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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

A U.S. Air Force SR-71 reconnaissance airplane set a new speed record for a transatlantic crossing, flying from New York City to London in less than two hours.
Inspiring Professor Charles Xavier to obtain one for the purpose of ferrying his students on field trips.

A tornado touched down in New York City for the first time since storm records were kept, striking the Bronx.
There's a rare event.

Three men were arrested at Westminster Abbey shortly after midnight for an alleged attempt to steal the Stone of Scone, the ancient artifact used in the coronations of monarchs of Scotland.
Sounds like a job for John Steed.

The current governors of the 13 original American colonies had been invited to serve as delegates at the reenactment; all of them were present except Francis Sargent of Massachusetts, who was campaigning for renomination.
Oh, come on. No wonder he was voted out. :rommie:

One of the falcon statuettes made for the 1941 film The Maltese Falcon, valued at $200, was stolen from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Only $200? :eek:

demonstrators cut off their little fingers, saying they wished to present them to the Embassy.
You're doing it wrong, demonstrators.

"Straight Shootin' Woman," Steppenwolf
I'm not familiar with this one. Not bad.

"Give It to the People," The Righteous Brothers
I'm not familiar with this one either. Not great.

"Skin Tight," Ohio Players
That nostalgic 70s sound. The album cut gets a bit old, though. :rommie:

"Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)," Reunion
Ah, here we go. Good one and nostalgia gold.

"The Bitch Is Back," Elton John
Classic Elton and also nostalgia gold.

Another one you might like, but also not available, is one from the '96 election season in which Norm Macdonald's Bob Dole, disguised as a hippie, uses the Time Tunnel to go back to the '60s in an attempt to catch Darrell Hammond's Clinton smoking pot in college. To his chagrin, he finds that Bill really didn't inhale.
It's weird that these are not available. I can't think of any reason why they wouldn't be.
 


70 Years Ago This Month



September
  • Formation of the Comics Magazine Association of America (CMAA) and the Comics Code Authority (CCA)

September 3
  • The last "new" episode of The Lone Ranger radio program is broadcast, after 2,956 episodes over a period of 21 years. Reruns of old episodes continue to be transmitted.

September 4
  • Soviet war planes shoot down a US bomber near or over the coast of Siberia. 9 of the 10 crewmembers will be rescued.
  • U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs a bill allowing revocation of the citizenship of anyone advocating violent overthrow of the government.

September 6
  • The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) treaty is signed in Manila, Philippines.

September 7
  • Died:
    • Bud Fisher, American cartoonist (b. 1885)
    • Glenn Scobey Warner, American college football coach (b. 1871)

September 11
  • The Miss America Pageant is broadcast on television for the first time. 27 million viewers watch as Lee Ann Meriwether wins the title. Meriwether later becomes a television actress, co-starring in Barnaby Jones (1973–1980).
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September 14
  • Totskoye nuclear exercise in Soviet Union.

September 16
  • Lewis Strauss, chairman of the United States Atomic Energy Commission, in a speech to the National Association of Science Writers claims: "It is not too much to expect that our children will enjoy in their homes electrical energy too cheap to meter".

September 17
  • William Golding's novel Lord of the Flies is published in London.

September 22
  • A riot occurs at Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City. During the incident four inmates are killed and multiple guards are injured. several parts of the prison are burned by inmates. Burnt areas of the prison from the riot will remain for ten years.



On September 23, Sabrina, starring Humphrey Bogart, Audrey Hepburn, and William Holden, premieres in New York and Los Angeles.
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On September 25, "Hey There" by Rosemary Clooney tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
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September 26
  • WCAX-TV signs on the air as WMVT, making it the first television station in Vermont.

September 27

September 29
  • New York Giants outfielder Willie Mays makes a highlight-reel over-the-shoulder catch to lead the Giants to a 5-2 extra inning victory over the Cleveland Indians in Game 1 of the World Series. The play would come to be known as The Catch.
  • A Star is Born premieres and marks Judy Garland's comeback after her termination from her contract at MGM. An astounding success with critics and audiences, A Star is Born not only marks the first time that legendary director George Cukor has made a film musical or a film in Technicolor and in anamorphic widescreen format, but also becomes regarded as one of Garland's best performances in her film career.
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September 30
  • The USS Nautilus (SSN-571), the first nuclear-powered submarine in the world, is commissioned into the U.S. Navy.
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Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month, as well as the year in film, music, television, and comics, with minor editing as needed. Sections separated from timeline entries are mine.



Sounds like a job for John Steed.
Reminds me of that H5O in which the college kids stole the robe of the last king of Hawaii, I think it was.

Oh, come on. No wonder he was voted out. :rommie:
:D

Only $200? :eek:
The equivalent of over $1,200 today; and it was younger then.

I'm not familiar with this one. Not bad.
Nor I. I'll be getting it, but it's a shadow of their two uber-classics.

I'm not familiar with this one either. Not great.
Pretty much ditto.

That nostalgic 70s sound. The album cut gets a bit old, though. :rommie:
It's decently funky, not remarkable.

Ah, here we go. Good one and nostalgia gold.
This one is quite familiar from oldies radio, but had previously eluded my collection. This was a studio band, the lead singer being the same guy who did "Yummy Yummy Yummy" for Ohio Express.

As list songs go, this one seems like a predecessor to "It's the End of the World as We Know It" and "We Didn't Start the Fire". I suppose you could say that "Subterranean Homesick Blues" was a predecessor of this, but Dylan used verbs.

Peak Elton, and aside from 'Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me', probably the only good song from the album 'Caribou'.
Classic Elton and also nostalgia gold.
Still in his peak period here.

It's weird that these are not available. I can't think of any reason why they wouldn't be.
Maybe holding back good stuff as incentive to buy the episodes.
 
Last edited:
Formation of the Comics Magazine Association of America (CMAA) and the Comics Code Authority (CCA)
Boo. Hiss.

The last "new" episode of The Lone Ranger radio program is broadcast, after 2,956 episodes over a period of 21 years.
Amazing. Nowadays we get 30 episodes of The Orville in 7 years. :rommie:

U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs a bill allowing revocation of the citizenship of anyone advocating violent overthrow of the government.
I don't need to be a Supreme Court Justice to guess how that would go.

The Miss America Pageant is broadcast on television for the first time. 27 million viewers watch as Lee Ann Meriwether wins the title.
Wow, I knew she was Miss America but I didn't know she was the first to be crowned on TV. Good for her.

On September 25, "Hey There" by Rosemary Clooney tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
Somehow this didn't make Rolling Stone's list of most influential songs.

The USS Nautilus (SSN-571), the first nuclear-powered submarine in the world, is commissioned into the U.S. Navy.
No Captain Nemo, though. Which, admittedly, is probably a good thing.

Reminds me of that H5O in which the college kids stole the robe of the last king of Hawaii, I think it was.
Oh, yeah, I remember that. I love those historical artifact plots.

The equivalent of over $1,200 today; and it was younger then.
Yeah, true. But still, it's the stuff that dreams are made of.

This was a studio band, the lead singer being the same guy who did "Yummy Yummy Yummy" for Ohio Express.
Ah, I don't think I knew that.

As list songs go, this one seems like a predecessor to "It's the End of the World as We Know It" and "We Didn't Start the Fire". I suppose you could say that "Subterranean Homesick Blues" was a predecessor of this, but Dylan used verbs.
Good point. I didn't make those connections.

Maybe holding back good stuff as incentive to buy the episodes.
Yeah, that's probably what it is.
 


Belated 50th Anniversary Viewing



The Six Million Dollar Man
"Doomsday, and Counting"
Originally aired March 1, 1974
Wiki said:
When an earthquake threatens the stability of an underground Russian nuclear installation, Steve must rescue the fiancée of his friend Col. Vasily Zhukov, who is buried beneath debris. Complicating matters further, Steve must also stop the reactor before it explodes.

KAMKOV ISLAND, USSR: Having gone over the head of General Koslenko (Special Guest Star William Smithers), Colonel Zuchov (Gary Collins) departs from his fiancée, computer designer Irina Leonova (Jane Merrow), to liaise with his American astronaut friend You Know Who about American help with a project that will keep the facility's reactor from being dismantled. Steve gives Vasily a warm welcome at the airport and a ride in Oscar's limo to a presentation in which he proposes a joint effort to turn the former missile defense installation into a base from which to launch a US/Soviet mission to Mars. One of the attendees is an Air Force general named Jamieson. (Would you like some cheese with that William Boyett?) But Vasily is interrupted by news that Kamkov has been hit by an earthquake, and Steve insists on going back with him against Oscar's objections.

At the facility, Koslenko informs Vasily that Irina has been trapped underground by a cave-in, and orders that no rescue effort be made until the tremors have stopped. Outside during a tremor, Steve uses his arm to stop a girder from falling on Vasily, and then is persuaded to confidentially share about his improvements. Vasily insists that Steve help him rescue Irina, but as they're getting started, another cave-in occurs in their area. Steve puts a splint on Vasily's injured leg, and they continue, now trapped underground themselves. After some bionic debris-clearing and climbing down-ladder, they find Irina unconscious and revive her. She informs them of a failsafe nuclear self-destruct device that could be triggered if the computer controlling it mistakes the tremors for an attack. When the crew above ground see that it has been activated and is on a countdown, Koslenko orders evacuation.

Vasily finally finds a phone that works and confers with Koslenko, who informs him of how much time they have. Oscar is flown in, because we're just super-chummy with Russians now. Koslenko fills him in on the situation, and Steve briefly talks to Oscar on the phone. The evacuation proceeds, but Oscar persuades Koslenko to stay with him in case the underground trio need help in their effort to dismantle the weapon. Down there, Irina sees Steve bending metal bars out of their way and Vasily tells her about the bionic thing...technology that they're both aware Russia had attempted unsuccessfully to achieve. They keep making their way down to the computer room. Fortunately given the shape the place is in, it's still very well lit. Unfortunately, security devices are also still operating, including lasers that Vasily walks into, killing him.

Steve brings Irina out of hysterics and convinces her to keep going. The two of them belly-crawl under the lasers. After another feat of bionic strength to open a blast door, they make it to the computer room and Irina tries to operate it, requesting some file info from the general via Steve on the phone. As they're down to a minute, Steve determines that he doesn't have enough time to do the required rewiring, so he uses a Geiger counter in his arm to find the triggering mechanism and joins two electrical wires together, the voltage running through his arm, to short out the computer with only two seconds left on the timer.

Over food, drinks, and cigars, Koslenko expresses his curiosity about how Steve got through security measures that were designed to stop an army, and Irina helps cover for him.

The general's right-hand man, Captain Voda, is played by recent Bond henchman Bruce Glover.



All in the Family
"Gloria Sings the Blues"
Originally aired March 2, 1974
Wiki said:
Gloria does not think she loves Mike anymore, so Edith tries to help her.

Archie and Mike are prepping to go on a fishing trip the following morning. While Mike promises not to get political in front of Archie's friends, they get into an argument about how the type of line Archie uses doesn't give the fish a fighting chance. While Edith's trying to figure out what to do for dinner, Gloria comes home acting completely apathetic to everything. When Archie says something relatively benign, she starts crying and goes upstairs. Mike gets her to come back down and tells Archie that she seems depressed. Over dinner, she explains that it came on her while she was on the subway, and that she now feels she has nothing to look forward to in life. Mike tries to sympathize...

Mike: There are mornings when I stand there debating with that mirror--should I shave, or should I cut my throat? But I shave!​
Archie: Y'know, it's too bad you always lose that argument.​

Their subsequent argument sets her off again, and it becomes clear that Archie's behavior factors into her state of mind. As she runs upstairs, she declares that she doesn't want to end up like Archie and Edith.

Pre-dawn the next morning, Archie complains that Edith's keeping the house too cold.

Archie: Aw, the energy crisis. I wish you'd come up with one o' them hot flashes o' yours now that we need it.​

The subject transitions to Gloria's behavior.

Archie: Maybe I oughta get one o' them priests in to exercise with her.​

Archie finds Gloria sitting in his chair, unable to sleep. She tries to apologize and he expresses concern, but then becomes enraged when he learns that Mike's still sound asleep, and goes up to get him. After Mike describes how Gloria wouldn't communicate with him the previous night, he and Archie get in a long argument about how Mike puts a sock and shoe on one foot before starting the other. When Mike goes downstairs, he tries to get Gloria to talk to him, but she's in full apathy mode again.

After the men leave, Edith takes Gloria in the kitchen and tells a story about how she had Archie's mother teach her to cook for him, only to learn that he hated his mother's cooking. Gloria probes Edith about her cheerful demeanor and she tells of a time when she thought she didn't love Archie anymore, watching him in his usual routine and thinking of him as a stranger. Gloria's surprised that Edith knows how she feels, and confesses that she came to see Michael the same way a couple of nights before. Edith tells of how she just suddenly realized her feelings for Archie again, and encourages Gloria to give the issue time. Then Mike comes back home concerned about Gloria, and when he switches abruptly to the subject of being hungry, she has the same moment as Edith, becoming giddy.

Archie comes home angry because Mike accidentally took both of their fishing rods home.



M*A*S*H
"A Smattering of Intelligence"
Originally aired March 2, 1974
Season finale
Wiki said:
When a pair of intelligence officers from different agencies investigate perceived security risks at the 4077th, Hawkeye and Trapper decide to have some fun at their expense.

Hawkeye and Houlihan treat Colonel Samuel Flagg (Edward Winter in his first of six appearances in the role, which will recur across several seasons) after he survives a chopper crash. Once his broken wing is patched up, he goes to Blake, reveals that he's CIA, and has Henry file the paperwork for him under an alias. After the guys find out about Flagg via Radar's eavesdropping, Trap returns to the Swamp with Hawkeye to find an old friend there, Captain Vinny Pratt (Bill Fletcher), who says he's with G2 and is investigating Flagg, whom he suspects of using the accident to infiltrate the hospital. Also assuming dual aliases--his cover and a false real name--Pratt goes to Blake to enlist his cooperation, producing blackmail files about Henry's extramarital activities back in the States. With more aliases and cover stories for both himself and Pratt, Flagg goes to Hawkeye for info about Pratt.

Flagg dictates a coded telegram to Radar, which Radar shares with the guys and Pratt decodes, following which he enlists Radar to keep the rival colonel under surveillance. After Pratt meets Burns while maintaining his cover, the guys stoke suspicion about Frank's vocal patriotism, which motivates Pratt to have a covert look at his files. Under one of his covers, Flagg approaches Frank and Margaret about Pratt, taking interest in a file of suspected subversives that Frank's been keeping and scaring away Radar when he's found eavesdropping. After Radar updates the guys, they decide to doctor up Frank's file. Flagg sneaks into Blake's office by night and photographs it, while being spied on by Radar; who then switches out the file and sends out a signal for the guys and Pratt by smoking a cigarette in the office doorway (choking on it, of course). The next day, Flagg and Pratt both converge on Burns to produce accusations and evidence of him being a communist and a fascist, respectively. The guys then show their hand, calling out both intelligence officers for self-serving activities that are motivated by the security of their careers rather than their nation, before departing to see to incoming wounded.

The season ends with another roll call of the main cast, this time in the form of a narrated joint CIA/G2 report about the 4077th.



Boo. Hiss.
This vilified development has a great, big silver lining--the Silver Age.

Amazing. Nowadays we get 30 episodes of The Orville in 7 years. :rommie:
And you like it!

I don't need to be a Supreme Court Justice to guess how that would go.
Is that law still around, because I can think of somebody who's citizenship should be revoked for advocating a government overthrow in 2021...

Somehow this didn't make Rolling Stone's list of most influential songs.
Our salvation is nigh...let us pray in the direction of Memphis.
 
This one is quite familiar from oldies radio, but had previously eluded my collection. This was a studio band, the lead singer being the same guy who did "Yummy Yummy Yummy" for Ohio Express.
Ah, I don't think I knew that.

He also had a hit with this song as well.

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Then there's this guy

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We can also throw in Paul Carrack as well. Four hits with three different bands and a solo artist

First with Ace

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Then Squeeze. Bit of trivia - Elvis Costello produced this album and sings back-up but uncredited

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Then Mike and the Mechanics

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And as a solo artist

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Steve gives Vasily a warm welcome at the airport and a ride in Oscar's limo to a presentation in which he proposes a joint effort to turn the former missile defense installation into a base from which to launch a US/Soviet mission to Mars.
Now that would have been a plot to follow up on. :rommie:

and Steve insists on going back with him against Oscar's objections.
Real objections or just Make-Him-Think-It's-His-Idea objections? :rommie:

Steve uses his arm to stop a girder from falling on Vasily, and then is persuaded to confidentially share about his improvements.
"This is why we're winning the arms race. See what I did there, Vasily? Arms race."

She informs them of a failsafe nuclear self-destruct device that could be triggered if the computer controlling it mistakes the tremors for an attack.
So if they're in danger of being blown up, they will blow themselves up. How very Russian! Susan Ivanova would approve.

Oscar is flown in, because we're just super-chummy with Russians now.
It's Detente, man. :D

Steve briefly talks to Oscar on the phone.
"I told you so, Steve."

The evacuation proceeds, but Oscar persuades Koslenko to stay with him in case the underground trio need help in their effort to dismantle the weapon.
That's cool. The Russian gets to be heroic, too.

Irina sees Steve bending metal bars out of their way and Vasily tells her about the bionic thing
So much for confidentiality. :rommie:

Unfortunately, security devices are also still operating, including lasers that Vasily walks into, killing him.
Okay, I didn't see that coming. That was an undeserved fate.

he uses a Geiger counter in his arm
I wonder if that ever comes up again.

to find the triggering mechanism and joins two electrical wires together, the voltage running through his arm, to short out the computer with only two seconds left on the timer.
There's some nice bionic MacGuyvering.

Archie and Mike are prepping to go on a fishing trip the following morning.
That certainly seems unlikely.

they get into an argument about how the type of line Archie uses doesn't give the fish a fighting chance.
Mike is kind of missing the point, I think. :rommie:

Mike: There are mornings when I stand there debating with that mirror--should I shave, or should I cut my throat? But I shave!
Time to call the Suicide Prevention Hotline, Mike. These are not healthy thoughts.

As she runs upstairs, she declares that she doesn't want to end up like Archie and Edith.
I remember this part.

he and Archie get in a long argument about how Mike puts a sock and shoe on one foot before starting the other.
I remember this part, too. :rommie:

Gloria probes Edith about her cheerful demeanor and she tells of a time when she thought she didn't love Archie anymore, watching him in his usual routine and thinking of him as a stranger. Gloria's surprised that Edith knows how she feels, and confesses that she came to see Michael the same way a couple of nights before.
I kind of remember this exchange, but I remember Gloria asking Edith if she ever felt like she was sleeping with a stranger and getting a very funny reaction shot. :rommie:

Archie comes home angry because Mike accidentally took both of their fishing rods home.
Accidentally, my butt. He's on the side of the fishes. :rommie:

Colonel Samuel Flagg (Edward Winter in his first of six appearances in the role, which will recur across several seasons)
He's pretty funny. "I am the wind."

Pratt goes to Blake to enlist his cooperation, producing blackmail files about Henry's extramarital activities back in the States.
Back in the States? For shame, Henry. Being trapped in a war zone is one thing, but back home is another.

The guys then show their hand, calling out both intelligence officers for self-serving activities that are motivated by the security of their careers rather than their nation, before departing to see to incoming wounded.
And the moral of the story is... early episodes were excessively silly.

This vilified development has a great, big silver lining--the Silver Age.
I'm definitely not going to argue with that, but on general principles I must still boo and hiss. :rommie:

And you like it!
Well, gee, it's better than eight episodes. :rommie:

Is that law still around, because I can think of somebody who's citizenship should be revoked for advocating a government overthrow in 2021...
Yeah, that occurred to me. :rommie:

Our salvation is nigh...let us pray in the direction of Memphis.
Graceland, Graceland....

He also had a hit with this song as well.

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Well, it's better than that other "Run, Joey, Run." :rommie:

Then there's this guy

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"Studio concoctions." :rommie: All good stuff, though. Well, mostly.

We can also throw in Paul Carrack as well. Four hits with three different bands and a solo artist

First with Ace

Then Squeeze. Bit of trivia - Elvis Costello produced this album and sings back-up but uncredited

Then Mike and the Mechanics
That's fascinating. I had no idea those were all the same singer. I like all of those songs.

And as a solo artist

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I'm not familiar with this one, though.
 
Real objections or just Make-Him-Think-It's-His-Idea objections? :rommie:
"Make Steve look like an authority-bucking rebel" objections.

"This is why we're winning the arms race. See what I did there, Vasily? Arms race."
The bionic sound effect is spelled Nyuk-nyuk-nyuk-nyuk, nyuk-nyuk-nyuk-nyuk...

Okay, I didn't see that coming. That was an undeserved fate.
And fakey lasers...big-ass ray beams.

That certainly seems unlikely.
Aw, give 'em a chance to try to bond...

Time to call the Suicide Prevention Hotline, Mike. These are not healthy thoughts.
Indeed.

I kind of remember this exchange, but I remember Gloria asking Edith if she ever felt like she was sleeping with a stranger and getting a very funny reaction shot. :rommie:
Not this one.

Accidentally, my butt. He's on the side of the fishes. :rommie:
There ya go.
 
Last edited:
"Make Steve look like an authority-bucking rebel" objections.
Right on!

The bionic sound effect is spelled Nyuk-nyuk-nyuk-nyuk, nyuk-nyuk-nyuk-nyuk...
Hey, it is. :rommie:

And fakey lasers...big-ass ray beams.
An undignified demise indeed.

Aw, give 'em a chance to try to bond...
There should have been some dialogue about Archie being strongarmed into it by Edith and Gloria. :rommie:

Not this one.
Guess it's either a different episode or my brain rewriting things again. It has been fifty years, after all.
 


Belated 50th Anniversary Viewing



The Six Million Dollar Man
"Eyewitness to Murder"
Originally aired March 8, 1974
Edited Wiki said:
Steve Austin witnesses the attempted assassination of Lorin Sandusky, a prosecutor who is about to file criminal charges against a known racketeer. Austin is unable to capture the attacker, but he catches a glimpse of his face.

Steve's dining alone in a fancy restaurant near the table of a party including Lorin Sandusky (William Schallert), who talks of an impending indictment. Another patron dining alone, John Hopper (Gary Lockwood), calls a man named Sebastian (uncredited Richard Webb) in New York to inform a Mr. Richie that a murder contract will be carried out at approximately midnight. Hopper proceeds to the top of a parking garage facing the entrance and assembles his sniper rifle, aiming as Steve waits for a cab outside. Sandusky comes out and bends over to pick up a dropped paper just as the shot is fired, the bullet hitting the man behind him. Steve spots the sniper with his infra-red eye, runs up through the parking garage, and gets a look at the plate of Hopper's car before it screeches away despite Steve jumping down a few stories.

Steve makes an early morning visit to OSI to look through mug files, though Oscar tries to discourage him on the basis that it's not his level of assignment and the eye that witnessed is "as classified as a missile site"; but becomes invested in the matter when he gets a call from Washington about the shooting, which was meant to kill Sandusky, a special prosecutor seeking a time-sensitive indictment against racketeer Victor Richie. At his hotel room, Hopper makes a follow-up call to Sebastian promising an updated deadline of 9:00 the following morning, which is when Sandusky is scheduled to appear in court. Oscar tries to keep Sandusky holed up at his hotel until the court date; then refers Steve to a hot dog stand-running stool pigeon named Dorsey (Allen Joseph) for names of potential hitmen that Richie might hire; he tells Steve of a highly reputed mystery hitman known only as the Big Buy. Steve then learns from a car rental girl (Marilyn J. Hassett) that the car the hitman used was stolen.

Oscar, Steve, and Lt. Tanner (Leonard Stone), who's running security for Sandusky, oversee the police escort to the courthouse for a preliminary appearance. Hopper is staking the place out, including Sandusky's security; Steve spots Hopper, runs after him as he's taking off in a cab, and tears the door off to grab him. Downtown, Sandusky is skeptical about how Steve could have seen Hopper the night of the shooting. Tanner informs the OSI men that Hopper has a cover as a salesman from out of town that checks out and an airtight alibi--showing them a tape of a local talk show he was on at the time of the shooting. Hopper is let go and even Oscar doubts Steve and his hardware. Hopper proceeds to make a call to have this Steve Austin character preoccupied for the next sixteen hours, whatever the cost.

Steve breaks into Hopper's hotel room and learns the name of his tailor, Mr. Hanley (Ivor Barry), whom he goes to question. Recognizing the famous Col. Austin, Hanley tells of how Hopper had two of each suit ordered. Outside, a pickup truck tries to run down Steve, but he runs it into an alley and ducks behind a dumpster, under the cover of which he stops the truck with the dumpster getting crushed in-between. Steve stakes out the lobby of Hopper's hotel as he returns to his room...where we learn that John is half of a set of twin brothers. (It was unclear which was actually John and/or the assassin.)

The hour before the court appearance, Assassin Hopper dresses as a cop while Decoy Hopper openly leaves the hotel to occupy Steve, engaging in benign activities like eating at a diner and window shopping. Assassin Hopper sets himself up on the roof of a building facing the courthouse as the motorcade is traveling there. While Steve's watching the decoy elsewhere, he notices a blemish on his face and recalls seeing Hopper without it. Steve splits for the courthouse on better, stronger, faster foot, getting within sight as the motorcade's arriving, spotting the unblemished Hopper on the roof, and heading up to intercept him. As Hopper's taking aim, Steve calls his name and jumps down from a higher point to tackle him. Steve subsequently takes in Decoy Hopper.

In a celebratory coda following the return of the indictments, Sandusky asks Steve again about how he saw Hopper, and Steve answers that he eats a lot of carrots.

This one seemed a little too police show, what with the OSI having mug files and local contacts.



All in the Family
"Pay the Twenty Dollars"
Originally aired March 9, 1974
Wiki said:
George Jefferson accuses Archie of giving him a counterfeit $20 bill to pay for his dry cleaning.

Edith has Louise in the kitchen for breakfast on a Saturday morning when Archie comes home from an all-nighter driving the cab, having picked up the dry cleaning on his way home. George soon arrives demanding to see Archie, who says something insensitive about the Jeffersons from upstairs, not knowing that they're present. Insert episode description here. George wants Archie to repay him, but Archie denies first that the bill in counterfeit, then that the "classy" customer he remembers giving it to him would have passed it on to him, then that it's the same bill he paid George with. Finally, Archie tries to kick George out so he can go to bed. In the kitchen, Edith and Louise get into a fight of their own defending their husbands. Archie advises George to pass off the bill up in Harlem, arguing that it will eventually end up in white hands. Each Jefferson ends up storming out a separate door, leaving Edith feeling terrible.

Back in the Jeffersons' parallel kitchen, Louise also feels bad for fighting with Edith, and after an argument with George she returns to the Bunkers' to exchange a hug. Edith tries to give Louise the money, but Louise feels that it would be more meaningful if Archie paid George himself, so she devises a plan to plant the money in Archie's pocket for George to find when he cleans it. George spitefully doesn't want to clean the coat, so Louise finds the bill for him, then claims that it's Archie's way of apologizing, but George is offended that Archie's trying to make him look bad. The Jeffersons go back to the Bunkers' for George to return the $20, and Edith spins it as George being magnanimous, then convinces Archie to offer to split the money with George. Then Meathead, who's been sitting at the table with Gloria, decides to meddle, jumping up to object that Archie's getting the better part of the arrangement. Surprisingly, he convinces Archie, but when nobody can produce singles, some bartering ensues over other, unrelated matters, and bills exchange hands between everyone present for various reasons. In the end, Archie, who had $35 on him, is empty-handed. George compensates him with the counterfeit twenty.

The Wisdom of Edith Bunker: I think that when two people fight, nobody wins.​
The Wisdom of Archie Bunker: A phony $20 bill is worth nothin'. But a good $20 bill is worth $10.​

This struck me as one that I have a vague memory of having seen first-run.



Guess it's either a different episode or my brain rewriting things again. It has been fifty years, after all.
You got me wondering if it already came up in another episode, but uncommented upon; e.g., the wig episode.
 
Steve's dining alone in a fancy restaurant
My credulity is already strained.

Lorin Sandusky (William Schallert)
Space Station boss and substitute Artie.

John Hopper (Gary Lockwood)
Best buddy from Starfleet Academy and doomed astronaut.

the bullet hitting the man behind him
An associate of Sandusky or an innocent bystander? I suppose we never learn his fate.

though Oscar tries to discourage him on the basis that it's not his level of assignment
"Okay, Oscar, are you really trying to discourage me or are you trying to get me into rebel mode?"

but becomes invested in the matter when he gets a call from Washington about the shooting
Why would Oscar get a call from Washington about a racketeer? Did Steve talk to the police?

Oscar tries to keep Sandusky holed up at his hotel until the court date
"Hello, Mr Sandusky, I'm with the Office of Scientific Investigations, a government bureau that has absolutely no jurisdiction over your case whatsoever."

then refers Steve to a hot dog stand-running stool pigeon
Didn't Mod Squad have one of those? :rommie:

he tells Steve of a highly reputed mystery hitman known only as the Big Buy.
Second only to the hitman known as Best Buy. :D

Steve spots Hopper, runs after him as he's taking off in a cab, and tears the door off to grab him.
That arm is as classified as a missile site, Steve.

Hopper is let go and even Oscar doubts Steve and his hardware.
And Steve feels alone, all alone in the world.

a pickup truck tries to run down Steve
What happens to the driver? Assuming he wasn't killed, he would be a lead.

we learn that John is half of a set of twin brothers.
I knew this as soon as he ordered the identical suits-- which I suppose was not exactly the most brilliant deduction. :rommie:

(It was unclear which was actually John and/or the assassin.)
I was wondering if maybe they took turns being the assassin and the decoy. Not that it matters.

While Steve's watching the decoy elsewhere, he notices a blemish on his face and recalls seeing Hopper without it.
Nice attention to detail. Hopefully it was something the viewer could have theoretically noticed.

Sandusky asks Steve again about how he saw Hopper, and Steve answers that he eats a lot of carrots.
"If you promise not to tell anyone but your fiancee...."

This one seemed a little too police show, what with the OSI having mug files and local contacts.
This is actually more in line with my memories of the show-- that it started out James Bond, went mainstream, and then became comic booky later on.

Insert episode description here.
This makes me wonder if it's possible for a business, like a dry cleaners or a cab company, that deals in a lot of cash could submit to their insurance for reimbursement for counterfeit money, the same way they would for theft.

Surprisingly, he convinces Archie, but when nobody can produce singles, some bartering ensues over other, unrelated matters, and bills exchange hands between everyone present for various reasons. In the end, Archie, who had $35 on him, is empty-handed. George compensates him with the counterfeit twenty.
I kinda remember this part. :rommie:

The Wisdom of Edith Bunker: I think that when two people fight, nobody wins.
The only way to win is to not play the game.

This struck me as one that I have a vague memory of having seen first-run.
I'm positive I did. I would have seen all of this stuff either first run or at least as a Summer re-run.

You got me wondering if it already came up in another episode, but uncommented upon; e.g., the wig episode.
That's definitely possible. Obviously I do mix up elements of different episodes.
 


Belated 50th Anniversary Viewing



Ironside
"Riddle at 24,000"
Originally aired March 14, 1974
Wiki said:
A medic helps Ironside with his investigation of a disguised murder. This is the only episode where Don Mitchell does not appear.

Ed's driving the Chief down the coast when the van gets a flat, and they find that the spare is empty as well, both due to bad valves. They call to their destination, the office of Dr. Juan Domingo (Special Guest Star "Hey, Lucy, I'm home!"), getting his receptionist, who's known as Big Sue (Linda Foster), while the doctor is going to an airfield to see to a patient, Laura Blaine (Patricia Smith), who's being talked through landing a prop plane after her husband, Walter, has a heart attack. Domingo finds Walter dead and becomes curious about an oxygen valve and a Thermos that became shattered on the inside. Domingo picks up the Chief on his way back to the office, and the Chief becomes curious about the Blaine matter. Domingo shares that he found traces of chloral hydrate in the Thermos's coffee, calling into question how Walter died.

Iron70.jpg
Juan drives Robert down to look at the plane, describing how he found the oxygen tank empty as well; indicating that Walter was drugged and his oxygen was drained. Domingo, apparently having a rep for being an amateur detective, plays his cards close to his chest with local law officer Lt. Mark Cardiff (L.Q. Jones), not sharing his clues or telling him who Ironside is. They proceed to the Blaine home, where the Chief conspicuously stays in the van and we meet some suspects--Walter's stepson, Denny Blaine (Michael Richardson), a skinhead to whom Juan recently prescribed chloral hydrate to help him get off drugs; and Walter's business partner, Wescott (Ralph Meeker), who's openly pleased in front of Laura, with whom he's apparently been having an affair, that Walter's out of the way of both them and his taking control of the business...which makes Laura upset. Laura describes to Juan what happened in the air, which upsets her more, and when asked, she refuses to give her permission for an autopsy.

A call to Fran turns up that the business was contracted to go to whichever partner survived. Ironside, Domingo, and Ed follow Denny to a bar to find him with Wescott's wife, Taffy (Dolores Dorn), and learn that he made a pledge to grow his hair back when his stepfather was dead. The Chief questions him about his motives for killing his mother and stepfather; and when Taffy demonstrates the same sort of bigotry toward Juan that her husband did earlier, the Chief gives her a Fridayesque lecture about Domingo's qualifications and history, including the circumstances under which he escaped from Cuba. As they're leaving, Juan driving his own vehicle, his steering goes out and he crashes into a house.

The next morning, as we're learning that Domingo and Big Sue have something going, it comes up that the Blaines have a second doctor that Domingo didn't know about; the broken Thermos goes missing; and Cardiff is now in the loop as it's discovered that the car's tie rod was sawed. When questioned by Cardiff with the Chief present, Wescott openly admits to his animosity with Blaine, while strongly objecting that he didn't kill him. Domingo finds the mechanic who sawed the rod with little explanation. In the hangar, Domingo has Sue re-create Laura's movements when she exited the plane, noticing that the fuel mixture knob would have been in covert reach. Then he has a good Thermos put in a pressure chamber to simulate rising altitude, and it shatters inside at the titular altitude. With Domingo present, Cardiff accuses Laura of having covertly obtained a pilot's license, of taking the plane up to that altitude to kill Walter, and then bringing the plane down and pretending to not know how to fly it. Among the tip-offs were how she knew which things to turn off after landing, including the mixture. In the coda, it's pointed out that Laura never met Ironside, thus she didn't know there was a master detective tagging along with Domingo.

This episode felt like a backdoor pilot (asserted by a brief blurb on IMDb with no further details), with the focus on Desi's character leading the investigation, and the Chief largely on the sidelines; right down to establishing a couple of supporting cast members who were prominently featured yet didn't have much to do. There was even a multi-scene subplot about a teenager (Kevin McCarley) coming to Domingo's office to treat his merganser, with Juan objecting that he wasn't a vet but ultimately agreeing to do it under the table, finding that the not-duck was also not male and pregnant. And of course, it would answer the previously speculated upon question of why Desi was doing such a rare guest appearance. Note that this was the last regular episode of Season 7 before the Amy Prentiss pilot movie, which aired in May.



The Six Million Dollar Man
"The Rescue of Athena One"
Originally aired March 15, 1974
Wiki said:
Steve is launched into space to rescue two astronauts stranded in a crippled space capsule. However, when his bionics begin to malfunction due to space radiation, the return trip to Earth becomes endangered.

Note: The first of four appearances that Lee Majors' then-wife, Farrah Fawcett Majors, made on the show. She appeared in each season except the final one, playing a different character each time.

The episode opens with Steve chewing out Major Kelly Wood (Farrah would make the short list of 1970s icons) as she botches an Athena One capsule simulation.
SMDM08.jpg
Steve tries to get out of the assignment, but Oscar informs him that Washington won't have it, given the high profile of the mission. Relations cool between them when Steve expresses his concern for her welfare in a TV interview they have with Jules Bergman (himself). After the interview, Steve catches a stage light that threatens to fall on her, and when pressed, he obliquely tells her of his origin without getting into the bionics.

Steve serves as Flight Dynamics Officer at Mission Control for Kelly's real mission. When the capsule's in orbit, an explosion in the capsule knocks out Kelly's co-pilot, Major Paul Osterman (Dean Smith), so she's directed to dock with Skylab, where another craft will be sent to pick them up. But Kelly finds that the hatch is jammed, so Steve questions her in a way that she'll understand about whether he might be able to get the hatch open, and she confirms.

Steve gets himself assigned as commander of the rescue mission, on which he's accompanied by Dr. Richard Wolf (Paul Kent). The Rescue capsule docks with Skylab and Steve makes his way through the station to the hatch, which he manages to open with his arm...or "can opener" as he refers to it with Kelly. Wolf gets to work examining Osterman, but Steve determines that a solar panel will have to be fixed to enable full power so Wolf can operate; so he and Kelly make a spacewalk, where Steve's using his arm to bend the panel into place when his bionic eye begins to malfunction on him. Wolf finds that Osterman has a fragment embedded near his aorta that will have to be removed before reentry. As Kelly assists Wolf, she notices Steve acting disoriented and wobbly.

As Wolf's sleeping, Steve tells Kelly how three of his limbs are also weak, and she speculates that it could be radiation. Steve confers with Mission Control that he'll have to jury-rig the Rescue capsule to bring all four of them back, and given the time factor, that means a manual reentry despite the capsule being designed for three. Steve has Oscar put on and relays a coded message about his malfunction, dropping Rudy's name and mentioning a previous incident in California. Steve tells Kelly that she'll have to pilot the reentry because of his inability to rely on his stick hand.

Kelly separates them from Skylab and Steve gently coaches her as she begins reentry. Things get tense on the ground during the communications blackout, but the capsule is spotted by the waiting Kitty Hawk with its chutes deployed. As the chopper comes for them, Steve compliments Kelly, and she attributes her success to her teacher.

In the coda, a recovering Steve laments to Oscar how his astronaut days are now firmly behind him.

Steve: Space. It is the final frontier, and I can't go.​

Oscar informs him that Rudy's planning to add a protective layer that should fix the issue. Kelly then enters and invites Steve to dinner at her place.

In this episode, Steve's clearly specified to have been the last American to walk on the Moon, in January 1972 (eleven months before Apollo 17), so the show does not take place in the future, but apparently the Bionicverse Apollo Program squeezed in more missions sooner. Maybe they didn't have the Apollo 1 accident.

I have to speculate that this episode may have played a role in motivating the showmakers to come up with a sound effect for Steve's bionic limbs, as they were relying on a variation of the bionic eye effect to convey its malfunction.



All in the Family
"Mike's Graduation"
Originally aired March 16, 1974
Season finale
Wiki said:
As Mike prepares for his final exams, Archie is anxious for the Stivics to move out.

Gloria's worried as she and Edith stay upstairs to avoid disturbing Mike, whose finals are in two weeks. When Archie comes home, he distracts Mike by acting unusually accommodating, volunteering to delay dinner so Mike can stay at the table, then offering to let Mike study in his chair.

Archie: Listen, I know my priorities, and this is priorer.​

Mike learns the reason for Archie's behavior when Archie brings in the head of a stuffed goat that Barney shot, which he plans to hang in the den he'll be gaining after the Stivics move out. Mike gets into an argument with Archie about the barbarity of hunting, then the women come downstairs and react to the trophy.

Edith: I don't think I'm gonna like him lookin' at me with them big, sad eyes.​
Archie: They ain't real eyes, Edith, them there are glass eyes.​
Edith (raising voice in shock): That wasn't fair of Barney Hefner, shootin' a blind animal!​

That night, Archie's sleep is disturbed by Mike having nightmares in the next room. Archie talks to Edith about how he plans to collect repayment from Mike, and she floats the idea of letting them stay a while longer. In the next room, Mike describes his nightmare to Gloria, which involves going door to door as Archie taunts him at each house, and being saved from quicksand by Professor Blake before being informed that he's failed. Gloria discusses how she'd like to keep working even after Mike graduates, concerned that she won't also be able to keep house...which puts Mike out.

Two weeks after the exams, Mike's waiting pensively for the results to come by mail. After Irene comes over to collect for a charity, Mike hears the mailman and has Gloria go through the mail to look at the results for him, only for her to find that they aren't there. Then Mike gets a call from Professor Blake, who wants Mike to come see him...just like in the dream. After he and Gloria leave, Edith confesses to Irene that she thinks she may have accidentally prayed for Mike to fail because she expressed her wish for the kids to stay longer. After leaves and then promptly returns, excited to have found that Mike's results were accidentally left in her mailbox.

Cut to Archie justifying opening them while the kids are still absent, learning that Mike passed...Edith not sharing his celebratory reaction. Then the kids return with pizza and ice cream, having learned themselves. After Archie comes downstairs sporting a pipe (introduced in the bedroom scene) and cardigan sweater, Mike informs the folks that Professor Blake wanted to see him about getting a fellowship to earn his master's...meaning that the kids will be staying for a couple more years, which explosively bursts Archie's bubble.

Hang in there, Archie--the Jeffersons will be movin' on up the middle of next season.



I suppose everybody's heard that we lost James Darren the other day.

Space Station boss and substitute Artie.
And a gazillion other things...he was everywhere in those days.

Best buddy from Starfleet Academy and doomed astronaut.
Oh yeah...sometimes I forget that he was also Not Dave.

An associate of Sandusky or an innocent bystander? I suppose we never learn his fate.
An associate, I think, and he was killed.

Why would Oscar get a call from Washington about a racketeer? Did Steve talk to the police?
Nope, Oscar was being assigned to the case.

Didn't Mod Squad have one of those? :rommie:
Probably.

That arm is as classified as a missile site, Steve.
Yet half the time, Steve blabs to guest characters left and right about his enhancements.

And Steve feels alone, all alone in the world.
Which is why he dines alone in fancy restaurants.

What happens to the driver? Assuming he wasn't killed, he would be a lead.
I think he drove off, assuming that his quarry was crushed behind the dumpster.

I knew this as soon as he ordered the identical suits-- which I suppose was not exactly the most brilliant deduction. :rommie:
I saw it coming by at least that point as well...they were really playing up the "How could he be in two places at once?" angle.

Nice attention to detail. Hopefully it was something the viewer could have theoretically noticed.
I didn't go back to look.

This makes me wonder if it's possible for a business, like a dry cleaners or a cab company, that deals in a lot of cash could submit to their insurance for reimbursement for counterfeit money, the same way they would for theft.
Would it be worth it for a twenty, though? By the time I was working fast food over a decade later, the managers were wary of fifties and higher...twenties were considered not worth counterfeiting.

I'm positive I did. I would have seen all of this stuff either first run or at least as a Summer re-run.
I was probably favoring watching Emergency! at the time, and thus my exposure to AITF would have been gappy.
 
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"Riddle at 24,000"
"What's big and ugly and tearing up the wing?"

the van gets a flat, and they find that the spare is empty as well, both due to bad valves.
Very suspicious!

Dr. Juan Domingo (Special Guest Star "Hey, Lucy, I'm home!")
No way!

Domingo finds Walter dead and becomes curious about an oxygen valve
Definitely a pattern with the valves.

Cool. Love the specs.

Lt. Mark Cardiff (L.Q. Jones)
Scary character actor.

when asked, she refuses to give her permission for an autopsy.
I'm sure this could be circumvented.

when Taffy demonstrates the same sort of bigotry toward Juan that her husband did earlier, the Chief gives her a Fridayesque lecture about Domingo's qualifications and history
Topical topics on Ironside!

including the circumstances under which he escaped from Cuba.
He came on a raft with his pal Antonio Prohias.

As they're leaving, Juan driving his own vehicle, his steering goes out and he crashes into a house.
You're getting too close, Domingo!

Domingo finds the mechanic who sawed the rod with little explanation.
Yeah, what's up with that? It's like they decided the episode needed some additional peril and shot a couple of new scenes.

With Domingo present, Cardiff accuses Laura of having covertly obtained a pilot's license
Nice twist. Did he deduce it or find evidence of it?

Among the tip-offs were how she knew which things to turn off after landing, including the mixture.
It sounds like he just deduced it. I would have been hesitant to say it without finding actual evidence. :rommie:

This episode felt like a backdoor pilot (asserted by a brief blurb on IMDb with no further details), with the focus on Desi's character leading the investigation
That would have been pretty cool, actually.

a multi-scene subplot about a teenager (Kevin McCarley) coming to Domingo's office to treat his merganser, with Juan objecting that he wasn't a vet but ultimately agreeing to do it under the table, finding that the not-duck was also not male and pregnant.
Don't birds lay eggs?

Note that this was the last regular episode of Season 7 before the Amy Prentiss pilot movie, which aired in May.
Apparently Ironside was a breeding ground for failed spinoffs.

The episode opens with Steve chewing out Major Kelly Wood (Farrah would make the short list of 1970s icons) as she botches an Athena One capsule simulation.
The only time he ever got to yell at her. :rommie:

Apparently she was born with that hair. :rommie:

Steve tries to get out of the assignment, but Oscar informs him that Washington won't have it, given the high profile of the mission.
This seems out of character for Steve.

Steve expresses his concern for her welfare in a TV interview
And that's pretty unprofessional. There's some questionable writing going on here.

Jules Bergman (himself)
That's pretty cool.

Steve catches a stage light that threatens to fall on her, and when pressed, he obliquely tells her of his origin without getting into the bionics.
"I was bitten by a radioactive Russian."

so she's directed to dock with Skylab
Super groovy!

Steve gets himself assigned as commander of the rescue mission
The Space Program must be much more advanced in this universe, unless they already had a rocket on the pad for a Skylab mission-- which seems unlikely. Did they say what Kelly's actual mission was?

The Rescue capsule docks with Skylab and Steve makes his way through the station to the hatch
Super groovy indeed!

Steve determines that a solar panel will have to be fixed
It never rains, but it pours.

Wolf finds that Osterman has a fragment embedded near his aorta that will have to be removed before reentry.
Was the rescue mission designated Murphy One or something? :rommie:

Steve tells Kelly how three of his limbs are also weak, and she speculates that it could be radiation.
His second weakness, and a nice little twist.

Steve confers with Mission Control that he'll have to jury-rig the Rescue capsule to bring all four of them back, and given the time factor, that means a manual reentry despite the capsule being designed for three.
Something only a man who's been to the Moon can do!

Steve tells Kelly that she'll have to pilot the reentry because of his inability to rely on his stick hand.
And Kelly gets to prove her abilities after getting chewed out by the famous Steve Austin.

the capsule is spotted by the waiting Kitty Hawk
Another nice detail.

Steve: Space. It is the final frontier, and I can't go.
That's a nice little character moment for Steve.

Oscar informs him that Rudy's planning to add a protective layer that should fix the issue.
It still could be used as a potential weakness if he ever goes on another space mission. Overall, aside from some contrived characterization at the beginning, this sounds like a really good episode. I love that they actually went to Skylab and got picked up by the Kitty Hawk. And I have absolutely no recollection of it whatsoever. :rommie:

Steve's clearly specified to have been the last American to walk on the Moon, in January 1972 (eleven months before Apollo 17), so the show does not take place in the future, but apparently the Bionicverse Apollo Program squeezed in more missions sooner. Maybe they didn't have the Apollo 1 accident.
Yeah, this is all very weird. I wonder if they had a purpose or if they're just making mistakes. Didn't they earlier specify that he was on Apollo 20 or something? And wasn't there something about him being on a secret mission? That would mean that he had been there more than once. I wonder if anybody on the Internet has tried to make sense of all this.

Gloria's worried as she and Edith stay upstairs to avoid disturbing Mike, whose finals are in two weeks.
Wouldn't it make more sense for Mike to be upstairs? :rommie:

Edith: I don't think I'm gonna like him lookin' at me with them big, sad eyes.
Archie: They ain't real eyes, Edith, them there are glass eyes.
Edith (raising voice in shock): That wasn't fair of Barney Hefner, shootin' a blind animal!
I definitely remember this. Very likely the funniest thing she ever said. :rommie:

Then Mike gets a call from Professor Blake, who wants Mike to come see him...just like in the dream.
Hopefully minus the quicksand.

Edith confesses to Irene that she thinks she may have accidentally prayed for Mike to fail because she expressed her wish for the kids to stay longer.
"I shouldn't have used that Monkey's Paw."

Professor Blake wanted to see him about getting a fellowship to earn his master's...meaning that the kids will be staying for a couple more years, which explosively bursts Archie's bubble.
But preserves the successful show format. :D

Hang in there, Archie--the Jeffersons will be movin' on up the middle of next season.
I wonder whatever happened to the goat's head.

I suppose everybody's heard that we lost James Darren the other day.
Yeah, I saw that yesterday. He was 88 years old. RIP, Tony.

And a gazillion other things...he was everywhere in those days.
Indeed, he was one of the great character actors.

Nope, Oscar was being assigned to the case.
That does not make a lot of sense.

Yet half the time, Steve blabs to guest characters left and right about his enhancements.
"If you pinky swear not to tell anyone...."

Which is why he dines alone in fancy restaurants.
:rommie:

I saw it coming by at least that point as well...they were really playing up the "How could he be in two places at once?" angle.
And it's too soon to be more robot doppelgangers. :rommie:

Would it be worth it for a twenty, though? By the time I was working fast food over a decade later, the managers were wary of fifties and higher...twenties were considered not worth counterfeiting.
That's true. Although Archie and George were making a big deal out of it-- because Archie is poor and George is a jerk. :rommie:

I was probably favoring watching Emergency! at the time, and thus my exposure to AITF would have been gappy.
At that time, I think the only place I would have seen Emergency! would have been at my Uncle Dave's house. My main exposure to it was several years later when it was syndicated on Channel 38.
 
"What's big and ugly and tearing up the wing?"
SMDM09.jpg
"IS THAT A CHICKEN JOKE!?!"

Very suspicious!
Nothing was really made of this...it was a contrivance, and I'm not sure it was necessary. It kept Ed out of some early scenes as he was dealing with the van.

This came up a few months ago when I had to skip the episode.

Cool. Love the specs.
You can picture them breaking into a singalong...
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Scary character actor.
He was relatively benign here.

I'm sure this could be circumvented.
This was actually a courtesy; it was a clue that in a case like this, the autopsy would be required, and Laura just happened to know this.

Yeah, what's up with that? It's like they decided the episode needed some additional peril and shot a couple of new scenes.
Laura was behind it, but if there was anything leading to the specific mechanic she used, I blinked.

Nice twist. Did he deduce it or find evidence of it?
Investigation. The second doctor was used to get her certified for the license.

Don't birds lay eggs?
Does their behavior change before they do? Bottom line is the kid thought that "he" was sick.

Apparently Ironside was a breeding ground for failed spinoffs.
I don't recall offhand if others came up in earlier seasons, but perhaps the impending cancelation played a role in this. The series ends in the middle of the following season.

And that's pretty unprofessional. There's some questionable writing going on here.
It played better than it sounds. It seemed chauvinistic at first, but as he went on, it became clear that he was first and foremost concerned about the welfare of an unseasoned astronaut.

The Space Program must be much more advanced in this universe, unless they already had a rocket on the pad for a Skylab mission-- which seems unlikely. Did they say what Kelly's actual mission was?
In addition to being high-profile because she was the first female astronaut, the mission was topical in that they were looking for new energy resources on Earth...however that was supposed to happen from orbit.

Super groovy indeed!
I have to wonder how accurate the interior was.

And Kelly gets to prove her abilities after getting chewed out by the famous Steve Austin.
Overall, they were more friendly and on good terms for most of the episode, and she typically referred to him as "Teach".

That's a nice little character moment for Steve.
To say nothing of the very blatant shout-out--Trek is entering the pop cultural lexicon! You could have knocked me over with a feather when he said "Space," and my mind filled in the next few words just before he said them.

It still could be used as a potential weakness if he ever goes on another space mission. Overall, aside from some contrived characterization at the beginning, this sounds like a really good episode. I love that they actually went to Skylab and got picked up by the Kitty Hawk. And I have absolutely no recollection of it whatsoever. :rommie:
Seems like you weren't watching at this early point.

Yeah, this is all very weird. I wonder if they had a purpose or if they're just making mistakes. Didn't they earlier specify that he was on Apollo 20 or something?
19, I think it was.
And wasn't there something about him being on a secret mission?
Don't recall that...maybe that was John Jameson? It's been well established in multiple episodes that Steve's a celebrity specifically for having walked on the Moon.
I wonder if anybody on the Internet has tried to make sense of all this.
That's where the theory that the show takes place in the future came from, but apparently the proponents were missing/ignoring this very direct date reference.

I have to wonder if they meant to say January 1973, which would at least put it after Apollo 17, but not enough to account for two subsequent missions.

Wouldn't it make more sense for Mike to be upstairs? :rommie:
That's what I always think when he's studying at the kitchen table. There's also the couch and coffee table that he and Gloria often sit at off to the side of Archie and Edith's chairs.

I definitely remember this. Very likely the funniest thing she ever said. :rommie:
I liked the "Ironsides" gag better...especially the way she delivered the punchline as if Edith were genuinely perplexed about the situation.

But preserves the successful show format. :D
As I recall, they're going to be moving into the Jeffersons' house sooner rather than later anyway (hence my reference to the impending spin-off).

I wonder whatever happened to the goat's head.
I'm guessing that the bedroom never gets turned into a den, whether or not they directly deal with it. Presumably that was Stephanie's room after she came into the picture.

Yeah, I saw that yesterday. He was 88 years old. RIP, Tony.
And Vic! I've been meaning to bring it up for days.
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"If you pinky swear not to tell anyone...."
Steve could rip your arm off with that pinky.

And it's too soon to be more robot doppelgangers. :rommie:
They'll be revisiting the Robot Maker as soon as the Season 1 finale.

That's true. Although Archie and George were making a big deal out of it-- because Archie is poor and George is a jerk. :rommie:
I guess twenties were still valuable enough in '74...the inflation calculator tells me that $20 in 1974 ≈ $48 in 1988.

At that time, I think the only place I would have seen Emergency! would have been at my Uncle Dave's house. My main exposure to it was several years later when it was syndicated on Channel 38.
FWIW, the show entered weekday syndication while still in first run, and they retitled it Emergency One for the reruns.
 
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View attachment 41596
"IS THAT A CHICKEN JOKE!?!"
Just a little nugget.

Nothing was really made of this...it was a contrivance, and I'm not sure it was necessary. It kept Ed out of some early scenes as he was dealing with the van.
It just got them to where they were already going. :rommie:

This came up a few months ago when I had to skip the episode.
I do remember that, but I just felt he deserved an exclamation. :rommie:

You can picture them breaking into a singalong...
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If it had gone to series, I'm sure there would have been the occasional "Babaloo" moment.

Investigation. The second doctor was used to get her certified for the license.
Ah, okay.

Does their behavior change before they do? Bottom line is the kid thought that "he" was sick.
I don't really know, but it seems odd. Maybe it was a chicken joke.

I don't recall offhand if others came up in earlier seasons, but perhaps the impending cancelation played a role in this. The series ends in the middle of the following season.
Maybe they should have planted them in a series that wasn't on its last legs. No pun intended.

It played better than it sounds. It seemed chauvinistic at first, but as he went on, it became clear that he was first and foremost concerned about the welfare of an unseasoned astronaut.
Well, the first scene seemed odd because I would expect Steve to be a more nurturing mentor. It seemed like a forced conflict. But the unprofessional part was talking about it on TV. Bad form.

In addition to being high-profile because she was the first female astronaut, the mission was topical in that they were looking for new energy resources on Earth...however that was supposed to happen from orbit.
Technobabble. :rommie:

I have to wonder how accurate the interior was.
I was wondering how well they handled the microgravity. Especially considering Farrah's hair. :rommie:

Overall, they were more friendly and on good terms for most of the episode, and she typically referred to him as "Teach".
It's kind of too bad that her return appearances weren't as the same character.

To say nothing of the very blatant shout-out--Trek is entering the pop cultural lexicon! You could have knocked me over with a feather when he said "Space," and my mind filled in the next few words just before he said them.
Too bad the ratings didn't live up to the cultural impact. :rommie:

Seems like you weren't watching at this early point.
I'm sure I was watching from almost the start, with the possible exception of the pilot. I remember details from all the episodes so far except this one.

Don't recall that...maybe that was John Jameson?
Ah, Steve versus the Man-Wolf. That would have been cool.

It's been well established in multiple episodes that Steve's a celebrity specifically for having walked on the Moon.
I'll try to check when I have more time. I think there was talk of him being on a secret mission, and also of there being a Moonbase. I think we also talked about him going more than once, but that may have been our speculation.

That's where the theory that the show takes place in the future came from, but apparently the proponents were missing/ignoring this very direct date reference.
There was certainly nothing helpful on the Wiki page.

That's what I always think when he's studying at the kitchen table. There's also the couch and coffee table that he and Gloria often sit at off to the side of Archie and Edith's chairs.
A lot of people also study at the library. Mike exhibits a number of self-defeating behaviors. :rommie:

I liked the "Ironsides" gag better...especially the way she delivered the punchline as if Edith were genuinely perplexed about the situation.
She's very good at that. :rommie:

As I recall, they're going to be moving into the Jeffersons' house sooner rather than later anyway (hence my reference to the impending spin-off).
Interesting. I'm not remembering that at the moment.

And Vic! I've been meaning to bring it up for days.
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Ah, Vic Fontaine. He was a great program.

Steve could rip your arm off with that pinky.
Steve always wins at cracking the wishbone. :rommie:

They'll be revisiting the Robot Maker as soon as the Season 1 finale.
Clearly my Six-Million-Dollar Man timeline is as wonky as their Apollo timeline. :rommie:

FWIW, the show entered weekday syndication while still in first run, and they retitled it Emergency One for the reruns.
Ah, right, Emergency One. I remember watching it after school when I was a junior, so that would have been 1977.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


September 8
  • U.S. President Gerald Ford made an unpopular decision that would ultimately cost him the 1976 U.S. presidential election, as he announced in a nationally televised speech that he had granted a "full, free and absolute pardon" to his predecessor, former President Richard Nixon, for any crimes that Nixon might have committed during the Nixon presidency. Ford said in his speech, "I have come to a decision which I felt I should tell you and all of my fellow American citizens, as soon as I was certain in my own mind and in my own conscience that it is the right thing to do." He added that the Watergate scandal "could go on and on and on, or someone must write the end to it. I have concluded that only I can do that, and if I can, I must." He noted that, "I am compelled to conclude that many months and perhaps more years will have to pass before Richard Nixon could obtain a fair trial by jury in any jurisdiction of the United States," and that "During this long period of delay and potential litigation, ugly passions would again be aroused. And our people would again be polarized in their opinions. And the credibility of our free institutions of government would again be challenged at home and abroad." Ford then read the text of Proclamation 4311 aloud. In 2001, Ford was presented the Profile in Courage Award, and U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy said, "At a time of national turmoil, America was fortunate that it was Gerald Ford who took the helm of the storm-tossed ship of state. Unlike many of us at the time, President Ford recognized that the nation had to move forward, and could not do so if there was a continuing effort to prosecute former President Nixon. So President Ford made a courageous decision, one that historians now say cost him his office, and he pardoned Richard Nixon...time has a way of clarifying past events, and now we see that President Ford was right. His courage and dedication to our country made it possible for us to begin the process of healing and put the tragedy of Watergate behind us."
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  • TWA Flight 841 crashed into the Ionian Sea 18 minutes after takeoff from Athens toward Rome, after a terrorist bomb exploded in the cargo hold. With control no longer possible, the Boeing 707 made a steep climb and stalled. All 88 people aboard were killed.
  • American daredevil Evel Knievel made a failed attempt to jump over the Snake River Canyon in Idaho aboard the Skycycle X-2, a steam-powered rocket. Although Knievel cleared the canyon, a premature parachute deployment caused the rocket to drift back to the launch side, landing at the bottom of the canyon near the river.
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September 9
  • Six climbers died in an avalanche on the West Shoulder of Mount Everest. French mountaineer Gérard Devouassoux, 34, and five Nepalese Sherpa were killed; mountaineer Claude Ancey survived.
  • Around 4,000 people attended a rally against desegregation busing at Boston City Hall Plaza, sponsored by the organization Restore Our Alienated Rights (R.O.A.R.). Massachusetts U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy, who attempted to speak at the rally to urge calm, was chased by the angry crowd, which threw tomatoes and eggs at him.

September 10
  • Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals set the Major League Baseball record for most bases stolen in a season. Playing against the visiting Philadelphia Phillies in the Cards' 142nd game, Brock tied the record of 104 (set by Maury Wills in the 154-game 1932 season), then had his 105th stolen base in the seventh inning.
  • The NBC television drama Little House on the Prairie, based on the works of Laura Ingalls Wilder, began the first of 204 episodes over nine seasons, following a successful pilot that had been broadcast on March 30. It would continue until March 21, 1983.

September 12
  • The longest game in Major League Baseball history to be played to a conclusion came to an end in the 25th inning, 7 hours and 4 minutes after it had started, as baseball's St. Louis Cardinals defeated the host New York Mets, 4 to 3, in the 25th inning. The game had been tied, 3 to 3, after nine innings and then went 15 additional scoreless innings before two Mets errors gave the Cardinals' Bake McBride the opportunity to run from first base to home plate.
  • In the U.S. state of Massachusetts, court-ordered desegregation busing began on the first day of school in Boston. While busing was successful in 79 of Boston's 80 schools, demonstrations and violence accompanied the beginning of school in the largely white South Boston neighborhood. On the first day, only 124 of the 1,000 students enrolled at South Boston High School attended, and white demonstrators stoned buses carrying African-American students home from the school. Kevin White, Mayor of Boston, banned gatherings of three or more people in the vicinity of public schools.

September 13
  • Three members of the Japanese Red Army (JRA) seized the French Embassy in The Hague, Netherlands, and took 11 people hostage, including Jacques Senard, the French Ambassador to the Netherlands. The JRA terrorists released their hostages after five days, in return for the release of jailed JRA member Yutaka Furuya and safe passage out of the Netherlands.
  • Several notable series premiered on American prime-time television. The CBS network debuted the Planet of the Apes TV series, based on the 1968 film of the same name and its sequels. ABC debuted the adventure series Kodiak, the sitcom The Texas Wheelers and the supernatural drama Kolchak: The Night Stalker, featuring a character who had appeared in two earlier TV movies. NBC debuted the sitcom Chico and the Man, the detective drama The Rockford Files and the police procedural Police Woman, a spin-off of an episode of the anthology Police Story.

September 14
  • American astronomer Charles T. Kowal discovered Leda, the 13th moon of Jupiter to be found up to that time, using the 48-inch (1,200 mm) Schmidt telescope at Palomar Observatory.
  • Warren Hull, 71, American film actor and radio and TV host known for his performances in movie serials as "The Spider" (in 1938 and 1941), "Mandrake the Magician" (1938), and the "Green Hornet" (1940), died of congestive heart failure. Hull, a popular singer, also hosted The Warren Hull Show on CBS Radio and the game show Strike It Rich on radio and TV.
  • Todd Rundgren attacked John Lennon's attitudes and abilities in an interview published in Melody Maker.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton
2. "(You're) Having My Baby," Paul Anka
3. "Rock Me Gently," Andy Kim
4. "I'm Leaving It (All) Up to You," Donny & Marie Osmond
5. "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe," Barry White
6. "Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston
7. "Tell Me Something Good," Rufus
8. "Then Came You," Dionne Warwick & The Spinners
9. "You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy
10. "Clap for the Wolfman," The Guess Who
11. "You Haven't Done Nothin'," Stevie Wonder
12. "I Honestly Love You," Olivia Newton-John
13. "Hang On in There Baby," Johnny Bristol
14. "The Night Chicago Died," Paper Lace
15. "Another Saturday Night," Cat Stevens
16. "Beach Baby," The First Class
17. "It's Only Rock 'N Roll (But I Like It)," The Rolling Stones
18. "Sweet Home Alabama," Lynyrd Skynyrd
19. "Who Do You Think You Are," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods
20. "Let's Put It All Together," The Stylistics
21. "Feel Like Makin' Love," Roberta Flack
22. "Rub It In," Billy "Crash" Craddock
23. "Earache My Eye," Cheech & Chong
24. "Free Man in Paris," Joni Mitchell
25. "Wild Thing," Fancy
26. "Can't Get Enough," Bad Company
27. "Never My Love," Blue Swede
28. "You Little Trustmaker," The Tymes

30. "Wildwood Weed," Jim Stafford
31. "Steppin' Out (Gonna Boogie Tonight)," Tony Orlando & Dawn
32. "Stop and Smell the Roses," Mac Davis
33. "Skin Tight," Ohio Players
34. "Keep on Smilin'," Wet Willie

36. "Please Come to Boston," Dave Loggins
37. "Sideshow," Blue Magic
38. "One Hell of a Woman," Mac Davis
39. "Jazzman," Carole King
40. "Do It Baby," The Miracles

43. "Waterloo," ABBA
44. "Papa Don't Take No Mess, Pt. 1," James Brown
45. "Shinin' On," Grand Funk
46. "Surfin' U.S.A.," The Beach Boys
47. "Call on Me," Chicago
48. "Takin' Care of Business," Bachman-Turner Overdrive

50. "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me," Elton John
51. "Tin Man," America
52. "The Bitch Is Back," Elton John

55. "Radar Love," Golden Earring
56. "Time for Livin'," Sly & The Family Stone

59. "Sure as I'm Sittin' Here," Three Dog Night
60. "Love Me for a Reason," The Osmonds

64. "Annie's Song," John Denver

66. "Give It to the People," The Righteous Brothers
67. "Carefree Highway," Gordon Lightfoot
68. "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)," Reunion

70. "Straight Shootin' Woman," Steppenwolf

73. "Rock and Roll Heaven," The Righteous Brothers
74. "Rock the Boat," Hues Corporation

77. "Rock Your Baby," George McCrae

84. "The Need to Be," Jim Weatherly

88. "Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)," Raspberries
89. "Honey, Honey," ABBA
90. "I've Got the Music in Me," The Kiki Dee Band


94. "My Thang," James Brown

97. "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," Steely Dan
98. "On and On," Gladys Knight & The Pips


Leaving the chart:
  • "The Air That I Breathe," The Hollies (21 weeks)
  • "Travelin' Prayer," Billy Joel (4 weeks)
  • "You Make Me Feel Brand New," The Stylistics (25 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)," Raspberries
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(#18 US)

"I've Got the Music in Me," The Kiki Dee Band
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(#12 US; #19 UK)

"The Need to Be," Jim Weatherly
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(#11 US; #6 AC)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Happy Days, "Richie Moves Out" (Season 2 premiere)
  • M*A*S*H, "The General Flipped at Dawn" (Season 3 premiere)
  • Hawaii Five-O, "The Young Assassins" (Season 7 premiere)
  • Ironside, "Raise the Devil: Part 1" (Season 8 premiere)
  • The Six Million Dollar Man, "Nuclear Alert" (Season 2 premiere)
  • Shazam!, "The Brothers"
  • Star Trek, "Bem"
  • Kung Fu, "Blood of the Dragon" (Season 3 premiere)
  • All in the Family, "The Bunkers and Inflation: Part 1" (Season 5 premiere)
  • Emergency!, "The Screenwriter" (Season 4 premiere)
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Will Mary Richards Go to Jail?" (Season 5 premiere)
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "Big Brother Is Watching" (Season 3 premiere)



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



If it had gone to series, I'm sure there would have been the occasional "Babaloo" moment.
Well, there was no singing in the episode.

But the unprofessional part was talking about it on TV. Bad form.
They put up a united front on camera, but he used it as an opportunity to express his concern, and underscore how dangerous space missions were.

I was wondering how well they handled the microgravity. Especially considering Farrah's hair. :rommie:
They made some effort to get it across...having them walk carefully with grip shoes and handles; the doctor was sleeping upright in a bag; and Farrah's iconic hair was carefully bunned.
SMDM12.jpg
When Steve unstraps himself, the straps are stiff, making it seem like they're floating.

I'll try to check when I have more time. I think there was talk of him being on a secret mission, and also of there being a Moonbase. I think we also talked about him going more than once, but that may have been our speculation.
I think the pilot, at least the syndicated version I watched, did establish that he was on multiple missions.

A lot of people also study at the library. Mike exhibits a number of self-defeating behaviors. :rommie:
I figured he preferred the kitchen table for that library-authentic hard wood chair experience.

Ah, Vic Fontaine. He was a great program.
I got a lot of play out of that album when it was younger.

Clearly my Six-Million-Dollar Man timeline is as wonky as their Apollo timeline. :rommie:
You didn't remember the first Robot Maker story with John Saxon, either, which is why I'm thinking that you weren't watching Season 1 in first-run, or at least not regularly.

Ah, right, Emergency One. I remember watching it after school when I was a junior, so that would have been 1977.
That sounds like the right timeframe.
 
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"Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)," Raspberries (#18 US)
The lead single off their upcoming fourth album 'Starting Over', which saw Jim Bonfanti and Dave Smalley replaced by Scott McCarl and Michael McBride.

The title 'Starting Over' refers to the band 'Starting Over' from scratch with two new members as well as being a concept album about being musicians, recording, touring, and life on the road away from family.

As for the lead single, Eric Carmen had this to say about it -
"Overnight Sensation" was like the first video that I ever saw in my head. It was written very theatrically. The genesis of "Overnight Sensation" was there were two things. One was I was reading a copy of "Billboard" and there was a full-page ad taken out by some record company for one of their artists and it just said the title of the tune is a hit record and then they listed all the stations that were on it. And I thought, 'Wouldn't it be funny if you had a song called 'Hit Record' and then you could take out an ad that said, 'Hit Record' is a hit record and then list all the stations that were on it." So, I got an idea to write this song called "Hit Record." And then at some point I came up with the idea of when I was a kid growing up on The Beatles and The Searchers and The Beau Brummels, I used to have a transistor radio under my pillow at night and I'll never forget what that sounded like. The idea came into my head at some point in the chorus of this song called "Hit Record" that it should break down and sound like you're hearing it through a transistor radio. So that was kind of the genesis of how that song came to pass. And then the rest of it in a way I almost wish I had written that song today because it was written before videos existed but, in my head, it was a video. The first scene was you can picture Abbey Road Studios, this great huge dark room with a real high camera and this one spotlight on the singer and it was like this guy singing in his living room thinking about the music business. "I know it sounds funny but I'm not in it for the money. . ." So, he gets through the verse and the first group of background vocals come in and the room lights up and gets a little bit bigger and by the time you get to the first full-blown chorus it's like "Baboom!" Visually I was trying to get on a record what I was seeing in my head. From an audio standpoint for it to sound like the little scene that I kept seeing, which started out and got bigger and bigger and then eventually came back down to that one guy again. I just wanted to hear one of my songs on the radio.
 
U.S. President Gerald Ford made an unpopular decision that would ultimately cost him the 1976 U.S. presidential election
It was an unpopular decision, but I disagree that it cost him the election. He really had no chance. He was not only serving the second of two consecutive Republican terms, but he was covering for a historically unpopular president, and he was also just some guy who nobody had voted for for president to begin with. He was an appointee. Plus the fact that he was up against a likeable candidate who was generally seen as the antidote to everything Nixon.

In 2001, Ford was presented the Profile in Courage Award, and U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy said, "At a time of national turmoil, America was fortunate that it was Gerald Ford who took the helm of the storm-tossed ship of state. Unlike many of us at the time, President Ford recognized that the nation had to move forward, and could not do so if there was a continuing effort to prosecute former President Nixon. So President Ford made a courageous decision, one that historians now say cost him his office, and he pardoned Richard Nixon...time has a way of clarifying past events, and now we see that President Ford was right. His courage and dedication to our country made it possible for us to begin the process of healing and put the tragedy of Watergate behind us."
It was the right thing to do, but he didn't think it through. Instead of just issuing a blanket pardon, he should have iterated all the charges that Nixon would have faced and pardoned him for each one individually. I think the acknowledgment that Nixon had committed those crimes would have satisfied most people. He still would have lost in 76, though.

American daredevil Evel Knievel made a failed attempt to jump over the Snake River Canyon in Idaho aboard the Skycycle X-2, a steam-powered rocket.
The thing is... a rocket is not a motorcycle. :rommie:

Massachusetts U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy, who attempted to speak at the rally to urge calm, was chased by the angry crowd, which threw tomatoes and eggs at him.
This is terrible, yet I can't help but laugh. :rommie:

Several notable series premiered on American prime-time television.
A Friday the 13th to remember! Planet of the Apes premiered at 8pm, after which I joined Six-Million-Dollar Man in progress, and then Night Stalker came on at 10pm. Night Stalker, of course, would become one of my all-time favorite TV shows.

"Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)," Raspberries
Good one. Some nostalgic appeal.

"I've Got the Music in Me," The Kiki Dee Band
Ditto.

"The Need to Be," Jim Weatherly
I have no recollection of this at all. I'm surprised it made it to #11. :rommie:

Well, there was no singing in the episode.
Come to think of it, it might have helped. :rommie:

They put up a united front on camera, but he used it as an opportunity to express his concern, and underscore how dangerous space missions were.
Okay, that doesn't sound as bad as I thought.

They made some effort to get it across...having them walk carefully with grip shoes and handles; the doctor was sleeping upright in a bag; and Farrah's iconic hair was carefully bunned.

View attachment 41602

When Steve unstraps himself, the straps are stiff, making it seem like they're floating.
Not bad for a TV show. But that picture answers the question of how accurate the interior was... namely, not at all. :rommie:

I think the pilot, at least the syndicated version I watched, did establish that he was on multiple missions.
Looking back a little, I think the talk of secret missions and a Moonbase was just us trying to make sense of all the stock footage. :rommie:

You didn't remember the first Robot Maker story with John Saxon, either, which is why I'm thinking that you weren't watching Season 1 in first-run, or at least not regularly.
No, I remembered the Robot Maker story, I just would have guessed that it happened later in the series.

Shortly after this appearance he's going to start work on his only directorial effort - an adaptation of Harlan Ellison's short story 'A Boy and his Dog', starring Don Johnson in his first onscreen role.
Wow, I didn't realize that he directed that movie. It was actually a decent adaptation of the story.
 
U.S. President Gerald Ford made an unpopular decision that would ultimately cost him the 1976 U.S. presidential election
It was an unpopular decision, but I disagree that it cost him the election. He really had no chance. He was not only serving the second of two consecutive Republican terms, but he was covering for a historically unpopular president, and he was also just some guy who nobody had voted for for president to begin with. He was an appointee. Plus the fact that he was up against a likeable candidate who was generally seen as the antidote to everything Nixon.

Yeah, Ford was never going to win re-election. If Reagan had challenged Ford for the Presidential ticket in '76 like he strongly being advised to, Reagan probably would have won, and it would have been Reagan v. Carter four years earlier.
That, coupled with the infamous headline 'Ford to NYC 'Drop Dead!' didn't do him any favors; however misleading the headline was, it made him look like he didn't care about the economic troubles of big cities.
Also, starting next year, Saturday Night Live and Chevy Chase will mock Ford, portraying him as clumsy and inept; just adding more fuel to the fire.
 
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