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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

Thank you. Miraculously, it took me literally only ten minutes to activate the WiFi. This was shocking after it took them two days and a dozen tries just to create my account, and then another day to switch my phone over. :rommie:
Been setting up a long-overdue new laptop today myself, and it's been...more than frustrating. I've got Internet including Frndly, among other things; but I'm leaving setting up iTunes for later at this point.

Luckily that could never happen here. :rommie:
We're on the same page here.

That's interesting. I thought there were female Mounties before then.
Maybe the first to go through that academy specifically? Hard to tell.

I'm shocked. Shocked!
:D

It's possible that Saddam Hussein might be untrustworthy.
Ah, hindsight.

Are we supposed to issue statements when we have a change in relationship status? Crap. I have a bit of a backlog to get through.
Well, it's John & Yoko going back to being John & Yoko just long enough to sign off for a few years.

They should raise it to 100%. :rommie:
Traditionally, it's been a tool abused by the Republicans when they were in obstructionist mode.

A rare example of an actual resolution in those days.
The entry was a bit misleading in implying that the premise started at the beginning of the series, when the series started with the premise in progress.

Classic Dylan, but I remember it more from the early 80s.
As I understand it, this album has traditionally been considered a return to form for Dylan, so I should probably get it. I'm a bit put off that the newified current version of the RS album list, in its effort to throw the '60s under the bus, elevated it above his seminal earlier works.

I remember hearing this at somebody's house back then, and then later on some radio shows, like Dr Demento or Lost 45s or whatever. I didn't know it actually charted.
I think I may have first-hand memory of having heard this on the radio in the day, but it's hard to tell at this point. A novelty classic.

I don't think I remember this, but it's Barry White so I'm not sure. :rommie:
Yeah, sounds like Barry White, that's about it.

An okay song, but strong nostalgic value.
This one feels like an early example of the period of mid-'70s soft rock where in my collection, the first-hand experience of having heard the music on the radio really clicked for me, immersing me in an era that I remembered fairly well.

An interesting bit from Wiki:
Wiki said:
Although widely interpreted as being about infidelity, the song was in fact composed by lead singer Paul Carrack upon discovering that bassist Terry "Tex" Comer had been secretly working with the Sutherland Brothers and Quiver.
@DarrenTR1970 did a post about Carrack's hits for different groups a bit back.

One of my favorite Elton songs. Strong nostalgic value.
Just looked it up, apparently this one was written in honor of Billie Jean King.

Ah, the All-New, All-Different X-Men. What a great book that was, and for quite a while. The creativity in those early issues was off the charts.
Cockrum has been off the Superboy / the Legion (replaced by Mike Grell) for a spell at this point.

Another favorite book of mine at the time. I loved Frank Robbins' art. He was my second-favorite Ghost Rider artist after Mike Ploog. Looking at those old Johnny Hazard strips, you'd never know his art could look so great on a comic book page.
An idiosyncrasy of his style is his way of contorting characters into unlikely positions. There was an example in GSI #1 when Bucky was throwing a punch, as I recall, with his torso twisted in a different direction from his legs.
 
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Been setting up a long-overdue new laptop today myself, and it's been...more than frustrating. I've got Internet including Frndly, among other things; but I'm leaving setting up iTunes for later at this point.
I hate iTunes so much. :rommie:

Maybe the first to go through that academy specifically? Hard to tell.
Yeah, that could be. Or a situation similar to women serving in the military, but not in combat.

Well, it's John & Yoko going back to being John & Yoko just long enough to sign off for a few years.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Big important people. :rommie:

Traditionally, it's been a tool abused by the Republicans when they were in obstructionist mode.
I've come to appreciate gridlock.

The entry was a bit misleading in implying that the premise started at the beginning of the series, when the series started with the premise in progress.
True. Although... since the title sequence laid out the premise and preceded the story, they do have a case. :rommie:

As I understand it, this album has traditionally been considered a return to form for Dylan, so I should probably get it. I'm a bit put off that the newified current version of the RS album list, in its effort to throw the '60s under the bus, elevated it above his seminal earlier works.
I can't really say. I'm familiar with his individual songs rather than his albums. I was never really much of an album guy.

I think I may have first-hand memory of having heard this on the radio in the day, but it's hard to tell at this point. A novelty classic.
Definitely a novelty classic. I should have said that.

This one feels like an early example of the period of mid-'70s soft rock where in my collection, the first-hand experience of having heard the music on the radio really clicked for me, immersing me in an era that I remembered fairly well.
Now we'll both be commenting on the nostalgic value. :rommie:

An interesting bit from Wiki:
@DarrenTR1970 did a post about Carrack's hits for different groups a bit back.
That's interesting. If your songwriter cheats on you, is that High Infidelity?

Just looked it up, apparently this one was written in honor of Billie Jean King.
I did not know that. I assumed it was because the Bicentennial was coming up.

Cockrum has been off the Superboy / the Legion (replaced by Mike Grell) for a spell at this point.
I'm not sure how familiar I was with his Legion stuff at that point.

An idiosyncrasy of his style is his way of contorting characters into unlikely positions. There was an example in GSI #1 when Bucky was throwing a punch, as I recall, with his torso twisted in a different direction from his legs.
Oh, yeah, he was nuts. You should have seen what he did with Ghost Rider. He also worked on Captain America during Englehart's amazing run on the book. His characters would throw these weird punches that would have snapped the wrist of an ordinary person, and would leap horizontally across the room about one foot off the floor in defiance of gravity and inertia. Very cartoony, but I loved it.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



Adam-12
"Ladies' Night"
Originally aired February 18, 1975
MeTV said:
On today's patrol, Malloy and Reed try to corral cattle that are wandering into the downtown area, pull over a speeding bicyclist, chase down a man with a stolen guitar, and break up a bar fight. After their shift is over, Reed and his wife witness a gas station holdup on their way to dinner with Malloy and his girlfriend.

Judy (Pete's mystery steady revealed--Aneta Corsaut) accompanies Pete to the station so she can borrow his wheels while hers are in the shop for an accident, which Pete ribs her about. She invites Jim and Jean to join her and Pete for dinner.
A1225.jpg

On patrol, the officers come upon the strange sight of Officer Grant herding a trio of bulls down the street with his bike.

Reed: Hey, Grant, how fast were they going?​

Grant explains that they came out of a truck that overturned near a railyard, and he was just trying to keep them from getting on the freeway. Jim radios for a supervisor.

Reed: We have a 415, livestock.​

While they wait, Adam-12 helps Grant corral the bulls into a fenced parking lot. One of them somehow gets in an adjacent building, so Pete goes in and lets it out. There's continuity with a previous appearance when Grant likens himself to the Lone Ranger. When Mac arrives, he steps in something below the camera frame.

Back on patrol, Malloy and Reed pull over and ticket an attractive bicyclist (Erica Hagen) who passes them on the right and runs through an intersection while going 45. She only recently took up cycling to lose weight, so Pete recommends that she read up on bicycle safety.

Next the officers are assigned to a 484 of a guitar. When they spot the suspect (Russell Wiggins) walking the backlot street, he tries unsuccessfully to make a run for it. The suspect claims that he's a musician who was just borrowing it for a gig, but when that doesn't do the trick, he fast-talks his way through a series of other excuses that sink his credibility.

The officers are then flagged down by a bartender (Bill McLean) to break up a fight inside his establishment. The brawlers (John Gilgreen and Judd Laurance) object that nobody's been hurt, then a citizen steps out of the crowd (Len Wayland) and tips the officers off that the duo are just distractions for a pickpocket, whom the citizen points out. The pickpocket makes a run for it but is tackled by Pete. The citizen catches up and explains that he's a retired cop from Philly.

After watch, Jim's taking Jean (Kristin Nelson in an eleventh-hour takeover of the role originated by Mikki Jamison, who last appeared in Season 2) to the restaurant in their kid-unfriendly sporty convertible when they witness a couple of robbers making a getaway from a gas station.
A1226.jpg
Jim pursues them to get their plate number, then gives Jean detailed instructions for calling it in, promptly drops her off at a phone booth, and continues to tail the car. After making her call, Jean proceeds to the restaurant to fill in Pete and Judy. Eventually a patrol car catches up with Jim and the suspects crash their car trying to evade it. One of them then tries to run for it on foot but is pursued and tackled by Jim, who rips up his sport coat in the process. Jim puts in a shabbily attired appearance at the restaurant just long enough to apologize for having to go back to the station for paperwork.



M*A*S*H
"Love and Marriage"
Originally aired February 18, 1975
Wiki said:
A skilled Korean medical assistant (Soon-Tek Oh) wants to see his pregnant wife. Meanwhile, a GI (Dennis Dugan) wants to marry a girl from Rosie's bar, but not for good reasons.

In the OR, Burns blames the assistant, Mr. Kwang, for his own clumsiness while the guys are getting under his skin. Hawk and Trap invite Kwang to the Swamp for alcohol and apologies. When he tells them how he was forcefully recruited while attending college without getting to say goodbye to his wife, they offer to get him a three-day pass, which Radar goes out of his way not to let Blake see while he's signing it. While the surgeons are conducting pre-marital physicals for locals looking to marry personnel, they're approached by Pvt. Danny McShane, who expresses his eagerness to marry a woman named Soong Hi (Pat Li), whom they recognize as a worker at Rosie's Bar. The guys gently try to talk some sense into him, but he tells them how much he's in love with her, while estimating her age at a lot younger than she actually is (Hawk quipping that her mascara's older than 21). By night, Frank is contrivedly serving as O.D. so that he's the one who intercepts Kwang while he's trying to leave, resulting in an altercation right outside the Swamp during the poker game, in which shots are fired while Kwang flees.

Hawk and Trap are propositioned by a local quack, Dr. Pak (Jerry Fujikawa), who offers them a bribe to approve Soong Hi's physical, as part of a racket to get Korean women to the States under the cover of marriage to GIs so that they can be put to work on the streets there--a scam that they learn McShane is in on. Kwang is caught by the MPs after learning that his wife is about to give birth. Confronted with the pass that he doesn't remember signing, Blake agrees to drop desertion charges, but won't let Kwang leave the camp...so Hawkeye volunteers himself and Radar to travel to her village and bring her to the 4077th to have her baby. While they're doing that, Trap confronts McShane, getting him to drop his "aw, shucks" routine and declaring a fair-and-square failure of the physical with the help of a timely delivery of X-rays that indicate tuberculosis in Soong Hi's lungs. Out on the road, Mrs. Kwang (Jeanne Joe) goes into labor on the bus...because they don't have elevators at the 4077th. Hawk tries to get Radar to assist, but the little guy goes into full panic mode in the presence of impending childbirth.

Back at the camp, Mrs. K and her healthy baby boy are brought out on a stretcher to meet Mr. K...followed by Radar also being brought out on a stretcher. In the coda, Henry welcomes Radar Benjamin Franklin Trapper John Henry Kwang into the world...and then learns that Radar got top billing for getting Kwang the pass.



Hawaii Five-O
"And the Horse Jumped Over the Moon"
Originally aired February 18, 1975
Paramount+ said:
An elaborate sea and air scheme for heroin smuggling goes unnoticed until one of the gang tries to sell out their plan for a fix of heroin.

A fishing boat drops a dayglo orange drum onto the drink, which is then picked up via a hooked line tossed from a plane (Cessna N29162) piloted by Bernie Ross (Ed Flanders). Over land, the hook man, Kevin Caulder (studly if toothy young Bruce Boxleitner), skydives out of the plane to make a rendezvous to deliver the drum, where he's also met by his girlfriend, Laurie Benedict (Jo Ann Harris, gracing us with a midriff-baring shirt, short shorts, and a bitchin' tan). The henchman who picks up the drum calls in the successful delivery to Trans-Oceanic Lines manager John Hollander (Robert Harker), who in turn calls in a shady party from Detroit, Rick Corso (Robert Sandla), to fly out for a proposition about doing business via this new delivery scheme, designed to thwart the islands being on a virtual drug lockdown via the coordinated efforts of various agencies. While all of this is going on, Mark Traynor (E. H. Marc Baxley) wanders Honolulu desperately looking for a fix, and gets the idea to call Five-O to sell information...but before he can spill what it's about, a car pulls up next to his phone booth with the barrel of a .357 Magnum pointing out the window.

Traynor is soon identified as a former Air Force mechanic and junkie, and Che is able to raise enough of a hotel name from his old key to lead to his room, where Laurie--who, Kevin learns, tipped off Hollander about Traynor--sees Danno and Frank being let into Mark's room. Paychecks found there lead to a former employer, air cargo hauler Bernie Ross. After Five-O talks to him, they dig up Ross's long record of having been arrested on suspicion of being involved in various smuggling operations and let go. Chin tails Ross to Laurie's place, where we learn that they're having an affair behind Kevin's back and plan to no longer need him after the big delivery that Hollander has set up. Meanwhile, Steve gets a tip from an Interpol inspector about a large shipment of H coming in on an unspecified Trans-Oceanic liner. Laurie sees Kevin off as he departs with his skydiving gear for the delivery.

Sponsor time...anyone for a Diamond Head Cola?
H5100.jpg
Evidently a real brand and still in operation.

Chin stakes out the airfield as Ross loads up his plane and takes off...Kevin already hiding onboard. McGarrett is present at air traffic control as the plane is tracked. On the return trip from a legit delivery, Kevin deploys the line to hook another floating container left by a TO liner. Laurie is on the scene again as Kevin makes his jump to deliver the merchandise to Hollander and Corso--he and Ross having passed their test by delivering the package untampered with. Five-O has the plane searched after it lands and are mystified that the merchandise they assumed had been picked up isn't aboard.

The hook is found, and delving into Laurie's minor record turns up a connection with skydiver Kevin Caulder...who, elsewhere, is frustrated to learn that his big job was just an audition. Chin stakes out as Ross packs up his plane for another delivery...this time with Laurie aboard, which is a surprise to Kevin. While McGarrett has the plane tracked again, an argument ensues on the circling plane as Kevin learns that Ross and Laurie are in cahoots to actually steal the real dope. Elsewhere, Frank tails Hollander and Corso. After the pickup is made, the chopper heads off-course for Honolulu International, which McGarrett heads to by chopper. He witnesses as Caulder, after grabbing the bag of dope, makes an unplanned jump. Steve lands to take the diver into custody, and after confirming that he's got the goods, radios orders to Frank.

McGarrett: Move in on Hollander and Corso. Book them.​



I hate iTunes so much. :rommie:
It's the platform of my vast music collection. But it turns out that getting it set up was effortless...apparently it had already been installed and synced up my collection, right down to the latest playlists that I'd made before the backup, and all I had to do was turn on the program. I didn't even have to log in.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Big important people. :rommie:
And in this case, notorious publicity whores. Remember the Bed-Ins?

True. Although... since the title sequence laid out the premise and preceded the story, they do have a case. :rommie:
IIRC, though, the earliest episodes didn't have the narration, which kicked in partway into the first season.

I can't really say. I'm familiar with his individual songs rather than his albums. I was never really much of an album guy.
I know I've had occasion to mention that Dylan only really popped for me when I listened to his '60s albums. I should also note that the release of Blood on the Tracks seems to have been accompanied by an immediate resurgence of interest in his prior work--his first two Greatest Hits volumes and Blonde on Blonde all reentered the album chart the same week as BOTT's entry.

Definitely a novelty classic. I should have said that.
You kind of did by mentioning Dr. Demento, who reportedly had a long history of association with the song.

Now we'll both be commenting on the nostalgic value. :rommie:
I mean, I remember specific songs from earlier years being on the radio, but it was when my collection hit '76 that it all sounded distinctly like stuff that I remembered being on the radio at the same time.

That's interesting. If your songwriter cheats on you, is that High Infidelity?
He worked with these various groups over a span of years.

I'm not sure how familiar I was with his Legion stuff at that point.
Grell will go on to follow in Neal Adams's footsteps when GL/GA is revived, but is probably most closely associated with his creation, Warlord.

Oh, yeah, he was nuts. You should have seen what he did with Ghost Rider. He also worked on Captain America during Englehart's amazing run on the book. His characters would throw these weird punches that would have snapped the wrist of an ordinary person, and would leap horizontally across the room about one foot off the floor in defiance of gravity and inertia. Very cartoony, but I loved it.
One that sticks out in my mind from I think the first issue of Invaders that I read in the day was a panel with a behind shot of Subby smashing an armored Nazi while in flight...one of his legs was bending outward at a sharp angle.

The Bucky pretzel-punch:
Inv01.jpg
 
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Judy (Pete's mystery steady revealed--Aneta Corsaut) accompanies Pete
I hope they lived happily ever after.

On patrol, the officers come upon the strange sight of Officer Grant herding a trio of bulls down the street with his bike.
Okay, that beats the pumpkin.

Reed: Hey, Grant, how fast were they going?
:rommie:

Reed: We have a 415, livestock.
What's a 415, jaywalking? :rommie:

There's continuity with a previous appearance when Grant likens himself to the Lone Ranger.
He has a rich inner life.

When Mac arrives, he steps in something below the camera frame.
Poor Mac is the comedic foil.

She only recently took up cycling to lose weight, so Pete recommends that she read up on bicycle safety.
Seriously, you don't need a license for a bike so how would she even know? They should have let her off with a warning.

he fast-talks his way through a series of other excuses that sink his credibility.
"Wouldja believe....?"

The officers are then flagged down by a bartender (Bill McLean) to break up a fight inside his establishment.
This is what that guy on Emergency! should have done.

Jim pursues them to get their plate number, then gives Jean detailed instructions for calling it in, promptly drops her off at a phone booth, and continues to tail the car.
Never off duty! These guys are never off duty! :rommie:

Jean proceeds to the restaurant to fill in Pete and Judy.
Pete jumps up and runs out to help Jim. :rommie:

One of them then tries to run for it on foot but is pursued and tackled by Jim
Pete will be jealous.

the assistant, Mr. Kwang
Something else we should be seeing all the time, I guess.

When he tells them how he was forcefully recruited while attending college without getting to say goodbye to his wife
And we thought our draft was bad. :rommie:

they offer to get him a three-day pass, which Radar goes out of his way not to let Blake see while he's signing it.
Radar knows best, but I can kind of see Blake going either way on this. Assuming he even has the authority to grant a pass to a South Korean soldier or whatever.

who expresses his eagerness to marry a woman named Soong Hi (Pat Li), whom they recognize as a worker at Rosie's Bar
Not an unusual situation, actually, so they probably wouldn't be too surprised.

Frank is contrivedly serving as O.D. so that he's the one who intercepts Kwang while he's trying to leave, resulting in an altercation right outside the Swamp during the poker game
How did Frank manage that if he has a legit pass?

in which shots are fired while Kwang flees.
By MPs? Or did Frank actually fire a gun?

a racket to get Korean women to the States under the cover of marriage to GIs so that they can be put to work on the streets there
Nice little subplot. A bit unusual for M*A*S*H.

Confronted with the pass that he doesn't remember signing, Blake agrees to drop desertion charges, but won't let Kwang leave the camp
I don't understand this.

so Hawkeye volunteers himself and Radar to travel to her village and bring her to the 4077th to have her baby.
This seems a bit iffy, considering her closeness to delivery and the way pregnant women were treated like delicate glassware in the 50s.

because they don't have elevators at the 4077th.
:rommie:

Henry welcomes Radar Benjamin Franklin Trapper John Henry Kwang into the world
I think I kind of remember that.

Cessna N29162
The movie plane database is down, but this plane appears to be a 1973 model that is currently located in Pickering, OH, and is owned by the Berry & Miller Construction Company.

Kevin Caulder (studly if toothy young Bruce Boxleitner)
Captain and President Sheridan.

Laurie Benedict (Jo Ann Harris, gracing us with a midriff-baring shirt, short shorts, and a bitchin' tan)
She was good. It's surprising she never got a steady gig.

who in turn calls in a shady party from Detroit
Where's Wo Fat?

designed to thwart the islands being on a virtual drug lockdown via the coordinated efforts of various agencies.
We all know it's just one agency.

Laurie--who, Kevin learns, tipped off Hollander about Traynor
How did she know?

Chin tails Ross to Laurie's place, where we learn that they're having an affair behind Kevin's back
She knew what Traynor was up to, she's screwing around with Ross-- the writers were a little too on the nose with her name. :rommie:

Sponsor time...anyone for a Diamond Head Cola?
View attachment 45021Evidently a real brand and still in operation.
That must have been great for them-- it's a local brand and H50 was probably widely watched in the islands.

Ross loads up his plane and takes off...Kevin already hiding onboard.
I wonder if a pilot could tell if he had an extra two hundred pounds on board.

an argument ensues on the circling plane as Kevin learns that Ross and Laurie are in cahoots to actually steal the real dope.
Probably not a good idea to tell him up in the air like that. :rommie:

Steve lands to take the diver into custody, and after confirming that he's got the goods, radios orders to Frank.

McGarrett: Move in on Hollander and Corso. Book them.
The ending kind of fizzled there. We needed gunplay and people going in the drink, but we didn't even see half of it.

It's the platform of my vast music collection. But it turns out that getting it set up was effortless...apparently it had already been installed and synced up my collection, right down to the latest playlists that I'd made before the backup, and all I had to do was turn on the program. I didn't even have to log in.
Nice. I'm kind of surprised. All I ever have to use iTunes for is to move files on and off my phone-- which is a rarity, but always a nightmare.

And in this case, notorious publicity whores. Remember the Bed-Ins?
I do indeed. :rommie:

IIRC, though, the earliest episodes didn't have the narration, which kicked in partway into the first season.
Ah, bummer.

I know I've had occasion to mention that Dylan only really popped for me when I listened to his '60s albums. I should also note that the release of Blood on the Tracks seems to have been accompanied by an immediate resurgence of interest in his prior work--his first two Greatest Hits volumes and Blonde on Blonde all reentered the album chart the same week as BOTT's entry.
Good year for the Bobster. :techman:

You kind of did by mentioning Dr. Demento, who reportedly had a long history of association with the song.
Dr Demento's contribution to culture is often overlooked.

I mean, I remember specific songs from earlier years being on the radio, but it was when my collection hit '76 that it all sounded distinctly like stuff that I remembered being on the radio at the same time.
Really brings it all back, doesn't it? :mallory:

He worked with these various groups over a span of years.

Ah, right. Good stuff, except for the one he did solo.

Grell will go on to follow in Neal Adams's footsteps when GL/GA is revived, but is probably most closely associated with his creation, Warlord.
I remember Warlord, but I never read it. I never clicked with Sword & Sorcery.

One that sticks out in my mind from I think the first issue of Invaders that I read in the day was a panel with a behind shot of Subby smashing an armored Nazi while in flight...one of his legs was bending outward at a sharp angle.
It's a miracle the Superheroes Union didn't sue him for abuse.

The Bucky pretzel-punch:
View attachment 45022
Those ballet lessons his parents sent him to paid off.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



The Odd Couple
"Old Flames Never Die"
Originally aired February 21, 1975
Frndly said:
Felix is deflated to learn that his high-school girlfriend is a grandmother.

This was the last episode available to me, though there are two more left in the series, including the finale that we'll be missing.

Felix is excited to receive a visit from now-married old girlfriend Mildred Fleener (Jean Gillespie), who still calls him Tiger. (I thought that perhaps they deliberately cast an older-looking woman, but surprisingly, Randall was actually a few years older than her.)

Mildred: I love your place. How do you keep it so clean?​
Oscar: I have a man who comes in every night.​

The reality hits Felix when she makes a call to her three-year-old granddaughter, which causes a sinus attack.

Felix wakes Oscar up in the middle of the night to talk about it. The next day, he starts dictating a will on tape in front of Murray. At his office, Oscar introduces Felix to some elder but active colleagues, Louie Menninni (Tom Pedi), Mamie Edkins (Marjorie Marshall), and a part-time comedian named Sonny (Leonard Barr).

Felix seems in a better mood when Oscar returns from a trip to three cities, including Boston. But a weary Oscar soon starts acting older himself, which includes reading the obituaries. After Murray tells the two of them off for acting so depressing, Felix decides that they need to hang out with some young people, so they go to a dance place where Oscar's eleventh-hour secretary Tina hangs out, the Electric Eggplant. Tina introduces them to socially conscious and astrology-following friends Jeannie (Kit McDonough), Suzi (Christina Hart), and Debbie (unknown). After Oscar and Felix dance with Suzi and Debbie, the girls give them the slip by claiming they're joining a religious cult and making a plan to meet them for a party at 2:30 a.m., after their induction. The guys decide to act their age and go home. But Felix ends up waking Oscar up at 2:00 to go to the party.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Ted Baxter's Famous Broadcasters' School"
Originally aired February 22, 1975
Frndly said:
The newsroom staff acts as the faculty of Ted's broadcasting school, but the enrollment is somewhat limited.

At the newsroom, Mary gets an unexpected, one-sided call from Ida Morgenstern, who backs her into a blind date with visiting Tony Kramer. Ted comes in excited that a broadcasting school is being started in his name, and introduces the crew to the entrepreneur who came up with the idea, Alan Marsh (Norman Bartold)...though the others seem suspicious of his intentions and credentials. The others make excuses not to attend the opening, then Ted learns that Marsh has skipped town with the school's money, not having paid for the banquet hall and having taken Ted's borrowed car.

With Ted facing fraud charges, Mary and Murray decide to help him, and persuade a reluctant Lou to join them. The plan that emerges is to serve as the faculty for the school for a week to give Ted time to hand the operation off to someone legit. As they're trying to come up with a program using their own experience, Tony Kramer arrives at Mary's for his date (Oh, Jerry--Bernie Kopell). He tags along as the party proceeds to the hall, where they find that only one student has shown (Leonard Frey). Lou tries to offer the student his money back, but the would-be sports announcer insists on getting what he came for, so the crew have to put on their improvised presentations for an audience of one. The student repeatedly interrupts Ted's orientation speech with questions about details such as grading and Christmas break (which is said to be six months away).

In the end, after all of the speeches have been given--the others acting uncomfortable, while Ted enjoys immersing himself in his role--the student asks if he can still get his money back.



The Bob Newhart Show
"Emily Hits the Ceiling"
Originally aired February 22, 1975
Wiki said:
Emily talks Bob into being a counselor at the summer camp she's organizing.

Despite the show having solidly fallen into using the intro that shows Emily leaving school, in-story she's still home before Bob, and talks about how the school year is about to end. Vice Principal Rex Pottinger (George Wyner reprising his role from "Think Smartly--Vote Hartley") comes by to inform Emily that he's gotten a permit to open his own summer camp, and he wants her to come aboard as his administrator, nicknamed "Honcho" in the style Rex is going after. Pottinger ("Flipper" for being a swimming counselor) encourages Bob to join Emily, pegging him as a basketball coach; though Bob tries to get out of it on the basis that July is his busiest time of the year. (I thought that was December....) At the office, Jerry reminds Bob of a golf clinic they had booked for those weeks in July, so Bob has to bow out, asking Emily to go alone. Howard initially thinks this is a bad idea, as it echoes a situation that led to his own divorce.

Along the way, Bob's patient of the week is Craig Plager (Howard Hesseman), a TV exec who's constantly brainstorming unlikely game show ideas. Bob learns that the golf clinic has been canceled, so he decides to go ahead and assume the mantle of Bob the Stilt. Meanwhile, Emily's hosting a meeting of Flipper and the other counselors: softball coach Spitball (Tom Newman); campe nurse Band-Aid (Susan Davis); a camp cook named Rita who doesn't want to go by Shingle (Lillian Garrett); and--having been recruited because one of them learned he knew archery--Howard as Indian lore counselor Iron Bow. They realize that they don't have the budget for a lot of what they need, in addition to various resources they'd planned to borrow falling through, including the bus; so they decide to give up on the idea. Just as they've adjourned, Bob comes home to announce that he's in.

In one scene, Bob makes a reference to Stuckey's, which was a fixture of annual family trips from Indiana to Florida when I was a kid.



Okay, that beats the pumpkin.
Beg pardon?

What's a 415, jaywalking? :rommie:
Disturbance of the peace.

"Wouldja believe....?"
Pretty much.

This is what that guy on Emergency! should have done.
That did come to mind...like they brainstormed two different ideas for the same scene and used them both.

Pete jumps up and runs out to help Jim. :rommie:
He was more like, "Ah, he'll be okay, he knows what he's doing."

Radar knows best, but I can kind of see Blake going either way on this. Assuming he even has the authority to grant a pass to a South Korean soldier or whatever.
All that was clear on that front was that Blake wouldn't knowingly approve it.

How did Frank manage that if he has a legit pass?
He insisted that it was fraudulent.

By MPs? Or did Frank actually fire a gun?
Frank did, offscreen; followed by some comic misfirings inside the Swamp.

I think I kind of remember that.
It's kind of a common trope, so I wouldn't be surprised if they had an occasion or two to do it again in the show's long lifespan.

The movie plane database is down, but this plane appears to be a 1973 model that is currently located in Pickering, OH, and is owned by the Berry & Miller Construction Company.
Drat! Fair enough.

Where's Wo Fat?
Seems kinda small potatoes for him.

How did she know?
He made some noise about potentially going that route in front of her (not seen).

That must have been great for them-- it's a local brand and H50 was probably widely watched in the islands.
Looking a bit more into it, it seems that it's a Coca Cola subsidiary and dates back to at least the '60s.

I wonder if a pilot could tell if he had an extra two hundred pounds on board.
Ross knew, that was their way of foiling surveillance that they didn't know they were under, thus keeping Five-O in the dark about how they were making their drops a bit longer.

The ending kind of fizzled there. We needed gunplay and people going in the drink, but we didn't even see half of it.
This one seemed a bit straightforward to me; not enough twists; Five-O was onto the baddies early and just spent the episode putting the pieces together. Definitely not Fat-worthy.

I remember Warlord, but I never read it. I never clicked with Sword & Sorcery.
I wasn't into it, either.

It's a miracle the Superheroes Union didn't sue him for abuse.
It was Subby's leg, to be clear.
 
This was the last episode available to me, though there are two more left in the series, including the finale that we'll be missing.
Aw, bummer.

Felix is excited to receive a visit from now-married old girlfriend Mildred Fleener (Jean Gillespie), who still calls him Tiger.
Apparently he hit the jackpot.

(I thought that perhaps they deliberately cast an older-looking woman, but surprisingly, Randall was actually a few years older than her.)
Tony Randall never did much in the way of aging.

The reality hits Felix when she makes a call to her three-year-old granddaughter, which causes a sinus attack.
My first time I had a wave of prickly heat and felt faint.

Felix wakes Oscar up in the middle of the night to talk about it. The next day, he starts dictating a will on tape in front of Murray.
Hasn't he ever heard of denial?

Felix seems in a better mood when Oscar returns from a trip to three cities, including Boston.
The 1975 Oscar Tour! I remember that!

Tina introduces them to socially conscious and astrology-following friends Jeannie (Kit McDonough), Suzi (Christina Hart), and Debbie (unknown).
Two old men, three young girls-- one of those girls should have disappeared in a script polish.

After Oscar and Felix dance with Suzi and Debbie, the girls give them the slip by claiming they're joining a religious cult and making a plan to meet them for a party at 2:30 a.m., after their induction.
Yeah, the old joining-a-cult excuse. I've heard that one.

The guys decide to act their age and go home. But Felix ends up waking Oscar up at 2:00 to go to the party.
And we never find out what happens. This was like the first halves of two episodes stuck together.

The others make excuses not to attend the opening, then Ted learns that Marsh has skipped town with the school's money, not having paid for the banquet hall and having taken Ted's borrowed car.
Ouch. Poor Ted.

With Ted facing fraud charges
Shouldn't the actual fraudster be facing charges?

Mary and Murray decide to help him, and persuade a reluctant Lou to join them.
He should have pressed charges and lawyered up to sue the guy. That seems like something Lou would have gone in on whole hog.

Tony Kramer arrives at Mary's for his date (Oh, Jerry--Bernie Kopell).
Doc! Alan-A-Dale! Siegfried! What a guy!

Christmas break (which is said to be six months away).
Was it snowing out? :rommie:

In the end, after all of the speeches have been given--the others acting uncomfortable, while Ted enjoys immersing himself in his role--the student asks if he can still get his money back.
I love Bernie Kopell, but why was he even here? The Odd Couple had an old girlfriend with no plotline and MTM had a blind date with no plotline. He should have turned out to be a hotshot lawyer who solved all of Ted's problems in one sentence at the last second.

he's gotten a permit to open his own summer camp, and he wants her to come aboard as his administrator
Wouldn't you need stuff like that in place as part of your business plan to qualify for the permit? I'm asking, I don't know.

Pottinger ("Flipper" for being a swimming counselor) encourages Bob to join Emily
"Shrink."

Craig Plager (Howard Hesseman)
Dr Johnny Fever, among many others-- on the same show.

having been recruited because one of them learned he knew archery--Howard as Indian lore counselor Iron Bow.
This episode is a failure because there was no scene of Howard shooting an arrow into an apple on Bob's head.

They realize that they don't have the budget for a lot of what they need
How did he get this permit? :rommie:

Just as they've adjourned, Bob comes home to announce that he's in.
At least this episode had a punchline. :rommie:

In one scene, Bob makes a reference to Stuckey's, which was a fixture of annual family trips from Indiana to Florida when I was a kid.
Somehow I know Stuckey's, but I don't know from where. I must have been on a trip.

Beg pardon?
Remember the episode where they pulled over the Great Pumpkin? :rommie:

Disturbance of the peace.
Ah, of course.

That did come to mind...like they brainstormed two different ideas for the same scene and used them both.
Yeah, that's probably what happened.

He was more like, "Ah, he'll be okay, he knows what he's doing."
Wow, major character development. :rommie:

All that was clear on that front was that Blake wouldn't knowingly approve it.
The more I think about it, the more I think he would have. The guy wanted to be with his wife when she delivered.

He insisted that it was fraudulent.
I guess we gotta hand him that one. :rommie:

Frank did, offscreen; followed by some comic misfirings inside the Swamp.
Okay, that's surprising. I would have pegged Frank as too scared to fire a gun.

It's kind of a common trope, so I wouldn't be surprised if they had an occasion or two to do it again in the show's long lifespan.
Yeah, you're right, it is pretty common.

Drat! Fair enough.
Still down today, too.

Seems kinda small potatoes for him.
All illegal drug trade cut off from the main island? It seems like he would take notice of that.

He made some noise about potentially going that route in front of her (not seen).
Ah, okay.

Looking a bit more into it, it seems that it's a Coca Cola subsidiary and dates back to at least the '60s.
Now I want to try some. It pays to advertise. :rommie:

Ross knew, that was their way of foiling surveillance that they didn't know they were under, thus keeping Five-O in the dark about how they were making their drops a bit longer.
Okay, I think I see.

This one seemed a bit straightforward to me; not enough twists; Five-O was onto the baddies early and just spent the episode putting the pieces together. Definitely not Fat-worthy.
Well, yeah, the whole episode would have needed to be upgraded.

It was Subby's leg, to be clear.
I'm sure he mangled everybody. :rommie:
 


70 Years Ago This Month



March (cover date)
  • Stan Lee and Bob Brown's Rawhide Kid makes its debut, published by Atlas Comics.

March 1
  • At the Lewis Flight Propulsion Laboratory in Cleveland, Ohio, future astronaut Neil Armstrong makes his first flight as a test pilot for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), the predecessor organization of NASA.

March 2
  • Claudette Colvin, a fifteen-year-old African-American girl, becomes the first person arrested for resisting bus segregation in Montgomery, Alabama, when she refuses to give up her seat to a white woman as demanded by the driver. She is carried off the bus backwards while being kicked and handcuffed and harassed on the way to the police station. She becomes a plaintiff in Browder v. Gayle (1956), which rules bus segregation to be unconstitutional.

March 3
  • The Pennsylvania Railroad runs its first "TrucTrain" piggyback train from Chicago to Kearny, NJ, the first time the Pennsylvania has carried trailers of common carrier trucking companies on its flatcars.

March 5
  • US TV station WBBJ-TV signs on the air in Jackson, Tennessee, with WDXI as its initial call-letters, to expanded American commercial television in mostly-rural areas.
  • Elvis Presley makes his television debut on Louisiana Hayride, carried by KSLA-TV Shreveport. (Although audio recordings exist, there is no known video footage of this appearance.)



Charting the week of March 5:

"Mambo Rock," Bill Haley & His Comets
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(B-side of "Birth of the Boogie"; #18 US; #14 UK)



March 7
  • The 7th Emmy Awards ceremony takes place at the Moulin Rouge Nightclub in Hollywood, California.
  • The Broadway musical version of Peter Pan, which had opened in 1954 starring Mary Martin, is presented on television for the first time by NBC-TV with its original cast, as an installment of Producers' Showcase. It is also the first time that a stage musical is presented in its entirety on TV almost exactly as it was performed on stage. This program gains the largest viewership of a TV special up to this time.



On March 9, Elia Kazan's adaptation of John Steinbeck's East of Eden, starring James Dean, Julie Harris, and Raymond Massey, premieres in New York.
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(Included in the National Film Registry.)



March 10
  • The UK's Anti-Aircraft Command is officially disbanded.

March 15
  • Colonel Tom Parker becomes Elvis Presley's de facto manager.
  • The play No Time for Sergeants is broadcast by the American Broadcasting Company in the United States Steel Hour series, starring Andy Griffith in his television debut.



March 17
  • Richard Riot in Montreal: 6,000 people protest against the suspension of French Canadian ice hockey star Maurice Richard of the Montreal Canadiens by the National Hockey League following a violent incident during a match.

March 19
  • TV station KXTV signs on the air in Sacramento, California, as KBET.
  • The film adaptation of Evan Hunter's novel Blackboard Jungle [starring Glenn Ford, Anne Francis, Louis Calhern, and Margaret Hayes] premieres in New York City, featuring the single "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley & His Comets over the opening credits, the first use of a rock and roll song in a major film. Teenagers jump from their seats to dance to it.
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(Also featuring the breakout role of a fella named Sidney Poitier, and included in the National Film Registry.)​



Charting the week of March 19:

"Birth of the Boogie," Bill Haley & His Comets
(#17 US)



March 22
  • Decca Records signs DJ Alan Freed as an A&R man.
  • Landing in darkness and heavy rain at Hickam Air Force Base, Territory of Hawaii, the crew of United States Navy Douglas R6D-1 Liftmaster 131612 of Air Transport Squadron 3 (VR-3) makes a navigational error, and the plane crashes into Pali Kea Peak in Oahu's Waianae Range 15 miles (24 km) northwest of Honolulu. The plane explodes, killing all 66 people on board. At the time, it would be the worst accident involving any version of the Douglas DC-6, and it remains the worst air disaster in the history of Hawaii. It would tie with the August 11 mid-air collision of two United States Air Force C-119G Flying Boxcars over West Germany and the October 6 crash of United Airlines Flight 409 in Wyoming as the deadliest air accident of 1955.

March 23
  • In Pozzuoli, the last knightly dispute in Italy happens. Gaetano Fiorentino, senator of the People's Monarchist Party, faces in a fencing duel the attorney Attilio Romano, acting in name of his client Carlo Delcroix, war invalid. Both the two contenders are slightly wounded. The dispute was caused by a Fiorentino's press article about Delcroix, judged injurious.

March 24
  • West German President Theodor Heuss signs the Bonn-Paris conventions that authorize the rearmament of West Germany. In France...the treaty causes heated debates; Prime Minister Edgard Faure is forced to intervene in the Council of the Republic to solicit its ratification.
  • At the Morosco Theatre on Broadway, premiere of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof by Tennessee Williams, directed by Elia Kazan, with Burl Ives, Ben Gazzara and Barbara Bel Geddes.

March 25
  • After West Germany, East Germany also announces its rearmament.
  • During a test flight with afterburner, the Lockheed XF-104 aircraft achieves a speed of Mach 1.79 (1,181.4 mph, 1,901.3 km/h).

March 26
  • Bill Hayes tops the US charts for five weeks with "The Ballad of Davy Crockett" and starts a (fake) coonskin cap craze. [Also #2 UK.]
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  • The number three propeller and engine detach from the Pan American World Airways Boeing 377 Stratocruiser 10-26 Clipper United States, operating as Flight 845/26 with 23 people on board, forcing it to ditch in the Pacific Ocean 35 miles (58 km) off the coast of Oregon and killing four people. The United States Navy attack transport USS Bayfield (APA-33) rescues the 19 survivors about two hours later.



Charting the week of March 26:

"Sincerely," The Moonglows
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(#20 US; #1 R&B; included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll)



March 28
  • In Washington, Italian Prime Minister Mario Scelba and Foreign Affair Minister Gaetano Martino meet President Eisenhower, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and the US ambassador in Italy, Claire Booth Luce. Scelba declares Italian support for the projected Big Four summit.
  • In South Vietnam, the Battle of Saigon begins. Prime Minister Ngo Dinh Diem uses the army to seize the police prefecture, controlled by the Bình Xuyên.

March 29
  • Uprising of the National Front in Saigon: the prime minister's palace and the police prefecture are attacked with mortars. Eight ministers (including Minister of Defence Ho Thong Minh) resign from the Diem cabinet.

March 30
  • In Saigon, the French High Commissioner for Indochina, General Paul Ely, secures a truce between the Army and the National Front; the fighting between the two parties, after having caused 26 victims in the capital, goes on in the country.
  • 1955 Academy Awards: On the Waterfront wins 8 prizes, included best motion picture, best directing (Elia Kazan), best script (Budd Schilberg), best actor (Marlon Brando), and best actress in a supporting role (Eva Marie Saint). Grace Kelly is awarded as best actress for The Country Girl, Edmond O'Brien as best actor in a supporting role for The Barefoot Contessa; Teinosuke Kinugasa's Gate of Hell gets an honorary prize as best foreign film.



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.



Apparently he hit the jackpot.
Took a second.

The 1975 Oscar Tour! I remember that!
:lol:

Two old men, three young girls-- one of those girls should have disappeared in a script polish.
The one that didn't dance didn't even look so young.

Yeah, the old joining-a-cult excuse. I've heard that one.
I wasn't clear if it was supposed to be just an excuse, but they seemed to be playing it that way.

Shouldn't the actual fraudster be facing charges?
Ted was the front; and he'd have to produce the guy.

He should have pressed charges and lawyered up to sue the guy. That seems like something Lou would have gone in on whole hog.
Yeah, that I could see; but again, they'd have to find the fraudster.

Was it snowing out? :rommie:
Not that I noticed, or Shirley I would have said.

I love Bernie Kopell, but why was he even here?
Good question. This is where I'd say that there was more than I indicated in the summary, if only there was more than I indicated in the summary. The blind date subplot just seemed like filler.

The Odd Couple had an old girlfriend with no plotline
She was the instigator of the plot.

Wouldn't you need stuff like that in place as part of your business plan to qualify for the permit? I'm asking, I don't know.
You think I do? :lol:

Somehow I know Stuckey's, but I don't know from where. I must have been on a trip.
It's possible that I had occasion to bring it up before, but I have no idea in what context.

Remember the episode where they pulled over the Great Pumpkin? :rommie:
Oh, yeah...someone was hauling either a giant pumpkin or a giant fake pumpkin through an alley between two neighborhood streets.

Ah, of course.
You can Google these things, y'know... :p

Wow, major character development. :rommie:
It is though, from the pilot when Pete was motivated to stay on the force to keep Reed from getting himself killed.

The more I think about it, the more I think he would have. The guy wanted to be with his wife when she delivered.
Whatever the legalities/protocol of the local personnel situation, my impression is that Henry wouldn't because it was a big no-no and would get him in hot water.

Okay, that's surprising. I would have pegged Frank as too scared to fire a gun.
He clearly demonstrated not knowing how to handle one.

Still down today, too.
You overloaded their site by actually visiting it. :p

All illegal drug trade cut off from the main island? It seems like he would take notice of that.
Doesn't seem like his thing, though I may be forgetting a plot in which he was involved with drug trafficking.

Now I want to try some. It pays to advertise. :rommie:
I wonder if they went through an unsuccessful "New Head" phase in the mid-eighties....

Okay, I think I see.
Bottom line, Ross knew he was there. Few others were supposed to.

I'm sure he mangled everybody. :rommie:
Subby or Robbins?
 
Last edited:
I'm sorting through many ancient artifacts in the archaeological dig of my old apartment, and I came across this little gem:

Steve-Austin-1.jpg


Apparently, I cared enough to send away for a picture, but not enough to join the fan club. :rommie:

Stan Lee and Bob Brown's Rawhide Kid makes its debut, published by Atlas Comics.
So is this the real start of the Marvel Age of Comics? :rommie:

At the Lewis Flight Propulsion Laboratory in Cleveland, Ohio, future astronaut Neil Armstrong makes his first flight as a test pilot for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), the predecessor organization of NASA.
An exemplary human being.

Claudette Colvin, a fifteen-year-old African-American girl, becomes the first person arrested for resisting bus segregation
And yet has forever been overshadowed by Rosa Parks.

Elvis Presley makes his television debut on Louisiana Hayride, carried by KSLA-TV Shreveport. (Although audio recordings exist, there is no known video footage of this appearance.)
That's a shame.

"Mambo Rock," Bill Haley & His Comets
Meh.

For some reason, TrekBBS demanded that I accept third-party cookies before it would show me any embedded YouTube videos. :rommie:

On March 9, Elia Kazan's adaptation of John Steinbeck's East of Eden, starring James Dean, Julie Harris, and Raymond Massey, premieres in New York.
Soap Opera. :rommie:

Colonel Tom Parker becomes Elvis Presley's de facto manager.
A critical juncture in the timeline.

The play No Time for Sergeants is broadcast by the American Broadcasting Company in the United States Steel Hour series, starring Andy Griffith in his television debut.
Eventually to become a pretty good movie.

Richard Riot in Montreal: 6,000 people protest against the suspension of French Canadian ice hockey star Maurice Richard of the Montreal Canadiens by the National Hockey League following a violent incident during a match.
Personally I'm opposed to Skates & Violence.

TV station KXTV signs on the air in Sacramento, California, as KBET.
Tricky.

The film adaptation of Evan Hunter's novel Blackboard Jungle [starring Glenn Ford, Anne Francis, Louis Calhern, and Margaret Hayes] premieres in New York City, featuring the single "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley & His Comets over the opening credits, the first use of a rock and roll song in a major film. Teenagers jump from their seats to dance to it.
That's a good movie.

That's better.

In Pozzuoli, the last knightly dispute in Italy happens. Gaetano Fiorentino, senator of the People's Monarchist Party, faces in a fencing duel the attorney Attilio Romano, acting in name of his client Carlo Delcroix, war invalid. Both the two contenders are slightly wounded.
"Just a flesh wound."

"Sincerely," The Moonglows
This is pretty good.

Took a second.
:D

The one that didn't dance didn't even look so young.
Maybe she was there for the same reason as the boys. :rommie:

Yeah, that I could see; but again, they'd have to find the fraudster.
I'm thinking the best defense is a good offense.

Not that I noticed, or Shirley I would have said.
Don't call me Shirley.

Good question. This is where I'd say that there was more than I indicated in the summary, if only there was more than I indicated in the summary. The blind date subplot just seemed like filler.
Yeah, weird. Especially since it involved Ida.

She was the instigator of the plot.
And then she disappeared. She was Chekhov's Old Girlfriend.

You think I do? :lol:
I don't know what esoteric knowledge your brain might harbor. :rommie:

It's possible that I had occasion to bring it up before, but I have no idea in what context.
No, I mean I'm kind of sure that I've been to one in real life, but I can't remember the context. Possibly the early 80s, since I traveled around the Northeast a lot in those days.

Oh, yeah...someone was hauling either a giant pumpkin or a giant fake pumpkin through an alley between two neighborhood streets.
Yeah, a young woman with a giant fake pumpkin on a trailer. She was a teacher or daycare provider or something.

You can Google these things, y'know... :p
True, that's something I could have Googled. I try to resist Googling in this thread, but that's something I couldn't have known.

It is though, from the pilot when Pete was motivated to stay on the force to keep Reed from getting himself killed.
Yeah, I was serious. We actually saw the pilot not too long ago on a Saturday morning.

Whatever the legalities/protocol of the local personnel situation, my impression is that Henry wouldn't because it was a big no-no and would get him in hot water.
Hmm, I guess.

You overloaded their site by actually visiting it. :p
:rommie:

Doesn't seem like his thing, though I may be forgetting a plot in which he was involved with drug trafficking.
I kind of think of him as Moriarty, but I could be wrong.

I wonder if they went through an unsuccessful "New Head" phase in the mid-eighties....
There's nothing like Classic Head, man.

Subby or Robbins?
Robbins. :rommie:
 
Another favorite book of mine at the time. I loved Frank Robbins' art. He was my second-favorite Ghost Rider artist after Mike Ploog. Looking at those old Johnny Hazard strips, yo
Hated Robbins when he took over Captain America. Quite a shift from Sal Buscema. Loved him on the Invaders. His Caniff influenced style was perfect for a WWII set book.
 
I'm sorting through many ancient artifacts in the archaeological dig of my old apartment, and I came across this little gem:

Steve-Austin-1.jpg
a) The Steve Austin fan kit looks like what I remember having.

b) Is that an Acer Nitro gaming laptop? It looks just like the one I replaced. FYI, be careful with closing the lid; if the plastic housing around the outboard hinges starts to break apart, it's all downhill from there. My monitor eventually became completely inoperable and I'd been using a plugin monitor for a few years. I finally made the move to replace the whole thing when the keyboard recently starting giving out.

Must have been a known issue, as the newer model has inboard metal hinges.

So is this the real start of the Marvel Age of Comics? :rommie:
Nah, they're not even calling themselves Marvel yet.

And yet has forever been overshadowed by Rosa Parks.
Yep.

I wasn't too crazy about either one of these, but I guess I chose the wrong one to get the embedded video.

For some reason, TrekBBS demanded that I accept third-party cookies before it would show me any embedded YouTube videos. :rommie:
Yeah, they just upgraded the cookie notification system to better comply with EU standards. There's been a big to-do about it down in QSF.

Soap Opera. :rommie:
But...James Dean's big breakout.

Back in the day, I would have put "icon" before his name, but the word's become so overused that it's lost its intended meaning.

Eventually to become a pretty good movie.
Also starring Andy, I see.

Personally I'm opposed to Skates & Violence.
Rudy's gonna set that one aside for future consideration.

That's a good movie.
Never seen it, but I probably should if it comes up on the Movies! schedule.

This is pretty good.
The standout in the R&R/R&B department this month.

Maybe she was there for the same reason as the boys. :rommie:
She didn't look as old as them, either, but definitely seemed like an older friend.

Don't call me Shirley.
Would've given you points if you'd flipped it around into Surely. :p

And then she disappeared. She was Chekhov's Old Girlfriend.
She got fired in the teaser.

I don't know what esoteric knowledge your brain might harbor. :rommie:
Look who's talkin'.

No, I mean I'm kind of sure that I've been to one in real life, but I can't remember the context. Possibly the early 80s, since I traveled around the Northeast a lot in those days.
Doesn't seem like their area. Going by their current locations, the furthest northeast they get is Virginia.

Yeah, I was serious. We actually saw the pilot not too long ago on a Saturday morning.
Cool.

I kind of think of him as Moriarty, but I could be wrong.
He's a Red Chinese agent...he's usually involved in larger-than-life schemes and international intrigue. He's McGarrett's Bond villain.

There's nothing like Classic Head, man.
:whistle:

Ah...the comment a few exchanges back makes more sense in that context. Your pronoun had an unclear antecedent.
 
Hated Robbins when he took over Captain America. Quite a shift from Sal Buscema.
He was definitely more suited for books like Ghost Rider and Invaders, but I didn't hate Captain America.

Loved him on the Invaders. His Caniff influenced style was perfect for a WWII set book.
He was so bonkers at Marvel that I didn't see the Caniff influence until I read Johnny Hazard some time later. The Marvel artist who really gave me Caniff vibes was Lee Elias.

a) The Steve Austin fan kit looks like what I remember having.
Except you used yours properly. :rommie:

b) Is that an Acer Nitro gaming laptop? It looks just like the one I replaced.
It is indeed. Good eye.

FYI, be careful with closing the lid; if the plastic housing around the outboard hinges starts to break apart, it's all downhill from there. My monitor eventually became completely inoperable and I'd been using a plugin monitor for a few years.
I've had it for a few years and it's actually in practically mint condition. Which is surprising, because it took kind of a beating those weeks when I was taking care of my Mother.

I finally made the move to replace the whole thing when the keyboard recently starting giving out.
I've used a plug in keyboard and mouse from the start. I hate the laptop keyboard and pad. :rommie:

Nah, they're not even calling themselves Marvel yet.
I mean in hindsight. I'm wondering if that's the first character who becomes part of the Marvel Universe.

Yeah, they just upgraded the cookie notification system to better comply with EU standards. There's been a big to-do about it down in QSF.
Ah, okay. It was no big deal, except I wondered about hackers for a few seconds.

Back in the day, I would have put "icon" before his name, but the word's become so overused that it's lost its intended meaning.
True of a lot of words these days.

Also starring Andy, I see.
Yeah, he was in the play, the TV show, and the movie. I think I might have known about the play.

Rudy's gonna set that one aside for future consideration.
:rommie:

Would've given you points if you'd flipped it around into Surely. :p
Damn it.

She got fired in the teaser.
I see what you did there.

Look who's talkin'.
True. I don't know what esoteric knowledge is in my own brain either.

Doesn't seem like their area. Going by their current locations, the furthest northeast they get is Virginia.
New Jersey? Pennsylvania? I may be thinking of a completely different restaurant.

He's a Red Chinese agent...he's usually involved in larger-than-life schemes and international intrigue. He's McGarrett's Bond villain.
Bond, not Holmes. Got it. :rommie:

Ah...the comment a few exchanges back makes more sense in that context. Your pronoun had an unclear antecedent.
What, you can't read my mind? :rommie:
 
He was so bonkers at Marvel that I didn't see the Caniff influence until I read Johnny Hazard some time later. The Marvel artist who really gave me Caniff vibes was Lee Elias.
A lot of artists who "grew up" reading comic strips tended to be influenced by Caniff, Foster or Raymond. Some managed all three. :lol: Even Kirby borrowed from Caniff and the others before became the Kirby we know.
 
Except you used yours properly. :rommie:
How's that?

It is indeed. Good eye.
It was like coming face-to-face with my recently replaced computer's evil twin.

I've had it for a few years and it's actually in practically mint condition. Which is surprising, because it took kind of a beating those weeks when I was taking care of my Mother.
Remind me to post a "DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU" pic.

I've used a plug in keyboard and mouse from the start. I hate the laptop keyboard and pad. :rommie:
I like the backlit keyboard, and got used to the red on the old one. (The current one's white.) A lot of my keys on the old one were unreadable from years of gaming.

I mean in hindsight. I'm wondering if that's the first character who becomes part of the Marvel Universe.
That would be the original Torch.

I see what you did there.
Coincidental, though I did notice.

True. I don't know what esoteric knowledge is in my own brain either.
:D

New Jersey? Pennsylvania? I may be thinking of a completely different restaurant.
Maybe a Kenny Rogers Roasters, but you wouldn't go in there for fear of being blown away.
 
A lot of artists who "grew up" reading comic strips tended to be influenced by Caniff, Foster or Raymond. Some managed all three. :lol: Even Kirby borrowed from Caniff and the others before became the Kirby we know.
True, early Kirby is practically unrecognizable. But Elias is kind of like the Ploog to Caniff's Eisner. :rommie:

How's that?
You sent away for the actual club materials. :rommie:

It was like coming face-to-face with my recently replaced computer's evil twin.
Sorry. :rommie:

Remind me to post a "DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU" pic.
Don't forget to post a "DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU" pic.

I like the backlit keyboard, and got used to the red on the old one. (The current one's white.) A lot of my keys on the old one were unreadable from years of gaming.
The backlit keyboard is actually one of the reasons I chose it, but I still had to go back to a regular keyboard and mouse pretty quickly.

That would be the original Torch.
Duh, of course. WWII.

Maybe a Kenny Rogers Roasters, but you wouldn't go in there for fear of being blown away.
I know when to walk away.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


March 9
  • The Golden Hinde II arrived in San Francisco Bay, re-enacting the voyage of Sir Francis Drake, which sailed in the bay in 1579. The journey had started on September 24 from Plymouth, England.

March 10
  • Troops of the Army of North Vietnam began an early morning attack on the city of Ban Me Thuot in South Vietnam with the 316th, 10th and 320th Divisions, easily overrunning a South Vietnam Army regiment of defenders who were outnumbered by 5 1/2 to 1. By 10:30 the next morning, "Campaign 275" was over and had effectively placed half of South Vietnam behind enemy lines. Because of Ban Me Thuot's strategic location at the intersection of South Vietnam's two main highways, the defeat created a "domino effect" that would lead to the disintegration and conquest of South Vietnam, as ARVN troops abandoned the Highlands and fled south.

March 12
  • The seventh and last "draft lottery", for conscription of 18-year-old American men into military service. Men born on December 8, 1956, would have been drafted first, in the event of a national emergency, followed by those born June 19 and March 22, while a February 12 birthday was drawn 366th and last. By 1975, the U.S. armed services were recruiting volunteers only. The draft registration requirement was suspended 20 days later, on April 1, and processing of all registrations would end on January 27, 1976.

March 13
  • The first Chili's restaurant was opened. The chain now has 1,400 locations.
  • U.S. Senator Hubert H. Humphrey agreed to pay back taxes owed to the Internal Revenue Service, after his claim of a deduction of $199,153 for the donation of records from service as Vice President of the United States, was disallowed. Nearly a year earlier, then-President Richard M. Nixon had been disallowed a more than $450,000 deduction for his vice-presidential papers. Nixon and Humphrey had run against each other in the 1968 U.S. presidential election. Humphrey later paid $240,000 in taxes, penalties and interest.
  • Khmer Rouge guerillas, fighting to take over Cambodia, destroyed a 20-ton ammunition dump at the Phnom Penh. Nobody was hurt, but the shrapnel rendered two commercial aircraft inoperable.

March 14
  • After the fall of Ban Me Thuot, South Vietnam's President Thieu made the decision to abandon the northwestern half of the nation to the North Vietnamese invaders, withdrawing troops and ordering an evacuation, in hopes of consolidating a defense of the remaining provinces around Saigon, and possibly regrouping for a counterattack....South Vietnam's defense would collapse so rapidly that the entire nation would be in North Vietnamese control within six weeks.
  • Former Oklahoma Governor David Hall, who had been indicted on January 13 while still in office, was convicted of racketeering, extortion and perjury, and sentenced to three years in federal prison. He would be released after 19 months.
  • Susan Hayward (stage name for Edythe Marrenner), 57, American film actress, died of brain cancer. Hayward had won the 1958 Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in the film I Want to Live!

March 15
  • Helios 1 made the closest approach to the Sun up to that time by a man-made object, coming within 28.7 million miles (46.2 million km) and sending back data to West Germany's space agency, the DFVLR at Oberpfaffenhofen as well as to the United States space agency, NASA.
  • South Vietnam's President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered his army to abandon defense of the nation's second largest city, Huế, and to retreat southward to defend Saigon. The decision led to more than 250,000 civilians refugees fleeing southward over the next six weeks.
  • Died: Aristotle Onassis, 69, Greek shipping magnate who rose from a menial job to become a billionaire and the husband of former U.S. first lady Jackie Kennedy.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Black Water," The Doobie Brothers
2. "My Eyes Adored You," Frankie Valli
3. "Lady Marmalade," Labelle
4. "Have You Never Been Mellow," Olivia Newton-John
5. "Lovin' You," Minnie Riperton
6. "Lady," Styx
7. "Lonely People," America
8. "Express," B.T. Express
9. "Can't Get It Out of My Head," Electric Light Orchestra
10. "Don't Call Us, We'll Call You," Sugarloaf / Jerry Corbetta
11. "Poetry Man," Phoebe Snow
12. "You Are So Beautiful" / "It's a Sin When You Love Somebody", Joe Cocker
13. "Best of My Love," Eagles
14. "No No Song" / "Snookeroo", Ringo Starr
15. "Shame, Shame, Shame," Shirley & Company
16. "Up in a Puff of Smoke," Polly Brown
17. "To the Door of the Sun (Alle Porte Del Sol)," Al Martino
18. "Sad Sweet Dreamer," Sweet Sensation
19. "I Am Love, Pts. 1 & 2," Jackson 5
20. "My Boy," Elvis Presley
21. "Pick Up the Pieces," Average White Band
22. "(Hey Won't You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song," B. J. Thomas
23. "Once You Get Started," Rufus feat. Chaka Khan
24. "Chevy Van," Sammy Johns

26. "Roll On Down the Highway," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
27. "Harry Truman," Chicago
28. "I'm a Woman," Maria Muldaur
29. "Emma," Hot Chocolate
30. "Supernatural Thing, Part I," Ben E. King

32. "Before the Next Teardrop Falls," Freddy Fender
33. "Movin' On," Bad Company

35. "Philadelphia Freedom," Elton John

38. "Walking in Rhythm," The Blackbyrds
39. "Fire," Ohio Players

41. "Shining Star," Earth, Wind & Fire

44. "The Bertha Butt Boogie, Pt. 1," The Jimmy Castor Bunch
45. "You're No Good," Linda Ronstadt
46. "Nightingale," Carole King
47. "Jackie Blue," The Ozark Mountain Daredevils
48. "L-O-V-E (Love)," Al Green
49. "Long Tall Glasses (I Can Dance)," Leo Sayer
50. "What Am I Gonna Do with You," Barry White

53. "It's a Miracle," Barry Manilow

55. "He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)," Tony Orlando & Dawn

57. "Tangled Up in Blue," Bob Dylan

60. "Killer Queen," Queen

64. "Shoeshine Boy," Eddie Kendricks

71. "I Don't Like to Sleep Alone," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates

73. "Doctor's Orders," Carol Douglas

76. "Amie," Pure Prairie League
77. "How Long," Ace
78. "Stand by Me," John Lennon
79. "Please Mr. Postman," Carpenters

84. "Young Americans," David Bowie

93. "Shaving Cream," Benny Bell


Leaving the chart:
  • "Boogie On Reggae Woman," Stevie Wonder (17 weeks)
  • "Look in My Eyes Pretty Woman," Tony Orlando & Dawn (12 weeks)
  • "#9 Dream," John Lennon (12 weeks)
  • "Some Kind of Wonderful," Grand Funk (13 weeks)
  • "Sweet Surrender," John Denver (11 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Young Americans," David Bowie
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#28 US; #18 UK; #481 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])

"Stand by Me," John Lennon
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#20 US; #30 UK)

"I Don't Like to Sleep Alone," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#8 US; #8 AC)

"He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)," Tony Orlando & Dawn
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#1 US the weeks of May 3 through 17, 1975; #1 AC)


New on the album chart, Physical Graffiti by Led Zeppelin (#70 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time [2003]), which includes this non-single track:

"Kashmir"
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For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#140 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])


And new on the boob tube:
  • Adam-12, "Follow Up"
  • M*A*S*H, "White Gold"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "The Hostage"



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



True, early Kirby is practically unrecognizable.
From his later work, yes; but very recognizable in its own right.

You sent away for the actual club materials. :rommie:
I don't think I did. Whatever I got, it was a birthday or Christmas present, and there was no ongoing commitment like a newsletter or anything.

Don't forget to post a "DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU" pic.
Remind me again, I don't feel like hauling the thing out to take a picture when I'm enjoying being able to stay in bed on Saturday morning with a fully functional laptop again.

The backlit keyboard is actually one of the reasons I chose it, but I still had to go back to a regular keyboard and mouse pretty quickly.
A cordless mouse I always use; don't think I could ever get used to using just a mousepad. The one on my new laptop seems a bit too big, I'm routinely accidentally using it while typing.

Duh, of course. WWII.
I'm reminded of revisionist claims that Martian Manhunter started the Silver Age because he was part of DC's Silver Age continuity and predated the SA Flash. Bottom line is that MM was a backup feature who didn't launch a bigger movement; but if one's factoring in continuity, Superboy beats him to the tune of ten years, as he was always considered a Silver/Bronze Age / Earth-1 character despite having debuted during the Golden Age.

I know when to walk away.
Kenny: You better...[cocks and aims shotgun]...know when to RUN!
 
Last edited:
50 Years Ago This Week


March 9
  • The Golden Hinde II arrived in San Francisco Bay, re-enacting the voyage of Sir Francis Drake, which sailed in the bay in 1579. The journey had started on September 24 from Plymouth, England.

March 10
  • Troops of the Army of North Vietnam began an early morning attack on the city of Ban Me Thuot in South Vietnam with the 316th, 10th and 320th Divisions, easily overrunning a South Vietnam Army regiment of defenders who were outnumbered by 5 1/2 to 1. By 10:30 the next morning, "Campaign 275" was over and had effectively placed half of South Vietnam behind enemy lines. Because of Ban Me Thuot's strategic location at the intersection of South Vietnam's two main highways, the defeat created a "domino effect" that would lead to the disintegration and conquest of South Vietnam, as ARVN troops abandoned the Highlands and fled south.

March 12
  • The seventh and last "draft lottery", for conscription of 18-year-old American men into military service. Men born on December 8, 1956, would have been drafted first, in the event of a national emergency, followed by those born June 19 and March 22, while a February 12 birthday was drawn 366th and last. By 1975, the U.S. armed services were recruiting volunteers only. The draft registration requirement was suspended 20 days later, on April 1, and processing of all registrations would end on January 27, 1976.

March 13
  • The first Chili's restaurant was opened. The chain now has 1,400 locations.
  • U.S. Senator Hubert H. Humphrey agreed to pay back taxes owed to the Internal Revenue Service, after his claim of a deduction of $199,153 for the donation of records from service as Vice President of the United States, was disallowed. Nearly a year earlier, then-President Richard M. Nixon had been disallowed a more than $450,000 deduction for his vice-presidential papers. Nixon and Humphrey had run against each other in the 1968 U.S. presidential election. Humphrey later paid $240,000 in taxes, penalties and interest.
  • Khmer Rouge guerillas, fighting to take over Cambodia, destroyed a 20-ton ammunition dump at the Phnom Penh. Nobody was hurt, but the shrapnel rendered two commercial aircraft inoperable.

March 14
  • After the fall of Ban Me Thuot, South Vietnam's President Thieu made the decision to abandon the northwestern half of the nation to the North Vietnamese invaders, withdrawing troops and ordering an evacuation, in hopes of consolidating a defense of the remaining provinces around Saigon, and possibly regrouping for a counterattack....South Vietnam's defense would collapse so rapidly that the entire nation would be in North Vietnamese control within six weeks.
  • Former Oklahoma Governor David Hall, who had been indicted on January 13 while still in office, was convicted of racketeering, extortion and perjury, and sentenced to three years in federal prison. He would be released after 19 months.
  • Susan Hayward (stage name for Edythe Marrenner), 57, American film actress, died of brain cancer. Hayward had won the 1958 Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in the film I Want to Live!

March 15
  • Helios 1 made the closest approach to the Sun up to that time by a man-made object, coming within 28.7 million miles (46.2 million km) and sending back data to West Germany's space agency, the DFVLR at Oberpfaffenhofen as well as to the United States space agency, NASA.
  • South Vietnam's President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered his army to abandon defense of the nation's second largest city, Huế, and to retreat southward to defend Saigon. The decision led to more than 250,000 civilians refugees fleeing southward over the next six weeks.
  • Died: Aristotle Onassis, 69, Greek shipping magnate who rose from a menial job to become a billionaire and the husband of former U.S. first lady Jackie Kennedy.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:



Leaving the chart:
  • "Boogie On Reggae Woman," Stevie Wonder (17 weeks)
  • "Look in My Eyes Pretty Woman," Tony Orlando & Dawn (12 weeks)
  • "#9 Dream," John Lennon (12 weeks)
  • "Some Kind of Wonderful," Grand Funk (13 weeks)
  • "Sweet Surrender," John Denver (11 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Young Americans," David Bowie
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#28 US; #18 UK; #481 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])

"Stand by Me," John Lennon
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#20 US; #30 UK)

"I Don't Like to Sleep Alone," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#8 US; #8 AC)

"He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)," Tony Orlando & Dawn
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#1 US the weeks of May 3 through 17, 1975; #1 AC)


New on the album chart, Physical Graffiti by Led Zeppelin (#70 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time [2003]), which includes this non-single track:

"Kashmir"
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#140 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])


And new on the boob tube:
  • Adam-12, "Follow Up"
  • M*A*S*H, "White Gold"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "The Hostage"



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




From his later work, yes; but very recognizable in its own right.


I don't think I did. Whatever I got, it was a birthday or Christmas present, and there was no ongoing commitment like a newsletter or anything.


Remind me again, I don't feel like hauling the thing out to take a picture when I'm enjoying being able to stay in bed on Saturday morning with a fully functional laptop again.


A cordless mouse I always use; don't think I could ever get used to using just a mousepad. The one on my new laptop seems a bit too big, I'm routinely accidentally using it while typing.


I'm reminded of revisionist claims that Martian Manhunter started the Silver Age because he was part of DC's Silver Age continuity and predated the SA Flash. Bottom line is that MM was a backup feature who didn't launch a bigger movement; but if one's factoring in continuity, Superboy beats him to the tune of ten years, as he was always considered a Silver/Bronze Age / Earth-1 character despite having debuted during the Golden Age.


Kenny: You better...[cocks and aims shotgun]...know when to RUN!
The Anka song is the only one that's not ringing a bell.
 
The Golden Hinde II arrived in San Francisco Bay, re-enacting the voyage of Sir Francis Drake, which sailed in the bay in 1579. The journey had started on September 24 from Plymouth, England.
The Golden Hinde is a great name for a ship.

The seventh and last "draft lottery", for conscription of 18-year-old American men into military service. Men born on December 8, 1956, would have been drafted first, in the event of a national emergency, followed by those born June 19 and March 22, while a February 12 birthday was drawn 366th and last. By 1975, the U.S. armed services were recruiting volunteers only. The draft registration requirement was suspended 20 days later, on April 1, and processing of all registrations would end on January 27, 1976.
It'll be back, kids. I had to register when I was 19.

South Vietnam's defense would collapse so rapidly that the entire nation would be in North Vietnamese control within six weeks.
What a disaster.

"Young Americans," David Bowie
One of my favorite Bowie songs. Strong nostalgic value.

"Stand by Me," John Lennon
A good cover. Not better than the original, though.

"I Don't Like to Sleep Alone," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates
I actually do know this one, but I'm not sure from where. Must be either Lost 45s or the Time-Life tapes. Odia Coates was also the female vocalist on "Having My Baby."

"He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)," Tony Orlando & Dawn
Classic Tony Orlando & Dawn. Strong nostalgic value.

"Kashmir"
Never cared much for Led Zep back in the day, but I've mellowed on them and they now have a pleasantly nostalgic sound to me.

From his later work, yes; but very recognizable in its own right.
Yeah, that's true.

I don't think I did. Whatever I got, it was a birthday or Christmas present, and there was no ongoing commitment like a newsletter or anything.
Oh, I see.

Remind me again, I don't feel like hauling the thing out to take a picture when I'm enjoying being able to stay in bed on Saturday morning with a fully functional laptop again.
Someday soon I'll be able to lay in bed again. The old apartment is almost completely wrapped up.

A cordless mouse I always use; don't think I could ever get used to using just a mousepad. The one on my new laptop seems a bit too big, I'm routinely accidentally using it while typing.
Yes, another reason that I don't like the laptop keyboard.

I'm reminded of revisionist claims that Martian Manhunter started the Silver Age because he was part of DC's Silver Age continuity and predated the SA Flash. Bottom line is that MM was a backup feature who didn't launch a bigger movement; but if one's factoring in continuity, Superboy beats him to the tune of ten years, as he was always considered a Silver/Bronze Age / Earth-1 character despite having debuted during the Golden Age.
See? Esoteric knowledge that I don't know. :rommie:

Kenny: You better...[cocks and aims shotgun]...know when to RUN!
flee.gif


Yikes. I feel like I'm on the bridge of the Enterprise looking at the Constellation.
 
It'll be back, kids. I had to register when I was 19.
So did I, but selective service registration wasn't the same thing as being drafted into service.

One of my favorite Bowie songs. Strong nostalgic value.
A little shout-out to John in the lyrics, who'll be accompanying him on another of this album's singles.

A good cover. Not better than the original, though.
Not gonna beat Ben E. King. This'll be John's last charting single in the States until his tragically brief post-househusband comeback in 1980. In the UK, "Imagine" will belatedly become a Top 10 single later in the year, released from John's compilation album Shaved Fish.

The album art for Rock 'n' Roll is a photo that early Beatles insider Jürgen Vollmer took during one of their gigs in Hamburg. Reportedly the blurry figures walking by are George, Stu, and Paul.

I actually do know this one, but I'm not sure from where. Must be either Lost 45s or the Time-Life tapes. Odia Coates was also the female vocalist on "Having My Baby."
Can't say I'd ever heard it before, and meh. I think Anka did the whole album that these singles are from with her.

Classic Tony Orlando & Dawn. Strong nostalgic value.
Pretty weaksauce compared to the Jerry Butler original (which was titled "He Will Break Your Heart").

Never cared much for Led Zep back in the day, but I've mellowed on them and they now have a pleasantly nostalgic sound to me.
Another familiar album rock classic. I've kind of fallen off of buying the albums at this point, but would consider getting this one.

Oh, I see.
Did you get a patch? I remember there being a patch, certificate, and the signed photo.

See? Esoteric knowledge that I don't know. :rommie:
You got me there...but comic book lore would be a known area for me.

Yikes. I feel like I'm on the bridge of the Enterprise looking at the Constellation.
Crazy Commodored.
 
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