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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

And what unlikely series of events led to that? Or was it being stolen?
The private company was supposedly developing the device, but it was transported illegally. I found the whole setup to be dubious.

"The recovery team will need to be blindfolded at all times!"
Boop, boop, b--[Mushroom cloud]

A prototype nuclear bomb that will go off if you look at it crosseyed was being transported across the South Pacific in a small prop plane without government approval?
They repeatedly told us it was a jet, which struck me as handwaving.

Well, if you count all the ones on TV shows. :rommie:
Even then, they tend to be discovered one at a time. Here they somehow know of hundreds of them still being out there, but their efforts to do anything about this situation appear to have been limited to Robert Ito, Manhunter.

The Philippines? We're allies. I doubt if they would object to the US military removing a dangerous weapon.
They didn't specify what country the island was in the waters of.

Perhaps he's gone quite mad.
It didn't strike me as a matter of deliberate writing intent. Probably just a sloppy rewrite of his having originally been written to have served in the war. Ito would have been close in age, but a little too young.

"Leverage, my friend. Leverage."
I think that was actually his excuse.

It's hard to imagine someone being close enough to an exploding grenade to get knocked out without suffering life-threatening injuries.
C'mon, he's a superhero.

Which would presumably mean nothing to him.
It had an American flag on it, that's all he needed to know.

The managers of my new apartment complex do better background checks. :rommie:
I'll take that as a sign of progress.

That's cool, but it seems like Kuroda never sees it.
He does. I didn't get into the details, but it was a beat that helped Kuroda to realize that things really had changed a lot.

"Skipper! Professor! Skipper! Professor!"
:D

If it's blocking her driveway, can't they just call for an immediate tow? Or are they deliberately leaving it there to bait the car thieves? That kind of inconveniences the civilian, and you'd think they'd call for a stakeout rather than ask her to call in.
They did want to leave it as bait, but they were dealing with literally hundred of these temporarily abandoned vehicles, and the connection was only a theory, so stakeouts probably wouldn't have been practical.

It might be a good idea for them to carry some kind of masks in the car.
This was a case where I felt like they should have called paramedics/firefighters instead of the police.

Okay, that was grim. Any idea why they went in there?
Implied to just be a stunt/dare that went wrong.

I really don't see the advantage of this elaborate scheme over the tried-and-true method.
Supposedly scrap was bringing in good money at this point.

This seems a bit contrived to make Hawkeye the hero.
Now that you mention it...

That's definitely a strange oversight.
I guess she had tunnel vision in her desperation for a fix.

Interesting. H50 is turning into the Bones of the 70s.
They literally had a bit where Che was expositing about how this was done and Steve asked him to repeat it in plain English.

With or without her sick kid?
She had Johnny transferred to another hospital, which was part of what tipped Dina off.

There goes her profits. She should have just explained to him how Dina was responsible for Maggie's death.
It was questionable how much he cared. He was portrayed as a generally loathsome figure. Implied to be an abuser, though it wasn't directly portrayed.

The show or the general topic?
The general topic. Seems like we had previous occasion to compare the premise to Honey West and Charlie's Angels.
 
The private company was supposedly developing the device, but it was transported illegally. I found the whole setup to be dubious.
Yeah, they needed to put some more thought into it.

Boop, boop, b--[Mushroom cloud]
:rommie:

They repeatedly told us it was a jet, which struck me as handwaving.
Another discrepancy between script and screen. It's possible that the plane scenes were shot after the rest of the show, or by a second unit that didn't communicate with the first unit. The schedule on those shows was kind of brutal.

Here they somehow know of hundreds of them still being out there, but their efforts to do anything about this situation appear to have been limited to Robert Ito, Manhunter.
Backdoor pilot for a show with a very narrow focus. :rommie:

They didn't specify what country the island was in the waters of.
True, I was just going by Gabella being Filipino.

I think that was actually his excuse.
Nice. :rommie:

C'mon, he's a superhero.
Okay, I'll allow it. :rommie:

It had an American flag on it, that's all he needed to know.
Good point.

I'll take that as a sign of progress.
But it blows my dream of infiltrating the OSI.

He does. I didn't get into the details, but it was a beat that helped Kuroda to realize that things really had changed a lot.
And that's how a 45-year-old Japanese WWII veteran lost on a deserted island came to have a Level-7 OSI security clearance.

This was a case where I felt like they should have called paramedics/firefighters instead of the police.
Yeah, that scenario was perfect for Station 51.

Implied to just be a stunt/dare that went wrong.
Dumb kids.

Supposedly scrap was bringing in good money at this point.
Yeah, but why not steal them and bring them straight to the junkyard, rather than abandon them to be picked up later? I don't see the advantage.

They literally had a bit where Che was expositing about how this was done and Steve asked him to repeat it in plain English.
That's hilarious. :rommie:

She had Johnny transferred to another hospital, which was part of what tipped Dina off.
Good, that's consistent with her motivations.

It was questionable how much he cared. He was portrayed as a generally loathsome figure. Implied to be an abuser, though it wasn't directly portrayed.
Ah, I see.

The general topic. Seems like we had previous occasion to compare the premise to Honey West and Charlie's Angels.
I don't remember, but we probably did. Maybe in the other thread.
 
Backdoor pilot for a show with a very narrow focus. :rommie:
Its routine use of the lagoon would culminate in the crossover TV movie Robert Ito: Manhunter on Gilligan's Island.

Actually, he said that he used to do a lot of weightlifting in college.

But it blows my dream of infiltrating the OSI.
You were born too late...

Yeah, but why not steal them and bring them straight to the junkyard, rather than abandon them to be picked up later? I don't see the advantage.
It served as a buffer between the two ends of the operation, and lots of cars being driven in might have attracted attention.

Ah, I see.
Dina reacted with disgust when she saw who was in her apartment.

I don't remember, but we probably did. Maybe in the other thread.
Seems like it was more recent than that.
 
Its routine use of the lagoon would culminate in the crossover TV movie Robert Ito: Manhunter on Gilligan's Island.
I wonder if he nabbed that Japanese sailor after he escaped from the island.

You were born too late...
Now I'll have that one stuck in my head. :rommie:

It served as a buffer between the two ends of the operation, and lots of cars being driven in might have attracted attention.
Hmm, I guess.

Seems like it was more recent than that.
Maybe Murder, She Wrote was part of the talk and that's where I got the writer part. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



The Odd Couple
"Felix the Horse Player"
Originally aired January 23, 1975
Wiki said:
After Oscar scores big at the racetrack, Felix becomes interested in betting on horses.

When Felix catches Oscar listening to a horse race, he produces a ledger of Oscar's past gambling-incurred debts to him, which go back to 1969 and come to a total of $1,480. (This strikes me as questionable continuity with any number of prior situations that involved specific debts being dealt with more immediately.) When Oscar's horse wins at 40-to-1 odds, he declares his debt to Felix paid in full.

Oscar takes Felix to a fancy restaurant to meet his inside source, Harry Tallman (Jerry Maren)--a little person who trains the horses while aspiring to be a jockey. Felix is initially not interested in going in with Oscar, but reconsiders after a winning streak that has Oscar rolling in dough so that his lifetime debts are cleared and he's routinely dining at the restaurant, where he once stook out, with an entourage. Felix agrees to place a laughably small bet on the next race, while taking a crash course in how horse-betting works. (Does this all sound familiar?) There's a cute bit here where, upon learning that money can be made on the horses that come in second and third, Felix expresses his astonishment that Oscar has somehow managed to lose for years.

After the horse wins, Felix goes all-in, putting up all of his savings and investments. Eventually Oscar's bookie goes broke and the duo have to place their bets publicly at the Off-Track Betting office. When a couple of guys there (Johnny Silver and Don Diamond), familiar with Oscar's winning streak, threaten the odds by declaring their intent to bet on whatever horse Oscar chooses, he places a small wager on the wrong horse while having Felix, who pretends to be a southern gentleman who doesn't know Oscar, put it all on the right one.

Then Harry drops by the apartment to inform Oscar and Felix that he finally got in as a jockey, and thus won't be able to continue providing winning tips. He casually offers them one last tip, though Oscar is wary because Harry doesn't seem as sure about it. Felix insists on putting their total winnings on the horse, which loses, taking them back to square one. Oscar draws from his lifetime of losing experience to console Felix.



Emergency!
"Prestidigitation"
Originally aired January 25, 1975
Edited IMDb said:
The paramedics rescue a magician trapped in his trunk. Dr. Brackett's father is treated at the hospital for phlebitis. A fireplace explodes and falls on top of the homeowner. An auto accident sends a power transformer flying into a man's bedroom. A fuel truck collides with a car and a gas main, trapping a woman and starting a fire.

The episode opens with the paramedics on their way to a call concerning a man trapped under his house with an alligator, which is canceled. They're then flagged down by a man (Arthur Space) to help Lorenzo the Magnificent, who's trapped in a trunk suspended from a jammed crane on a pier.

Crane operator: If I pull up the outriggers, the whole thing is gonna go in the drink.​

A frenetic fellow magician among the onlookers named Eldridge (Bernard Fox) argues for letting the trunk fall in the drink (the operator actually repeating the word) so Lorenzo can commence with his escape. Contacted via bullhorn, Lorenzo concurs that they should cut the cable. Johnny climbs the crane arm and down the winch cable to comply. Sure enough, a wet-suited Lorenzo (Tony Giorgio) emerges to the surface. On the pier, he engages in a titular display with a cigarette and matches, then produces a "magic globe" as a gift for the paramedics, claiming that its mysteries can reveal the secrets of the universe. Back at the station, Johnny pesters Roy into sharing how he'd climbed down to look under the pier and verified that Lorenzo wasn't in the trunk.

At Rampart, a man is brought in (James Gregory) who addresses Brackett as Kel, and is suffering from leg pain and trouble breathing. Kel gives the case to Early, explaining that the patient is his father. Kel hovers around while Joe begins tests and Morton examines X-rays, and reveals to his father that he has a blood clot in the leg, a piece of which broke off and traveled into his lungs. As Brackett Sr. begins to engage in morbid reflection, Kel, no doubt hearing Harry Chapin in his head, promises to find the time to go fishing with his father. Subsequent tests verify that surgery is necessary despite the risk, to be conducted by a highly qualified but uncredited vascular surgeon.

The paramedics are called to a suburban home where a man (Dick Yarmy) has been knocked out by his newly constructed fireplace exploding. When they learn that he'd just finished it an hour prior, Johnny explains to the revived man and his wife (Madelyn Cain) that he didn't let the mortar dry, which caused the water to become steam. At Rampart, Jamie is soon on his feet with a minor concussion, while Johnny begins to try to pry open the magic globe.

Johnny's still trying to figure it out when Station 51 is called to the site of a vehicle accident where an unoccupied car rolled into and toppled a power line pole, causing a transformer to fall into a window and onto the legs of a man already in bed with a broken leg from a skiing accident (uncredited Gil Serna). The firefighters cut the lines outside and lift the transformer off so the man can be treated.

Johnny's made some progress on taking apart the globe's wooden sections when Station 51 and other units are called to an accident in which a kerosene truck has rolled over the hood of a convertible sports car, trapping the woman inside, while the fuel leaks, threatening to be ignited by a standing flame from a ruptured gas main. (Nobody notices a motorhome with a lightning bolt insignia quietly slipping away.) While the firefighters push back the extremely hot flame with hoses until the gas main can be shut off, the woman is freed via the jaws of life, while the truck driver (uncredited Stack Pierce) assists.

In the coda, Brackett thanks his colleague for the successful surgery; and Roy accidentally causes the globe to come completely apart. The only secret it reveals is that it was made in Japan, and Johnny obsesses over putting it back together so he can take it apart himself.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"The Shame of the Cities"
Originally aired January 25, 1975
Frndly said:
Eager to return to active reporting, Lou goes in search of corruption to expose on the WJM news, but takes aim at a phantom target, a political figure with a flawless record.

The only time it's not snowing in Minneapolis is when they open with their establishing shot of WJM. Lou shares with Mary how he's envious about an old colleague of his having been shot at by a mobster, and resolves to dust off both his pharmacist grandfather's antique typewriter and his investigative reporting chops. He wakes up Mary at her apartment with Charlene Maguire in tow (Sheree North reprising her role from "Lou and That Woman") to have the ladies pore through Democratic campaign contribution records while he does some legwork. Back at WJM, he shares with Mary and Murray--and Ted after he insists on sitting in--that he thinks he's found his subject: councilman Charles Harkney, whose record is clean, but Lou smells something fishy about him.

After three weeks, Lou's so desperate for dirt on Harkney that he resorts to paying an informant named Jack (Robert Emhardt), but is crestfallen when the worst thing in his package is that Harkney once got a parking ticket while delivering Easter baskets to an orphanage. Mary encourages Lou to go ahead and do a documentary on Harkney anyway, even though he's clean and honest. While the ladies wait at the apartment for news from Lou about how the edited special comes out, Mary becomes completely preoccupied by Charlene casually mentioning that she once dated Sinatra.

Charlene invites the WJM gang to watch the show at the bar where she plays, in lieu of her usual performance. It ends up practically clearing the place out--even Murray having left early--and Mary ends up swacked. When she attempts to console Lou in her inebriated state, Mary comes to the realization that she owes her career to people who do rotten things. In the coda, while still at the bar, Lou tries to console Mary about having talked him into it, but only makes her feel worse by asserting that it was the worst documentary in the history of television.



The Bob Newhart Show
"A Pound of Flesh"
Originally aired January 25, 1975
Wiki said:
Jerry is angry at Bob for refusing to lend him money.

After a big stock loss, Jerry, who doesn't believe in conventional lending methods, wants to cheer himself up by having Bob loan him $1,200+ for a new motorcycle (the amount going up by $1,000 every time it's mentioned, due to Jerry continually adding new accessories). Bob actually considers this against his better judgment and Emily's, ultimately deciding not to by drawing from a childhood friendship that was ruined when he was the borrower. After Bob breaks his decision to Jerry, the two of them have an indirect spat through Carol.

Jerry ends up getting the loan from Howard, who's lured in by promises of sharing custody of the bike and free dental care for Howie. But Howard soon finds strings attached, which include Jerry tailoring the custody schedule to accommodate himself and making deductions to his payments for his own expenses. Bob and Emily come down to the apartment's parking garage in the middle of Jerry and Howard having an argument, and Bob shares his obvious wisdom about money ruining friendships.

I can't say that I cared for this one at all--they really crossed the line with making Jerry completely unlikeable.

Bob's guest patient is Mrs. Loomis (Merie Earle making her second of three appearances in the role), an elderly woman who's still working out childhood issues from 66 years prior. The punchline involves her twin sister (also Earle) showing up at Bob's office, also fixated on their ancient sibling rivalry.


 
(This strikes me as questionable continuity with any number of prior situations that involved specific debts being dealt with more immediately.)
Every episode of Odd Couple takes place in a different timeline of the Multiverse.

his inside source, Harry Tallman (Jerry Maren)--a little person
Was that supposed to be his real name or a professional name? I can't imagine Felix let it slide by without comment. :rommie:

(Does this all sound familiar?)
Now that you mention it....

There's a cute bit here where, upon learning that money can be made on the horses that come in second and third, Felix expresses his astonishment that Oscar has somehow managed to lose for years.
Oh, yeah, that Win, Place, or Show thing. I don't understand it either. :rommie:

After the horse wins, Felix goes all-in, putting up all of his savings and investments.
That didn't take much.

(Johnny Silver and Don Diamond)
That can't be a coincidence. :rommie:

Felix insists on putting their total winnings on the horse, which loses, taking them back to square one.
Hopefully Felix was smart enough to hang onto the equivalent of his savings and investments.

Oscar draws from his lifetime of losing experience to console Felix.
That's cute. :rommie:

"Prestidigitation"
Are they sure it wasn't legerdemain?

The episode opens with the paramedics on their way to a call concerning a man trapped under his house with an alligator, which is canceled.
I'd go anyway, just out of curiosity. :rommie:

Crane operator: If I pull up the outriggers, the whole thing is gonna go in the drink.
No drink! Wrong show!

Eldridge (Bernard Fox)
Dr Bombay! And Crittendon.

Johnny pesters Roy into sharing how he'd climbed down to look under the pier and verified that Lorenzo wasn't in the trunk.
:rommie:

a man is brought in (James Gregory) who addresses Brackett as Kel
James Gregory is Brackett's father-- I love it. :rommie:

As Brackett Sr. begins to engage in morbid reflection, Kel, no doubt hearing Harry Chapin in his head, promises to find the time to go fishing with his father.
Montage time!

to be conducted by a highly qualified but uncredited vascular surgeon
I first read that as "uncredentialed" and figured dad was doomed. :rommie:

When they learn that he'd just finished it an hour prior, Johnny explains to the revived man and his wife (Madelyn Cain) that he didn't let the mortar dry, which caused the water to become steam.
Johnny has some esoteric knowledge.....

Johnny begins to try to pry open the magic globe.
....and yet he foolishly tampers with arcane occult artifacts.

an unoccupied car rolled into and toppled a power line pole, causing a transformer to fall into a window and onto the legs of a man already in bed with a broken leg from a skiing accident
They should have given this guy the magic globe, because he's obviously under a curse. :rommie:

(Nobody notices a motorhome with a lightning bolt insignia quietly slipping away.)
Heh. That also explains the transformer falling on the guy. :rommie:

while the truck driver (uncredited Stack Pierce) assists.
That's cool.

In the coda, Brackett thanks his colleague for the successful surgery
That's it? That's all we get from Brackett's dad? I was expecting him to be a world-class multi-specialty surgical pioneer who was forced by circumstance to remove his own blood clot with a butter knife or something. Did they even mention his career?

Lou shares with Mary how he's envious about an old colleague of his having been shot at by a mobster
Nice. :rommie:

resolves to dust off both his pharmacist grandfather's antique typewriter and his investigative reporting chops.
Now I'm seeing the title sequence of Night Stalker, only with Ed Asner instead of Darren McGavin. :rommie:

Charlene Maguire in tow (Sheree North reprising her role from "Lou and That Woman")
That's pretty cool. Too bad she doesn't have a more substantial part.

councilman Charles Harkney, whose record is clean, but Lou smells something fishy about him.
Kind of Chekhov's Aroma there.

the worst thing in his package is that Harkney once got a parking ticket while delivering Easter baskets to an orphanage.
Yeah, probably time to look for a new victim, Lou. :rommie:

Mary becomes completely preoccupied by Charlene casually mentioning that she once dated Sinatra.
Lou must be unaware of that, given the plot of her previous appearance. :rommie:

Mary ends up swacked. When she attempts to console Lou in her inebriated state, Mary comes to the realization that she owes her career to people who do rotten things. In the coda, while still at the bar, Lou tries to console Mary about having talked him into it, but only makes her feel worse by asserting that it was the worst documentary in the history of television.
There's some cute character stuff here, but Lou's plotline is never really resolved-- and kind of makes him look bad.

"A Pound of Flesh"
Kind of an overly dramatic Shakespeare reference. :rommie:

Jerry, who doesn't believe in conventional lending methods
Is that true, or are you mocking him? :rommie:

Bob and Emily come down to the apartment's parking garage in the middle of Jerry and Howard having an argument, and Bob shares his obvious wisdom about money ruining friendships.
And they both punch him in the nose. :rommie:

I can't say that I cared for this one at all--they really crossed the line with making Jerry completely unlikeable.
Plus which, orthodontists make a lot more than psychologists, so he really shouldn't need to borrow money from Bob.

Bob's guest patient is Mrs. Loomis (Merie Earle making her second of three appearances in the role), an elderly woman who's still working out childhood issues from 66 years prior. The punchline involves her twin sister (also Earle) showing up at Bob's office, also fixated on their ancient sibling rivalry.
That's cute. It would have made a good recurring bit.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


February 2
  • Ethiopian troops massacred 103 civilians in the village of Woki Duba, after driving Eritrean rebels from the town.

February 3
  • Eli M. Black, the 53-year-old CEO of United Brands, was driven to his office at the Pan Am Building in Manhattan, rode to the 44th floor, locked the door inside his private office, broke a window, and jumped to his death. Subsequent investigations revealed that Black had paid a $1,250,000 bribe to the Economics Minister of Honduras, Abraham Bennaton Ramos, in order to prevent that nation from placing a tax on the bananas from United Brands' farms.

February 4
  • The Haicheng earthquake killed 2,041 and injured 27,538 in Haicheng, Liaoning, China. In a possible example of successful earthquake prediction, the Chinese government had issued warnings at 2:00 in the afternoon to the three million residents of the southern Liaoning province, advising them to spend the night outdoors in tents. At 7:36 pm, a 7.8 magnitude quake flattened Haicheng.
  • Former British Prime Minister Edward Heath stepped down as chairman of the Conservative Party after former Education Minister Margaret Thatcher outpolled him 130-119, less than a majority of the 276 needed to become the party's leader, the first woman leader for anyu British political party.
  • Died: Louis Jordan, 66, American jazz bandleader, in Los Angeles

February 6
  • Thieves in Italy broke into the Ducal Palace art museum at Urbino, and stole the painting La Muta by Raphael, and the masterpieces The Flagellation of Christ and Madonna di Senigallia by Piero della Francesca, considered to be three of the ten most famous Italian paintings from the Renaissance. The works were recovered, unharmed, on March 24, 1976, from a hotel room in Locarno, Switzerland.

February 7
  • The Los Angeles Times revealed the existence of Project Azorian, the American CIA's attempt to recover the Soviet submarine K-129, which had sunk in 1968. According to the investigative report, confidential files on the operation were "believed to have been among the documents stolen by safecrackers" during a burglary of the offices of the Summa Corporation the previous June, and had been held by the thieves who demanded one million dollars to prevent their leaking.
  • Former White House aide Charles W. Colson told the Today Show that President Nixon had talked to him on December 18, 1973, about resigning, but did not do so because he was afraid that Vice-President Ford "couldn't control Henry Kissinger". Nixon's resignation had taken place almost eight months later, on August 9, 1974.

February 8
  • Advertisements appeared on US television for an album titled Roots, a compilation of John Lennon's recordings from his rock 'n' roll sessions. The label releasing the album, Adam VIII, was run by Morris Levy.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Fire," Ohio Players
2. "You're No Good," Linda Ronstadt
3. "Boogie On Reggae Woman," Stevie Wonder
4. "Pick Up the Pieces," Average White Band
5. "Best of My Love," Eagles
6. "Some Kind of Wonderful," Grand Funk
7. "Black Water," The Doobie Brothers
8. "Laughter in the Rain," Neil Sedaka
9. "Lonely People," America
10. "Get Dancin'," Disco-Tex & The Sex-O-Lettes feat. Sir Monti Rock III
11. "Doctor's Orders," Carol Douglas
12. "My Eyes Adored You," Frankie Valli
13. "#9 Dream," John Lennon
14. "Look in My Eyes Pretty Woman," Tony Orlando & Dawn
15. "Please Mr. Postman," Carpenters
16. "Mandy," Barry Manilow
17. "Sweet Surrender," John Denver
18. "Morning Side of the Mountain," Donny & Marie Osmond
19. "Nightingale," Carole King
20. "Never Can Say Goodbye," Gloria Gaynor
21. "Lady," Styx
22. "Rock n' Roll (I Gave You the Best Years of My Life)," Mac Davis
23. "Can't Get It Out of My Head," Electric Light Orchestra

25. "I'm a Woman," Maria Muldaur
26. "Big Yellow Taxi" (Live), Joni Mitchell

28. "One Man Woman / One Woman Man," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates
29. "Lady Marmalade," Labelle
30. "Roll On Down the Highway," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
31. "Don't Call Us, We'll Call You," Sugarloaf / Jerry Corbetta
32. "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds," Elton John
33. "Express," B.T. Express
34. "Have You Never Been Mellow," Olivia Newton-John
35. "Struttin'," Billy Preston
36. "Ding Dong, Ding Dong," George Harrison
37. "Poetry Man," Phoebe Snow
38. "Up in a Puff of Smoke," Polly Brown
39. "Movin' On," Bad Company
40. "To the Door of the Sun (Alle Porte Del Sol)," Al Martino

42. "My Boy," Elvis Presley
43. "You Are So Beautiful" / "It's a Sin When You Love Somebody", Joe Cocker

46. "Ready," Cat Stevens
47. "Sad Sweet Dreamer," Sweet Sensation
48. "Lovin' You," Minnie Riperton

50. "Junior's Farm" / "Sally G", Paul McCartney & Wings
51. "Free Bird," Lynyrd Skynyrd
52. "I Am Love, Pts. 1 & 2," Jackson 5
53. "Shame, Shame, Shame," Shirley & Company
54. "You're the First, the Last, My Everything," Barry White
55. "Bungle in the Jungle," Jethro Tull
56. "Only You," Ringo Starr

59. "Changes," David Bowie
60. "Kung Fu Fighting," Carl Douglas
61. "Angie Baby," Helen Reddy

68. "Chevy Van," Sammy Johns

70. "Cat's in the Cradle," Harry Chapin

78. "No No Song" / "Snookeroo", Ringo Starr

85. "Supernatural Thing, Part I," Ben E. King

88. "Walking in Rhythm," The Blackbyrds
89. "Emma," Hot Chocolate


91. "(Hey Won't You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song," B. J. Thomas
92. "Before the Next Teardrop Falls," Freddy Fender

94. "Jackie Blue," The Ozark Mountain Daredevils

98. "Killer Queen," Queen
99. "Hijack," Herbie Mann


Leaving the chart:
  • "Dancin' Fool," The Guess Who (11 weeks)
  • "The Entertainer," Billy Joel (10 weeks)
  • "From His Woman to You," Barbara Mason (10 weeks)
  • "I Feel a Song (In My Heart)" / "Don't Burn Down the Bridge", Gladys Knight & The Pips (17 weeks)
  • "Sha-La-La (Make Me Happy)," Al Green (19 weeks)


New on the chart:

"Emma," Hot Chocolate
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(#8 US; #3 UK)

"Walking in Rhythm," The Blackbyrds
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(#6 US; #5 AC; #4 R&B; #23 UK)

"Supernatural Thing, Part I," Ben E. King
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(#5 US; #1 R&B)

"Jackie Blue," The Ozark Mountain Daredevils
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(#3 US; #53 UK)

"No No Song," Ringo Starr
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(#3 US)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Six Million Dollar Man, "Taneha"
  • Adam-12, "Pressure Point"
  • M*A*S*H, "House Arrest"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Ring of Life"
  • Kung Fu, "Battle Hymn"
  • All in the Family, "Everybody Does It"
  • Emergency!, "The Mouse"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "You Try to Be a Nice Guy"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "The New Look"



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.



Was that supposed to be his real name or a professional name? I can't imagine Felix let it slide by without comment. :rommie:
He might have briefly reacted.

Hopefully Felix was smart enough to hang onto the equivalent of his savings and investments.
I was wondering about that, too, but the way they were playing it implied that he wasn't wiped out.

No drink! Wrong show!
There was definitely a drink...I thought we welcomed it wherever it may turn up.

I first read that as "uncredentialed" and figured dad was doomed. :rommie:
Like the Brackett would ever allow that.

Johnny has some esoteric knowledge.....
He is a firefighter...knowing what goes boom in a fire is useful.

That's cool.
He got to start the jaws generator...as far away from the gas main as it reached.

That's it? That's all we get from Brackett's dad? I was expecting him to be a world-class multi-specialty surgical pioneer who was forced by circumstance to remove his own blood clot with a butter knife or something. Did they even mention his career?
I didn't catch what he did, but he did talk of how he'd wanted Kel to be a lawyer, and expressed his gratitude for Kel's stubbornness.

Now I'm seeing the title sequence of Night Stalker, only with Ed Asner instead of Darren McGavin. :rommie:
Lou seems more like the Vincenzo type.

That's pretty cool. Too bad she doesn't have a more substantial part.
She had a good amount of screentime in this one.

There's some cute character stuff here, but Lou's plotline is never really resolved-- and kind of makes him look bad.
I'm sure that he got the bug out of his system, at least.

Is that true, or are you mocking him? :rommie:
The first thing Bob did was advise using a payment plan, but Jerry blew it off as interest being for patsies...yet he didn't mind making patsies out of his friends.

Plus which, orthodontists make a lot more than psychologists, so he really shouldn't need to borrow money from Bob.
I think that's what the stock loss was primarily for.
 
Eli M. Black, the 53-year-old CEO of United Brands, was driven to his office at the Pan Am Building in Manhattan, rode to the 44th floor, locked the door inside his private office, broke a window, and jumped to his death. Subsequent investigations revealed that Black had paid a $1,250,000 bribe to the Economics Minister of Honduras, Abraham Bennaton Ramos, in order to prevent that nation from placing a tax on the bananas from United Brands' farms.
Guilty conscience? Fear of discovery? Or did he just go bananas?

In a possible example of successful earthquake prediction, the Chinese government had issued warnings at 2:00 in the afternoon to the three million residents of the southern Liaoning province, advising them to spend the night outdoors in tents. At 7:36 pm, a 7.8 magnitude quake flattened Haicheng.
Amazing. Tens or hundreds of thousands of lives may have been saved. It's too bad the science of earthquake prediction hasn't progressed very much.

Thieves in Italy broke into the Ducal Palace art museum at Urbino, and stole the painting La Muta by Raphael, and the masterpieces The Flagellation of Christ and Madonna di Senigallia by Piero della Francesca, considered to be three of the ten most famous Italian paintings from the Renaissance. The works were recovered, unharmed, on March 24, 1976, from a hotel room in Locarno, Switzerland.
Interesting. I wonder what they intended to do with them.

and had been held by the thieves who demanded one million dollars to prevent their leaking.
As scandals go, a salvage operation doesn't really rate. :rommie:

"Emma," Hot Chocolate
This is a great song, but I find it almost impossible to listen to. Strong nostalgic value.

"Walking in Rhythm," The Blackbyrds
Very nice. Strong nostalgic value.

"Supernatural Thing, Part I," Ben E. King
Never heard this one. I've already forgotten it. :rommie:

"Jackie Blue," The Ozark Mountain Daredevils
Another nice one. Strong nostalgic value.

"No No Song," Ringo Starr
Cute. Moderate nostalgic value.

He might have briefly reacted.
Seemed like the perfect opportunity for one of his politically incorrect comments. :rommie:

There was definitely a drink...I thought we welcomed it wherever it may turn up.
All right, they can have a drink. I overreacted. :rommie:

Like the Brackett would ever allow that.
Well, I was expecting some grand Brackett Family drama.

He is a firefighter...knowing what goes boom in a fire is useful.
True.

He got to start the jaws generator...as far away from the gas main as it reached.
Nice. I like it when civilians step up.

I didn't catch what he did, but he did talk of how he'd wanted Kel to be a lawyer, and expressed his gratitude for Kel's stubbornness.
Weird. You'd think they'd want to delve a little more deeply.

Lou seems more like the Vincenzo type.
I think they both used to be Kolchak. :rommie:

She had a good amount of screentime in this one.
I wonder if they contemplated making her a recurring character.

I'm sure that he got the bug out of his system, at least.
Yeah, but he was totally wrong about the politician, making a mockery of his reporter's instincts. It was kind of humiliating, really.

The first thing Bob did was advise using a payment plan, but Jerry blew it off as interest being for patsies...yet he didn't mind making patsies out of his friends.
Right.

I think that's what the stock loss was primarily for.
And yet the loan was for a luxury item, not to make a car payment or mortgage payment-- you're right, it doesn't make him look good at all.
 


70 Years Ago This Month



February
  • Cancellation of Tales from the Crypt, with issue #46, by EC Comics.

February 4
  • The Pact of Mutual Cooperation ("Baghdad Pact") is signed.

February 5
  • Lichen Island, a small island lying north of the Bølingen Islands and 5 kilometres (2.5 nmi) north-west of Cleft Island in southern Prydz Bay, Antarctica, is visited by an Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions party led by Phillip Law, who names it for the rich growth of lichens found there.



The week of February 5, "Hearts of Stone" by the Fontane Sisters tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
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February 9
  • Apartheid in South Africa: 60,000 non-white residents of the Sophiatown suburb of Johannesburg are forcibly evicted.
  • Twenty nautical miles (37 km) southeast of the Tachen Islands, the People's Republic of China shoots down a U.S. Navy AD Skyraider attack aircraft covering the evacuation of Nationalist Chinese forces from the islands.

February 10
  • The United States Seventh Fleet helps the Republic of China evacuate Chinese Nationalist army and residents from the Tachen Islands to Taiwan.

February 12
  • U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower sends the first U.S. advisors to South Vietnam.



The week of February 12, "Sincerely" by the McGuire Sisters tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
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(originally recorded in 1954 by the Moonglows, whose version will chart in March)



February 16
  • Nearly 100 die in a fire at a home for the elderly in Yokohama, Japan.

February 19
  • The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization is established at a meeting in Bangkok.
  • Dot Records introduces a new singer, Pat Boone, with an advertisement in Billboard magazine calling him "a great new voice". His first record for Dot Records is "Two Hearts, Two Kisses, One Love."
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(released Mar. 1955; charts Apr. 2; #16 US; originally recorded by the Charms in 1954)​



Charting the week of February 19:

"Pledging My Love," Johnny Ace
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(#17 US; #1 R&B)



February 21
  • Born: Kelsey Grammer, American actor and producer, in St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands

February 22
  • In Chicago's Democratic primary, Mayor Martin H. Kennelly loses to the head of the Cook County Democratic Party, Richard J. Daley, by 364,839 votes to 264,077.

February 24
  • 12th Golden Globe Awards announced: On The Waterfront, Marlon Brando, & Judy Garland win
  • Born: Steve Jobs, US businessman and founder of Apple Inc, in San Francisco, California (d. 2011)

February 26
  • George F. Smith becomes the first person to survive a supersonic ejection, from a North American F-100 Super Sabre travelling at Mach 1.05.
  • For the first time since their introduction in 1949, 45 rpm discs begin to outsell standard 78s.

February 28
  • Born: Gilbert Gottfried, American stand up comedian and actor, in Brooklyn, New York (d. 2022)



Released in February:

"Whatcha Gonna Do," Clyde McPhatter & The Drifters
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(#2 R&B)



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.



Guilty conscience? Fear of discovery? Or did he just go bananas?
I was wondering.

Interesting. I wonder what they intended to do with them.
Perpetrate a scam in which they were discovered to be fakes?

As scandals go, a salvage operation doesn't really rate. :rommie:
Indeed, I was like, "Yeah, so?"

This is a great song, but I find it almost impossible to listen to. Strong nostalgic value.
I'm not particularly familiar with it, but it has a distinctive sound that is recognizable from their later hits. And you made me pay attention to the lyrics.

Very nice. Strong nostalgic value.
Familiar and pleasant oldies radio classic, and maybe one I knew in the day.

Never heard this one. I've already forgotten it. :rommie:
It's certainly obscure for such a high-charting hit, and nowhere near the league of King's early '60s classics with the Drifters and as a solo artist.

Another nice one. Strong nostalgic value.
Another one that seems mainly like an oldies radio classic now, though I probably heard it in the day.

Cute. Moderate nostalgic value.
The last of Ringo's early-'70s string of Top 10 hits. I'm surprised it did so well given the subject matter, which might have impacted airplay.

Seemed like the perfect opportunity for one of his politically incorrect comments. :rommie:
Actually, Felix said hello and commented that he must be a jockey, but Harry explained that he was too small.

Well, I was expecting some grand Brackett Family drama.
It seemed like they had a decent relationship, they just didn't see each other a lot.

Weird. You'd think they'd want to delve a little more deeply.
What they did played out a little more gradually than the summary. For a show like Emergency!, I sometimes consolidate multiple scenes of a story thread into a single paragraph to make the writeup more concise.

I wonder if they contemplated making her a recurring character.
Seemed like it here.

Yeah, but he was totally wrong about the politician, making a mockery of his reporter's instincts. It was kind of humiliating, really.
Seemed like typical sitcom story procedure--can't let a character succeed if it might threaten the status quo.

And yet the loan was for a luxury item, not to make a car payment or mortgage payment-- you're right, it doesn't make him look good at all.
He came across as completely immature, inconsiderate, entitled, and self-absorbed, all to a degree that went well beyond "lovably funny".
 
Last edited:
Cancellation of Tales from the Crypt, with issue #46, by EC Comics.
It will rise again... and again... and again....

an Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions party led by Phillip Law, who names it for the rich growth of lichens found there.
Good scientist, bad namer.

The week of February 5, "Hearts of Stone" by the Fontane Sisters tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
Sounds like the 40s.

U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower sends the first U.S. advisors to South Vietnam.
You might want to think that through a little bit more, Ike.

The week of February 12, "Sincerely" by the McGuire Sisters tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
Lots of sister acts in those days.

Dot Records introduces a new singer, Pat Boone, with an advertisement in Billboard magazine calling him "a great new voice". His first record for Dot Records is "Two Hearts, Two Kisses, One Love."
So Pat Boone started out as an Elvis impersonator. :rommie:

"Pledging My Love," Johnny Ace
That was pleasant.

George F. Smith becomes the first person to survive a supersonic ejection
"Survive" covers a lot of ground. :rommie: I had to look that up: "George Smith was unconscious for six days, and when he awoke he was blind in both eyes. After four surgeries and seven months in the hospital, he recovered from his supersonic ejection and returned to flight status." I found that here. Pretty amazing.

"Whatcha Gonna Do," Clyde McPhatter & The Drifters
We're gettin' there....

Perpetrate a scam in which they were discovered to be fakes?
:rommie:

I'm not particularly familiar with it, but it has a distinctive sound that is recognizable from their later hits. And you made me pay attention to the lyrics.
Pretty rough.

The last of Ringo's early-'70s string of Top 10 hits. I'm surprised it did so well given the subject matter, which might have impacted airplay.
I definitely remember hearing it at the time. Maybe since it was an anti-drug message.... :rommie:

Actually, Felix said hello and commented that he must be a jockey, but Harry explained that he was too small.
It's strange that they would give him that ironic name and then not use it.

What they did played out a little more gradually than the summary. For a show like Emergency!, I sometimes consolidate multiple scenes of a story thread into a single paragraph to make the writeup more concise.
It just seems like Brackett's dad should have been a bigger deal.

Seemed like typical sitcom story procedure--can't let a character succeed if it might threaten the status quo.
Well, it could have been a one-last-hurrah story.

He came across as completely immature, inconsiderate, entitled, and self-absorbed, all to a degree that went well beyond "lovably funny".
Probably looked better on paper, I guess.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



The Six Million Dollar Man
"Return of the Robot Maker"
Originally aired January 26, 1975
Peacock said:
A robot duplicate of Oscar Goldman is used in a plot to destroy Steve and steal a secret formula.

We're going straight into the opening credits now, no teaser. In his semi-trailer lair, Dr. Chester Dolenz (Henry Jones in his last of three appearances in the role) prepares his Oscar robot by putting on his face to nobody's surprise. Dolenz proceeds to get an appointment to see Oscar using an alias, shoots him with a tranq gun (because it's just that easy), and switches him with the robot with the help of a couple of window washers. Meanwhile, Steve's workout is interrupted by Barney Barnes (Troy Melton), a field agent who's eager to get into the gadgetry side of the operation by hawking his wares. Steve encourages him to go straight to Oscar.

While RoboOscar uses camera eyes to photograph the top-secret Brahmin file, Dolenz has Oscar brought to his mobile lair, where he's bound in front of a TV showing his duplicate's POV and hooked up to mind-reading electrodes that enable Dolenz to extract the access code to the Brahmin facility. Dolenz transmits this info to RoboOscar over the phone at a restaurant where he and Steve are on a double date with a pair of ladies named Amy and Denise (Iris Edwards and Jean Lee Brooks). The robot is aided in this situation by a new ability to simulate eating and drinking, though RO attracts Steve's attention by quickly gulping down his drinks. (Dolenz mentions Steve having told him that his earlier robots squeaked, a detail I don't remember.) following the call, RoboOscar takes Steve aside to assign him to test the defenses of the Brahmin facility--where a concentrated energy source is being developed--on the premise that a computer has predicted that a bionic man could get through. RO says that these orders came straight from the Secretary (who apparently doesn't use self-destructing reel-to-reel tapes anymore), and that the test will involve simulated defenses.

In actuality, the facility isn't in on the "test" and Dolenz is killing two birds with one stone by using Steve as a diversion with the intent of getting him offed. Steve brings Barney into Oscar's office to get RoboOscar's permission to use the security test as an opportunity to field-test Barney's gadgets. On the way to the test, RO's drinking problem comes up again when he quickly downs a cup of scalding coffee. RO drops Steve off outside the facility's fence and goes over the plan, which involves Oscar getting inside conventionally so he can supposedly monitor Steve's progress from there. After Oscar is in the control center with General Stacey (Ben Hammer), Steve, wearing a pack of Barney's gear, jumps the fence and starts running toward the facility, which triggers alarms and gets him on camera while RO eyes the safe that contains the plans he's after.

After a pen call from Barney looking for a premature progress report, Steve bionic-tosses a briefcase that deploys three explosives to divert remote machine gun fire; then navigates a minefield at bionic speed, keeping ahead of the explosions; then dodges remote machine gun pillboxes, getting close enough to one to squeeze its barrel shut; and is finally felled by a higher-caliber round to the chest from a gun that pops out of a bunker. (Did I mention that one of Barney's gadgets was a lightweight bulletproof vest? Also, I think this sequence is the source of some of the footage that was regurgitated more than once sans any story context in the syndicated version of one of the pre-series TV movies.) While all this has been going on, RO has slipped into the safe without anyone noticing. A camera closeup reveals that the seemingly dead intruder was Steve Austin. In the trailer, thinking his plan has worked, Dolenz threatens to dispose of the real Oscar.

While the guards look for the body, the revived Steve sees RO being driven away and manages to get a cryptic alert out to Barney via the malfunctioning pen radio, then pursues in the car he and RO came in as RO is dropped off at some sort of industrial property. There RO enters the trailer and Oscar expresses the obligatory astonishment at finding himself face-to-face with his double. (It's funny that in the intro while they were attempting to tease the robot's identity, Anderson was very recognizable from behind; while the double playing Oscar seen from behind in the same chair obviously isn't Anderson.) Dolenz walks them out and is explaining how he plans to entomb Oscar in concrete when Steve pops up, and both Oscars cry out that they're the real McCoy. (A very obvious double is seen full-frontal next to Anderson in the long shots, while split screen aided by the edge of the trailer door is used for tighter shots.) Steve examines both with his bionic eye, noticing sweat on the brow of the real Oscar, and charges up to bionic-kick the other. A bionic/robotic duel ensues with the sound effect used for both participants and a tape drive unit being hurled as one of the improvised weapons. (I assume this is one of the cool sequences you've previously alluded to, RJ--it's not every episode that we see Steve in a bionic brawl with Oscar!) Steve ultimately comes out victorious with a chop that causes the robot's head to come off as it keels over.

As Dolenz is being taken into custody, he and Steve grudgingly express mutual respect; following which Steve explains how he was able to distinguish the real Oscar. A very fake effects shot is used for a close-up of RoboOscar's eyes-open head being held in Oscar's hand as he examines it.



Adam-12
"Victim of the Crime"
Originally aired January 28, 1975
MeTV said:
Malloy and Reed are left frustrated after investigating the theft of an elderly woman's old television set, but they have hope that a recently passed law may provide her and other victims with compensation. Elsewhere on patrol, they search for an armed robber who shot an over-trusting shopkeeper, and respond to a call of an unusual armed robbery at a drive-in.

The episode opens with the officers climbing stairs to the apartment of elderly widow Louise Hammond (Dorothy Neumann), who has multiple chain locks, but no deadbolt to protect the place while she's out. Thieves have stolen her vintage Dumont television set (a brand that Reed is unfamiliar with), which she describes as "the only friend I've got left".

On patrol, the officers are called to a 211 in progress at an antique store where shots have already been fired. Debbie McMahon tells the officers of two fleeing suspects, one of whom shot her father (Amy Milner sharing the scene with her real-life father).
A1222.jpg
The suspects are found jumping a fence out back, and one of them is apprehended. Reed tries to go after the other one, but gets a bad roll and finds himself side-quested to help a young mother (Shelby Leverington) whose baby buggy is rolling down the street. Debbie rides with her father to the hospital, where RL Dad tries to comfort her.
A1223.jpg
Back in the squad car, Jim vents about a law they're not allowed to tell victims about yet because the forms haven't come in.

We learn more about this in the HQ break room, where the officers inform Woods of a recently passed Rights of the Victim law that's supposed to reimburse victims of violent crimes. Investigator Johnson (Jim B. Smith in his second of three appearances as the character this season) recruits the officers to conduct some follow-up on the tight-lipped suspect they caught, Donald Miller, in an effort to identify his partner, Ronnie. Johnson points them to a bail bondsman named Sid (Stan[ley] Adams), whom Miller was a client of from another recent offense. Sid digs into his files to find that Miller was referred by a cousin named Ron Daly, who's since skipped out on a $500 bond. At Daly's address, neighbor Angie Byrd (Julie Bennett) informs the officers that he's been gone for over a week, but is able to ID his vehicle because he recently hit hers with it.

The officers proceed to check out a 211 silent at a drive-in restaurant, where the waitress (Rose Ann Zecker) describes how she was held up with what turned out to be a piece of pipe, the robbers' car stalled, and they gave the money back before making their delayed getaway. Reed hears on the radio that they've been caught a few blocks away.

Back on patrol, the officers hear a call about a 211 suspect under pursuit in a vehicle matching Daly's. They intercept and corner the vehicle, the suspect gets out and hops a fence into a park with a swimming pool and basketball courts (Malloy doing a nifty fence-vault to follow), and after some more pursuit and fence-hopping, the suspect finds himself surrounded by a pair of armed officers and surrenders.
A1224.jpg

Back at HQ, the officers are visited by Mrs. Hammond, who's looking for news about her set and airs her dissatisfaction about what's done for victims. The officers return to the T12 office to find Mac handing out and explaining the anticipated Rights of the Victim forms. While the law doesn't cover burglary, Debbie McMahon is grateful for the help it should provide in paying her father's medical bills.



Hawaii Five-O
"Small Witness, Large Crime"
Originally aired January 28, 1975
Paramount+ said:
When a young boy is arrested as a witness to a murder, McGarrett must contend with a fiery deputy public prosecutor.

A pro sniper (some other John Kerry) climbs an old WWII machine gun tower and sets up his rifle while a sailing yacht enters the harbor that the tower overlooks. Nearby, a young urchin (Joshua N. Farin) steals chocolate milk and donuts from the car of a woman returning to her beachside shack with groceries (Elizabeth Smith). The boy gets away and is enjoying his meal on the steps of the tower when the sniper shoots a man on the yacht, the boy drops his milk bottle, and the sniper sees that he has a witness. The sniper attempts to pursue the boy, who loses him in a nearby auto junkyard.

The victim is Chun Hong, president of a trust company. The yacht's captain (Wright Esser) tells Five-O how Hong was supposed to be traveling on business but got called back by an unknown party. Che works out where the shots came from, and the 1/2-mile distance and type of ammo used cause Steve to suspect an assassin with special forces training. Checking out the tower, Five-O finds the boy's discarded lunch and one of his footprints in the milk, deducing that there was a witness to the crime. Steve uses a regular handball game with Hong's executive assistant, Arnold Hubbard (Bert Convy), as an opportunity for questioning. Arnold isn't able to shed light on the situation, but does cast doubt on Hong's reputation as a philanthropist, indicating that he may have been hiding something. After the game, Steve meets energetic juvenile court public defendant Frances Chai (France Nuyen), who's concerned about how this will affect a youth center program.

Meanwhile, the original owner of the boy's meal, Rosalei Kahala, is found, and tells Chin that the boy probably lives in the junkyard. Five-O and HPD search the place while the sniper, who's staking out the property, watches from afar with interest. The boy tries to slip away but is caught by Danno and, when his shoe proves to be a match, taken in. At HQ, Steve and Danno try to loosen the kid up with all the fast food he can eat, but as they present him with evidence of his presence at the tower and show him pictures of possible suspects with special forces training (one of whom is the sniper), the boy remains completely mum. They decide to hold him on theft charges for his protection, and word of this gets to an outraged Frances Chai via Arnold Hubbard (already a suspicious character for his story placement and casting). Meanwhile, a well-placed informant named Tommy (Thomas Fujiwara) tells Frank of rumors that Hong's trust was involved in fencing stolen stocks and bonds. A computer analysis of the boy's footprint against birth records identifies him as Moki Kanihelu, the orphan of a mother who OD'ed and a father who'd been serving time on the mainland until recently and is known to be looking for his son. Then Steve learns that the boy's been set free.

Judge Keona (Ted F. Nobriga) hooks Steve up with Chai, who had the boy released into her custody and placed him in a youth foundation home. Steve lays out for her exactly why he had the boy in custody, she realizes that she's put Moki in mortal danger, and is sent with an officer to bring him back in, but learns that the boy has split. Along the way, Steve has noted with interest that it was Hubbard who tipped Chai off. Five-O learns that it was an auditor who'd found some paper substitution in a portfolio who called Hong back to the island. Steve and Danno share what they know with Hubbard, getting him to contribute knowledge about how Hong might have made such a switch to profit from the stolen securities. Then Steve turns the tables on Hubbard, indicating that Hong was out at sea when the switch was made and that Arnold's their suspect.

Hubbard pleads that he was working for a mainland ring who hired the hitman, and is nevertheless booked for murder one. Five-O heads to the junkyard to find Moki, but Chai gets there first. As she's trying to call the boy out of hiding, the sniper readies his rifle and finds a good position; but the boy, aware of the sniper, pulls her behind cover. Then Five-O and HPD come wailing in and search the place. The sniper is taking aim at McGarrett when Moki provides a distraction, causing the sniper to reveal himself, and McGarrett puts a few rounds into the man's chest. Moki positively identifies the body as the killer he saw, then Duke arrives with the boy's father to end the story with a happy reunion.



The Odd Couple
"The Rent Strike"
Originally aired January 31, 1975
Wiki said:
Felix organizes a rent strike against the building's nasty manager (Victor Buono).

It seems that I was previously mistaken; the show did move to Fridays at this point for the remainder of its final season...this being the penultimate episode available to me.

In a quantum reality in which Felix doesn't have a fear of flying, he returns from Baltimore exhausted after having to climb 11 flights of stairs because the elevator's broken. While Oscar's happy to avoid the issue by working from home, Felix organizes a tenant march--which includes Miriam and a bagpipe player--and has the new building manager, Mr. Lovelace (Buono sporting a Santa beard), called before a board. Felix assumes that he's got Lovelace where he wants him when he's called to the manager's office for a meeting, but Lovelace, who's a houseplant lover, announces a rent increase to pay for improvements he's already made that don't affect the tenants' quality of life as much as the issues they're protesting. Felix proceeds to lead a rent strike, with Lovelace retaliating by turning off heat and water and taking away the tenants' doors so that they're all robbed. (The thieves take away most of the apartment's living room furniture, including the couch that Oscar's sleeping on.) During a tenants' assembly, Lovelace pops in to announce that he'll restore things to normal and cancel the rent increase, on the condition that Felix moves out immediately. Oscar's initial reaction is to cheer.

While Felix packs his things, a guilty Oscar tries to reason with Lovelace. When the manager stands firm while predicting that the other tenants will turn against Felix, Oscar is motivated to back his roomie in staying. After a warning from Miriam, an angry mob of tenants accompanied by Lovelace forces their way through a barricade of boxes and a table in the doorway. Oscar shames them by recounting good deeds that Felix did for each of them, causing most of the mob to disperse while a small group that includes Mr. Ralston (Ed Peck) and Mrs. Osgood (Georgia Schmidt) turns on Lovelace and stands with Felix. Just as Felix is referencing the wisdom of Solomon as what it would take to resolve this clash of irresistible force vs. immovable object, Murray arrives to announce that he's finally identified the building's owner (having been recruited to do so earlier in the episode)--child actor Rodney Allen Rippy (himself), who, accompanied a lawyer who does most of the talking (Peter Hobbs), fires Lovelace with promises to have things restored to normal.

In the coda, Felix and Oscar go down to see an apologetic Lovelace as he's packing up, noting along the way that they conveniently got their furniture back.



So Pat Boone started out as an Elvis impersonator. :rommie:
Pat (who doesn't exist as far as my collection's concerned), like most of the world, presumably wouldn't have heard of him at this point.

That was pleasant.
OK, pretty forgettable.

"Survive" covers a lot of ground. :rommie: I had to look that up: "George Smith was unconscious for six days, and when he awoke he was blind in both eyes. After four surgeries and seven months in the hospital, he recovered from his supersonic ejection and returned to flight status." I found that here. Pretty amazing.
Are you bucking for a No Prize?

We're gettin' there....
And they've already done better.

It's strange that they would give him that ironic name and then not use it.
The studio audience did the reacting.
 
Dolenz proceeds to get an appointment to see Oscar using an alias, shoots him with a tranq gun (because it's just that easy)
I'm surprised he bothered to get an appointment. :rommie:

mind-reading electrodes that enable Dolenz to extract the access code
Dolenz is truly a gifted inventor.

RO attracts Steve's attention by quickly gulping down his drinks.
"Sorry, Steve, but the bad security at OSI has me all stressed out."

(Dolenz mentions Steve having told him that his earlier robots squeaked, a detail I don't remember.)
Retcon!

RO says that these orders came straight from the Secretary (who apparently doesn't use self-destructing reel-to-reel tapes anymore)
Not with Oscar, just with Jim. Which, frankly, put something of a strain on their friendship.

RO's drinking problem comes up again when he quickly downs a cup of scalding coffee.
He's still numb from all the booze. :rommie:

then navigates a minefield at bionic speed, keeping ahead of the explosions
Questionable, but cool.

Did I mention that one of Barney's gadgets was a lightweight bulletproof vest?
No! Thanks for the heart attack! :rommie:

Oscar expresses the obligatory astonishment at finding himself face-to-face with his double.
"My god, look at the size of that mole. No wonder Iris wouldn't go home with me."

(It's funny that in the intro while they were attempting to tease the robot's identity, Anderson was very recognizable from behind; while the double playing Oscar seen from behind in the same chair obviously isn't Anderson.)
I get a kick out of those things. I always think of Kirk's fight with Khan in "Space Seed." :rommie:

Dolenz walks them out and is explaining how he plans to entomb Oscar in concrete
"I have this cask of Amontillado that I've been dying to share."

Steve examines both with his bionic eye, noticing sweat on the brow of the real Oscar
Nice touch.

(I assume this is one of the cool sequences you've previously alluded to, RJ--it's not every episode that we see Steve in a bionic brawl with Oscar!)
Yes! :rommie: I loved this sequence and this episode. And I can only imagine that Richard Anderson had the time of his life. :mallory:

As Dolenz is being taken into custody, he and Steve grudgingly express mutual respect
It's a shame he didn't make a few more appearances.

A very fake effects shot is used for a close-up of RoboOscar's eyes-open head being held in Oscar's hand as he examines it.
Once the power is off they don't look real at all. :rommie:

Thieves have stolen her vintage Dumont television set (a brand that Reed is unfamiliar with), which she describes as "the only friend I've got left".
We actually saw this episode fairly recently. This was a sad character.

(Amy Milner sharing the scene with her real-life father).
Wow, I don't think I even knew that he had an adult child. I can kind of see the resemblance, now that I know.

Reed tries to go after the other one, but gets a bad roll and finds himself side-quested to help a young mother (Shelby Leverington) whose baby buggy is rolling down the street.
This was like a random hero event that you'd see in a Spider-Man comic or something. :rommie:

Sid digs into his files to find that Miller was referred by a cousin named Ron Daly, who's since skipped out on a $500 bond.
He was portrayed as a sleazy character and the boys treated him with contempt, but he was completely helpful.

the waitress (Rose Ann Zecker) describes how she was held up with what turned out to be a piece of pipe, the robbers' car stalled, and they gave the money back before making their delayed getaway.
This was pretty funny. I think there was something about them giving her too much money back and she wanted to return it to them. Or something like that.

(Malloy doing a nifty fence-vault to follow)
Nice one.

A pro sniper (some other John Kerry) climbs an old WWII machine gun tower
I always like the old WWII-era bunkers and artifacts.

the 1/2-mile distance and type of ammo used cause Steve to suspect an assassin with special forces training.
Yeah, that's a good shot, especially when the target is not only moving, but bobbing on the waves.

Steve uses a regular handball game with Hong's executive assistant
That's an odd touch. Not just that Steve just happens to be a regular handball buddy with this guy, but that he would question him over their next game. Wouldn't Steve want to move fast? Wouldn't the guy be upset over the murder and cancel the game?

Arnold Hubbard (Bert Convy)
Popular hunky character actor. I think he was another football guy who turned to acting.

energetic juvenile court public defendant Frances Chai (France Nuyen)
Popular exotic character actor, and Trek veteran.

the original owner of the boy's meal, Rosalei Kahala, is found
Now that's some pretty impressive detective work. I wonder how they managed that. :rommie:

The boy tries to slip away but is caught by Danno and, when his shoe proves to be a match, taken in.
"Comic book 'im, Danno!"

A computer analysis of the boy's footprint against birth records identifies him as Moki Kanihelu
More high-tech detective work.

Steve lays out for her exactly why he had the boy in custody, she realizes that she's put Moki in mortal danger
No forced social-worker-distrustful-of-cops conflict. I like that.

Hubbard pleads that he was working for a mainland ring who hired the hitman, and is nevertheless booked for murder one.
"I'm not a criminal, I'm just employed by a criminal."

As she's trying to call the boy out of hiding, the sniper readies his rifle and finds a good position; but the boy, aware of the sniper, pulls her behind cover.
Nice.

The sniper is taking aim at McGarrett when Moki provides a distraction
Probably would have been a good time to make tracks, although this guy is probably the most competently portrayed assassin they've ever had.

McGarrett puts a few rounds into the man's chest.
Ouch. Don't bother to book him, Danno.

Moki positively identifies the body as the killer he saw
Aw, man, they made the kid look at the shot-up corpse?

then Duke arrives with the boy's father to end the story with a happy reunion.
"Just thought I'd bring him straight into the line of fire and save us a scene change." Overall, a good episode, though, aside from a couple of minor quibbles.

In a quantum reality in which Felix doesn't have a fear of flying
:rommie:

having to climb 11 flights of stairs because the elevator's broken.
They're on the 11th floor? Is this new info?

Mr. Lovelace (Buono sporting a Santa beard)
King Tut to Santa Claus. A storied career!

Felix proceeds to lead a rent strike, with Lovelace retaliating by turning off heat and water and taking away the tenants' doors so that they're all robbed.
I know this was fifty years ago, but this seems a bit preposterous. :rommie:

Lovelace pops in to announce that he'll restore things to normal and cancel the rent increase, on the condition that Felix moves out immediately.
None of this can possibly be legal. :rommie:

Oscar is motivated to back his roomie in staying.
Oscar always comes through in the end. Almost always, anyway. :rommie:

Oscar shames them by recounting good deeds that Felix did for each of them, causing most of the mob to disperse while a small group that includes Mr. Ralston (Ed Peck) and Mrs. Osgood (Georgia Schmidt) turns on Lovelace and stands with Felix.
Awww.

child actor Rodney Allen Rippy (himself)
I don't think I remember him.

accompanied a lawyer who does most of the talking
Getting a lawyer involved at the start probably would have been the best idea. :rommie:

Pat (who doesn't exist as far as my collection's concerned), like most of the world, presumably wouldn't have heard of him at this point.
Really? That seems odd. Maybe they're just drawing on the same style then, because those vocals definitely remind me of Elvis.

Are you bucking for a No Prize?
Better late than never. :rommie:

The studio audience did the reacting.
Hmm, okay.
 
"Sorry, Steve, but the bad security at OSI has me all stressed out."
:D

I'm not sure. If Steve did say anything about squeaking earlier, it was probably a joke.

Questionable, but cool.
I think they may have been triggering the mines from the control center, though that doesn't make much sense.

Yes! :rommie: I loved this sequence and this episode. And I can only imagine that Richard Anderson had the time of his life. :mallory:
I should rewatch for absorption.

It's a shame he didn't make a few more appearances.
So did he have any connection to the fembots?

Once the power is off they don't look real at all. :rommie:
The problem was they tried to make it look too real, so they had this superimposed Oscar head floating around with an arm attached to it.

Wow, I don't think I even knew that he had an adult child. I can kind of see the resemblance, now that I know.
Definite resemblance, and she was 16 at the time. She would have been little when Daddy was in Route 66. Died young, too, of leukemia at 46...12 years before her father.

This was like a random hero event that you'd see in a Spider-Man comic or something. :rommie:
"Just my luck--I'll never catch up with the Vulture now!"

Actually, it kind of reminds me of Superman II, when he's doing little side rescues during his battle with the Phantom Zone villains.

He was portrayed as a sleazy character and the boys treated him with contempt, but he was completely helpful.
Yep.

This was pretty funny. I think there was something about them giving her too much money back and she wanted to return it to them. Or something like that.
Yeah, she wanted to give them their change or something.

Nice one.
It looked like it might have actually been Milner, too. That, or he had a much better double than Richard Anderson.

That's an odd touch. Not just that Steve just happens to be a regular handball buddy with this guy, but that he would question him over their next game. Wouldn't Steve want to move fast? Wouldn't the guy be upset over the murder and cancel the game?
Overall, the connection was contrived. But the game was timely and Hubbard acted emotionally disconnected from Hong the entire time.

Popular hunky character actor. I think he was another football guy who turned to acting.
Looks like he did a stint in minor-league baseball, but I mainly associate him with game shows.

Now that's some pretty impressive detective work. I wonder how they managed that. :rommie:
She was pretty near the scene of the crime. They were probably just questioning people in what passed for the neighborhood.

No forced social-worker-distrustful-of-cops conflict. I like that.
Well, not after he had to explain the obvious to her, which was pretty funny.

McGarrett: Counsellor, we're state police. We deal with organized crime, murder, assassination attempts, foreign agents, felonies of every type! Do you think for one moment that Five-O is interested in busting a child for a bottle of milk and some donuts!?!​

Oddly, even when he was cooperating, the kid never uttered a sound. He did yell "Papa!" when Duke brought his father.

Aw, man, they made the kid look at the shot-up corpse?
Well, he was there for the shooting. Hey, we were tougher back then, we weren't snowflakes!

They're on the 11th floor? Is this new info?
12th, actually, the first floor is free. A general Google search did verify this, though I don't know if it's come up before in the series. It could have been established in the play or the film. Given the show's track record, though, I'd be surprised if they haven't had occasion to contradict it.

I know this was fifty years ago, but this seems a bit preposterous. :rommie:
Yeah, especially the doors. And while they played up the heat situation, the water was only mentioned once and nothing more made of it.

I don't think I remember him.
Nor did I, even after I looked him up. Seems he was out and about in miscellaneous roles and commercials, but didn't have a starring gig on TV or anything. He did play young Bart in Blazing Saddles.

Really? That seems odd. Maybe they're just drawing on the same style then, because those vocals definitely remind me of Elvis.
At that point, it probably owed to the source.
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Say, it looks like the Fontane Sisters were covering the Charms as well. This one would've come up in a previous post, probably in November when it charted.
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I'm not sure. If Steve did say anything about squeaking earlier, it was probably a joke.
Could be. That's the sort of thing that would have triggered Dolenz. :rommie:

I think they may have been triggering the mines from the control center, though that doesn't make much sense.
My impression was that he was just running so fast that he had moved out of range in the instant between tripping the mine and the actual explosion-- which is far fetched, but possibly possible, I guess.

I should rewatch for absorption.
It's a great scene. :rommie:

So did he have any connection to the fembots?
It was a different Mad Scientist who created the Fembots, but I don't remember if he was carrying on Dolenz' research or not.

The problem was they tried to make it look too real, so they had this superimposed Oscar head floating around with an arm attached to it.
Oh, yeah, that's right. I remember that now. The bad blue screen effect. :rommie:

Definite resemblance, and she was 16 at the time. She would have been little when Daddy was in Route 66. Died young, too, of leukemia at 46...12 years before her father.
Aargh, that's horrible. :(

"Just my luck--I'll never catch up with the Vulture now!"
Exactly. :rommie:

Actually, it kind of reminds me of Superman II, when he's doing little side rescues during his battle with the Phantom Zone villains.
I never saw Superman II. I didn't like the first one much, although I thought Christopher Reeve was a great Superman.

It looked like it might have actually been Milner, too. That, or he had a much better double than Richard Anderson.
It looks like him in that picture.

Overall, the connection was contrived. But the game was timely and Hubbard acted emotionally disconnected from Hong the entire time.
Kind of stupid of him to not feign being distraught.

Looks like he did a stint in minor-league baseball, but I mainly associate him with game shows.
Oh, yeah, that's right. I kinda remember that, although I didn't watch game shows a lot.

She was pretty near the scene of the crime. They were probably just questioning people in what passed for the neighborhood.
That's true.

Well, not after he had to explain the obvious to her, which was pretty funny.

McGarrett: Counsellor, we're state police. We deal with organized crime, murder, assassination attempts, foreign agents, felonies of every type! Do you think for one moment that Five-O is interested in busting a child for a bottle of milk and some donuts!?!
"Well, when you put it that way." :rommie:

Oddly, even when he was cooperating, the kid never uttered a sound. He did yell "Papa!" when Duke brought his father.
No doubt severely traumatized at that point. Sounds like he had been feral for quite a while, if his father had served out his jail term and had been searching for him.

Well, he was there for the shooting. Hey, we were tougher back then, we weren't snowflakes!
No argument there. :rommie:

12th, actually, the first floor is free. A general Google search did verify this, though I don't know if it's come up before in the series. It could have been established in the play or the film. Given the show's track record, though, I'd be surprised if they haven't had occasion to contradict it.
Interesting. It does seem wrong to me somehow, but I don't know why.

At that point, it probably owed to the source.
Yeah, they do that little hiccup thing that made Pat sound like Elvis to me.

Say, it looks like the Fontane Sisters were covering the Charms as well. This one would've come up in a previous post, probably in November when it charted.
That seems to be the same song that came up in the February 5th listing a couple of posts ago-- although the video length is different for some reason.
 
Now on the stands in 50th Anniversaryland:
Alright, it's already a pretty big suspension of disbelief to buy that his web shooters and cartridge belt don't bulge out of his skin-tight costume--where's he stashing the fruit pies?

My impression was that he was just running so fast that he had moved out of range in the instant between tripping the mine and the actual explosion-- which is far fetched, but possibly possible, I guess.
He's only supposed to be able to run about 60 mph or so...would that work with a Jeep?

It's a great scene. :rommie:
Which one, Steve--which one!?!
SMDM22.jpg

Oh, yeah, that's right. I remember that now. The bad blue screen effect. :rommie:
SMDM23.jpg

I never saw Superman II. I didn't like the first one much, although I thought Christopher Reeve was a great Superman.
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Once again, the Fandango Movie Clip cuts away too soon.

Zod: This "Super-man" is nothing of the kind. I've discovered his weakness. He cares...he actually cares for these Earth people.​
Ursa: Like pets?​
Zod: I suppose so.​

It looks like him in that picture.
And more like him in the lead-up to the stunt.

Kind of stupid of him to not feign being distraught.
a) Maybe Steve would have known better; b) part of his angle was to stoke suspicion about Hong, which his detachment enabled.

"Well, when you put it that way." :rommie:
She actually thought he was trying to crack down on juvenile crime! In general, the character was portrayed as being headstrong with moments of apology for leaping without looking. Her reaction when Steve laid it out for her was priceless, bringing Edith to mind.

No doubt severely traumatized at that point. Sounds like he had been feral for quite a while, if his father had served out his jail term and had been searching for him.
His mom was alive for part of that time. I didn't catch how recently she'd died.

Interesting. It does seem wrong to me somehow, but I don't know why.
For some reason my mind goes back to a vaguely remembered episode that had something to do with their air conditioner, and I want to say that they may have said it was on the 7th or 8th floor at the time.

Yeah, they do that little hiccup thing that made Pat sound like Elvis to me.
Otis Williams must be imitating Buddy Holly! :p

That seems to be the same song that came up in the February 5th listing a couple of posts ago-- although the video length is different for some reason.
The Feb. 5 clip I posted was the Fontane Sisters cover; the clip I posted in my previous post was Otis Williams & the Charms' 1954 version.
 
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Alright, it's already a pretty big suspension of disbelief to buy that his web shooters and cartridge belt don't bulge out of his skin-tight costume--where's he stashing the fruit pies?
Fake pecs. Peter Parker's not that built.

He's only supposed to be able to run about 60 mph or so...would that work with a Jeep?
And could he get anywhere near 60mph in that field?

Which one, Steve--which one!?!
I love the ease with which he figured it out, compared to similar situations in other shows. :rommie:

I wonder if this was Richard Anderson's favorite episode. :rommie:

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I love how he flinches from the explosion, like when George Reeves ducks an empty gun. :rommie:

Once again, the Fandango Movie Clip cuts away too soon.

Zod: This "Super-man" is nothing of the kind. I've discovered his weakness. He cares...he actually cares for these Earth people.
Ursa: Like pets?
Zod: I suppose so.
From this we can at least infer that Kryptonian super-villains care about their pets. :rommie:

a) Maybe Steve would have known better; b) part of his angle was to stoke suspicion about Hong, which his detachment enabled.
Good point.

She actually thought he was trying to crack down on juvenile crime! In general, the character was portrayed as being headstrong with moments of apology for leaping without looking. Her reaction when Steve laid it out for her was priceless, bringing Edith to mind.
Ouch. :rommie:

His mom was alive for part of that time. I didn't catch how recently she'd died.
Okay, I was under the impression that she died, then his father was arrested, tried, convicted, and served his time.

For some reason my mind goes back to a vaguely remembered episode that had something to do with their air conditioner, and I want to say that they may have said it was on the 7th or 8th floor at the time.
Who knew that would become an important piece of information? :rommie:

Otis Williams must be imitating Buddy Holly! :p
It's all synergy, man.

The Feb. 5 clip I posted was the Fontane Sisters cover; the clip I posted in my previous post was Otis Williams & the Charms' 1954 version.
Oh, right, I see now.
 
Fake pecs. Peter Parker's not that built.
That's not actually a bad explanation, thinking of how artfully sculpted Tobey Maguire's Spidey suit was.

And could he get anywhere near 60mph in that field?
Maybe...I could see it being easier for him than a vehicle.

I love the ease with which he figured it out, compared to similar situations in other shows. :rommie:
Another giveaway was that when they were saying the same things, it was always the robot repeating whatever Oscar said.

I love how he flinches from the explosion, like when George Reeves ducks an empty gun. :rommie:
Well...it's a heat vision explosion.... :shifty:

From this we can at least infer that Kryptonian super-villains care about their pets. :rommie:
Or Kryptonians in general do. Though the movie Krypton didn't look like a very pet-friendly environment.
 
That's not actually a bad explanation, thinking of how artfully sculpted Tobey Maguire's Spidey suit was.
I've noticed that about a few movie costumes.

Maybe...I could see it being easier for him than a vehicle.
Yeah, he would certainly be more nimble than a jeep.

Another giveaway was that when they were saying the same things, it was always the robot repeating whatever Oscar said.
Nice touch.

Well...it's a heat vision explosion.... :shifty:
It would be funny if one of Superman's weaknesses was a speck of dust in his eye. "Arrgh! Wait! I can't see! Gimme a second here!"

Or Kryptonians in general do. Though the movie Krypton didn't look like a very pet-friendly environment.
One of the two things I really disliked about the movie. Whenever anybody mentions it, the very first thing that pops into my head is that abysmal version of Krypton.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



Emergency!
"It's How You Play the Game"
Originally aired February 1, 1975
Edited IMDb said:
John makes a bet with Squad 36 that the losing baseball team at the fireman's picnic will pay for the picnic. Chet becomes Station 51's only hope when their pitcher breaks his arm. A drunk driver becomes violent after crashing his car; another man is trapped in a car with a tiger. A man with a back problem must be extricated from his water bed. A structure fire is complicated by moonshine.

Johnny's testing crew members for pitching ability after Dwyer from another shift breaks his arm. When asked why he's taking the upcoming game so seriously, he reveals that he took it upon himself to make a wager with Station 36 that the losing stations would pay for the whole picnic rather than splitting the cost. Then he sees Chet, who doesn't play, demonstrate a natural ability while tossing an apple core into the garbage.

The station is called to where an old truck has crashed outside a used auto lot. The crew uses the jaws to free the dazed driver (Cliff Osmond) from being pinned under the steering wheel. When Johnny tries to reassure the victim, he gets whacked in the nose and the man goes into a seizure. The victim is restrained and sent to Rampart, where Morton smells alcohol on his breath, though the patient's blood alcohol level is very low. When Gus is conscious, he's cooperative and indicates severe stomach pain, then goes into another seizure. Later, having pulled through that, the man becomes hostile and uncooperative. Brackett brings in an uncredited neurologist named Pete and puzzles over Gus's symptoms, which don't seem to be accident-related.

After Dix indicates that 36 is abuzz about the game, Johnny recruits a reluctant Chet. Then Squad 51 is called to Trader Jack's car lot, where they find the proprietor (Dennis Patrick), who's known for his crazy TV commercials, trapped in a car with a tigress who bit him while going after a bag of peanuts. The cat's trainer (Hal Baylor) keeps her calm while the paramedics assess Jack's condition; and then use a ladder covered in an asbestos blanket as a barrier to keep the cat in the back seat while they pull Jack out and get him into an ambulance. While being rushed to Rampart, Jack wants to know how the film came out. From Johnny's biophoned description of the situation, Early assumes that he's dealing with a dog bite victim and is informed otherwise. During his brief stay at the hospital and while being released, Jack is less concerned about his condition than trying to spin his experience into new commercials.

During practice, Chet proves to be a much better pitcher than Stoker. The squad is called to a frequently used apartment complex, where a man named Walter (Ryan MacDonald), lying very still on a waterbed, refuses to let an already-present ambulance crew move him because of the pain the bed's motion causes to his herniated disc. The paramedics get a board to put under him, and when they ask about draining the bed, Walter's wife, Marion (Maggie Sullivan), who hates the bed, maniacally stabs holes in it with a pair of scissors.

At Rampart, Kel and Pete hit upon the realization that Gus's symptoms are consistent with lead poisoning, which has become rare since the toxic element was taken out of paint. While Gus is uncooperative in helping them to determine the source of contamination, more patients from the same neighborhood are brought in with the same symptoms, and it comes to light that they've been drinking moonshine from a local still.

While Chet lets his value to the team go to his head, causing an argument with Marco, the station and other units are called to a blazing house in Gus's neighborhood where the occupant is found unconscious in the basement with a still. The man is taken out and rushed away from the house just in time for the place to go up, which is played as the resolution of the lead poisoning cases.

In the coda, the crew is sore at Johnny and Chet, and Johnny and Chet at each other, after Chet fell apart at the game.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Marriage Minneapolis Style"
Originally aired February 1, 1975
Wiki said:
After Murray and Marie celebrate their 20th anniversary, Ted impulsively proposes to Georgette on air—and quickly regrets it.

In a rare scene at the Slaughter home, Ted arrives awkwardly early for the 20th anniversary party while Georgette's out of town. Murray shows and explains to him the newfangled digital watch that Marie got him, then Ted leaves to re-arrive after the party is underway to avoid looking desperate. Eileen McDonough appears as one of Murray's daughters, Ellen. When Mary arrives, she's self-conscious at apparently being the only guest to heed the invitation's "no presents" stipulation. Ted looks choked up when Lou gives a toast.

Murray comes into work the next day hung over, which Lou tries to remedy with a neck massage.

Lou: Now all of these nerves are connected--we learned about this in the service.​
Murray: What were they teachin' you, first aid?​
Lou: Actually, it was how to kill a sentry before he can yell "Achtung".​

Ted comes in questioning the meaning of life after having stayed up much of the night, following which he dreamed of being haunted by the spirits of children he never had. Lou asks him to cut to how it ended.

Ted: Well, like all my dreams end--with Marlo Thomas and Winston Churchill applauding me.​

On the air, Ted goes off-script and proposes to Georgette while not addressing her by name. Not for the first time, Lou rushes into the studio.

Among the viewer calls that Mary takes are four from women who accept. A giddy Georgette comes in with Ted, who puts on an appropriate front; but the moment she exits, he goes into panic mode. Mary and Murray try to encourage Ted to go through with it, so Ted goes to Lou, and later Mary, trying to enlist their aid in perpetrating a scheme to make Georgette think he's moved to Brazil. He pleads with Mary that he's not ready for the responsibility.

Ted: Look at my old man...he walked out on my mother when I was two years old.​
Mary: It's a shame he didn't walk out three years sooner. [Pause followed by insincere laugh.]​

Georgette comes into the newsroom to share with Mary that she doesn't think she can go through with it, particularly after Ted tried pulling his Brazil story on her. She shares her plan to go along with the ruse to get them both out of the marriage. After she leaves, Mary, clearly upset at being caught in the middle of this, leads Ted to believe that she and Lou actually are sending him to Brazil, giving him something else to panic about as she describes it as a godforsaken place full of quicksand and man-eating plants where Lou lost an uncle. Ted's still buying this in the coda as he asks Lou--who's on a different page--about how his uncle died.



The Bob Newhart Show
"My Business Is Shrinking"
Originally aired February 1, 1975
Wiki said:
Bob himself joins a therapy group to get some help for his recent depression.

The episode opens with Bob sending out a would-be patient, Mrs. Englehart (Mary Jo Catlett), who insists that her nearsightedness is a psychological issue. (Now thinking that your nearsightedness is a psychological issue just might be a psychological issue.) Carol informs Bob of the latest in a series of canceled appointments, which includes a second recent reference to Mr. Peterson in an episode that doesn't feature him. As a result, Bob finds himself staying at home in his bathrobe and loses confidence in his ability to connect with his patients. He brings Dr. Frank Walburn (Phillip R. Allen) to his office to talk to him, learning that he can't afford his more successful colleague's rates. Walburn offers to awkwardly sit in on a session with Elliot Carlin, who consents under the condition of using an alias. While Carlin describes a date gone wrong, Frank proves to be a distraction, and ultimately undermines Bob's approach by bolstering Elliot's confidence, causing Bob to lose another patient.

Emily encourages Bob to get into Frank's therapy group, which includes Congressman Jerome Shetland (Ray Stewart)--who greets everyone like he's out meeting voters--Bears linebacker Wayne Hilton (Ron McIlwain, whose character is billed with the surname Jefferson; seems like this would have been a good place for an appearance by an actual Bear or other pro player; I couldn't find anything on this guy); and Elliot, who's still using his alias and has been hooked up with Frank's secretary, Midge (Timothy Blake), a former cocktail waitress. Bob gets engaged in discussion with Hilton, falling into shrink mode in a way that contradicts Frank's style. When Walburn has to leave to talk about a movie deal for his book, he leaves Bob in charge of the session. The first thing Bob does is to out Elliot regarding his alias.

In the coda, Bob's enjoying being overbooked.



I've noticed that about a few movie costumes.
In this case, they were perpetrating the illusion that Spidey was wearing a skin-tight fabric costume, but the sculpted build was underneath. They even had a mechanical jaw piece to convey his mouth movements under the mask. All overthinking the much simpler and more classic approach of making him look like a gangly schmuck in a skin-tight bodysuit.

Nice touch.
Except that it came off as an obvious giveaway.

One of the two things I really disliked about the movie. Whenever anybody mentions it, the very first thing that pops into my head is that abysmal version of Krypton.
An understandable deviation to be turned off by, as it was the setting of the first segment of the film--the Krypton, Smallville, and Metropolis segments having been deliberately shot in different styles, as if each was a separate film. What was the other thing?
 
When asked why he's taking the upcoming game so seriously, he reveals that he took it upon himself to make a wager with Station 36 that the losing stations would pay for the whole picnic rather than splitting the cost.
Which means that he'd be paying for the whole picnic, or at least 36's share, because the boys aren't going to go along with that. :rommie:

After Dix indicates that 36 is abuzz about the game, Johnny recruits a reluctant Chet.
"Come on, man, you want your own subplot, don't you?"

trapped in a car with a tigress who bit him while going after a bag of peanuts
Do tigresses dig peanuts?

During his brief stay at the hospital and while being released, Jack is less concerned about his condition than trying to spin his experience into new commercials.
That's the spirit. :rommie:

During practice, Chet proves to be a much better pitcher than Stoker.
I wonder why he's reluctant, aside from plot.

when they ask about draining the bed, Walter's wife, Marion (Maggie Sullivan), who hates the bed, maniacally stabs holes in it with a pair of scissors.
She'll come to regret that, as will the neighbors on the floors below. :rommie:

more patients from the same neighborhood are brought in with the same symptoms, and it comes to light that they've been drinking moonshine from a local still.
I wonder if lead poisoning would really act that quickly. I thought it was more of a cumulative thing.

The man is taken out and rushed away from the house just in time for the place to go up, which is played as the resolution of the lead poisoning cases.
It wasn't just a regular still. It was a cursed still, and as soon as it was destroyed all the victims were released from the curse. Which is actually not a bad plot. :rommie:

In the coda, the crew is sore at Johnny and Chet, and Johnny and Chet at each other, after Chet fell apart at the game.
Johnny is Charlie Brown.

Murray shows and explains to him the newfangled digital watch that Marie got him
Digital? What's that?

Ted leaves to re-arrive after the party is underway to avoid looking desperate.
Everybody knows, Ted.

When Mary arrives, she's self-conscious at apparently being the only guest to heed the invitation's "no presents" stipulation.
She should have known just to get a present and keep it hidden unless needed. :rommie:

Lou: Now all of these nerves are connected--we learned about this in the service.
Murray: What were they teachin' you, first aid?
Lou: Actually, it was how to kill a sentry before he can yell "Achtung".
I can imagine Murray's face. :rommie:

Ted: Well, like all my dreams end--with Marlo Thomas and Winston Churchill applauding me.
That's very specific. :rommie:

Among the viewer calls that Mary takes are four from women who accept.
I guess he should have tried that years ago. :rommie:

Mary and Murray try to encourage Ted to go through with it
You'd think they'd try to save Georgette.

perpetrating a scheme to make Georgette think he's moved to Brazil.
And how would he explain his daily broadcast?

Ted: Look at my old man...he walked out on my mother when I was two years old.
Mary: It's a shame he didn't walk out three years sooner. [Pause followed by insincere laugh.]
Wow. Mary's not all sugar and spice. :eek:

Mary, clearly upset at being caught in the middle of this, leads Ted to believe that she and Lou actually are sending him to Brazil, giving him something else to panic about as she describes it as a godforsaken place full of quicksand and man-eating plants where Lou lost an uncle.
That's hilarious. Imagine the response on Twitter. :rommie:

Ted's still buying this in the coda as he asks Lou--who's on a different page--about how his uncle died.
Pretty much nothing got resolved there.

(Now thinking that your nearsightedness is a psychological issue just might be a psychological issue.)
Well, stress can cause vision problems, so in a sense it can be psychological.

He brings Dr. Frank Walburn (Phillip R. Allen) to his office to talk to him, learning that he can't afford his more successful colleague's rates.
Bob should just charge more, then people will think he's better than he is. Psychology is all psychological.

While Carlin describes a date gone wrong, Frank proves to be a distraction, and ultimately undermines Bob's approach by bolstering Elliot's confidence, causing Bob to lose another patient.
I'm very disappointed in Mr Carlin. He's shown more loyalty than that in the past.

seems like this would have been a good place for an appearance by an actual Bear or other pro player
Maybe they intended to and it didn't work out somehow.

The first thing Bob does is to out Elliot regarding his alias.
Damn. And yet I'm sure Mr Carlin will be back.

In the coda, Bob's enjoying being overbooked.
So we never found out why Bob was losing patients, and we never found out why he started gaining patients. This is the week for unresolved plots.

In this case, they were perpetrating the illusion that Spidey was wearing a skin-tight fabric costume, but the sculpted build was underneath. They even had a mechanical jaw piece to convey his mouth movements under the mask. All overthinking the much simpler and more classic approach of making him look like a gangly schmuck in a skin-tight bodysuit.
Which was part of the essence of the character. I hate when they change things.

Except that it came off as an obvious giveaway.
That's true.

An understandable deviation to be turned off by, as it was the setting of the first segment of the film--the Krypton, Smallville, and Metropolis segments having been deliberately shot in different styles, as if each was a separate film.
In and of itself, that's a good idea.

What was the other thing?
Turning back time by flying opposite to the Earth's rotation, or whatever that was.
 
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