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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

Fun fact: In the novel, No's complex was fueled not by a nuclear reactor, but by bird guano.
They should have left that in the movie. Bond's final quip could have been, "Same shit, different day."

A Hero Who Fancies Himself Hogan[/crittendon]
A Chap Called Ironside, A Hero Who Fancies Himself Hogan-- "What If The British Won The Revolutionary War?" :rommie:

But they kept coming, so it was a little more than a found money situation.
She had made an effort to set them straight. Although I suppose she could have just refused delivery.

I think Archie calculated around $400 a year.
That's more than four quarters a day. :rommie:

But you can't make deposits when you're dead.
True, solving one problem often creates another one.

Or maybe they just weren't good at doing it.
Maybe it sounds slightly different in their universe. :rommie:

She looked like a believable match for him, though.
What a look she's giving him. Radar, you're a dope. :rommie:

Heck, even Klinger was coupled up:
Klinger made out the best of them all. Maybe there's something to this dressing up thing. :rommie:

It was implied that the bureaucracy was on Regina's side of this issue. Lt. Willis even came off as something of an Archie type, though they left the blatant bigotry to Regina.
Wait, Regina was involved? I assumed she was a nurse. Or do you mean the guy's wife?

They would have had to go through the bureaucracy first.
Maybe Mulcahy could have helped, since it's part of his job. I forget if he has a rank or just some special status.

He ran in the primaries against Nixon in '68, not long after he became governor of California. Reagan as a politician with presidential aspirations was definitely on the radar (pardon the expression) when the episode was made.
I guess they saw the writing on the wall.

Whatever issues the original material may have had, the slapped-on nonsense filler isn't doing it any favors.
True. :rommie:

Apparently, he was off leash.
:rommie:

I recall Lionel getting married to their daughter.
Yeah, their daughter was Black and they got married and had a kid. Then they got divorced, possibly because somebody left the show, I forget. Their son was White and I don't remember him being around that much. I think he was off in college or something.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



All in the Family
"The Games Bunkers Play"
Originally aired November 3, 1973
Wiki said:
During a group therapy game, Mike gets offended by the honest opinions about him.

After an arguably undercooked chicken dinner, Mike enthusiastically breaks out an adult board game called Group Therapy that Lionel and the Lorenzos are coming over to play. Archie, of course, doesn't approve of it.

Mike: Anything after George III is left-wing to you.​

After inspecting some cards (with his glasses on for a change), Archie mocks the game by doing an "interpretative dance" of himself leaving for Kelsey's. (It's interesting that they got Archie out of the way for this one.) Setting up what kicks off the situation, when Lionel comes over, the first words out of Mike's mouth are about an article he read concerning "the black problem". (Clearly Mike learned nothing from the episode with the burglars.) A few turns give us an idea of how the game's played, and everyone's having fun until Lionel's question results in him sharing his issue with how Mike makes Lionel's skin color the focal point of their relationship. Subsequent questions and Mike's behavior concerning them conspire to keep him in the spotlight. When Gloria has to pick the person she's closest to in the group, she chooses Edith, which sends Mike into one of his abusive tantrums. On his own turn, Mike extols maturity, tolerance, and open-mindedness as his own virtues, and everyone votes that he's a "Cop Out" (not being honest). Irene chooses Mike as the one who makes her nervous, because of how uptight he's acting about the game. And Edith tells Mike that he acts too stuck-up, particularly with Archie.

Edith: If you was really smarter than Archie, you'd be smart enough not to let him see that you're smarter than him.​

(One could really run with that if one wanted to theorize that Edith's not as dumb as she acts.) In each case where it's somebody else's turn, everyone but Mike votes that the player is "With It". Feeling that he's being ganged up on, Mike works himself into a frenzy, tosses over the board, and runs upstairs.

In their room, Mike and Gloria get into an argument about how he can't take criticism. Mike comes downstairs ostensibly to apologize, but turns it into an airing of grievances with everyone else's behavior, and gets all wound up again at their reactions. He tries to put others on the spot, starting with having Lionel apply his question to Edith. He touchingly thanks her for always having made him feel welcome, which earns him a kiss on the cheek. Still worked up, Mike demonstrates how he never listens to anybody as Edith's trying to tell him a story to explain why he yells at Archie--which comes down to Mike being resentful of Archie because Mike owes him so much. When they're alone in the kitchen, Edith picks Mike back up again by telling him the other half--that Archie yells at him out of jealousy for being what Archie, who dropped out of school to support his family, couldn't be. Mike's absorbing this when Archie comes home through the back door, irate because he assumes that the game's still going on. Mike tells Archie "I understand" and embraces him. Needless to say, Archie's expression is Sammy Davis Jr.-level priceless.



M*A*S*H
"The Trial of Henry Blake"
Originally aired November 3, 1973
1974 Emmy nomination for Best Writing in Comedy (McLean Stevenson)
Wiki said:
Henry is put on trial for charges made by Frank and Margaret regarding his command of the 4077th.

When Blake and Radar leave for regimental HQ all uniformed up, Burns can't help boasting to the guys that it's part of his plan to gain permanent command of the 4077th. It turns out that the colonel is attending a hearing presided over by General Mitchell (Robert F. Simon) and Major Murphy (Jack Aaron), which serves much the same purpose as correspondence/report episodes--taking the audience into a series of flashback vignettes of hijinks at the camp. These include Blake officiating over wagered-upon gurney races in which doctors push nurses; Radar using a mail-order kit to moonlight as a wingtip shoe salesman; and Klinger, clad in goggles, a robe, and fuzzy slippers, using a hang glider to try to escape the camp (via a very unconvincing effect). Based on Blake and O'Reilly's admissions to these incidents, the general announces that Blake will be confined at HQ to face the more serious charges of falsifying records and lending aid and comfort to the enemy.

Radar's allowed to return to the camp to retrieve records, and tells the guys what's going on. When they confront Burns and announce their plan to help Blake by finding a Nurse Ratty whom they believe to be involved in the charges, Burns has them placed on house arrest. The guys bust loose with Klinger's help and show up at the hearing--where Blake is accused of diverting supplies to North Korea--with Nurse Meg Cratty (Hope Summers), who praises the colonel for sending the supplies to the clinic she runs for young Korean mothers north of the border. Blake has a good moment in which he unapologetically stands by his actions. The general is willing to let the matter go if Burns will drop the charges...which the major is persuaded to do when Hawkeye hands him a letter written to his wife about her husband's extramarital activities. (You'd think they'd be playing that card a lot more often.)

In the coda, the camp comes out to see the general bringing Blake home. Klinger greets the general with flowers, and all of the personnel are wearing wingtip shoes.



That's more than four quarters a day. :rommie:
Yeah, doesn't sound right, but that was based on Edith saying that it was up to $8 a week.

Wait, Regina was involved? I assumed she was a nurse. Or do you mean the guy's wife?
No, I'm just saying that the Army brass probably felt the same way that she did about "our guys" bringing home LIP families.

The dog will probably turn out to be Jaime Sommers's dog or something.
 
"The Games Bunkers Play"
Mostly non-Bunkers, actually. :rommie:

Mike enthusiastically breaks out an adult board game called Group Therapy that Lionel and the Lorenzos are coming over to play.
Apparently a real game that existed at the time.

Archie mocks the game by doing an "interpretative dance" of himself leaving for Kelsey's.
Sometimes Archie can be intentionally funny. :rommie:

(It's interesting that they got Archie out of the way for this one.)
Smart, though. This means Mike has to face only valid criticisms from characters with credibility.

(Clearly Mike learned nothing from the episode with the burglars.)
If people learned....

Lionel's question results in him sharing his issue with how Mike makes Lionel's skin color the focal point of their relationship.
Something that has only gotten worse.

When Gloria has to pick the person she's closest to in the group, she chooses Edith, which sends Mike into one of his abusive tantrums.
This question alone is a good reason not to have Archie around.

Edith: If you was really smarter than Archie, you'd be smart enough not to let him see that you're smarter than him.

(One could really run with that if one wanted to theorize that Edith's not as dumb as she acts.)
Oh, yeah, absolutely. :rommie:

Feeling that he's being ganged up on, Mike works himself into a frenzy, tosses over the board, and runs upstairs.
Yikes. Irene must be really nervous now.

He touchingly thanks her for always having made him feel welcome, which earns him a kiss on the cheek.
Awww. :D

Mike's absorbing this when Archie comes home through the back door, irate because he assumes that the game's still going on. Mike tells Archie "I understand" and embraces him. Needless to say, Archie's expression is Sammy Davis Jr.-level priceless.
I remember this very well, although I thought it was from a different episode. One of the classic moments. :rommie:

When Blake and Radar leave for regimental HQ all uniformed up, Burns can't help boasting to the guys that it's part of his plan to gain permanent command of the 4077th.
Talk about giving aid and comfort to the enemy. :rommie:

Klinger, clad in goggles, a robe, and fuzzy slippers, using a hang glider to try to escape the camp (via a very unconvincing effect).
I remember this. :rommie: I don't think he really needs a hang glider to go AWOL.

Blake has a good moment in which he unapologetically stands by his actions.
Good for him. He doesn't usually show much backbone. This reminds me of Trapper and the orphan kid. Neither one of them generally have good moments.

(You'd think they'd be playing that card a lot more often.)
Indeed. They should have complete control of him by now. :rommie:

Klinger greets the general with flowers, and all of the personnel are wearing wingtip shoes.
Chekov is pleased. :D

Yeah, doesn't sound right, but that was based on Edith saying that it was up to $8 a week.
Maybe the quarters were accellerating, which would be a better explanation of why it was a problem.

No, I'm just saying that the Army brass probably felt the same way that she did about "our guys" bringing home LIP families.
Ah, okay, I misread the sentence. That could be true. But there were a lot of guys who brought home Korean wives, though.

The dog will probably turn out to be Jaime Sommers's dog or something.
It's a small bionic universe, after all.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


August 11
  • At Patricia Nixon Historical Park in Cerritos, California, former First Lady Pat Nixon's childhood home was firebombed, causing $2,000 in damage. The home would be destroyed by fire in 1978.

August 12
  • 20th Century Fox released the road movie Harry and Tonto, starring Art Carney and directed by Paul Mazursky.
  • During a televised address to a joint session of the United States Congress, U.S. President Ford said, "To the limits of my strength and ability, I will be the President of the black, brown, red and white Americans, of old and young, of women's liberationists and male chauvinists and all the rest of us in between, of the poor and the rich, of native sons and new refugees, of those who work at lathes or at desks or in mines or in the fields, and of Christians, Jews, Moslems, Buddhists and atheists, if there really are any atheists after what we have all been through."
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August 13
  • On the second day of principal photography for the film The Eiger Sanction, directed by and starring Clint Eastwood, a falling rock on the north face of the Eiger killed 26-year-old British climber David Knowles and injured climbing advisor and cameraman Mike Hoover.

August 14
  • Turkey invaded Cyprus for the second time, eventually occupying 37% of the island's territory, and dividing the Cypriot capital of Nicosia.
  • Greece withdrew its forces from NATO's military command structure, as a result of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus.

August 15
  • Yuk Young-soo, 48, the wife of South Korea's President Park Chung Hee, was fatally wounded during an attempt by a Japanese-born North Korean sympathizer, Mun Se-gwang, to assassinate President Park. The event occurred as the President was giving a speech at the National Theater of Korea in Seoul for National Liberation Day. During the gun battle that followed, a bullet fired by one of the president's guards ricocheted and killed Jang Bong-hwa, a member of a high school choir performing at the event. After the shooting and Mun's arrest, President Park resumed his address.
  • Clay Shaw, 61, American businessman and CIA contact, the only person brought to trial for involvement in the assassination of John F. Kennedy, died of metastatic lung cancer. Shaw had been indicted and arrested in 1967 on the prosecution of New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison on charges of conspiracy, but acquitted by a jury.

August 16
  • U.S. President Ford gave the first state dinner of his administration, hosting King Hussein and Queen Alia of Jordan at the White House.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "The Night Chicago Died," Paper Lace
2. "Feel Like Makin' Love," Roberta Flack
3. "(You're) Having My Baby," Paul Anka
4. "Tell Me Something Good," Rufus
5. "Please Come to Boston," Dave Loggins
6. "Call on Me," Chicago
7. "Waterloo," ABBA
8. "Wildwood Weed," Jim Stafford
9. "I'm Leaving It (All) Up to You," Donny & Marie Osmond
10. "Sideshow," Blue Magic
11. "Keep on Smilin'," Wet Willie
12. "Takin' Care of Business," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
13. "I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton
14. "Shinin' On," Grand Funk
15. "Rock Me Gently," Andy Kim
16. "Sure as I'm Sittin' Here," Three Dog Night
17. "You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy
18. "Annie's Song," John Denver
19. "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me," Elton John
20. "Rub It In," Billy "Crash" Craddock
21. "Then Came You," Dionne Warwick & The Spinners
22. "Wild Thing," Fancy
23. "Hang On in There Baby," Johnny Bristol
24. "Rock and Roll Heaven," The Righteous Brothers
25. "Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston
26. "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe," Barry White
27. "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," Steely Dan
28. "Radar Love," Golden Earring
29. "My Thang," James Brown
30. "Clap for the Wolfman," The Guess Who
31. "The Air That I Breathe," The Hollies
32. "You Haven't Done Nothin'," Stevie Wonder

34. "It's Only Rock 'N Roll (But I Like It)," The Rolling Stones

36. "Rock Your Baby," George McCrae
37. "Rock the Boat," Hues Corporation
38. "Let's Put It All Together," The Stylistics
39. "Time for Livin'," Sly & The Family Stone
40. "Beach Baby," The First Class

42. "Another Saturday Night," Cat Stevens
43. "On and On," Gladys Knight & The Pips
44. "Sweet Home Alabama," Lynyrd Skynyrd
45. "Who Do You Think You Are," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods

47. "Free Man in Paris," Joni Mitchell

49. "One Hell of a Woman," Mac Davis

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

57. "Come Monday," Jimmy Buffett

59. "Finally Got Myself Together (I'm a Changed Man)," The Impressions

61. "If You Love Me (Let Me Know)," Olivia Newton-John
62. "Be Thankful for What You Got," William DeVaughn
63. "I Honestly Love You," Olivia Newton-John

68. "You Won't See Me," Anne Murray

70. "Can't Get Enough," Bad Company

72. "Earache My Eye," Cheech & Chong

80. "Hollywood Swinging," Kool & The Gang

82. "You Litttle Trustmaker," The Tymes

84. "Surfin' U.S.A.," The Beach Boys

87. "Travelin' Prayer," Billy Joel


93. "You Make Me Feel Brand New," The Stylistics

95. "Band on the Run," Paul McCartney & Wings

99. "Billy, Don't Be a Hero," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods


Leaving the chart:
  • "Already Gone," Eagles (15 weeks)
  • "Dancing Machine," Jackson 5 (22 weeks)
  • "I'm Coming Home," The Spinners (13 weeks)
  • "Sundown," Gordon Lightfoot (18 weeks)

Re-entering the chart:

"Surfin' U.S.A.," The Beach Boys
(originally charted in 1963, reaching #3 US, #20 R&B, #34 UK; reaches #36 US this run)


New on the chart:

"Travelin' Prayer," Billy Joel
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(#77 US; #31 AC)

"You Litttle Trustmaker," The Tymes
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(#12 US; #31 AC; #7 Dance; #20 R&B; #18 UK)

"Can't Get Enough," Bad Company
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(#5 US; #15 UK)

"I Honestly Love You," Olivia Newton-John
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(#1 US the weeks of Oct. 5 and 12, 1974; #1 AC; #6 Country; #22 UK; 1975 Grammy Award for Record of the Year)



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



Mostly non-Bunkers, actually. :rommie:
I noticed that.

Apparently a real game that existed at the time.
It hadn't even occurred to me that it was real! Yep, that's it. Product placement?

Smart, though. This means Mike has to face only valid criticisms from characters with credibility.
Oh, absolutely. If Archie had been present, a) it would have become the usual Mike vs. Archie situation; and b) Archie would have drawn more attention from the other players. Without Archie there to tank, Mike was drawing the aggro.

Oh, yeah, absolutely. :rommie:
I think she's maybe a little smarter than she lets on, but she's not a secret genius.

I remember this very well, although I thought it was from a different episode. One of the classic moments. :rommie:
Could be they'll have occasion to hug again, somewhere between Joey and the Stivics moving out and the Stivics leaving the show.

I remember this. :rommie: I don't think he really needs a hang glider to go AWOL.
There was a bit in there where somebody was describing what they saw that was strikingly similar to the police station scene in Superman where the beat cop is describing Supes to his desk sergeant as a "big blue bird...in bright red boots".

Good for him. He doesn't usually show much backbone. This reminds me of Trapper and the orphan kid. Neither one of them generally have good moments.
Once in a while we're reminded that Henry isn't just a buffoonish, laissez-faire commanding officer, he's also a skilled and dedicated surgeon.

Indeed. They should have complete control of him by now. :rommie:
Maybe it's a code of honor thing...the thing they won't pull out unless it's really warranted to save somebody else.

Chekov is pleased. :D
:D

Maybe the quarters were accellerating, which would be a better explanation of why it was a problem.
That wasn't factored into the math, though. There was the thing where if she tried to send one back, they'd send her two more.
 
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At Patricia Nixon Historical Park in Cerritos, California, former First Lady Pat Nixon's childhood home was firebombed, causing $2,000 in damage.
For Pete's sake....

During a televised address to a joint session of the United States Congress, U.S. President Ford said, "To the limits of my strength and ability, I will be the President of the black, brown, red and white Americans, of old and young, of women's liberationists and male chauvinists and all the rest of us in between, of the poor and the rich, of native sons and new refugees, of those who work at lathes or at desks or in mines or in the fields, and of Christians, Jews, Moslems, Buddhists and atheists, if there really are any atheists after what we have all been through."
He almost sounded like a Liberal up until that last part. :rommie:

After the shooting and Mun's arrest, President Park resumed his address.
Maybe not the best decision.

"Travelin' Prayer," Billy Joel
I don't remember this one. He'll get better. :rommie:

"You Litttle Trustmaker," The Tymes
Nice and nostalgic.

"Can't Get Enough," Bad Company
Classic Rock.

"I Honestly Love You," Olivia Newton-John
Classic Olivia, when she was Olivia.

It hadn't even occurred to me that it was real! Yep, that's it. Product placement?
Probably. I'm sure it flew off the shelves in the next week or so. Probably destroyed a lot of relationships. :rommie:

Oh, absolutely. If Archie had been present, a) it would have become the usual Mike vs. Archie situation; and b) Archie would have drawn more attention from the other players. Without Archie there to tank, Mike was drawing the aggro.
They really knew what they were doing. This is the sort of thing that gave them credibility.

I think she's maybe a little smarter than she lets on, but she's not a secret genius.
She's kind of a genius with people. Not quarters, though. :rommie:

Could be they'll have occasion to hug again, somewhere between Joey and the Stivics moving out and the Stivics leaving the show.
It was definitely the "I understand" moment that I'm remembering, but I thought it was in the Shoe-Bootie episode, if you know what that one was. :rommie:

There was a bit in there where somebody was describing what they saw that was strikingly similar to the police station scene in Superman where the beat cop is describing Supes to his desk sergeant as a "big blue bird...in bright red boots".
Sadly, the world was just not ready for Super-Klinger.

Once in a while we're reminded that Henry isn't just a buffoonish, laissez-faire commanding officer, he's also a skilled and dedicated surgeon.
Oh, yeah, as far as medicine and compassion goes, he's on par with Hawkeye and Trapper.

Maybe it's a code of honor thing...the thing they won't pull out unless it's really warranted to save somebody else.
That sounds reasonable. They are ethical people, for the most part.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



All in the Family
"Edith's Conversion"
Originally aired November 10, 1973
Wiki said:
Archie is worried that Edith will convert when she befriends Irene's sister, a Catholic nun.

Meathead proves that there are limits to what he'll willingly put in his mouth when he's upset to learn that Gloria, using a recipe given to her by Frank Lorenzo, is preparing horse meat for dinner. She tricks him into trying some, and after he's done overreacting, he admits that he likes it. Edith brings home Irene and her sister, Sister Theresa (Phyllis Avery), who's out of her habit. Archie then comes home and starts talking smack about Catholicism because of a medal of St. Anne that Theresa gave Edith, with him not knowing Theresa's profession and considering her to be a religious nut when she chimes in.

Theresa: [Our religion is] like a deep well--you can always dip in and renew yourself.​
Archie: That's the trouble with you Catholics, you won't quit renewin' yourselves and we got too many people in the world already.​

Father Majeski from Our Lady of the Cling Peaches (Barnard Hughes making his third of three appearances in the role) drops in for Theresa and Irene, but Archie remains unaware about Theresa. The family sits down to eat, with Archie and Edith being led to believe they're having steak, which Archie objects to cost-wise until he learns that Gloria bought it.

Archie: It's delicious! I wanna tell ya, you really whipped up a winner tonight!​

Edith discusses things that she likes about the Catholic faith; and when she learns what she's eating, rushes into the kitchen to thoroughly rinse her mouth out.

Edith: I keep thinkin' of Mr. Ed.​

She then excitedly leaves to attend a guitar mass with Irene. Theresa comes to the door afterward, now in her habit, to leave some instructional books about the faith for Edith. Alarmed at the possibility of the titular situation, Archie heads to Majeski's church--which turns out not to be the one that Edith was going to--and airs his grievances.

Archie: Here's another one--The Holy Father's Newest Encyclical...as if anybody cares what He rides around on.​
Majeski: God works in mysterious ways, Mr. Bunker. And you're one of His darkest mysteries.​

Majeski insists that nobody's trying to convert Edith and, believing that she's looking for something, encourages Archie to talk to her, or to his minister, whose name Majeski knows better than Archie.

Archie: Why should I talk to that dumbbell? He's turned more Protestants into Catholics than you have.​

As Archie leaves, Majeski decides not to proceed to the movies as he'd intended to.

Majeski: After talking to you, Dillinger would be a letdown.​

When Archie returns home after Edith and Irene, he assumes the worst and confronts Irene about it.

Irene: Are you trying to accuse me of proselytizing?​
Archie: What? [Shocked look comes over his face.] Nooo...!

Irene tells Archie that regardless of her religion, Edith knows that the important thing in life is to love other people, and she and Mike, despite his atheism, agree on that principle...to Archie's dismay. After she leaves, Archie asks Edith to fix him some of that leftover steak, saying that he's so hungry he could eat a...well, you know.

There was a running gag of teasing the audience into thinking that Archie had realized what he'd eaten, but he never did.



M*A*S*H
"Dear Dad...Three"
Originally aired November 10, 1973
Frndly said:
Another letter from Hawkeye to his father tells about a bigoted soldier who wants the "right color" blood, a live grenade in the OR, and Henry's home movies.

The personnel are engaging in recreational activities during some down time as Hawkeye writes to his father about a day in the OR in which a patient, Sgt. Condon (Mills Watson), makes the request described above right after Lt. Ginger Bayliss leaves his bedside. Then the X-ray of a young soldier reveals an unexploded grenade embedded in his body, which Hawkeye carefully pulls out as Blake assists (serious Blake moment). During a "happy hour" afterward, a plastered Henry makes one-sided conversation with Father Mulcahy; Lt. Gilbert (Bobbie Mitchell) asks an uncomfortable Radar if he's really a virgin; and Hawkeye and Trapper decide to teach Condon a lesson, tinting his head and hands with iodine while he's sedated. The next day, the guys are invited into Henry's office while Radar screens a home movie of the colonel's daughter's birthday party that his wife, Lorraine (Kathleen Hughes), sent. After a touching message in which the family and guests hold up letters spelling "MISS YOU," it segues into an older clip of Henry goofing around at home for the camera, eventually being joined by neighbors Milt and Sylvia Jaffe (Arthur Abelson and Louise Vienna).

The letter continues with a spat between Frank and Margaret that turns into passion; Klinger and Ginger playing along with the prank as Condon starts to wonder why his skin is darker (which isn't even evident in the face shots); and a staff meeting chaired by Houlihan and attended by the surgeons and Radar, in which friction ensues between Frank and the guys, and the guys motion for an end to the war. Back in the OR, Trapper tells Condon that all blood is the same, and he and Hawkeye underscore their lesson by telling him of how Dr. Charles Drew, who invented the process of separating blood plasma, recently bled to death after an accident because he was refused treatment in a whites-only hospital. (Drew's Wiki page disputes the denial of admission as a myth, specifically referencing this episode.)

Hawkeye finishes his letter during a coda happy hour in which Gilbert dances with a visibly uncomfortable Radar; Condon comes by to thank Hawkeye, saluting Ginger on the way out; and Trapper introduces Hawkeye to Swedish nurse Anna Lindstrom (Sivi Aberg).



He almost sounded like a Liberal up until that last part. :rommie:
I thought it was cute.

I don't remember this one. He'll get better. :rommie:
The opening track of the Piano Man album, this was an odd choice for a single when there was stronger material to choose from. A better choice that was also travel themed would have been "You're My Home," though they'd already used it as the B-side of the "Piano Man" single:
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Also noteworthy is that Helen Reddy had covered the song on her then-current album:
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Nice and nostalgic.
This one doesn't grab me...one of those songs that I couldn't tell you how it goes while I'm listening to it. Of interest here is that the Tymes' short string of prior hits was back in '63, though I couldn't find enough info about them with a casual search to tell how much the personnel overlapped after a decade.

Classic Rock.
What the kids call "Dad rock" these days...or maybe that was last week.

Classic Olivia, when she was Olivia.
I don't have the issue with later Olivia, but she's really making her mark here.

Probably. I'm sure it flew off the shelves in the next week or so. Probably destroyed a lot of relationships. :rommie:
:lol:

It was definitely the "I understand" moment that I'm remembering, but I thought it was in the Shoe-Bootie episode, if you know what that one was. :rommie:
Not offhand, but it sounds like something in the Joey era.

That sounds reasonable. They are ethical people, for the most part.
Also, Trapper's got a family at home himself.
 
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preparing horse meat for dinner.
I don't remember horse meat being a thing (unless you count school lunches :rommie: ). I wonder if it was political or just trendy. Maybe some solution to world hunger?

considering her to be a religious nut when she chimes in.
Wouldn't want any religious nuts in the Bunker household. :rommie:

Archie: That's the trouble with you Catholics, you won't quit renewin' yourselves and we got too many people in the world already.
Is this because Arch is a ZPG guy or just because he hates everybody? :rommie:

Father Majeski from Our Lady of the Cling Peaches
Say what? :rommie:

Edith: I keep thinkin' of Mr. Ed.
That's hilarious. :rommie:

Irene tells Archie that regardless of her religion, Edith knows that the important thing in life is to love other people, and she and Mike, despite his atheism, agree on that principle...to Archie's dismay.
"Despite" his atheism. :rommie:

Then the X-ray of a young soldier reveals an unexploded grenade embedded in his body, which Hawkeye carefully pulls out as Blake assists (serious Blake moment).
I remember a live grenade incident, but this isn't it.

The next day, the guys are invited into Henry's office while Radar screens a home movie of the colonel's daughter's birthday party that his wife, Lorraine (Kathleen Hughes), sent.
That's a nice little interlude.

Dr. Charles Drew, who invented the process of separating blood plasma, recently bled to death after an accident because he was refused treatment in a whites-only hospital. (Drew's Wiki page disputes the denial of admission as a myth, specifically referencing this episode.)
It kinda makes for a more teachable moment when your stories are true.

Condon comes by to thank Hawkeye, saluting Ginger on the way out
Well, that strikes a nice balance with the other episode.

I thought it was cute.
As an Atheist, I was outraged! And offended! And all in a big tizzy! No, actually I laughed. :rommie:

A better choice that was also travel themed would have been "You're My Home," though they'd already used it as the B-side of the "Piano Man" single:

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Also noteworthy is that Helen Reddy had covered the song on her then-current album:

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I don't think I've ever heard that one either, but it is a better one.

This one doesn't grab me...one of those songs that I couldn't tell you how it goes while I'm listening to it.
It's basically one of those comfort food songs.

What the kids call "Dad rock" these days...or maybe that was last week.
Let's make that "Cool Uncle Rock." :rommie:

Not offhand, but it sounds like something in the Joey era.
I'm not sure about that.

Also, Trapper's got a family at home himself.
Ah, true. He's vulnerable to counter blackmail.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



All in the Family
"Archie in the Cellar"
Originally aired November 17, 1973
Wiki said:
While the rest of the family is away for the weekend, Archie accidentally locks himself in the cellar.

The episode opens with Archie and Mike arguing about whether Stretch Cunningham's jokes are funny when heard in his own voice via a borrowed tape recorder (uncredited Billy Sands). Archie wants a tie-breaker, so he plays the recording for Irene, who's been working on the cellar door, and it proves to be highly underwhelming. Mike and Gloria are leaving for an outdoor sociology seminar, and Edith's going out of town for the weekend to attend a family baptism. Irene tries to show Archie how the new deadbolt lock works, which can't be opened from the inside, but he rushes her out. (Even if I didn't know the title, Chekhov would be looming large here. Archie even exposits that he's expecting a delivery from the oil man.) One he's alone, Archie has some fun on the other side of the cassette, pretending to be a club crooner. He carries the recorder with him as he goes down to check the heater, and the door promptly closes and locks behind him.

Archie tries the outdoor hatch doors, which are also locked, and briefly calls for help. He then tries ineffectually to bust down the inside door, running out of steam before he gets up the stairs. After some more physical comedy in which he bends a crowbar trying to pry open the outside doors, he checks the heater to find it's empty.

Archie: Thank you, Arabs.​

He writes a note and slips it outside. Then, scoping out the provisions at hand, Archie finds an unopened bottle of Polish vodka that was a wedding present from Mike's Uncle Casmir. He polishes off more than half of it and is enjoying a snooze when the phone rings upstairs, and he tries to answer it via a toy phone within reach. So under the influence that he doesn't remember why nobody's around, Archie takes to the recorder and starts dictating his "last will and tentacle". (You know what they were trying to suggest there...:guffaw:) He leaves everything to Edith except his 48-star flag for Meathead and his living room chair for Gloria (which actually ended up in the Smithsonian); and blames Irene for killing him.

While the recorder continues to roll, he has visions of the rest of the family (appearing superimposed like ghosts), which includes an argument with Mike about Nixon (whom Archie consistently refers to as "Richard E. Nixon," if that hasn't come up before); and telling Edith that he loves her before she disappears. Archie's drunkenly pleading for the Lord to take him when the advertised oil man comes knocking at the outside doors. Still thinking he's being delivered by the Almighty, he signs off on the recorder. As the oil man comes downstairs through the inside, Archie turns to meet his maker face-to-face (Juan DeCarlos).

Archie (getting down on his knees): Forgive me, Lord! The Jeffersons was right...​

In the coda, everyone's back and Mike and Gloria tease Archie after having listened to the tape.



M*A*S*H
"The Sniper"
Originally aired November 17, 1973
IMDb said:
The 4077th deals with more than the usual mayhem when a sniper opens fire on the camp.

Frank's getting ready to do some target shooting with his newly cleaned pistol, and Hawkeye's enjoying a picnic with Lt. Suzanne Marquette (Teri Garr), when a shot shatters Hawkeye's liquor bottle. He initially thinks it's Frank and storms over, but when another shot is fired, realizes it's a titular antagonist. (There's a bad bit of audio business here in which the second shot is drowned out by the laugh track.) Henry and Radar are initially trapped in the shower, with Radar trying to get to the office to call for help only to be sent scurrying back to Blake. Many of the personnel end up taking shelter in the OR, and Trapper gets HQ on the phone only to be told that there's a push on and nobody can be sent until the next day. When Blake and Radar make it to the office, Hawkeye and Trapper argue for trying to surrender, in the hope that they'll be allowed to continue working when the wounded come in from the push. They walk out bearing a white flag, but are shot at and run for cover. (This was not their proudest moment--how naive could they be? When I'm siding with Burns and Houlihan, they're doing something wrong.)

Somehow the wounded manage to be carried in and the surgeons have to work by lantern light because the generator's been shot. Afterward, everyone's been holed up in the OR for thirteen hours with nothing to eat. (They can bring in wounded but not rations? Outsiders can come in bearing litters without being fired upon, but they can't get to the mess tent?) Margaret tries to encourage Frank to go out in the darkness and deal with the sniper with his gun. When she later realizes that he's gone, Hawkeye goes out looking for him and finds him cowering in a stack of drums. They have a nice little sympathetic talk in which Frank reveals that he flunked med school twice and Hawkeye gives him some words of encouragement. Then they hear clattering in the mess tent, and assuming that it's the sniper, Hawkeye moves in. When Frank tells him not to be a hero, he counters with a line that would sound a lot better if it wasn't coming from the guy whose first thought was surrender.

Hawkeye: Frank, you know what a hero is? Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, he's somebody who's tired enough and cold enough and hungry enough not to give a damn. I don't give a damn, come on.​

It turns out to be Radar looking for a sandwich, and though Hawkeye scolds him, it demonstrates that it wasn't that hard to get to the food in the dark. Frank gets in some wild shots along the way to remind us what he's stuffed with.

The following day, a helicopter comes in, and when the sniper starts taking shots, the soldier riding shotgun sprays the area with automatic rifle fire. Hawkeye and Trapper actually look scornful about it. After the chopper flies away, the personnel see a white flag with blood splattered on it waving from the sniper's position. They finally hit the right note with Hawkeye when, everyone wary that it could be a trick, he carries his bag out to tend to the guy who's been trying to kill everyone.

In the coda, Hawkeye's performed successful surgery on the sniper, who's said to be a kid who got cut off from his unit and delusionally thought he'd stumbled upon MacArthur's headquarters. The episode ends with a gag of Hawkeye and Trapper starting to disguise a napping Frank as the iconic general to pay their patient a visit.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"The Dinner Party"
Originally aired November 17, 1973
Wiki said:
Mary meets a congresswoman (Irene Tedrow), who accepts a casual invitation for dinner. An unexpected guest, an ill-timed preparation of Veal Prince Orloff, and Lou's ravenous appetite cause the evening to continue Mary's string of terrible parties.

Rhoda picks up a call from Congresswoman Margaret Geddes, whom Mary had recently interviewed, thinking initially that it's a prank from Phyllis. Mary politely exchanges offers to host each other for dinner, and the congresswoman invites herself for the following night. Rhoda cautions Mary that her parties are disasters, which Mary is self-conscious about, though she'd hoped that nobody else noticed. Mary resolves to keep it strictly limited to five guests so that everyone can fit at the table. When she invites Lou, he's up for dinner but not a dinner party, as he also considers her parties to be awful, noting that he broke up with his wife at one of them; but he ultimately agrees to give Mary one more chance. Murray, who's also invited and conveniently can't bring Marie, suggests that Mary ask Sue Ann for help with choosing something to make. Sue Ann is just coming off of a live, on-air flub because her oven wasn't plugged in and is out for the hide of whoever's responsible. As soon as Mary mentions that she's having a dinner party, Sue Ann invites herself--squeezing out Mary potentially bringing a date--but also offers to prepare the meal. Ted catches wind of the party and assumes that he's invited. When Mary explains the situation, he wants to know who was invited, and is fine with everyone until she gets to Murray, at which point he turns spiteful.

Ted later resorts to begging, and tells a sob story of a Christmas party that he wasn't invited to as a teenager, which he ultimately ruined by tossing a stink bomb into it. The night of the party, Mary learns too late that Sue Ann has precisely timed the veal to be served when the guests will only be just arriving, forcing her to rush them to dinner. As the guests arrive, Rhoda brings Steve Waldman, an awkward fellow employee who just got fired from the department store and asked her about having dinner together.
MTM10.jpg
Mary is forced to make him sit separately like a child at a small lamp table near her French doors. Sue Ann lets Mary take credit for the veal, which everyone is impressed with upon sight, but Lou promptly helps himself to half of it, assuming that there's more. Mary has to take him aside and explain to him that there are exactly six portions, and he has to go awkwardly put some back.

Nevertheless, by dessert time, Mary's surprised at how well things have gone overall when Ted shows up at the door with sherbet for six and guilts her into inviting him in. In the coda, Lou's chewing out Ted for crashing the party, and he starts to go into his sob story again, but Mary notices that the details are different this time.

I know what you're thinking--Chekhov's congresswoman was barely a McGuffin here.



I don't remember horse meat being a thing (unless you count school lunches :rommie: ). I wonder if it was political or just trendy. Maybe some solution to world hunger?
Or just something different that they thought Frank might introduce the Bunkers to, perhaps with somebody behind the scenes having had an experience as inspiration. (Lots of Seinfeld's situations were based on actual awkward experiences of the show's co-creator and head writer, Larry David.) It was noted that selling horse meat was illegal in New York, so Gloria had to go to Jersey to get it.

Say what? :rommie:
I never imagined that you wouldn't Cap that.
All in the Family
"Edith's Accident"
Originally aired November 6, 1971

Archie comes home in a foul mood because of a subway stall, and wants to know why Edith is even later. In her roundabout way that tries his patience, Edith describes how she lost control of her shopping cart in the grocery store parking lot and not only scratched the fender, but put a dent in the hood with a flying can of cling peaches--having to hum the phrase "cling peaches" multiple times after Archie tells her stop saying it. Archie's beside himself when he learns that she left a note on the car, as he figures he'll get taken to the cleaners by one of them "tricky garages". In their argument over such honesty, Mike is ashamed to admit that if he found change in a pay phone, he'd take it. The owner of the car, John Majeski, calls Edith about coming over after dinner, and Archie calls his garage pretending to be an insurance representative to find out what the estimate is. What Mike figured would be $30-40 and Archie saw as more likely $75 turns out to be a bill of $197.

Edith: Maybe it was the heavy syrup.​

Archie thinks that Mike may be of use as he assumes that the owner's surname is Polish, and attempts to explain why he doesn't believe anyone with the name John might be Jewish.

Archie: Like you got Saul Nelson, Izzy Watson...​
Mike: Abe Lincoln.​
Edith: I didn't know Lincoln was Jewish.​

Archie actually takes an interest when Edith relates how she saw Perry Mason catch a crook in a lie thanks to a tape recording made by Della Street...though she goes into a noteworthy tangent...

Edith: ...and Perry Mason jumped up! That's when he was playin' Perry Mason. Now he's Ironsides and...[pause held to allow for audience laughter]...he don't jump up no more!​

Mike and Gloria feel that recording Majeski without his knowledge would be depriving him of his civil rights.

Archie: He ain't [C-word], he's Polish!​

When Majeski (Barnard Hughes) comes to the door, it's clear from his collar that he's Father John Majeski.

Mike: Still want the tape recorder, Arch?​

Majeski praises Edith for her honesty, but Archie assumes that he's a fake and attempts to test him. Though Majeski is absent-minded and the psalm numbers vary in Catholicism, he proves able to quote one in Latin. Ultimately Archie confronts him head-on about the bill, and the father explains that it includes an engine overhaul that's being covered by the bishop, with the damages only coming to $14. Archie offers to cover that much, but the father walks out declaring that he doesn't want Archie's money...then walks back in and offers to take the money for a donation to Catholic charities in Archie's name.

In the coda, Archie turns up his nose when Edith brings him his desert of..."mmm-hmm".

That's hilarious. :rommie:
It doesn't touch the delivery-rich "Ironsides" moment requoted above.

"Despite" his atheism. :rommie:
They were agreeing on what she presented as a principle of her faith.

Ah, true. He's vulnerable to counter blackmail.
And it's a stronger basis for an understood code...honor among philanderers.
 
Last edited:
"Archie in the Cellar"
If the title doesn't appear onscreen, they just don't care. :rommie:

arguing about whether Stretch Cunningham's jokes are funny when heard in his own voice via a borrowed tape recorder (uncredited Billy Sands).
Apparently this was before Zefram Cochrane was cast as Stretch.

Edith's going out of town for the weekend
Is somebody picking her up? Traveling alone doesn't seem like an Edith type of thing.

Irene tries to show Archie how the new deadbolt lock works, which can't be opened from the inside, but he rushes her out.
She didn't give him a key?

(Even if I didn't know the title, Chekhov would be looming large here. Archie even exposits that he's expecting a delivery from the oil man.)
"I hope I don't get locked in the cellar. That would be bad."

He then tries ineffectually to bust down the inside door, running out of steam before he gets up the stairs.
I remember that. :rommie:

Then, scoping out the provisions at hand, Archie finds an unopened bottle of Polish vodka that was a wedding present from Mike's Uncle Casmir.
It's been like five minutes!

Archie takes to the recorder and starts dictating his "last will and tentacle". (You know what they were trying to suggest there...:guffaw:)
Archie is the spawn of Cthulhu!

He leaves everything to Edith except his 48-star flag for Meathead and his living room chair for Gloria
Aw, he remembered Meathead this time. To digress, my Mother has a 48-star flag that belonged to her older brother from his time in the Navy (or Coast Guard, maybe).

(which actually ended up in the Smithsonian)
Yeah, I saw it once. Archie Bunker's chair and the original Starship Enterprise are both at the Smithsonian. That says something about something, I guess. :rommie:

While the recorder continues to roll, he has visions of the rest of the family (appearing superimposed like ghosts)
This Polish vodka is good stuff.

and telling Edith that he loves her before she disappears.
Awww, maybe he's not the spawn of Cthulhu after all.

Archie (getting down on his knees): Forgive me, Lord! The Jeffersons was right...
I remember that. :rommie:

In the coda, everyone's back and Mike and Gloria tease Archie after having listened to the tape.
The thing I don't understand is how Archie couldn't get out through the outside door, but the oil guy could get in. That doesn't make much sense.

Lt. Suzanne Marquette (Teri Garr)
Roberta Lincoln. And Inga.

when a shot shatters Hawkeye's liquor bottle.
Pretty lucky shot, since the guy never hit much of anything else.

Radar trying to get to the office to call for help only to be sent scurrying back to Blake.
I hope there was a parental advisory.

Trapper gets HQ on the phone only to be told that there's a push on and nobody can be sent until the next day.
"Help will arrive between the hours of 8am and 5pm."

(This was not their proudest moment--how naive could they be? When I'm siding with Burns and Houlihan, they're doing something wrong.)
Yeah, sometimes the show overdoes it. It also makes me wonder if real MASH units had any actual military personnell-- as in MPs or whatever who could deal with a situation like this.

the surgeons have to work by lantern light because the generator's been shot.
There we go. Two lucky shots.

(They can bring in wounded but not rations? Outsiders can come in bearing litters without being fired upon, but they can't get to the mess tent?)
If the sniper is selectively letting in the wounded but not letting anybody back out, his story after being caught doesn't hold up.

Margaret tries to encourage Frank to go out in the darkness and deal with the sniper with his gun.
This is literally an example of Chekov's gun. :rommie:

They have a nice little sympathetic talk in which Frank reveals that he flunked med school twice and Hawkeye gives him some words of encouragement.
Interesting. I don't think I remember any humanizing moments for Frank before his final season. It does remind me that they kind of retconned his surgical abilities-- at first he was presented as incompetent, but later his expertise was given as an excuse for keeping him around.

It turns out to be Radar looking for a sandwich, and though Hawkeye scolds him, it demonstrates that it wasn't that hard to get to the food in the dark.
Well, Radar is a pretty small target. And he has his radar sense. :rommie:

Hawkeye and Trapper actually look scornful about it.
Yup, they overdo it sometimes.

They finally hit the right note with Hawkeye when, everyone wary that it could be a trick, he carries his bag out to tend to the guy who's been trying to kill everyone.
Definitely some inconsistent writing in this episode, but that's a good moment.

a kid who got cut off from his unit and delusionally thought he'd stumbled upon MacArthur's headquarters.
He must have found some Polish vodka.

Rhoda picks up a call from Congresswoman Margaret Geddes, whom Mary had recently interviewed, thinking initially that it's a prank from Phyllis.
Because that Phyllis is such a cut up. :rommie:

noting that he broke up with his wife at one of them
Continuity!

Sue Ann invites herself--squeezing out Mary potentially bringing a date
Mary needs a fold-out table to go with her fold-out bed.

Mary learns too late that Sue Ann has precisely timed the veal to be served when the guests will only be just arriving, forcing her to rush them to dinner.
Wow, fussy. :rommie:

Rhoda brings Steve Waldman, an awkward fellow employee who just got fired from the department store
Ayyy!

Lou's chewing out Ted for crashing the party, and he starts to go into his sob story again, but Mary notices that the details are different this time.
He probably picked it up at a creative writing class. :rommie:

I know what you're thinking--Chekhov's congresswoman was barely a McGuffin here.
Seriously. I was expecting Mary to get involved in a scandal or something.

Or just something different that they thought Frank might introduce the Bunkers to, perhaps with somebody behind the scenes having had an experience as inspiration. (Lots of Seinfeld's situations were based on actual awkward experiences of the show's co-creator and head writer, Larry David.) It was noted that selling horse meat was illegal in New York, so Gloria had to go to Jersey to get it.
Strange. I just Googled to see if horsemeat is legal in Massachusetts and I'm getting conflicting results. I never knew horsemeat had such a complicated history. :rommie:

I never imagined that you wouldn't Cap that.
No, I completely forgot about most of that. I remember the Ironside part, though. :rommie:

They were agreeing on what she presented as a principle of her faith.
They just seem a little too surprised that Atheists have morals. :rommie:

And it's a stronger basis for an understood code...honor among philanderers.
Sounds like a Dashiell Hammett novel or something. :rommie:
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



The Six Million Dollar Man
"The Solid Gold Kidnapping"
Syndication edit of the ABC Suspense Movie that originally aired November 17, 1973
Wiki said:
Oscar Goldman orchestrates a ruse whereby a high-level U.S. military diplomat pretending to be held up in a Paris hospital is to be secretly whisked off to Peking to negotiate an ease of tensions between the two countries. A professional kidnapping organization successfully abducts the diplomat in Paris with the aid of his treacherous paramour known as the Contessa. The kidnappers demand a $1 billion ransom in gold. As the gold shipment moves forward, Steve Austin begins a search against the clock for the hostage. He is aided both by the fickle Contessa and by a doctor who agrees, with perilous consequences, to have brain cells of a dead kidnapper injected into her own brain to allow her to have access to his memories.
IMDb said:
Re-edited into two episodes of "The Six Million Dollar Man" for syndication. To pad out the story, footage was re-edited, a new score by Oliver Nelson was inserted and scenes were added from The Seven Million Dollar Man (1974), Clark Templeton O'Flaherty (1975) and Colossus: The Forbin Project (1970).

The edited story opens with the freighter-based evil boardroom of a SPECTRE-on-a-budget organization, chaired by Maurice Evans, where Julian Peck (John Vernon) speaks about the plan to kidnap Ambassador Scott (David White) and hold him in a Mayan pyramid in Mexico. I surmised later that this was one of several inserts of evil board business repurposed from a later scene. In an obviously slapped-together sequence, Steve has his bionic hand tested by Obligatory Colossus Footage and is briefed by Oscar about the kidnapping. Steve heads to the site in an obviously inserted travel sequence, via Lear jet, helicopter, and Jeep. Mingling among the workers at the site, he plants various timed devices and a belt of fireworks. When these go off, he slips into the pyramid while the armed workers fire at unseen attackers. Peck catches on, and he and Roger Ventriss (Craig Huebing) head into the pyramid, to be blocked by Steve collapsing the entrance. There's an attempt at inflation-era humor as the ambassador complains about the seemingly low-budget rescue.

Unable to find a lever to open the concealed door to an anticipated secret passage, Steve kicks open a doorway of his own. Repetitious filler footage of two or three different helicopters eventually results in Steve and the ambassador being lifted out as Steve is shot with a rifle but continues to hang onto the rope ladder with one arm. Back at HQ, another Obligatory Colossus Examination ensues, following which Rudy encourages Steve to take a vacation. We return to the freighter boardroom for the first time--the previous and subsequent filler scenes apparently having been cobbled together from this one--as Peck reports to the now-speaking Chairman Not-Blofeld about the operation's failure due to an extraordinarily powered man. Ventriss--played as a rival of Peck--then speaks about a new operation that should net the company a billion dollars. After some obviously slapped together footage of a plane ride, we learn that the victim is Not-Kissinger William Henry Cameron (Leif Erickson), who--minded by Oscar and right-hand man Mel Bristol (recently deceased Battlestar colonel Terry Carter)--is being checked into a Paris hospital as cover for a secret trip to Peking.

A fake doctor and nurse wheel in Ventriss bandaged as a fake patient to clock Bristol, shoot another OSI man, and abduct Cameron, whom they wheel out as the patient right under the nose of Oscar and another assisting agent (also recently deceased James Sikking). There's another inserted bit of repurposed evil boardroom business. At an airstrip where Cameron is being flown away, Peck approaches and shoots Ventriss. Some obvious voiced-over inserts clue us in that Steve's now on a ski trip, where his quality time with Leigh Christian is interrupted as he's called in. In what seems like an unnecessary bit of subterfuge, Steve is smuggled into the hospital as a bandaged patient to be briefed by Oscar, who reveals that their only clue is Ventriss's unidentified body, which was found at the airstrip near discarded hospital outfits.

In more inserted evil boardroom filler, the chairman is updated regarding the progress of the operation. Elsewhere, Oscar and Rudy introduce Steve to Dr. Erica Bergner (Elizabeth Ashley), who demonstrates how she's transferred brain cells from one lab rat to another to allow the second rat to navigate a maze that the first one had memorized. Being a bit opinionated about humans being used as guinea pigs, Steve objects to the idea of employing this technique on a human to implant brain cells from the unidentified corpse of Ventriss into a willing volunteer: Dr. Bergner herself. Cameron awakes in confinement in the evil freighter, while Peck reveals to the chairman that he's identified the agent in Mexico as astronaut Steve Austin. There's an insert of footage of a gold shipment being prepared at Fort Knox, which reportedly was shot in 1974. Following the brain procedure, an unconscious Erica has flashbacks to previous scenes involving Ventriss. When she awakes, she needs time to sort out her memories of Cameron's abduction, but is able to identify Ventriss and his destination of Switzerland.

On the flight there, Erica "remembers" Steve hanging from a helicopter and asks him about it. On the ground, their taxi is intercepted in an attempted abduction of Steve, but he bionics his way to freedom sans sound effects as Peck watches from afar. He checks into their hotel to find that Erica, posing as his wife, has set them up in the bridal suite. Steve gets into a debate with her about her research, arguing that you can replace any other part of a man and he's still the same man, so long as you don't replace his brain. After Steve calls Oscar to wire some money to recompense a vendor whose fish stand was damaged in his escape, Oscar assigns Bristol to accompany the gold shipment undercover, where we get an awkwardly placed mid-scene To Be Continued.

The not-quite-as-long-as-last-time recap includes some of the awkward insert business from Part I. The post-intro credits play over an establishing shot of the Mexican pyramids that goes into freeze-frame, even though we're past that location's part of the story. Then we get the last scene from Part I, which continues a bit past its awkward cutoff point. On the ship, Peck answers to the Chairman about the botched attempt on Austin, and they mention that he's checked into the same hotel that the Contessa is at. The Chairman then pays a visit to Cameron, who learns that the Contessa, his paramour, was the inside women in his abduction. Meanwhile, Steve and Erica are taken around by a confused taxi driver (Vito Scotti) in an attempt to dredge up some of her implanted memories, but all she gets is a cryptic number. (If the significance of this was revealed later, I didn't catch it.) Later at the hotel casino, Steve is approached by the Contessa DeRojas (dropping in from Montreal, Bond femme fatale Luciana Paluzzi), who tries to pick him up. Erica interrupts the attempt long enough to inform Steve that she pops up in Roger's memories. Steve decides to play along and lets the Contessa take him to her lakefront villa.

At a dock, Bristol has to fend off a customs inspector (Marcel Hillaire) who insists on having a look at the shipment of "ball bearings," but is cowed when he's given the number of the premier himself, who instructs him to cooperate. At the Paris hospital, Oscar deals with the press, maintaining his cover that Cameron is still checked in. In Bergner's lab, Rudy shows him that the rat with the transplanted brain cells is suffering side effects, indicating that Erica could be facing brain damage, but Oscar decides to let the mission continue given all that's at stake. While the Contessa pretends to sleep, Steve inspects her passport with his night vision. In what seems to be an insert reused from Part I, a sleeping Erica has visions of Cameron's abduction. Steve's shot at coming down the outdoor lift from the villa, takes out the shooter, and takes the Contessa's motorboat.

A boat chase ensues in which Steve's pursuers take shots at him, but he breaks the throttle and dives out so that it rams into the other boat, both craft meeting their obligatory TV fates. Steve returns to his hotel soaking wet, and Erica wakes up from memories of Roger being shot by Peck that were so vivid they seemed like they were happening to her. After a chess game with the Chairman, Cameron learns that he's not just being ransomed, he's for sale to the highest bidder. Bristol reports to Goldman via phone about the ball bearing delivery proceeding on land via truck.

Bristol: I feel like Clark Kent. Every time I turn around, I'm in a men's room changing clothes.​

Rudy argues for calling Bergner to warn her, as the rat is showing signs of insanity and eventual burn-out. But it's now a race against time, to find Cameron before the delivery is made.

Steve returns to the Contessa to enlist her cooperation. She indicates that she was motivated by needing money to run her estate and arranges for Steve to meet Peck at the casino. Steve brings forth Erica as a witness to Ventriss's murder in an attempt to get Peck to talk, but the doctor blows it by reacting to Peck as if he'd killed her. Peck tries to get away, but Steve stops him outside by diving into the windshield of his car, where he finds a dock pass. Oscar pays an in-person visit to Erica to question her for details about where Cameron's being held, but she can't bring up anything until Steve shows Oscar the pass, which she ties into flashes she's been having of a freighter.

Oscar meets with Bristol at a warehouse and inspects the crates to find that the gold has been switched with painted led; which apparently took place aboard the ship, the only time that Bristol wasn't directly watching the gold. (I get the impression that the evil freighter was used for the delivery, but if so, this wasn't made clear.) The OSI men realize that the kidnappers have everything they want--the gold and Cameron. After a tad more insert filler, Steve goes to the dock and climbs aboard the ship, the Hawaiian Legislator. He takes out some guards and finds the compartment where Cameron's being held. The Chairman walks in on them and tries to escape, but Steve pursues him to the evil conference room, where he dives across the table and tackles the Chairman, then smashes his gun underfoot.

Cut to Cameron being brought down to the press at the hospital, his cover maintained.

Part II's otherwise series-style end credits include the Dusty Springfield song. IMDb said that the evil organization was named OSO, the same initials that OSI was using in the original pilot, but if so, I didn't catch this.

It'll be a relief going forward to be able to just describe the actual plot without the play-by-play of nonsensical inserted filler.



Apparently this was before Zefram Cochrane was cast as Stretch.
Yeah, Stretch hasn't been shown yet.

Is somebody picking her up? Traveling alone doesn't seem like an Edith type of thing.
Bus, I think.

She didn't give him a key?
It can't be unlocked from the inside.

The thing I don't understand is how Archie couldn't get out through the outside door, but the oil guy could get in. That doesn't make much sense.
At Archie's instruction, the oil guy went into the house to the inside door.

Yeah, sometimes the show overdoes it. It also makes me wonder if real MASH units had any actual military personnell-- as in MPs or whatever who could deal with a situation like this.
I believe that's Klinger's job.

The thing about the surrender angle is that if the show weren't so one-sided with Hawkeye's never seriously challenged righteousness--if he were played as a little more fallible in his worldview like Meathead--the botched surrender attempt could have worked as a moment of disillusionment.

If the sniper is selectively letting in the wounded but not letting anybody back out, his story after being caught doesn't hold up.
I thinks it's the situation in general that doesn't hold up. It makes no sense that the personnel felt like they couldn't leave the OR, but a parade of people could come in from outside bearing wounded without being threatened. It makes no sense that the wounded would be brought in with no attempt to address the sniper situation.

This is literally an example of Chekov's gun. :rommie:
Frank would never use a Russian sidearm!

Because that Phyllis is such a cut up. :rommie:
IKR?

Shortly to commence playing his signature role.
 
Last edited:
The episode opens with Archie and Mike arguing about whether Stretch Cunningham's jokes are funny when heard in his own voice via a borrowed tape recorder (uncredited Billy Sands)
Apparently this was before Zefram Cochrane was cast as Stretch.
Yeah, Stretch hasn't been shown yet.

In my personal head canon Chuck Cunningham from 'Happy Days' and 'Stretch' Cunningham from 'All in the Family' are the same person separated by twenty years; Chuck moving from Milwaukee to New York after graduating college and befriending Archie Bunker, who nicknames him 'Stretch'.
 
chaired by Maurice Evans
Dr Zaius.

and hold him in a Mayan pyramid in Mexico.
Silly, but kind of cool.

into the pyramid, to be blocked by Steve collapsing the entrance.
He deliberately damaged an ancient Mayan temple? For shame, Steve!

There's an attempt at inflation-era humor as the ambassador complains about the seemingly low-budget rescue.
Presumably this is part of the original movie, so not as meta as it seems. :rommie:

Steve is shot with a rifle but continues to hang onto the rope ladder
Apparently getting shot in the bionics was a regular feature of the Suspense Movie era. :rommie:

Rudy encourages Steve to take a vacation.
"Just knock it off and give me the assignment, Rudy."

we learn that the victim is Not-Kissinger William Henry Cameron
So he's the Secretary of State? Do we learn why the trip to Peking is so secretive?

right-hand man Mel Bristol (recently deceased Battlestar colonel Terry Carter)
Also McCloud's pardner.

A fake doctor and nurse wheel in Ventriss bandaged as a fake patient
It would be funny if the fake doctor and nurse were played by Clarence Williams and Peggy Lipton. :rommie:

and abduct Cameron, whom they wheel out as the patient right under the nose of Oscar and another assisting agent
That's pretty shabby. :rommie:

(also recently deceased James Sikking)
Captain Riding Crop. He was in something else just recently.

In what seems like an unnecessary bit of subterfuge, Steve is smuggled into the hospital as a bandaged patient to be briefed by Oscar
They should have unplugged his arm and legs and brought him in as an amputee. :rommie:

she's transferred brain cells from one lab rat to another to allow the second rat to navigate a maze that the first one had memorized.
This was actually done with flatworms or something, but nothing as complex as a rat. And I'm not sure if the results were ever verified.

Steve objects to the idea of employing this technique on a human to implant brain cells from the unidentified corpse of Ventriss into a willing volunteer: Dr. Bergner herself.
Why would they even want an untrained scientist on the mission? Not to mention that neurons degrade very quickly and would be useless by now, even if such a procedure were possible. And how would they know which cells had the right memories? But here I am questioning the science in Six-Million Dollar Man. :rommie:

When she awakes, she needs time to sort out her memories of Cameron's abduction
Not to mention recover from invasive brain surgery.

He checks into their hotel to find that Erica, posing as his wife, has set them up in the bridal suite.
"Sorry, Erica, I'm not doing anything with Ventriss in there."

Steve calls Oscar to wire some money to recompense a vendor whose fish stand was damaged in his escape
Well that's a nice thoughtful touch. :rommie:

Oscar assigns Bristol to accompany the gold shipment undercover, where we get an awkwardly placed mid-scene To Be Continued.
"Bristol, I want you to go--" To Be Continued!

an establishing shot of the Mexican pyramids that goes into freeze-frame, even though we're past that location's part of the story.
Too bad, I liked that. :rommie:

the Contessa, his paramour, was the inside women in his abduction.
This Contessa business reminds me of SHIELD.

a confused taxi driver (Vito Scotti)
Dr Balinkoff-- who knows something about memory transfer.

In Bergner's lab, Rudy shows him that the rat with the transplanted brain cells is suffering side effects, indicating that Erica could be facing brain damage
Wholly unexpected.

Oscar decides to let the mission continue given all that's at stake.
Which is what exactly? :rommie:

Cameron learns that he's not just being ransomed, he's for sale to the highest bidder.
Flattering. He's going to be as egotistical as the real Kissinger after this. :rommie:

Steve brings forth Erica as a witness to Ventriss's murder in an attempt to get Peck to talk, but the doctor blows it by reacting to Peck as if he'd killed her.
This seems to be the only payoff to the insanity foreshadowing. Do they say what becomes of her? Are they able to extract the dead brain tissue from her head? Is she forever plagued by memories not her own? Does the ghost of Ventriss eventually take over, driving her to become an evil international criminal Lesbian? Inquiring minds want to know.

Steve pursues him to the evil conference room, where he dives across the table and tackles the Chairman, then smashes his gun underfoot.
"This is for Charlton Heston!"

Cut to Cameron being brought down to the press at the hospital, his cover maintained.
But his mission unaccomplished. He still needs to go to Peking, so they'll have to come up with another cover story. :rommie:

It'll be a relief going forward to be able to just describe the actual plot without the play-by-play of nonsensical inserted filler.
I wonder who did the filler stuff. The regular producers? Interns? Was it outsourced to the lowest bidder? :rommie:

Bus, I think.
Interesting. I don't see Edith traveling alone by bus.

At Archie's instruction, the oil guy went into the house to the inside door.
Ah, I see.

I believe that's Klinger's job.
Hmm, okay. I had always thought of him as another company clerk, specializing in medical support, but I also remember him walking guard duty, now that you mention it. So why wasn't it his job to deal with the sniper?

I thinks it's the situation in general that doesn't hold up.
Well, yeah. :rommie:

It makes no sense that the personnel felt like they couldn't leave the OR, but a parade of people could come in from outside bearing wounded without being threatened. It makes no sense that the wounded would be brought in with no attempt to address the sniper situation.
It was kind of a mess all around, that's for sure.

Frank would never use a Russian sidearm!
True. :rommie:

In my personal head canon Chuck Cunningham from 'Happy Days' and 'Stretch' Cunningham from 'All in the Family' are the same person separated by twenty years; Chuck moving from Milwaukee to New York after graduating college and befriending Archie Bunker, who nicknames him 'Stretch'.
Howard: "We shall never speak of him again!"
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



All in the Family
"Black Is the Color of My True Love's Wig"
Originally aired November 24, 1973
Wiki said:
Gloria buys a black wig to change her look, but she becomes upset when Mike becomes more attracted to her with the wig on.

It's Saturday and Archie's in Manhattan for a veterans' convention. Gloria takes up the mantle by pretending to complain about the subway while she comes home, but she's actually in a good mood after having bought something on sale, and runs upstairs with it. Frank drops in to invite Edith to join him and Irene at a Swedish movie, while playfully flirting with her. Mike takes an interest in bringing Gloria, who subsequently comes downstairs sporting a black bob, which she bought for the convenience of not having to wash her hair as much.

Edith: The nice thing about washin' a wig is that when you sit under the dryer, you don't have to be there!​

Gloria's initially pleased at how much Mike digs it, and suddenly he doesn't want to go to the movie anymore, making a story that Citizen Kane is going to be on--a ruse that both Gloria and Edith see through. When they're alone, Mike insists that Gloria not take off the wig, and she teases him by pretending to actually be interested in watching the movie, but eventually they head upstairs. Mike's waiting pensively in his bathrobe as Gloria gets ready for bed, and is dismayed when she returns with the wig off, insisting that she put it back on. By that point, she sees what's up and accuses Mike of having found a way of effectively cheating on her that doesn't involve another woman.

Gloria: Michael, it's not me, it's this pile of hair from Kressler's that's gettin' to ya, I just happen to be standing underneath it!​

Mike: You're the sick one, you're jealous of your own wig!​

Mike briefly makes a good point that the wig is no different from the array of cosmetics that Gloria typically employs to make herself more attractive, but his inability to relent regarding the wig results in him going down to sleep on the couch. Once she's alone, Gloria goes into one of her signature cries.

The next morning, Mike's gone out and Edith tries to get Gloria to talk to her about what happened.

Gloria: I put on the wig, and somethin' came over him. He became sensuous and demanding and passionate--It was terrible!​

Edith doesn't understand Gloria's issue. Then Archie comes home, sporting his veteran's cap and singing, and describes how one of the other guys was pulling pranks on women.

Archie: You come back after a hard day's fightin', you need a few laughs to break up the monogamy. That's what these conventions do, they break up monogamy.​

Gloria uses her father as a stand-in for Mike, berating him for the sort of misconduct that she assumes Archie and his pals were engaged in at the convention, then runs upstairs.

Archie (to Edith): It's that time o' the month again, huh?​

When Edith drops the bomb that Mike walked out, Archie asks Edith to tell him the story short and sweet and without any "detours".

Edith: Mike fell in love with a wig.​

At first Archie doesn't understand the problem, either; but when Edith very reluctantly conveys how Mike wanted her to wear it while...you know...his attitude changes. When Mike comes home, he tries to defend his little girl from this "weird wolf". After initially asking everyone what he did wrong, Mike argues to Gloria that it was no different than when he liked her in a dress that she bought--he wasn't attracted to the dress, or other women trying it on, he was attracted to her in the dress. Having successfully gotten through to her, she encourages him to come upstairs and "take a nap" with her...to Archie's disapproval, though Edith likens the situation to how he's always worn the same after shave since one night years back when it had an effect on her.

Edith: There's somethin' about my Aqua Velva man.​

(The AI tells me that they weren't a sponsor, but I had to wonder.)

In the coda, Edith is greeted by an uproarious studio audience when she comes downstairs wearing the wig, but Archie doesn't even look up from his paper.



M*A*S*H
"Carry On, Hawkeye"
Originally aired November 24, 1973
1974 Emmy award for Best Directing in Comedy (Jackie Cooper)
Wiki said:
Hawkeye and Margaret are the only ones able to work during a flu epidemic.

The episode opens with most personnel masked, and Trapper laid up in a hospital bed being tended to by Hawkeye, who meets a new nurse who catches his interest, Lt. Sheila Anderson (Lynnette Mettey). Hawkeye is notably not masked, with the straw people scolding him for his assumption of immunity; but Henry collapses, and is soon followed by Frank while he's operating. Hawkeye sends Houlihan to finish up the patient Frank was working on, and enlists Mulcahy to assist him. Assuming that he's in de facto command, Hawkeye tries to call HQ for help.

Hawkeye: It's hard to believe I'm sitting in Henry Blake's chair. This is the chair from which a thousand indecisions have been launched.​

Margaret drops by the Swamp for Frank's Bible and, after an obligatory come-on attempt by Hawkeye, asserts that she's in administrative command as she outranks him.

Houlihan: You've emasculated me for the last time! I'm in charge now!​

She nevertheless lets Hawkeye take charge in the OR, where Mulcahy is now embedded as a fill-in nurse and she's still pinch-hitting as a pseudo-doctor while Radar, also still unaffected, takes to the phone trying to find another surgeon.

Hawkeye: We've been offered a veterinarian and a gynecologist....That'll be very helpful if we get a horse who's going through menopause.​

With everyone out of their comfort zones, things get pretty chaotic in the OR.

At the major's order, she and Hawkeye inject each other with an experimental flu serum, with Hawkeye insisting that she give him his shot in the rear. Henry returns to his office paranoid that they're conspiring to take command from him, but in a good bit of physical comedy, slides out his chair as he passes out. In the ward, Trapper is also trying to get back on duty, but can't stand up. Margaret tries to share with Frank how she plans to take opportunity of her temporary position to change things, but in his delirium he not only calls her by his wife's name, but by that of a secretary back home whom he also had an affair with. In the colonel's office, Hawkeye reveals to Margaret that he's now experiencing symptoms, and she shows genuine concern.

Hawkeye: You know all those rotten things I've said to you, and all those nasty little tricks I've played on you?​
Margaret: Yes?​
Hawkeye: I'd like to get well and do them all over again.​

Hawkeye impresses Houlihan by remaining on duty despite his condition. In a moment of need, Hawkeye has Radar scrub up and assist Houlihan. The episode sort of anti-climaxes with everyone in the OR mustering on overlaid by PA announcements of world events (including a mention of that French conflict in Vietnam).

In the coda, Hawkeye's laid up as Blake, Burns, and Trapper are back on their feet. Henry presents Hawkeye with a toilet paper roll signed by everyone in the camp, and Radar, acting as Hawkeye's nurse, orders everyone out.



In my personal head canon Chuck Cunningham from 'Happy Days' and 'Stretch' Cunningham from 'All in the Family' are the same person separated by twenty years; Chuck moving from Milwaukee to New York after graduating college and befriending Archie Bunker, who nicknames him 'Stretch'.
That's kind of a...

Dr Zaius.
And Sam's daddy.

"Just knock it off and give me the assignment, Rudy."
:lol:

So he's the Secretary of State? Do we learn why the trip to Peking is so secretive?
He's implied to be. They make a big deal out of how important and valuable he is. I think the secrecy was mirroring something that Kissinger actually did with Russia or China.

Also McCloud's pardner.
It's funny that he was involved with the show here, as I always thought that the voice who says "Steve Austin, astronaut: a man barely alive" sounded like him; but sources tell me that was Harve Bennett.

It would be funny if the fake doctor and nurse were played by Clarence Williams and Peggy Lipton. :rommie:
:techman:

Captain Riding Crop. He was in something else just recently.
It came to my attention when he died that he was best known to TV audiences as the SWAT guy on Hill Street Blues, whom I vaguely remember from background exposure to the show, though I didn't realize that was him.

They should have unplugged his arm and legs and brought him in as an amputee. :rommie:
There ya go!

This was actually done with flatworms or something, but nothing as complex as a rat. And I'm not sure if the results were ever verified.
I had no idea there was any scientific basis for this!

Why would they even want an untrained scientist on the mission?
There was a handwave about how she best knew what to expect.

"Sorry, Erica, I'm not doing anything with Ventriss in there."
:lol:

"Bristol, I want you to go--" To Be Continued!
More or less.

Dr Balinkoff-- who knows something about memory transfer.
Ah, yes.

Which is what exactly? :rommie:
Save Not-Kissinger!

This seems to be the only payoff to the insanity foreshadowing. Do they say what becomes of her? Are they able to extract the dead brain tissue from her head? Is she forever plagued by memories not her own? Does the ghost of Ventriss eventually take over, driving her to become an evil international criminal Lesbian? Inquiring minds want to know.
There was a last scene after her freak-out, when she was back in her hotel and Oscar was trying to get more info out of her. She said that there was nothing of Roger left, "It's just all blank, like an empty screen." Oscar responded, "You burned out." So I guess this was her version of what happened to the rat...she lost his memories.

Hmm, okay. I had always thought of him as another company clerk, specializing in medical support, but I also remember him walking guard duty, now that you mention it. So why wasn't it his job to deal with the sniper?
He wasn't in the episode. :shrug:
 
Frank drops in to invite Edith to join him and Irene at a Swedish movie, while playfully flirting with her.
Uh oh, a Swedish movie. We know what means. Probably something about threesomes. :rommie:

Mike briefly makes a good point that the wig is no different from the array of cosmetics that Gloria typically employs to make herself more attractive
Assuming that cosmetics make women more attractive.

Archie (to Edith): It's that time o' the month again, huh?
Sometimes I wonder what they put in the original script that they traded for what they got. :rommie:

Edith: Mike fell in love with a wig.
Edith should write capsule descriptions for IMDB.

Mike argues to Gloria that it was no different than when he liked her in a dress that she bought--he wasn't attracted to the dress, or other women trying it on, he was attracted to her in the dress.
It's like asking your girlfriend to wear the Supergirl costume. But I digress.

Edith: There's somethin' about my Aqua Velva man.
He never got to be in Super Friends, though.

(The AI tells me that they weren't a sponsor, but I had to wonder.)
I actually forgot about that one. Now it's going to be stuck in my head.

In the coda, Edith is greeted by an uproarious studio audience when she comes downstairs wearing the wig, but Archie doesn't even look up from his paper.
That's great. I bet that was Jean Stapleton's idea. :rommie:

"Carry On, Hawkeye"
I wonder if that's supposed to be a reference to the British movies.

Hawkeye is notably not masked, with the straw people scolding him for his assumption of immunity
Hawkeye is an anti-masker! :eek:

Henry collapses, and is soon followed by Frank while he's operating.
This is some serious flu. A lot of these patients who would have survived are going to die.

Hawkeye sends Houlihan to finish up the patient Frank was working on
This makes me wonder how much surgical skill these nurses picked up in the war, beyond what would have been allowed back in the States.

and enlists Mulcahy to assist him.
To say nothing of civilians.

Assuming that he's in de facto command, Hawkeye tries to call HQ for help.
That probably should have happened earlier.

Hawkeye: It's hard to believe I'm sitting in Henry Blake's chair. This is the chair from which a thousand indecisions have been launched.
Ouch. :rommie:

Houlihan: You've emasculated me for the last time! I'm in charge now!
:rommie:

With everyone out of their comfort zones, things get pretty chaotic in the OR.
That's pretty cool-- everyone being out of their comfort zones, I mean.

she and Hawkeye inject each other with an experimental flu serum
What's an experimental flu serum doing in a M.A.S.H unit?

with Hawkeye insisting that she give him his shot in the rear.
I remember this. She was happy to do it, as I recall. :rommie:

Henry returns to his office paranoid that they're conspiring to take command from him, but in a good bit of physical comedy, slides out his chair as he passes out. In the ward, Trapper is also trying to get back on duty, but can't stand up.
A bad flu, indeed.

Hawkeye reveals to Margaret that he's now experiencing symptoms, and she shows genuine concern.
A hint of the M*A*S*H to come.

The episode sort of anti-climaxes with everyone in the OR mustering on overlaid by PA announcements of world events (including a mention of that French conflict in Vietnam).
Definitely anti-climactic, but a good episode nonetheless.

That's kind of a...
Heh.

And Sam's daddy.
Ah, that's right. At first I was thinking Sam Beckett before it came back to me. It's hard to believe that Sam's daddy and Zaius are the same guy.

He's implied to be. They make a big deal out of how important and valuable he is. I think the secrecy was mirroring something that Kissinger actually did with Russia or China.
Interesting. It's not ringing any bells.

It's funny that he was involved with the show here, as I always thought that the voice who says "Steve Austin, astronaut: a man barely alive" sounded like him; but sources tell me that was Harve Bennett.
That's Harve Bennett? He's got a cool voice.

It came to my attention when he died that he was best known to TV audiences as the SWAT guy on Hill Street Blues, whom I vaguely remember from background exposure to the show, though I didn't realize that was him.
I never watched Hill Street Blues, but I knew he was in it. I must have read it in Starlog or something.

I had no idea there was any scientific basis for this!
A little bit, yeah.

Save Not-Kissinger!
I suppose, but the stakes didn't seem high enough to require the surgical transplantation of a dead man's brain cells into a living woman's brain. :rommie:

There was a last scene after her freak-out, when she was back in her hotel and Oscar was trying to get more info out of her. She said that there was nothing of Roger left, "It's just all blank, like an empty screen." Oscar responded, "You burned out." So I guess this was her version of what happened to the rat...she lost his memories.
Okay, that's a legit resolution.

He wasn't in the episode. :shrug:
Or this one, now that I notice it. Weird, because he would have been particularly useful in both.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



All in the Family
"Second Honeymoon"
Originally aired December 1, 1973
Wiki said:
Edith takes a reluctant Archie on a second honeymoon to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary.

Having gotten the idea from a Cosmopolitan article, Edith's arranged for her and Archie to stay at the Hotel Atlantic City, where they spent their original honeymoon, but plans to keep it secret from him until the last minute. Archie begins to get the idea that something's up when she takes a call from the hotel about getting the same room while he's within earshot, and makes an effort to hide what it's about. But Archie has arranged for Lionel to secure him a basketball ticket for that weekend, so Edith has to let him know early.

Edith: Does Room 822 mean anything to you?​
Archie: It's a TV show, ain't it?​

When he's clued in, Archie is less than appreciative, considering the place to have been a fleabag and being more invested in attending the game. Edith has to put her foot down that they're going to Atlantic City.

Mike and Gloria throw rice as Archie and Edith are leaving for their bus. As they're shown to their room by a bellhop named Albert (Mel Bryant), Archie won't consider carrying Edith across the threshold. His first thought is to check the TV listings, but Edith tries to steer him into doing something more appropriate.

Edith: Archie, for your information, I'm at the prime of my life and at the height of my sexual attractiveness.​
Archie: I can't believe this.​
Edith: Well, I didn't either until I read it in Cosmopolitan magazine.​

At Edith's bidding, they recreate a moment from their honeymoon by sitting in front of a window overlooking the ocean and talking about their memories in lieu of their future together.

Edith: Oh, look, Archie! It's still there, the Atlantic Ocean!​

Edith asks Archie if he's been happy with her, and he asks her in return. He's generous, and she notes his temper, but then recounts how Archie sat up with Gloria for two nights when she had the measles. As Edith's in the bathroom getting ready for bed per the original schedule, Albert brings in a basket of fruit from the manager and champagne from the kids. Edith comes out in nightwear that she just bought, but Archie mistakes it for what she wore on their honeymoon, telling her that she looks just like she did twenty-five years ago. Now a little more in the mood, Archie insists that they start on the champagne and they toast, followed by a romantic kiss.

In the coda, Archie unsuccessfully tries to avoid Albert as the punchline of a running gag about the hotel's policy of all tips being collected at check-out.



M*A*S*H
"The Incubator"
Originally aired December 1, 1973
Wiki said:
Hawkeye and Trapper attempt to obtain an incubator for the 4077th.

The episode opens with the guys thoroughly hung over after a party at the Swamp. When they're back on duty, they're dismayed to find that a blood test they need for a patient will take 72 hours to come back from Tokyo and go to Blake's office to get Radar to work on finding them an incubator.

Blake: Now just hold it! I'm sick and tired of you guys going over my head down to Radar!​

Blake has no-nonsense Captain Sloan from Quartermaster brought in (Eldon Quick). He informs the surgeons that they can't have an incubator because they're not entitled to one. Hawkeye mocks his acronym-filled military jargon.

Radar subsequently locates a Major Morris (Ted Gehring) in Pusan who's sitting on three incubators, so the guys get uniformed up and pay him a call. But he proves to be a hoarder who won't part with any of them, so they see his superior officer, Colonel Lambert (Logan Ramsey), at his Japanese-style home. Lambert, whom they learn is engaged in selling supplies on the black market, tries to sell one to them marked up, but they can't afford it even when he offers it at cost, so they proceed to his superior, General Mitchell, who's holding a press conference. Sitting among the reporters, the guys start to press the general with questions about hospital units needing incubators, and he answers them with double-talk. Eventually the actual reporters get worked up, demanding to know more about the issue, so the general has the guys arrested by MPs and returned to their unit on charges, though Blake doesn't intend to punish them because of their skill. Then Radar reveals that after all their fruitless efforts, he's gotten an incubator through some wheeling and dealing.

Hawkeye mentions that the war has been running for two years, which would make it 1952, and 2/3 over. So the next nine seasons of the show take place during a single year? Not that the show's timeline bears close scrutiny, of course...
Wiki said:
In this episode a crooked army colonel refers to selling, among other things, "the odd B-52," but this is an error by the writers as the B-52 did not enter service until after the Korean War.



Sometimes I wonder what they put in the original script that they traded for what they got. :rommie:
I thought that was pretty good for the era.

Edith should write capsule descriptions for IMDB.
:D

It's like asking your girlfriend to wear the Supergirl costume. But I digress.
:eek:

I actually forgot about that one. Now it's going to be stuck in my head.
I had to do a search to make sure it was a slogan, but I didn't watch any commercials.

That's great. I bet that was Jean Stapleton's idea. :rommie:

I wonder if that's supposed to be a reference to the British movies.
What movies would those be?

Hawkeye is an anti-masker! :eek:
For all his being the poster boy of '70s-early '80s Hollywood liberalism and male sensitivity, he ended up on the wrong side of history here.

To say nothing of civilians.
Mulcahy was filling in for Houlihan as nurse.

I remember this. She was happy to do it, as I recall. :rommie:
No, she was wary that it was one of his come-on attempts, but he insisted that he had a low tolerance for pain.

A bad flu, indeed.
MASH05.jpg

A hint of the M*A*S*H to come.
Yeah, I recall there being more romantic tension between them in later seasons.

Interesting. It's not ringing any bells.
I'm pretty sure it came up in the retro-news how the initial overtures to China were done in secret.

I suppose, but the stakes didn't seem high enough to require the surgical transplantation of a dead man's brain cells into a living woman's brain. :rommie:
They played them up as being very high--the guy was worth a billion-dollar ransom. They couldn't afford to let him fall into enemy hands because of the things that he knew. (And this stands in contrast to the assertion in the previous movie that Steve was the most valuable man alive.)

Or this one, now that I notice it. Weird, because he would have been particularly useful in both.
Keep in mind that he was just a recurring player at this point. I'm not sure how useful he would have been during the epidemic--keeping people in bed?
 
Having gotten the idea from a Cosmopolitan article
Edith reads Cosmo. She must have found Gloria's copy. :rommie:

Edith: Does Room 822 mean anything to you?
Archie: It's a TV show, ain't it?
I think Room 222 is just ending right about now. There's a show I'd love to see on one of the Retro channels.

Edith has to put her foot down that they're going to Atlantic City.
Not only is she smarter than she seems, she has more authority than she uses.

Edith: Archie, for your information, I'm at the prime of my life and at the height of my sexual attractiveness.
Archie: I can't believe this.
Edith: Well, I didn't either until I read it in Cosmopolitan magazine.
:rommie:

At Edith's bidding, they recreate a moment from their honeymoon by sitting in front of a window overlooking the ocean and talking about their memories in lieu of their future together.
Aw, that's sweet. And they're only about fifty. :rommie:

Edith: Oh, look, Archie! It's still there, the Atlantic Ocean!
It's still there even today. I live right down the street, so I see it all the time.

He's generous, and she notes his temper, but then recounts how Archie sat up with Gloria for two nights when she had the measles.
Archie's making out better in his solo episode than Meathead did in his. :rommie:

Edith comes out in nightwear that she just bought, but Archie mistakes it for what she wore on their honeymoon, telling her that she looks just like she did twenty-five years ago.
You finally said something right, Arch. :rommie:

Now a little more in the mood, Archie insists that they start on the champagne and they toast, followed by a romantic kiss.
Awww, sweet. And that's two episodes in a row that focused on relationship stuff rather than burning issues ripped from the day's headlines. And the couple of episodes before that were kind of light, too, I think.

they're dismayed to find that a blood test they need for a patient will take 72 hours to come back from Tokyo
In 1952, in a war zone, hundreds of miles each way? That actually sounds pretty good to me.

Blake: Now just hold it! I'm sick and tired of you guys going over my head down to Radar!
Houlihan's not the only one they emasculate. :rommie:

He informs the surgeons that they can't have an incubator because they're not entitled to one.
That clears that up.

Hawkeye mocks his acronym-filled military jargon.
hawkeye ftw lol

Colonel Lambert (Logan Ramsey)
Popular character actor specializing in sleazy characters, like the Roman councilman in "Bread and Circuses."

the general has the guys arrested by MPs and returned to their unit on charges
I wonder what charges.

Then Radar reveals that after all their fruitless efforts, he's gotten an incubator through some wheeling and dealing.
They've got to learn to trust in Radar.

Hawkeye mentions that the war has been running for two years, which would make it 1952, and 2/3 over. So the next nine seasons of the show take place during a single year? Not that the show's timeline bears close scrutiny, of course...
Assuming that each episode averages out to a day or so, it could be made to work. But I think it makes more sense to assume that the war lasted longer in their timeline. :rommie:

I thought that was pretty good for the era.
That's what I mean. They probably wrote the original script to go even farther, so they could negotiate with the censors.

And it has to be the blue miniskirt. Just sayin.'

I had to do a search to make sure it was a slogan, but I didn't watch any commercials.
There were many such catchy jingles back in the day, and it's kind of amazing how often they pop up in my brain. :rommie:

Not bad, Edith. :mallory:

What movies would those be?
Oh, there was a series of British comedy movies in the 60s and 70s that were all Carry On-something. Each one satirized a particular genre. My favorite, predictably, was Carry On Screaming, which spoofed Horror movies, but there was one about medical dramas and one about historical epics and so on. They pop up periodically on TCM.

For all his being the poster boy of '70s-early '80s Hollywood liberalism and male sensitivity, he ended up on the wrong side of history here.
Nobody can be right all the time. They just think they are. :rommie:

Mulcahy was filling in for Houlihan as nurse.
I know, but that's still a highly trained specialty for which he and Radar have zero qualifications. A nurse filling in for a doctor is less of a stretch.

No, she was wary that it was one of his come-on attempts, but he insisted that he had a low tolerance for pain.
I seem to remember her enjoying giving him a painful stab in the butt. Maybe I'm thinking of a different episode. Or maybe my memory is exaggerating. :rommie:

Heh. He could be funny. :rommie:

Yeah, I recall there being more romantic tension between them in later seasons.
I mean just the more human interaction in general, rather than just flinging zingers.

I'm pretty sure it came up in the retro-news how the initial overtures to China were done in secret.
So secret that I don't know even after I'm told. :rommie:

They played them up as being very high--the guy was worth a billion-dollar ransom. They couldn't afford to let him fall into enemy hands because of the things that he knew. (And this stands in contrast to the assertion in the previous movie that Steve was the most valuable man alive.)
Okay, I guess it makes sense.

Keep in mind that he was just a recurring player at this point. I'm not sure how useful he would have been during the epidemic--keeping people in bed?
Well, he's the one you always see helping out in the OR, so it seems to make sense he'd be a better draftee for a fill-in nurse. Unless I'm thinking of later seasons.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



All in the Family
"The Taxi Caper"
Originally aired December 8, 1973
Wiki said:
Archie is robbed while moonlighting as a cabbie for his friend Burt Munson, then agrees to drop the charges in return for a payoff, only to get in trouble with the police.

The episode opens with Mike making a Chinese dinner in a wok that he borrowed from Frank.

Edith: You're supposed to cook in the pot, not in the lid.​

Edith's unconcerned that Archie's late, assuming that he's doing good business in the cab. But Archie's actually at the police station, reporting to Sgt. Blair (Al Stellone) that he was mugged by a passenger. After Archie pines for the days of Irish cops who'd bust heads, he's taken to Sgt. Roselli (Michael Pataki), a long-haired young man whom he initially takes to be a suspect who was brought in.

Archie: What're you, one o' them Mod Squads?​

Roselli tells Archie that he just likes to wear his hair long, and Archie expresses concern that should his wallet be recovered, some of the money may get lost at the station. When Archie returns home, he and Mike manage to get into an argument about it all--with Mike making the point along the way that the type of detective Archie would have expected fits the same description as Haldeman and Ehrlichman. After Archie's had a chance to complain about the C-word food, he gets a visit from a lawyer named Morrison (John Ritter's future TV father-in-law Robert Mandan), who says that he has a proposition. While Archie's talking to him outside, Roselli calls saying that they've caught the young man who stole his wallet, but Archie announces that he refuses to press charges and quickly hangs up.

Mike (who in other circumstances would probably be defending Archie's mugger as a victim of the system) presses Archie and Morrison about why Archie's not helping the police (How much counterculture cred does he lose for that?), and learns that the mugger is the son of a city commissioner. After Morrison leaves, Archie reveals that the lawyer gave him $100. When Archie goes to the station to pick up his wallet--after assuming that a long-haired, bearded suspect sitting next to him cuffed to another man is the detective--he runs into Roselli, who asks him why he dropped the charges and informs him that he's the third person to have done so for this suspect...making it clear that he knows Archie was bribed. When the wallet is returned, it turns out to be empty--the suspect having claimed that he found it that way. The sergeants then inform Archie that his cab--having been parked in a no-standing zone--has been ticketed and towed away, which will cost him a total of $75...putting him $25 in the hole. Roselli heavy-handedly describes this as "justice". DUNNN-DA-DUN!DUN!

In the coda, Mike reads in the paper about Morrison being involved in a $200,000 bribe attempt, and Archie regrets that he didn't hold out for more.



M*A*S*H
"Deal Me Out"
Originally aired December 8, 1973
Frndly said:
The weekly poker game plays on, despite Radar running over a civilian and Frank being held hostage in the showers by an enlisted man.

Captain Sam Pak (Pat Morita) and renamed Major Sidney Freedman arrive at the camp for a "conference" that turns out to be poker with Blake, Hawkeye, Trapper, and Klinger. Freedman encourages Klinger to be more creative in his methods of trying to get out of the service. Radar, who'd borrowed Blake's Jeep to go to a hole-in-the-wall club, interrupts the game to tell the colonel that he hit a local (Jerry Fujikawa), who's now in the ward. Hawkeye and Trapper then leave the game when they learn that Frank has a Lt. Rogers (Tom Dever) from CID in the OR, but is following regulations not to anesthetize him for surgery until another CID man is present. The guys proceed to put him under and operate, while Frank sternly deals with a combat-fatigued Private Carter (Robert Mandan's future TV son-in-law John Ritter), who refuses to eat and otherwise acts uncooperative because he doesn't want to go back to the front.

After questioning Frank, Captain Halloran from CID (Edward Winter) goes to the game to arrest Hawkeye and Trapper, but Henry intervenes and the surgeons insists that Rogers didn't say anything before he went out, so Halloran takes a seat next to Klinger at the game. When Radar comes back needing $50 to pay off the old man he hit, Pak informs him that the "victim" is "Whiplash" Hwang, a professional fall-down man; but everyone chips in for the money to save Radar from being reported. The game is interrupted again by the sound of shots being fired. It seems that two's a crowd after Private Carter comes and knocks on Frank's shower door.
MASH06.jpg

Halloran pulls his own sidearm and offers to deal with Carter.

Trapper: Hold it, anything you put in him, we have to take out.​

Freedman tries to talk the private down--which includes spewing BS about what a fine man Burns is--while Trapper sneaks into the tent behind the private and grabs his gun arm. After that situation's resolved, Hwang takes another fall for Radar, this time in front of an ambulance truck.

In the coda, it's morning and the players are exhausted, but they keep going.



Edith reads Cosmo. She must have found Gloria's copy. :rommie:
I think she reads it at the beauty parlor.

It's still there even today. I live right down the street, so I see it all the time.
Sounds nice.

You finally said something right, Arch. :rommie:
He'd settled down into his gentler mode by that point.

Houlihan's not the only one they emasculate. :rommie:
:D

hawkeye ftw lol

Hawkeye: In fact, you can't have anything-stroke-nothing which is not approved by STATQUOPAC! Which is enough to make you reach for AIRSICKBAG!​

I wonder what charges.

Blake: Holy cow! Insubordination; conduct unbecoming officers; violations of articles 13 through 27, with a repeat on 26!​

That's what I mean. They probably wrote the original script to go even farther, so they could negotiate with the censors.
I wonder if they had many problems with the network by this point, given that the show was such a hit and a critical darling.

And it has to be the blue miniskirt. Just sayin.'
Ah, old-school.

There were many such catchy jingles back in the day, and it's kind of amazing how often they pop up in my brain. :rommie:
Having checked YouTube, this one doesn't actually ring any bells with me.

Not bad, Edith. :mallory:
Now you're wondering what she'd look like in a Supergirl costume...

Nobody can be right all the time. They just think they are. :rommie:
To be fair, I should note that he routinely masks up for surgery.

I know, but that's still a highly trained specialty for which he and Radar have zero qualifications. A nurse filling in for a doctor is less of a stretch.
Well, it was pretty much "Hand me the forceps," followed by pointing out which instrument they were.

I seem to remember her enjoying giving him a painful stab in the butt. Maybe I'm thinking of a different episode. Or maybe my memory is exaggerating. :rommie:
She didn't want to do it, but when she put it in, she wasn't gentle about it.

Well, he's the one you always see helping out in the OR, so it seems to make sense he'd be a better draftee for a fill-in nurse. Unless I'm thinking of later seasons.
You probably are, he hasn't done anything like that yet. And FWIW, he's not involved in the attempt to save Frank at all...the last we see of him, he's ducking under the poker table from the sound of gunfire like everyone else. He pops up again for the gag of Hwang's second fall.
 
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Edith: You're supposed to cook in the pot, not in the lid.
She sounds a bit like Archie there. :rommie:

Archie pines for the days of Irish cops who'd bust heads
I don't remember this, but I know my Uncle Joe would have laughed and agreed. :rommie:

Sgt. Roselli (Michael Pataki), a long-haired young man
I wonder how often that happened in real life.

Archie: What're you, one o' them Mod Squads?
That's gone now, too, at this point.

a lawyer named Morrison (John Ritter's future TV father-in-law Robert Mandan)
And one of the dads on Soap.

Mike (who in other circumstances would probably be defending Archie's mugger as a victim of the system) presses Archie and Morrison about why Archie's not helping the police (How much counterculture cred does he lose for that?), and learns that the mugger is the son of a city commissioner.
Yeah, that's out of character for Mike-- unless he was just suspicious because Archie was acting out of character.

after assuming that a long-haired, bearded suspect sitting next to him cuffed to another man is the detective
:rommie:

Roselli heavy-handedly describes this as "justice". DUNNN-DA-DUN!DUN!
It would have been funny if Mike and Gloria did that, but I guess they had enough trouble with Twilight Zone. :rommie:

Captain Sam Pak (Pat Morita)
Restaurateur and Kung Fu master.

renamed Major Sidney Freedman
He's usually the focus of the episode when he turns up.

Freedman encourages Klinger to be more creative in his methods of trying to get out of the service.
I wonder what he means. He already gave him an out.

Radar, who'd borrowed Blake's Jeep to go to a hole-in-the-wall club
That seems unusual.

Frank has a Lt. Rogers (Tom Dever) from CID in the OR
Kind of makes me wonder what he's doing there.

Private Carter (Robert Mandan's future TV son-in-law John Ritter)
Nice symmetry!

After questioning Frank, Captain Halloran from CID (Edward Winter) goes to the game to arrest Hawkeye and Trapper, but Henry intervenes and the surgeons insists that Rogers didn't say anything before he went out, so Halloran takes a seat next to Klinger at the game.
That was easy for a change. :rommie:

Pak informs him that the "victim" is "Whiplash" Hwang
They should have called him "Hwiplash" Hwang, but I guess that only works in print. :rommie:

It seems that two's a crowd after Private Carter comes and knocks on Frank's shower door.

View attachment 41298
"But I've already got two roommates!"

Freedman tries to talk the private down--which includes spewing BS about what a fine man Burns is--while Trapper sneaks into the tent behind the private and grabs his gun arm.
Action Trapper! That's a bit unusual.

In the coda, it's morning and the players are exhausted, but they keep going.
It's not just surgery they're devoted to. :rommie:

I think she reads it at the beauty parlor.
Ah, the beauty parlor, of course.

Sounds nice.
Sunrise-060318-1.jpg


Blake: Holy cow! Insubordination; conduct unbecoming officers; violations of articles 13 through 27, with a repeat on 26!
Eh, it would never stick. The general was just trying to intimidate them. :rommie:

I wonder if they had many problems with the network by this point, given that the show was such a hit and a critical darling.
Yeah, I'm sure that helped. :rommie:

Ah, old-school.
Indeed, we're talking 60s.

Having checked YouTube, this one doesn't actually ring any bells with me.
I guess this was a minor one, because I forgot about it too until you reminded me.

Now you're wondering what she'd look like in a Supergirl costume...
Well, no. :rommie:

To be fair, I should note that he routinely masks up for surgery.
Yeah, surgery is patient care, whereas the flu thing was chest thumping.

Well, it was pretty much "Hand me the forceps," followed by pointing out which instrument they were.
Oh, okay. :rommie:

She didn't want to do it, but when she put it in, she wasn't gentle about it.
My memory is probably exaggerating it.

You probably are, he hasn't done anything like that yet. And FWIW, he's not involved in the attempt to save Frank at all...the last we see of him, he's ducking under the poker table from the sound of gunfire like everyone else. He pops up again for the gag of Hwang's second fall.
He's not much of an MP. It's funny that it never occurred to me until now that the unit has no actual soldiers, aside from the ones that pass through surgery.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


August 18
  • Nineteen incarcerated members of the Provisional IRA escaped from Portlaoise Prison in County Laois in the Republic of Ireland. The prisoners, including Tom McFeely, overpowered guards, took uniforms, and then used gelignite to blow open the gates.

August 19
  • Rodger Davies, 53, the United States Ambassador to Cyprus, was shot and killed while standing in the central hall of the U.S. Embassy in Nicosia during a demonstration outside the embassy by Greek Cypriots, angry over the Turkish invasion and division of the capital. A bullet fired from outside passed through the shuttered window of Davies' office and through another office before striking him in the chest. Antoinette Varnavas, an embassy secretary who was a Greek Cypriot national, was struck in the head by a bullet and killed after going to Davies' assistance. The shooters were believed to be gunmen from the Greek Cypriot paramilitary organisation EOKA B.
  • After 10 days of the U.S. presidential residence being at the home of Gerald and Betty Ford at 514 Crown View Drive in Alexandria, Virginia, U.S. President Gerald R. Ford and his family moved into the White House at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C. During his first ten days as President, Ford had been driven to and from his office at the White House, along with his Secret Service escorts and with help from the Alexandria police.
  • A bomb threat forced American musician Ray Charles to cut short a performance at the Schaefer Music Festival in Central Park after only four songs. No bomb was discovered. Charles would return to Central Park to fulfill his engagement on September 2.

August 20
  • U.S. President Gerald Ford nominated Nelson Rockefeller, the former Governor of New York, to be Vice President of the United States. Rockefeller was selected despite a poll of Republican leaders showing a preference for Republican National Committee chairman George H. W. Bush. In compensation, Ford offered Bush the chance to be a major U.S. diplomat and Bush asked to be the first representative to Communist China. The U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives would confirm Rockefeller in December.
  • President Ford also nominated former child actress Shirley Temple Black as United States Ambassador to Ghana.
  • W. D. Jones, 58, former member of the Barrow Gang and associate of Bonnie and Clyde during 1933, was shot and killed by a friend with whom he had gotten into an argument.

August 21
  • Paramount Pictures released the sports comedy film The Longest Yard, starring Burt Reynolds and directed by Robert Aldrich.
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  • The second Northrop YF-17 prototype jet fighter aircraft (s/n 72-1570) made it's test flight, departing from Edwards Air Force Base in the U.S. state of California. It reached an altitude of 27,000 feet (8,200 m) and a speed of 615 miles per hour (990 km/h). Only 2 of these fighter prototypes were built, the first (s/n 72-1569), flew 9 June 1974.
  • Buford Pusser, 36, former sheriff of McNairy County, Tennessee, subject of the Walking Tall series of films, was killed in an automobile accident hours after signing a contract to portray himself in a sequel to the 1973 film.

August 22
  • The Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 was signed into law by U.S. President Gerald Ford, after being approved in the Senate, 76 to 11, and by the House, 351 to 25. The law created the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) for public housing authorities in the U.S. to spend on housing, public facilities, child care and economic development to fill local needs. In effect, as one historian noted, "the U.S. government got out of the construction business," with the housing authorities being allowed to distribute Housing Choice Vouchers to low-income families and "letting the tenants shop around the private market to find an apartment of their own choosing."

August 24
  • U.S. Congressman J. J. Pickle and former First Lady Lady Bird Johnson unveiled a larger-than-life-size bronze statue of Lyndon B. Johnson, carved by sculptor Jimilu Mason, at Lyndon B. Johnson State Park in Texas.
  • Born: Jennifer Lien, American actress known for portraying the character "Kes" on the TV show Star Trek: Voyager; in Palos Heights, Illinois


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "(You're) Having My Baby," Paul Anka
2. "The Night Chicago Died," Paper Lace
3. "Tell Me Something Good," Rufus
4. "Feel Like Makin' Love," Roberta Flack
5. "I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton
6. "Waterloo," ABBA
7. "Wildwood Weed," Jim Stafford
8. "I'm Leaving It (All) Up to You," Donny & Marie Osmond
9. "Rock Me Gently," Andy Kim
10. "Keep on Smilin'," Wet Willie
11. "Shinin' On," Grand Funk
12. "You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy
13. "Please Come to Boston," Dave Loggins
14. "Sideshow," Blue Magic
15. "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe," Barry White
16. "Rub It In," Billy "Crash" Craddock
17. "Then Came You," Dionne Warwick & The Spinners
18. "Wild Thing," Fancy
19. "Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston
20. "Call on Me," Chicago
21. "Hang On in There Baby," Johnny Bristol
22. "Clap for the Wolfman," The Guess Who
23. "Sure as I'm Sittin' Here," Three Dog Night
24. "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me," Elton John
25. "Takin' Care of Business," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
26. "You Haven't Done Nothin'," Stevie Wonder
27. "It's Only Rock 'N Roll (But I Like It)," The Rolling Stones
28. "Annie's Song," John Denver
29. "My Thang," James Brown
30. "Let's Put It All Together," The Stylistics
31. "Beach Baby," The First Class
32. "Radar Love," Golden Earring
33. "Another Saturday Night," Cat Stevens
34. "Time for Livin'," Sly & The Family Stone

36. "Sweet Home Alabama," Lynyrd Skynyrd
37. "Who Do You Think You Are," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods
38. "Free Man in Paris," Joni Mitchell
39. "I Honestly Love You," Olivia Newton-John

41. "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," Steely Dan
42. "Rock and Roll Heaven," The Righteous Brothers

44. "One Hell of a Woman," Mac Davis

46. "The Air That I Breathe," The Hollies
47. "Earache My Eye," Cheech & Chong
48. "Rock Your Baby," George McCrae
49. "Rock the Boat," Hues Corporation

53. "On and On," Gladys Knight & The Pips

59. "Can't Get Enough," Bad Company

67. "You Litttle Trustmaker," The Tymes
68. "Finally Got Myself Together (I'm a Changed Man)," The Impressions

73. "If You Talk in Your Sleep," Elvis Presley
74. "Surfin' U.S.A.," The Beach Boys
75. "Do It Baby," The Miracles

77. "Never My Love," Blue Swede

79. "Be Thankful for What You Got," William DeVaughn
80. "If You Love Me (Let Me Know)," Olivia Newton-John
81. "Steppin' Out (Gonna Boogie Tonight)," Tony Orlando & Dawn
82. "Travelin' Prayer," Billy Joel
83. "Stop and Smell the Roses," Mac Davis

86. "Papa Don't Take No Mess, Pt. 1," James Brown

89. "Tin Man," America


92. "Hollywood Swinging," Kool & The Gang
93. "You Make Me Feel Brand New," The Stylistics

95. "You Won't See Me," Anne Murray

100. "Billy, Don't Be a Hero," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods


Leaving the chart:
  • "Band on the Run," Paul McCartney & Wings (18 weeks)
  • "Come Monday," Jimmy Buffett (14 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Stop and Smell the Roses," Mac Davis
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(#9 US; #1 AC; #40 Country)

"Steppin' Out (Gonna Boogie Tonight)," Tony Orlando & Dawn
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(#7 US; #4 AC)

"Never My Love," Blue Swede
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(#7 US)

"Tin Man," America
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(#4 US; #1 AC)



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



It's worth noting that 50 years ago this weekend is the fifth anniversary of Woodstock! :mallory:

She sounds a bit like Archie there. :rommie:
There was an apologetic build-up to it because she didn't want to give him unwelcome advice.

And one of the dads on Soap.
Ah, yes. I knew that I knew him from stuff, but stopped when I saw that he was the dad on Three's a Crowd.

Yeah, that's out of character for Mike-- unless he was just suspicious because Archie was acting out of character.
He was, but they made it come from a very unnatural place for him. This stood out as one of those cases where his worldview is just the opposite of whatever Archie's is on any specific point.


It would have been funny if Mike and Gloria did that, but I guess they had enough trouble with Twilight Zone. :rommie:
And they weren't there.

Restaurateur and Kung Fu master.
It wasn't The Kung Fu Kid.

I wonder what he means. He already gave him an out.

Friedman: I remember a guy, insisted he was a cockroach who'd only crawl along the woodwork....Then I had a young man who claimed to be reincarnated. Said he was with Washington at Valley Forge and therefore he'd already done his military service.​

That seems unusual.
It was implied that he was seeking to lose his virginity. Blake reminded him of a lecture he gave.

"But I've already got two roommates!"
:D

Sweet. :techman:

Indeed, we're talking 60s.
I would've figured you'd be more into either the variety of groovy, sometimes revealing outfits she wore in Adventure ca. 1971, or the hot pants outfit that she ultimately settled on for the next decade.

I guess this was a minor one, because I forgot about it too until you reminded me.
I just sort of vaguely recognized it as a slogan.

Oh, okay. :rommie:
Though everybody settled into their roles somewhat as the situation progressed, as evidenced by the coda beat with Radar.

My memory is probably exaggerating it.
It was a good, painful jab played for laughs, but that was motivated by her not wanting to inject it there in the first place.

Two episodes on from the one I just posted about, look who shows up on duty in the ward:
MASH07.jpg
Now I'm thinking that this probably isn't the first time he's worn a nurse's uniform, but I didn't make anything of it before. There definitely hasn't been a noticeable pattern of him putting in hospital duty.
 
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