death was an accident, and indicates that a man named Havlicek was involved.
If Arturo hired Havlicek to kill Ernie, this was a pretty stupid thing to say.

Next we see Arturo visit former union president Emile Wade...

View attachment 40609
My goodness, Jim Backus in a serious and evil role. You go, Jim!

the foreman (William "Mac" Boyett)
And Dan Matthews' most frequent sidekick.

he's been feeling weak, though he doesn't believe in Teresa's Indigenous "mumbo jumbo".
A likely story.

Eventually they find two men meeting in the background--Arturo and Wade, the latter of whom Greer identifies.
So this is all about a bribe, and Arturo framed his bro as the killer.

Linc climbs back up and goes after him, and following a brief scuffle mirroring the one in the opening, holds Havlicek partly over the edge to threaten him to talk.
Holy crap, Linc! Also, coercion.

Linc gets the drop on an armed Arturo, and stares down Wade.

View attachment 40611
Now there's a sight to behold. :rommie:

Tomas--now fully recovered and set free--is exiting Greer's office when Teresa arrives to inform him that the consejo has lifted his sentence...the timing of which closely coincides with Tommy's sudden recovery.
Supernatural or psychological-- YOU be the judge!

After seeing Tommy and Teresa off, Greer and the Mods walk away from police HQ.
That all seemed to hold together well, although I don't know enough about union shenanigans or consejos to be sure.

Harry Ashton (L. Q. Jones)
Popular scary character actor.

there are flowers at the door with a card reading "Till death do us part";
Apparently an unfollowed clue.

After the caller hangs up, the Chief directly asks Fran about the calls she's been getting for the past week.
And why she, a policewoman, didn't just tell him right at the start.

Johnny Garber (fourth of three Barry Livingston)
Heh.

Fran returns to the apartment to get another call, this time without a phone. (I remembered this gimmick being used on H5O, and looking it up, the episode in question only aired a week before this one.)
Like a disembodied voice? I'm not sure I understand this.

he finds a picture of Fran adjusting her bikini top by the pool
That's normal.

and notices that he's got an article of Fran's clothing stuffed in his wheelchair.
That's not normal.

He then asks Johnny if he calls people in addition to watching them, which is met with an angry, defensive outburst.
Depending on how that other woman was killed, his condition would seem to rule him out. But apparently that murder was really unrelated and the caller just opportunistically took credit for it.

Daniel Leary (Dabney Coleman)
Another popular bad guy.

He unmasks and begins to set up a sniper rifle at the window overlooking the other penthouse, only to be held at gunpoint from behind by the Chief.
So much for keeping a close eye on the apartment.

he exclaims that he was only trying to scare Fran into moving out, unaware that she was a policewoman.
Oh, well then. :rommie:

gets the janitor to admit that he was hired by Leary to take out Cavanaugh
So did Leary hire Karen specifically because he knew the location of her apartment? Otherwise the business connection doesn't seem to make much sense.

Johnny drops in to say goodbye and to apologize to the Chief, whom he indicates has inspired him to do what he wants with the life ahead of him.
That's a nice little subplot. It's kind of odd that they didn't show Leary being taken into custody, though.

As a regular? I don't recall.

The satanic cult article was used as the example. Jameson wanted the magazine to do more cultured stuff.
Okay, makes sense.

Something I didn't catch is why Dorian chose to orchestrate his scheme while Ironside was there.
Probably he thought that having Ironside present would lend some kind of credibility to the event, not realizing how ill thought out it was.

It's got powder in it.
He pulled the bullet apart and drained some of the powder?

It had been set up earlier in the episode. Mrs. D resented how Evelyn's father took her to the studio.
Ah, okay.

There's an even more gripping drama coming up in the next retro-week.
Cool.

That's vaguely ringing a bell, but I think it may have been an Ironside or H50.
Okay, I'm thinking now it was H50. That seems right.

I had to look that up to refresh my memory.
DP 7 was the only one of them that was really good, although Starbrand had its moments. I don't think I even tried any of the others.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


July 7
  • Died: Cornelius Vanderbilt IV, 76, U.S. journalist and publisher
  • Nancy Newhall, 66, prolific photography book writer and editor, died of injuries sustained on June 30 while she and other people were on a rafting trip in the Grand Teton National Park in the U.S. state of Wyoming. Mrs. Newhall and 11 other people were in the rubber raft on the Snake River when a giant spruce tree fell onto them.
:beer: And a Happy 34th to Ringo! :beer:

July 8
  • Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski and U.S. President Nixon's attorney James D. St. Clair appeared before the U.S. Supreme Court to make oral arguments on the issue of whether Nixon's refusal to release 64 tape recordings, relevant to the Watergate scandal, were protected by executive privilege.
  • Deborah Gail Stone, an employee of Disneyland in California, was crushed to death by a rotating wall while working in the new "America Sings" exhibit, becoming the first death of a worker at a Disney park. The ride was immediately closed down and was not reopened until alarms could be installed.
  • One week after the beginning of the players' strike against the National Football League, the college students scheduled to play in the July 26 College All-Star Game against the Miami Dolphins voted not to practice unless the NFL strike could be settled. The 1974 game was canceled two days later.

July 9
  • The Judiciary Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives released an enhanced version of eight of the White House tapes previously transcribed by Nixon's team. These included potentially damaging statements suppressed in Nixon's version.
  • Died: Earl Warren, 83, former Chief Justice of the United States from 1953 to 1969

July 10
  • The creation of the largest newspaper publisher in the United States, with 35 daily papers and 3.6 million subscribers, was announced with the merger of Knight Newspapers and Ridder Publications to form Knight-Ridder Newspapers Inc. The largest of the Knight papers were the Detroit Free Press, the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Miami Herald, while the Ridder papers included the San Jose Mercury and News. The merger put Knight-Ridder ahead of the Tribune Company, owner of the Chicago Tribune, the Daily News of New York, and five other papers for a total circulation of 3.5 million.

July 11
  • John Kerr, the Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales, took office as the new Governor-General of Australia, appointed by Queen Elizabeth of Australia after being nominated by Prime Minister Gough Whitlam.

July 12
  • The Congressional Budget Office (CBO), an agency of the U.S. Congress, was created with the signing of the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974.
  • U.S. President Nixon signed the National Research Act into law, creating the Office of Human Research Protections and placing research and experimentation on human beings under federal regulation.

T-minus 27 days and counting.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Rock Your Baby," George McCrae
2. "Annie's Song," John Denver
3. "Rock the Boat," Hues Corporation
4. "Sundown," Gordon Lightfoot
5. "On and On," Gladys Knight & The Pips
6. "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me," Elton John
7. "Billy, Don't Be a Hero," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods
8. "You Won't See Me," Anne Murray
9. "The Air That I Breathe," The Hollies
10. "Rock and Roll Heaven," The Righteous Brothers
11. "One Hell of a Woman," Mac Davis
12. "If You Love Me (Let Me Know)," Olivia Newton-John
13. "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," Steely Dan
14. "Sideshow," Blue Magic
15. "Band on the Run," Paul McCartney & Wings
16. "Radar Love," Golden Earring
17. "Hollywood Swinging," Kool & The Gang
18. "Waterloo," ABBA
19. "You Make Me Feel Brand New," The Stylistics
20. "Be Thankful for What You Got," William DeVaughn
21. "Finally Got Myself Together (I'm a Changed Man)," The Impressions
22. "Feel Like Makin' Love," Roberta Flack
23. "Please Come to Boston," Dave Loggins
24. "Takin' Care of Business," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
25. "If You Talk in Your Sleep," Elvis Presley

27. "Call on Me," Chicago

29. "The Streak," Ray Stevens
30. "Come Monday," Jimmy Buffett
31. "Midnight at the Oasis," Maria Muldaur

33. "Dancing Machine," Jackson 5

35. "Keep on Smilin'," Wet Willie

37. "I'm Coming Home," The Spinners
38. "Sure as I'm Sittin' Here," Three Dog Night
39. "Tell Me Something Good," Rufus
40. "The Night Chicago Died," Paper Lace
41. "Train of Thought," Cher
42. "Rock Me Gently," Andy Kim
43. "You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy
44. "Haven't Got Time for the Pain," Carly Simon

46. "For the Love of Money," The O'Jays

48. "Already Gone," Eagles
49. "Save the Last Dance for Me," The DeFranco Family feat. Tony DeFranco

51. "My Thang," James Brown
52. "Hang On in There Baby," Johnny Bristol

54. "La Grange," ZZ Top
55. "Wild Thing," Fancy
56. "Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing," Stevie Wonder
57. "My Girl Bill," Jim Stafford
58. "(You're) Having My Baby," Paul Anka

60. "The Loco-Motion," Grand Funk

62. "Wildwood Weed," Jim Stafford
63. "Shinin' On," Grand Funk
64. "Rub It In," Billy "Crash" Craddock
65. "I'm Leaving It (All) Up to You," Donny & Marie Osmond

67. "Help Me," Joni Mitchell
68. "Rebel Rebel," David Bowie

70. "Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston

73. "The Show Must Go On," Three Dog Night

76. "I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton

80. "Worse Comes to Worst," Billy Joel

87. "Time for Livin'," Sly & The Family Stone


Leaving the chart:
  • "The Entertainer," Music from "The Sting" feat. Marvin Hamlisch on Piano (16 weeks)
  • "Oh Very Young," Cat Stevens (17 weeks)


New on the chart:

"Shinin' On," Grand Funk
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(#11 US)

"I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton
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(#1 US the week of Sept. 14, 1974; #33 R&B; #9 UK; written and originally recorded by Bob Marley in 1973, that version being #443 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])

"Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston
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(#1 US the week of Oct. 19, 1974; #15 AC; #8 R&B)

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month, with minor editing as needed.

_______

No Fifth Amendment in the consejo, apparently. Why doesn't he want to speak?
To not incriminate his brother, apparently.

I'll bet he looked marvelous.
Capped.

If Arturo hired Havlicek to kill Ernie, this was a pretty stupid thing to say.
So this is all about a bribe, and Arturo framed his bro as the killer.
He sent Havlicek to lean on Ernie...the fight and death were unintended.

Holy crap, Linc! Also, coercion.
Linc was just basically on top of Havlicek with the latter's head and shoulders over the edge.

Now there's a sight to behold. :rommie:
"Don't make me introduce you to Lucy..."

Supernatural or psychological-- YOU be the judge!
This was the biggest weakness of the episode...there was no subtlety to it.

That all seemed to hold together well, although I don't know enough about union shenanigans or consejos to be sure.
I should note that I didn't catch the organization being described as a union, but it was referred to as "the Local," which sounds like union-speak to me.

Apparently an unfollowed clue.
There may have been a dead end.

Like a disembodied voice? I'm not sure I understand this.
Yes, and they didn't get into how it was done.

So did Leary hire Karen specifically because he knew the location of her apartment? Otherwise the business connection doesn't seem to make much sense.
The initial rationale for scoping out her clients was that they'd know her number. It kind of makes sense that they'd have inside knowledge of when she'd be gone...but indeed, while I didn't catch the episode getting into it, it makes the most sense if they specifically scoped her out to gain access to her apartment.

As a regular? I don't recall.
As a single-episode guest playing himself, which the title frame I posted is from.

"Sock It to Me"
September 26, 1968
Wiki said:
Ann's opportunity to perform in a Broadway play opposite Barry Sullivan is jeopardized by her inability to slap him.

He pulled the bullet apart and drained some of the powder?
We just recently saw Linc create a makeshift explosive using the powder from acquired ammo as an ingredient (the cave-in episode).

Okay, I'm thinking now it was H50. That seems right.
The only one I could think of was "Nightmare in Blue," though that doesn't appear to have the parking garage angle, which I do vaguely recall, but think that may have been an Ironside.
 
Last edited:
"Shinin' On," Grand Funk (#11 US)

Classic

"I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton (#1 US the week of Sept. 14, 1974; #33 R&B; #9 UK; written and originally recorded by Bob Marley in 1973, that version being #443 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])

Released in conjunction with the album '461 Ocean Boulevard', Eric Clapton's 'comeback' album after an absence of three years during which time he was dealing with a heroin addiction.

"Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston (#1 US the week of Oct. 19, 1974; #15 AC; #8 R&B)

Another classic. Shame you don't hear it much on the radio anymore.
 
Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski and U.S. President Nixon's attorney James D. St. Clair appeared before the U.S. Supreme Court to make oral arguments on the issue of whether Nixon's refusal to release 64 tape recordings, relevant to the Watergate scandal, were protected by executive privilege.

A sad, but familiar, refrain. Really makes you wish the founding fathers had the foresight to include language in the Constitution setting limits on what exactly 'Executive Privilege' is.
 
Mrs. Newhall and 11 other people were in the rubber raft on the Snake River when a giant spruce tree fell onto them.
Talk about bad luck. What are the odds?

:beer: And a Happy 34th to Ringo! :beer:
Birthday-Cake-Animated.gif


Deborah Gail Stone, an employee of Disneyland in California, was crushed to death by a rotating wall while working in the new "America Sings" exhibit
Hopefully not while kids were watching.

Died: Earl Warren, 83, former Chief Justice of the United States from 1953 to 1969
Are you telling me they used to leave the Court before dying?

U.S. President Nixon signed the National Research Act into law, creating the Office of Human Research Protections and placing research and experimentation on human beings under federal regulation.
Does this mean I can't leave my body to Mad Science?

T-minus 27 days and counting.
Wow, less than a month! I better stock up on party favors.

"Shinin' On," Grand Funk
I don't remember this one at all. I do hear that Grand Funk sound, though, especially at the beginning.

"I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton
Oh, yeah! :rommie:

"Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston
Another goodie.

To not incriminate his brother, apparently.
Okay, I was wondering how much he knew.

:D

He sent Havlicek to lean on Ernie...the fight and death were unintended.
Ohhh.

Linc was just basically on top of Havlicek with the latter's head and shoulders over the edge.
Okay, whew. That seemed more like something Pete would do.

"Don't make me introduce you to Lucy..."
:rommie:

This was the biggest weakness of the episode...there was no subtlety to it.
It seemed quite odd for the show.

I should note that I didn't catch the organization being described as a union, but it was referred to as "the Local," which sounds like union-speak to me.
Yeah, I think it's gotta be.

Yes, and they didn't get into how it was done.
More spookiness!

As a single-episode guest playing himself, which the title frame I posted is from.

"Sock It to Me"
September 26, 1968
Ah, the slap plot, I do remember that.

We just recently saw Linc create a makeshift explosive using the powder from acquired ammo as an ingredient (the cave-in episode).
Yeah, but what I'm thinking is whether the bullet would fire at all. It seems to me that the powder would have to be packed tightly to be ignited by the hammer.

The only one I could think of was "Nightmare in Blue," though that doesn't appear to have the parking garage angle, which I do vaguely recall, but think that may have been an Ironside.
It will no doubt turn out to be the one I think is least likely. :rommie:

Must be another one of those regional things.

Another classic. Shame you don't hear it much on the radio anymore.
You're right, I haven't heard that one in ages.

A sad, but familiar, refrain. Really makes you wish the founding fathers had the foresight to include language in the Constitution setting limits on what exactly 'Executive Privilege' is.
I've often wondered if their general vagueness has been more of a blessing or a curse. When you think that the past is a foreign country-- or maybe an alien planet-- it's probably for the best. :rommie:
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



The Mod Squad
"Put Out the Welcome Mat for Death"
Originally aired February 1, 1973
IMDb said:
The trio investigates a euthanasia that may turn out to be murder.

The guys are staking out a club named Jon's Joynt when their person of interest, kitchen worker Don Rice (John Mark Robinson), arrives on a bike in the wee hours to go in the delivery entrance. Pete follows Don in as he's unwrapping a bundle of jewels, which he hurriedly puts in a locker before escaping out the window. After he clocks a following Pete, Lucy shows off a little in evading his getaway...
Mod127.jpg
The towel the jewels were wrapped in and a vial also found tie Rice in with Memorial Hospital, from which Greer suspects someone is smuggling out narcotics. The Mods get jobs there--Linc and Pete as orderlies, Julie as a candy striper--and Julie makes the acquaintance of the Graham family--Martha (Doreen Lang), who's struggling with pain from a terminal illness; her husband Walter (Howard Duff), who's reading her Hemingway; and daughter Linda (Kristina Holland), who arranges for Julie to bring her mother a rose every day. On the side, Pete pays a visit to Rice's girlfriend, Bev (Lenore Kasdorf), pretending to be an associate, and overhears her calling Don afterward. Back at the hospital, we see Nurse Belle Fuller (Martha Scott) siphoning and pocketing a vial of medication; following which she takes Pete with her as she gives Mrs. Graham a sedative. Walter sneaks in after visiting hours and his wife cries to him that the pain is unendurable and she wants to die, so he confronts the nurse in the hall, insisting that she give Martha something that will help; but the nurse rebuffs him, insisting that nothing more can be done until the doctor comes in the morning.

The next morning Martha's still writhing in agony, and Nurse Gregory (Leigh Hamilton) reluctantly agrees to give her something before the doctor arrives. When the nurse is called out of the room, Walter pockets the syringe she left behind. Meanwhile, the guys follow Bev to a golf course rendezvous with Don, who spots them and makes a run for it, only to be taken down in an empty pool scuffle. When Greer interrogates Rice, he insists that he has nothing to do with the drug angle, causing Greer to suspect that somebody else at Jon's Joynt may have left the vial. When Dr. Webber (James Sikking) comes in, he has a talk with Linda in which he agrees to have more medication given to her mother at night, and she tearfully asks him about the possibility of stopping her mother's IV feedings. He gently refuses, telling her that it's against everything he believes in.

Dr. Webber: I can't be the judge of when life should stop.​
Linda: But you are, you're prolonging it!​

Julie lends a sympathetic ear to Linda afterward. That night, Martha is still in agony, and Walter begs forgiveness of God before pulling out the syringe. Nurse Fuller and Pete walk in to find Martha dead with the needle in her arm and Walter sobbing.

Fuller goes home distraught because, we learn, she'd been cutting Mrs. Graham's doses to bring morphine home to her son, Rick (Michael Burns), a vet who tells her that he needs it for pain from a leg injury. Investigating Jon's Joynt as a power company worker, Linc finds a hospital towel in Rick's locker, and learns that Rick plays there as a musician. Against Pete and Julie's objections, Greer is investigating Mr. Graham's act as murder rather than manslaughter, because there was a life insurance policy and the doctors insist that Martha was getting more than enough medication. Pete realizes that Fuller is a potential weak link, so Greer goes to the hospital and has a Dr. Brandson (John Howard) inspect her tray--but he finds that everything's in order, as she stopped herself from siphoning that time. She goes home early and finds to her horror that Rick is actually selling the morphine to a dealer and user named Joey (Ed Bach).

The Mods learn that Rick is Fuller's son and deduce what's been going on, but can't prove anything; so Julie pays Fuller a visit and lays it straight, not divulging her true profession but letting her know that Mr. Graham is being charged for murder and that the police know about Rick and what she's been doing; and Fuller admits to it. Meanwhile, Rick, apparently actually needing some of the morphine, tries unsuccessfully to score a fix at Jon's and realizes that he can get it at the hospital. He gains access to his mother's locker under false pretenses, takes her keys, and starts rummaging through the medicine cabinets for what he needs. Greer and the Mods track Rick down to the hospital and are trying to find him when a nurse walks in on him shooting up and screams. He makes a run for it, pushing a patient in a wheelchair at the Mods, but Pete takes him down and his vial shatters on the floor. Rick reaches at the broken glass in desperation.
Mod130.jpg

The coda has the Grahams thanking Julie outside the courthouse for her concern as Walter expresses his willingness to face the music for what he did. Awkward looks are exchanged between Walter and Fuller as she's brought in, and Julie walks back to the other Mods waiting at the Charger.



Ironside
"Love Me in December"
Originally aired February 1, 1973
IMDb said:
Small-town bias against a May-December romance is blocking Ironside's attempt to clear a murder suspect.

The episode opens with Aaron Clark (Steve Forrest in a mustache and wifebeater) swearing revenge on whoever burned down his house with kerosene, and getting angry at the amateur fire department, led by local newspaperman Elton Ferris (Simon Oakland), for arriving so late. Cut to the sight of the dead body of carpenter Jerry Powell, followed by Vicki Dunhill (Kathy Cannon) at the Cave protesting Aaron's innocence. It turns out that Clark was a wartime acquaintance of the Chief's with whom he wasn't on good terms, and Dunhill, who's turning 19, is his girlfriend. (Forrest was eight years younger than Burr, but served in the Battle of the Bulge at 18. His character is later established to be about 55, which is roughly Burr's age.)

The team heads down to the small town where this occurred, Ed driving separately from Mark and the Chief. Mark learns that the Chief was responsible for having Clark busted down from officer to enlisted. Clark isn't happy to see his former commanding officer, and the Chief offers to leave, but Clark apologizes and asks him to stay. We further learn that the Chief was trying to get Clark tossed out of the service entirely, but later pinned a medal on him. Mingling among the townsfolk, Ed learns that Clark isn't a poplar figure, and that they assume Clark is guilty and don't approve of his seeing Vicki. Learning how the town likes to rule on matters of local interest by consensus, the Chief sounds out Clark's attorney, McKay (Val Avery), regarding where his loyalties lie.

Elton is married to Vicki's mother, Kate (Madlyn Rhue, who is old enough to be the mother of a 19-year-old), who doesn't want her daughter marrying Clark. While searching the remains of Clark's house for a murder weapon, Ed and Mark meet Deputy Billy Trona (Gregory Sierra). Mark finds a board with blood stains, and Jerry's friend, Phil Wagner Jr. (Kip Niven), who works for Mrs. Ferris at a filling station and used to go with Vicki, shows the detectives Jerry's place and tells them of an argument of unknown cause between Clark and Powell the day of the murder. Clark doesn't want to talk about it, and the Chief accuses him of using Vicki as his latest way of rebelling against society.

The Chief's words plant some doubt in Clark, which causes a fight between him and Vicki. The Chief talks to Mrs. Ferris, whom it turns out used to see Clark and through whom he met Vicki. He fingers her as having the influence to turn the town against Clark or convince them of his innocence. When Vicki comes home upset, the Chief lets her know that he was responsible, and lays it out that it's her relationship with Clark that's turned the town against him. She realizes that Aaron was giving her an out and goes back to him to make up. Back in Frisco, Fran has turned up that Clark was finally forced out of the service over a violent altercation with a junior officer. Back at the town's filling station, pharmacist Phil Wagner Sr. (George Murdock) confronts Ed--who's looking over the establishment's records on behalf of the Chief--over harassment of his son that never happened.

All the while, Mark has been engaged in the unglamorous task of walking through the wilderness between the site of the fire and town looking for the kerosene can, which he finally finds. Ed runs his findings by Mr. Ferris, accusing him of having made an unnecessary gas stop on the night of the fire as a way of dragging his feet. Ferris prints a story about the circumstances of Clark's forced retirement from the service, which further fans the flames with the townsfolk. Aaron is giving Vicki a horse when the deputy and McKay arrive to inform him that in light of what's been found so far, the town wants his bail revoked. Paying another visit to Kate, the Chief finally persuades her to divulge the details of the argument between Aaron and Powell--that Powell was drunkenly forcing himself on her when Aaron intervened, but it never came to blows. Ironside then unmasks her real motive for not approving of the marriage--that she's still in love with Aaron. At the Chief's behest, she shares some scuttlebutt with Phil Jr. at the station about how the detectives are onto the real murderer and zeroing in on the location of the can. Phil brings his father along in the middle of the night to the spot where it had already been found to retrieve it, and as he picks it up, the Wagners discover that they're surrounded. Against his father's will, Jr. confesses that he was helping Jerry set fire to the house when Jerry fell from scaffolding, injuring his head; and that while Jerry managed to walk away, he later collapsed dead. Phil Sr. is shamed by McKay for helping to cover up for his son at Clark's expense.

In the coda, Kate still objects to the marriage, but is diverted by flirtation with Ironside, who strategically underestimates her age, earning of tip of the beer can from Aaron (to whom the Chief had confided in an earlier scene that he still has eyes for younger women).



I don't remember this one at all.
I'm with RJ here...the only reason I'm familiar with this is because it's been in my playlist for a while as an album track.

Released in conjunction with the album '461 Ocean Boulevard', Eric Clapton's 'comeback' album after an absence of three years during which time he was dealing with a heroin addiction.
Oh, yeah! :rommie:
Clapton's only chart-topper. I have a distinctive first-hand recollection of this as a current song.

So who did shoot the deputy? Somebody call in Ironside before he gets cancelled. Or maybe the narrator is just plea-bargaining.

Another classic. Shame you don't hear it much on the radio anymore.
Another goodie.
An enjoyable bit of business, and the second of Preston's two chart-toppers.

Wow, less than a month! I better stock up on party favors.
An historic moment is nigh.

Okay, whew. That seemed more like something Pete would do.
"Pete, you'll kill him!" (DRINK!)

Yeah, but what I'm thinking is whether the bullet would fire at all. It seems to me that the powder would have to be packed tightly to be ignited by the hammer.
A quick search indicates that half-loaded bullets can fire, but there's a risk of misfiring or other complications with rifles.
 
Lucy shows off a little in evading his getaway...
Like Lucy couldn't tackle a guy on a bike.

The Mods get jobs there--Linc and Pete as orderlies, Julie as a candy striper
Or they just put on the uniforms and show up.

Walter (Howard Duff)
Omnipresent character actor.

we see Nurse Belle Fuller (Martha Scott) siphoning and pocketing a vial of medication
As silly as their portrayal of hospitals are, this is all too accurate-- around the time I left BMC there were several nurses in the Women's Center under investigation for pocketing doses of medicine that should have gone to patients. Not to sell, but for their own use. And it was not an isolated incident.

the nurse rebuffs him, insisting that nothing more can be done until the doctor comes in the morning.
Back to silly. Doctors are there 24/7. There's this place called a "call room." :rommie:

Dr. Webber (James Sikking)
Captain Riding Crop!

Dr. Webber: I can't be the judge of when life should stop.
Linda: But you are, you're prolonging it!
He could have also mentioned that it was illegal. But this is pretty heavy duty for 1974. It's horrible watching somebody suffer without relief when you know they'll never get any better.

Nurse Fuller and Pete walk in to find Martha dead with the needle in her arm and Walter sobbing.
So he's been stockpiling medication in order to give her a lethal dose? Meaning that between him and the nurse she's been getting little to no pain killers at all.

a vet who tells her that he needs it for pain from a leg injury.
There's this place called the VA, kid.

Linc finds a hospital towel in Rick's locker, and learns that Rick plays there as a musician.
I worked in two hospitals over twenty-two years and we never had a staff musician. Must have been the budget cuts. :rommie:

Julie pays Fuller a visit and lays it straight, not divulging her true profession but letting her know that Mr. Graham is being charged for murder and that the police know about Rick and what she's been doing; and Fuller admits to it.
There we go. It's possible to write Julie's character as useful.

and starts rummaging through the medicine cabinets for what he needs.
Pretty ridiculous, but at least he does get caught.

a nurse walks in on him shooting up and screams.
"Eek!" Most nurses I knew would have twisted his arm behind his back and knocked his head into the wall a couple of times to relax him. :rommie:

Rick reaches at the broken glass in desperation.
Yeah, kind of a lost cause at this point.

The coda has the Grahams thanking Julie outside the courthouse for her concern as Walter expresses his willingness to face the music for what he did.
I can imagine that watching the woman suffer must have made the episode uncomfortable, but they kind of glossed over the issue of euthanasia. Probably the best they could do at that time and it gave the TV audience something to think about.

Awkward looks are exchanged between Walter and Fuller as she's brought in, and Julie walks back to the other Mods waiting at the Charger.
Meanwhile, the owners of the jewels are sitting at home wondering if any progress has been made in the investigation. :rommie:

"Love Me in December"
Cute. :rommie:

Aaron Clark (Steve Forrest in a mustache and wifebeater)
The SWAT guy, and not Jock Ewing.

local newspaperman Elton Ferris (Simon Oakland)
Vincenzoooo!

It turns out that Clark was a wartime acquaintance of the Chief's with whom he wasn't on good terms
Just the person to turn to then.

Dunhill, who's turning 19, is his girlfriend. (Forrest was eight years younger than Burr, but served in the Battle of the Bulge at 18. His character is later established to be about 55, which is roughly Burr's age.)
That's a pretty serious age gap.

Clark isn't happy to see his former commanding officer, and the Chief offers to leave, but Clark apologizes and asks him to stay.
So Team Ironside are basically just private citizens here, way outside their jurisdiction and asked to help informally.

We further learn that the Chief was trying to get Clark tossed out of the service entirely, but later pinned a medal on him.
Maybe the problem was with the Chief. :rommie:

the Chief sounds out Clark's attorney, McKay (Val Avery), regarding where his loyalties lie.
Maybe Vicki should have hunted down Perry Mason instead. :rommie:

Kate (Madlyn Rhue, who is old enough to be the mother of a 19-year-old)
If she hadn't been exiled to Ceti Alpha V!

While searching the remains of Clark's house for a murder weapon
No forensics experts in small towns.

Deputy Billy Trona (Gregory Sierra)
Detective Chano.

the Chief accuses him of using Vicki as his latest way of rebelling against society.
"What do you think you are, a Hippie?"

Aaron is giving Vicki a horse
Good grief. :rommie:

the Chief finally persuades her to divulge the details of the argument between Aaron and Powell--that Powell was drunkenly forcing himself on her when Aaron intervened, but it never came to blows.
And this needed to be kept secret because....?

Against his father's will, Jr. confesses that he was helping Jerry set fire to the house when Jerry fell from scaffolding, injuring his head; and that while Jerry managed to walk away, he later collapsed dead.
Okay, so Powell torched the house because Clark intervened with Vicki's mother and Wagner was helping because Clark has a young girlfriend, and Ferris let the house burn down because his wife was messing around with Clark. Do I have all that straight? :rommie:

Kate still objects to the marriage, but is diverted by flirtation with Ironside
Good idea, send her to Canada where she'll be out of her daughter's hair. :rommie:

(to whom the Chief had confided in an earlier scene that he still has eyes for younger women).
Girl watching is fine, but 35 years? Geez! :rommie:

So who did shoot the deputy? Somebody call in Ironside before he gets cancelled. Or maybe the narrator is just plea-bargaining.
Now that you mention it, it's kind of funny that somebody didn't do a sequel song that solved the case. :rommie:

An historic moment is nigh.
One that I remember well.

"Pete, you'll kill him!" (DRINK!)
:rommie:

A quick search indicates that half-loaded bullets can fire, but there's a risk of misfiring or other complications with rifles.
Well, I was close. :rommie:
 
Like Lucy couldn't tackle a guy on a bike.
The guy was trying to run him over. He hopped over it like Spidey.

Or they just put on the uniforms and show up.
Could be.

As silly as their portrayal of hospitals are, this is all too accurate-- around the time I left BMC there were several nurses in the Women's Center under investigation for pocketing doses of medicine that should have gone to patients. Not to sell, but for their own use. And it was not an isolated incident.
Interesting.

So he's been stockpiling medication in order to give her a lethal dose? Meaning that between him and the nurse she's been getting little to no pain killers at all.
No, I didn't get that impression at all. It was a moment of opportunity. Keep in mind that this was another nurse. Apparently her syringe had more than she needed to use in it, for whatever reason.

There's this place called the VA, kid.
He supposedly had a thing against hospitals since his experience in 'Nam, but it was hard to tell how much of his story was the truth.

I worked in two hospitals over twenty-two years and we never had a staff musician. Must have been the budget cuts. :rommie:
He was a musician at Jon's Joynt, the club.

There we go. It's possible to write Julie's character as useful.
They seem to be realizing this far too late.

I can imagine that watching the woman suffer must have made the episode uncomfortable, but they kind of glossed over the issue of euthanasia. Probably the best they could do at that time and it gave the TV audience something to think about.
As always, these are my summaries; you might have gotten more out of the episode itself.

Meanwhile, the owners of the jewels are sitting at home wondering if any progress has been made in the investigation. :rommie:
The jewels were recovered from the locker early in the episode.

So Team Ironside are basically just private citizens here, way outside their jurisdiction and asked to help informally.
Now that you mention it, yeah.

And this needed to be kept secret because....?
Embarrassment/scandal, I guess.

Okay, so Powell torched the house because Clark intervened with Vicki's mother and Wagner was helping because Clark has a young girlfriend, and Ferris let the house burn down because his wife was messing around with Clark. Do I have all that straight? :rommie:
I think Wagner was just helping because he was a buddy, and I wasn't clear on the third point, but that makes sense.

Now that you mention it, it's kind of funny that somebody didn't do a sequel song that solved the case. :rommie:
He shot the sheriff,
It was I who shot the deputy


Needs some work...get on it.
 
No, I didn't get that impression at all. It was a moment of opportunity. Keep in mind that this was another nurse. Apparently her syringe had more than she needed to use in it, for whatever reason.
I think the reason was that Mod Squad had no medical consultant. :rommie:

He supposedly had a thing against hospitals since his experience in 'Nam, but it was hard to tell how much of his story was the truth.
Could be true, and it was his mother he was manipulating, so I can't really quibble.

He was a musician at Jon's Joynt, the club.
Ah, I see that I completely misread that sentence. :rommie:

They seem to be realizing this far too late.
Which is a shame.

As always, these are my summaries; you might have gotten more out of the episode itself.
Right, that's true.

The jewels were recovered from the locker early in the episode.
Yeah, but it was kind of a Chekov thing. Was he the thief? A courier? Fence? It would have been better for the story if it was all about the drugs. But this show loves jewel thefts. :rommie:

Embarrassment/scandal, I guess.
Small-town politics is once again worth more than a human life. :rommie:

He shot the sheriff,
It was I who shot the deputy


Needs some work...get on it.
I shot the deputy
Then framed Eric Clapton for it
Because he was gonna hang
for the sheriff anyway....


Kinda freeform. :rommie:
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



The Mod Squad
"Scion of Death"
Originally aired February 8, 1973
Edited Wiki said:
Pete and Linc witness the kidnapping of the son of a newspaper publisher, but his father refuses to report the abduction to the police.

The guys stake out a couple of burglary suspects as one of them, Eddie Payne (Bill Vint), enters a backlot pool hall and the other, Roy Condon (Aaron's brother Daniel Spelling), keeps watch outside. They witness Condon being given money by a passing young man (Richard Rowley), following which a car screeches up and a couple of stocking-masked men abduct the young man. Pete chases after Condon on foot but loses him, while Linc tries to pursue the vehicle but is cut off. However, Linc catches Payne on foot as he exits to find uniformed backup arriving and attempts to flee. Questioned by Greer, Payne insists that he knows nothing about a kidnapping, and directs them to Roy's old man.

The two kidnappers, Sam Brodie and Woody Samuels (Ross Elliott and Larry Golden), bring the boy to Brodie's home and tie him to a bed, while Brodie's wife Cora (Mitzi Hoag) acts concerned about the potential consequences. Samuels makes a ransom call to the hostage's father, Tribune publisher Walter Ryan (Don Porter), threatening him not to inform the authorities and ordering him to get rid of his servants. Ryan shares the situation with his wife, Nancy (Julie Adams :D). After Pete speaks to Roy's disapproving father (Lewis Charles), Linc visits a gym where Roy practices karate to question him. Roy insists that he was watching Sesame Street (kinda late for that), but when Linc presses and Roy tries practicing on him, Linc quickly subdues him and takes him in for interrogation.

Greer: You can either do business with me or the FBI.​
Roy: I don't care if you bring in the CIA.​

Or the BBC,
B. B. King,
or Doris Day...
Matt Busby!

While Roy's story is that he was collecting a payment for a hot ring that the victim bought for his old lady, he informs Greer that the victim was Danny Ryan. Realizing that the kidnappers may have gotten to the Ryans, Greer sends Julie in to scope out the situation.

Posing as a door-to-door survey taker, Julie hands Mrs. Ryan a clipboard with "POLICE" written on the form. And a brief explanation written underneath. Nancy lets Julie in as requested in finer handwriting, and while Walter checks her ID and tries to send her away, with his wife's help he's persuaded to cooperate before the FBI get involved and it's out of the police's hands. Mr. Ryan answers questions into a walkie talkie with the guys at the other end. While the kidnappers are making the next ransom call, which Julie records, back at the Brodie home, Danny gets loose, recognizes Cora, and makes a run for it, only to be pursued and cornered by the kidnappers as they return. Samuels learns that the Brodies worked six years for the Ryans as their chauffeur and cook before Sam was caught stealing. Cora is horrified to learn that her husband is considering dealing with Danny to avoid identification.

While Mr. Ryan goes to withdraw money from his bank at a time specified by the kidnappers, Julie learns that the Ryans had another son who was killed in 'Nam and that Nancy blames herself for what's happened to Danny, feeling that she's being punished for having considered aborting him. Staking out the bank with Pete, Linc recognizes a man watching in a phone booth (Dennis Dugan) as one whom he ran into on the backlot while apprehending Eddie Payne. Linc tails him and learns that his name is Chris Norton. Back at the house, Danny pleads with Cora to help him. Walter Ryan is subsequently persuaded by Greer to play along with a risky plan of Pete's to save his son.

After Walter has a heart-to-heart with Julie about the value of his son being greater than that of any money, the kidnappers call again and he tells them that he wasn't able to make the large withdrawal, but can do so the next day. The bank is staked out again, with "finger man" Norton once more on the scene, but this time Ryan fakes a heart attack in the parking lot, is tended to by a conveniently present doctor, and is rushed away in a squad car. Norton calls it in and is subsequently arrested, Greer having gotten a trace to the farmhouse hideout. In order to get close to the place without drawing suspicion, Pete and Linc take to their dirt bikes again (Linc's helmet reprising its role). Unable to get ahold of Norton, Brodie gets nervous and has his wife start packing. Samuels goes into the bedroom with his gun drawn to deal with Danny, but is distracted by the sound of the bikes. Pete fakes a spill nearby and Linc walks him to the house and pushes his way in to use the phone. The kidnappers draw their guns and the unarmed Mods make short work of them. Greer and Walter watch from a hillside as Pete and Danny walk out and wave toward them.

In the coda, Nancy is tearfully reunited with her son outside of police HQ. The Mods steer Walter into making a donation to charity in lieu of a reward, and then walk off to the Charger.



Which is a shame.
See also the episode above.

Yeah, but it was kind of a Chekov thing. Was he the thief? A courier? Fence?
A Russkie spy looking for nuclear wessels?

It would have been better for the story if it was all about the drugs. But this show loves jewel thefts. :rommie:
At least Rick didn't have a bunch of furs stuffed in his locker.

I shot the deputy
Then framed Eric Clapton for it
Because he was gonna hang
for the sheriff anyway....


Kinda freeform. :rommie:
This is why we're not a famous songwriting team.
 
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