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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread



50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



The Six Million Dollar Man
"The Song and Dance Spy"
Originally aired October 5, 1975
Edited Wiki said:
When Oscar suspects Steve's former college roommate, rock star John Perry, of carrying top-secret information, Steve is assigned to watch him and hopefully prove his innocence.

Steve and Oscar watch from the wings as John Perry's singing a loungey version of "Can't Take My Eyes Off You" on a theater stage. After the show, Steve goes up to greet his old chum by initiating an improvised gag about being there to repo the sound equipment, which has everyone else backstage going. Once the two of them break character, John introduces Steve to his backup singers, Linda, Louise, and Laura (Susie Coelho, Jayne Kennedy, and Susan McIver), and his PR man Lee Michaels (Victor Mohica). After they set a date to get together the next day, Oscar privately informs Steve that his former roomie is a courier for an espionage ring.

Out in the parking lot, after Steve bionic-pulls a station wagon that's got Oscar blocked in, Oscar explains that cassette tapes containing top secret intel have been delivered in various cities that Perry was playing in at the time. Steve, who's not keen on spying on his old friend, moodily listens to John singing "A Song for You" on the radio before going to Oscar's office to see proof that he spoke of--photos of Perry being given the tapes by a known agent named Kimbrough, who was just reported dead that morning. Oscar wants Steve to accompany his friend to his next gig in the Philippines for a sting operation involving a planted cassette with a homing device in it. The next day, when Steve shows up backstage during rehearsal, John initiates an improv gag, casting Steve as a pizza delivery boy who's late. Steve persuades his buddy to do an unscheduled gig at a military base on Guam, which Michaels is against. Afterward in a Manila warehouse, a Mr. Damon (Robin Clarke) reports to an art object-collecting Mr. Buckner (recent Bond henchman Bruce Glover, who just passed this year) about the change in itinerary, which could ruin their plans. An unconcerned Buckner orders Damon to deal with Austin.

On the C-130 to Andersen Air Force Base, Steve confers with plane crew-embedded intelligence man Crawford (Fred Holliday) about the plan, then chats with Linda, who teases him about his golf swing on the Moon. At the base's airfield, John witnesses as a forklift driver pushes a 1,450-pound crate onto Steve and Steve pushes it off himself, which John assumes to be a put-on, though he finds that he can't budge the crate. Later at Steve's room, John finds Steve's open wallet with his OSI ID showing and asks him about it, seeming pretty casual. Cut to John's USO-style base show, where he introduces his astronaut buddy onstage and goes into a lighthearted song that he claims Steve wrote, "Know Your Up Side from Your Down." Later, as the party's boarding the plane to Manila, a man poses as Steve's car driver so that his hoods can blackjack Steve and load him into the back.

In Manila, Oscar learns from Crawford that Perry informed him that Steve received orders to stay on Guam. Steve comes to tied in a boathouse, breaks his bonds, busts down a wall, and takes out the hoods watching him...tossing one of them into the drink. He then gets away in their limo and radios Oscar as he flies to Manila in a fighter. Meeting with Oscar, Steve still doesn't believe Perry's behind all of this. On the streets of Manila, Damon has a man bolt out in front of Crawford's vehicle as he's trying to tail Perry, who has the tape. John meets up with Linda at a shady-looking warehouse under false pretenses on her part...which turns out to be the lair of Mr. Buckner, who has Perry TV Fu'ed, takes the case, and informs a now-reluctant Linda that he'll be using Mr. Perry as a hostage to get out of Manila.

The OSI keeps the stage crew openly guarded at the venue. Crawford reports that the signal stopped abruptly, which Steve speculates may be from high-powered electronic interference. John's phone log reveals that he received a call from Linda at the Manila Export Warehouse. After Linda arrives at the theater, she's taken into custody, following which Steve scopes out the warehouse, bionic-jumping to the roof for bionic-enabled skylight access. Mr. Wint and Damon get taken down by bionic rights; but Steve has to hold back John from trying to take on a heavy goon with his dubious karate skills.
SMDM27.jpg
This one actually puts up a good fight against Steve, but is ultimately KO'ed, with John cheering his buddy on all the way.

In the coda, John's rehearsing "Can't Take My Eyes Off You" with his backup-singing duo when he gets even for Steve's supposed gag at the airfield by saving Steve from a crate being dropped on him from the rafters. After he explains that Linda set him up to take the tapes from Kimbrough, whom he was told was an arranger, Louise casually pushes the crate out her way.



All in the Family
"Mike's Pains"
Originally aired October 6, 1975
Wiki said:
Mike has second thoughts about being in the delivery room with Gloria.

Edith comes home excited after a sale at Ferguson's Market, sharing with Archie that she's arranged for Sybil Gooley who works there to come to Mike and Gloria's to determine if the baby will be a boy or a girl, as Gooley's supposed to have an inherited supernatural gift. Gloria, now four months along, comes home insisting that she's showing, though Edith doesn't see it. Archie gets Mike going over remarks about the baby's father being Polish, which takes a strange turn when Mike recites several P-word jokes and Archie, insisting that he'll defend his grandson from such remarks, chastises Mike for knocking "minororities". They change the subject to how much pain Gloria will experience in childbirth, giving Archie the opportunity to mangle the scripture as only he can, insisting that women having labor pains is one of God's commandments in the book of Generous; while Mike mocks him for putting the word "youse" in God's mouth. We also get this line, which I think came up before, either in another episode or in discussion...

Archie: Faith is somethin' that you'll believe that nobody in his right mind will believe in.​

Gloria comes downstairs modeling her maternity blouse with a pillow under it, scandalizing her father. The subject comes up of how she and Mike have agreed that she'll have natural childbirth, which will involve him being in the delivery room. Archie's outrage at the idea draws attention from Mike's reactions to the conversation, which signal the audience that he's less than comfortable with the arrangement. Eventually the spotlight shifts to Mike, and he expresses his doubts about being in the delivery room, making Gloria angry.

Over dinner at their modest table for two in their now-furnished and decorated house, Gloria won't speak to Mike; following which they get into an argument in the kitchen. Archie and Edith come over for Sybil's visit, Archie shaking Mike's hand for his sensible decision, only to crush an egg that Gloria had just put there in a sarcastic gesture. Sybil (Francine Beers) arrives and proceeds to dangle a ring on a string over Gloria's belly, the type of swing determining whether it will be a boy or girl. Everyone gets invested in cheering the ring on as it alternates between swinging back and forth or in a circle...ultimately settling on the former, determining that it will be a boy. Afterward, Mike asks Sybil about her delivery pain and learns that her husband wasn't in the room for any of her four births, which Mike initially sees as supporting his decision. But then Edith and Sybil exchange stories about their positive experiences in the delivery room, which causes Mike to reconsider. Mike takes Gloria into the kitchen to tell her that he's changed his mind, and they make up. He's still nervous, but informed by Edith's story, wants Gloria to see the birth of her baby in his eyes.



M*A*S*H
"Hey, Doc"
Originally aired October 10, 1975
Frndly said:
The doctors are hit by an epidemic of requests for special favors.

After a poker game, motor pool sergeant Kimble (Bruce Kirby), who's about to be discharged, shares his plan with the guys to smuggle home some supplies for starting a Korean restaurant, which means he needs a medical exemption to flying. (IMDb indicates that this whole premise is anachronistic, as soldiers were still transported primarily by ship in this era.) But the exemption requires a third doctor to sign it, and the guys have assessed Potter to be too honest. Meanwhile, the camp's been having an issue with a sniper, so Potter calls for help and gets a British patrol led by Lieutenant Chivers (Ted Hamilton). In the mess tent, Chivers asks the guys about doing an under-the-table operation on his ingrown toenail, as he could actually get in serious trouble for allowing such a condition to develop. He agrees to pay them two bottles of scotch--a not-atypical arrangement with which Potter has experience. A tank commander, Colonel Griswald (Frank Marth), visits the camp to see a wounded man in his unit whom he doesn't know by sight. He approaches Hawkeye in private about getting an off-the-record penicillin shot for implied VD. B.J. approaches Kimble about arranging the exemption for a new microscope, their old one having been stolen.

Burns--who's jealous of Margaret exhibiting attraction to the tank commander--refuses to play ball with the exemption. Immediately after Chivers makes good on the scotch, both bottles are casualties in a sniper attack. Potter gets the idea that having a tank around would intimidate the sniper, so Hawk calls in a favor from Griswald, resorting to blackmail to persuade him. Griswald delivers a unit in need of maintenance. Wanting to prove to Margaret that he's trained to drive a tank, Burns takes a farcical joyride, losing control of the tank and taking out the women's shower, the Swamp, and Potter's Jeep. Potter pulls out his sidearm to put his scrapped ride out of its misery.

In the coda, the guys improvise an excuse for Frank's joyride, giving them leverage to have him sign the exemption.



Hawaii Five-O
"Death's Name Is Sam"
Originally aired October 10, 1975
Paramount+ said:
A road accident starts the trail towards a plot to use SAM missiles to bring down a VIP jet plane.

The episode opens with an older Asian man named Timor Ambok (George Takei in too much age makeup for a character who's said to be 40) trying to hail a taxi at the airport only to be hit by a car. An observer in shades (George Oshiro, I presume, whose character is listed as Mystery Man) observes with interest and reports to another party by phone about the status of Ambok's suitcase. When Mr. Ambok wakes up in the hospital and doesn't find his suitcase in the closet, he takes a cyanide pill that was hidden in his clothes. The case is found to contain a metal cylinder with Russian markings. Consulting with government intelligence weapons and explosives expert Pete Masters (Lou Frizzell), Steve's informed that it's one-fifth of a heat-seeking surface-to-air (SAM) missile. McGarrett speculates that this incident is one piece of a larger operation to smuggle SAM missiles into Hawaii to shoot down unknown aircraft. Five-O uses a computer to dig up Nathaniel Blake, a younger police officer who bears a resemblance to Ambok and is also of Malaysian descent (Takei, initially sporting a 'stache). News of Ambok's suicide having been withheld, Five-O disguises and trains Blake to impersonate Ambok and infiltrate whatever he was into.

We're clued in to the intended target when we switch the UN Building in New York, where security is arranged for the travel of Boon Lianuk (John Chung), president-in-exile of Camponesia, and his family...via a low-profile commercial flight that will be making a stop in Honolulu.

While Mystery Man stakes out the hospital, Blake is smuggled in via ambulance only to be wheeled back out as Ambok. As he taxis to the ever-popular Ilikai Hotel, MM reports to his boss again, who by this point we can tell is being played by John Colicos. When MM reports to Colicos again via an airport phone regarding security screenings, it puts Duke on his tail. At the hotel, which is being staked out by Chin, a woman named Evelyn (Constance Towers) pays a visit to Not Timor, maintaining a cover as an old acquaintance while inviting him out to her and Harold's place. She then arranges for a couple of ringers dressed to resemble her and Timor to leave the hotel from the room next door, foiling Five-O's surveillance while Blake is driven out to the seaside Thorncrest estate, where he's greeted by Harold (Colicos), who's throwing a casual-looking party. When Blake spots a jigsaw puzzle of a SAM missile and handheld launcher with one missing piece, he takes the piece from Ambok's pocket--the previously enigmatic item having been found among Ambok's possessions--and puts it in place, at which point Mr. Thorncrest welcomes him to the CLF and takes him to the nerve center of Operation Turkey Shoot, where Mr. T uses Ambok's component to assemble a missile, and the progress of Lianuk's plane is being tracked via radio.

At the airport, a woman named Carmen Hewitt (Darcy Hinton Cook) tries to get out of having her baggage screened and is apprehended; as is MM, by Chin and Duke, when he tries to call in about it. When Hewitt's found to be a known radical affiliated with the Camponesian Liberation Front, she asks for her jacket and tries to find her cyanide capsule, only for McGarrett to hold it in front of her. At Thorncrest Manor, Blake escapes in a helicopter that's just arrived with the last part for a second missile, from which he radios McGarrett about the departure time of the unknown flight from New York before the chopper is shot down by a handheld SAM launcher.

Upon request, Jonathan Kaye fills McGarrett in regarding the highly classified VIP on the flight, which is too far along to turn back. From the tower, McGarrett instructs the flight crew to divert to Hilo, but this maneuver is thwarted by a timely fuel truck explosion at the runway there which is taken to be sabotage. Forced to restore the original flight plan, McGarrett consults with Masters about diverting the heat-seeking missile. While a launcher-armed Thorncrest rides in the back of a van onto the runway, McGarrett orders a barrage of flares fired along the plane's approach. Thorncrest gets his missile off just before Danno jumps into his moving van from another vehicle. The missile veers off to one of the flares and detonates and the plane lands safely. While the Thorncrest estate is being raided and the CLF members there, including Mrs. T, are taken into custody, McGarrett greets Lianuk as he and his family disembark.


 
Steve and Oscar watch from the wings as John Perry's singing a loungey version of "Can't Take My Eyes Off You" on a theater stage.
Over the years, my impression of Six-Million Dollar Man was that it started out cool like James Bond, became kind of boring and mainstream in the middle, and then got cool and comic-booky again at the end. My timeline was obviously a little off, but this was always the episode I remembered that represented the boring stretch-- not because I dislike Sonny Bono, but because it's just so generic and lackluster.

Once the two of them break character, John introduces Steve to his backup singers, Linda, Louise, and Laura
"Steve, meet Dawn."

Jayne Kennedy
I mainly remember her as being a possible replacement for Kate Jackson on Charlie's Angels.

Oscar privately informs Steve that his former roomie is a courier for an espionage ring.
"We're assigning you to the case because of the conflict of interest."

Oscar explains that cassette tapes containing top secret intel have been delivered in various cities that Perry was playing in at the time.
They should use the kind that self destruct.

Afterward in a Manila warehouse, a Mr. Damon (Robin Clarke) reports to an art object-collecting Mr. Buckner (recent Bond henchman Bruce Glover, who just passed this year) about the change in itinerary, which could ruin their plans.
You'd think they'd be prepared to deal with changes and delays, considering they're using a touring musician without his knowledge.

then chats with Linda, who teases him about his golf swing on the Moon.
"That was the other guy."

Later at Steve's room, John finds Steve's open wallet with his OSI ID showing and asks him about it
"Why do you leave your wallet lying around open, exposing information that you want to keep confidential, Steve?"

a lighthearted song that he claims Steve wrote, "Know Your Up Side from Your Down."
A song about working in zero gravity, no doubt. :rommie:

Steve comes to tied in a boathouse, breaks his bonds, busts down a wall, and takes out the hoods watching him...
Steve's lucky streak of not being knocked out by anybody willing to kill him continues.

He then gets away in their limo and radios Oscar as he flies to Manila in a fighter.
That's pretty cool. :rommie:

Steve still doesn't believe Perry's behind all of this.
"Face it, Oscar, he's just too dumb."

John meets up with Linda at a shady-looking warehouse under false pretenses on her part...which turns out to be the lair of Mr. Buckner, who has Perry TV Fu'ed, takes the case, and informs a now-reluctant Linda that he'll be using Mr. Perry as a hostage to get out of Manila.
If he was smart, he would have just dropped the whole scheme once he knew OSI was onto him.

Steve has to hold back John from trying to take on a heavy goon with his dubious karate skills. View attachment 49427
I actually do get a kick out of Sonny Bono. He reminds me a little of my Uncle Mike. :rommie:

This one actually puts up a good fight against Steve, but is ultimately KO'ed, with John cheering his buddy on all the way.
That's part of the problem. Steve didn't really come up against much of a challenge in this episode.

he gets even for Steve's supposed gag at the airfield by saving Steve from a crate being dropped on him from the rafters. After he explains that Linda set him up to take the tapes from Kimbrough, whom he was told was an arranger, Louise casually pushes the crate out her way.
This is the part I remember most vividly. :rommie:

she's arranged for Sybil Gooley who works there to come to Mike and Gloria's to determine if the baby will be a boy or a girl
I remember that character. I wonder if she was in more than one episode.

Archie gets Mike going over remarks about the baby's father being Polish, which takes a strange turn when Mike recites several P-word jokes and Archie, insisting that he'll defend his grandson from such remarks, chastises Mike for knocking "minororities".
Bizarre, yet utterly realistic. :rommie:

while Mike mocks him for putting the word "youse" in God's mouth.
I think I remember that. "God said, 'Youse?'"

We also get this line, which I think came up before, either in another episode or in discussion...

Archie: Faith is somethin' that you'll believe that nobody in his right mind will believe in.
Yes, both. It's one of my favorite quotes, which I use frequently to this day. :rommie:

The subject comes up of how she and Mike have agreed that she'll have natural childbirth, which will involve him being in the delivery room. Archie's outrage at the idea draws attention from Mike's reactions to the conversation, which signal the audience that he's less than comfortable with the arrangement.
It cracks me up that this was controversial at that time. It very quickly became the norm.

Archie shaking Mike's hand for his sensible decision, only to crush an egg that Gloria had just put there in a sarcastic gesture.
I remember this too. "You've been keeping that there for ten years just waiting for me to shake your hand." :rommie:

ultimately settling on the former, determining that it will be a boy.
Sybil is correct.

He's still nervous, but informed by Edith's story, wants Gloria to see the birth of her baby in his eyes.
Aww. But that's not the part that freaks people out. :rommie:

(IMDb indicates that this whole premise is anachronistic, as soldiers were still transported primarily by ship in this era.)
Interesting fun fact.

But the exemption requires a third doctor to sign it, and the guys have assessed Potter to be too honest.
:rommie:

Meanwhile, the camp's been having an issue with a sniper, so Potter calls for help
He didn't just send Klinger up into them thar hills? :rommie:

He agrees to pay them two bottles of scotch--a not-atypical arrangement with which Potter has experience.
He's not too honest when it comes to two bottles of Scotch. :rommie:

B.J. approaches Kimble about arranging the exemption for a new microscope, their old one having been stolen.
Who would steal a microscope?

Immediately after Chivers makes good on the scotch, both bottles are casualties in a sniper attack.
I think that's a violation of the Geneva Convention.

Wanting to prove to Margaret that he's trained to drive a tank, Burns takes a farcical joyride, losing control of the tank and taking out the women's shower, the Swamp, and Potter's Jeep. Potter pulls out his sidearm to put his scrapped ride out of its misery.
I remember this. :rommie:

Timor Ambok (George Takei in too much age makeup for a character who's said to be 40)
Hey, he had to work with William Shatner.

When Mr. Ambok wakes up in the hospital and doesn't find his suitcase in the closet, he takes a cyanide pill that was hidden in his clothes.
I would have asked somebody about it first, on the off chance that security was keeping it in a safe or something.

Steve's informed that it's one-fifth of a heat-seeking surface-to-air (SAM) missile.
This is interesting.

McGarrett speculates that this incident is one piece of a larger operation to smuggle SAM missiles into Hawaii to shoot down unknown aircraft.
This strikes me more as stating the obvious than speculation. :rommie:

Five-O uses a computer to dig up Nathaniel Blake, a younger police officer who bears a resemblance to Ambok and is also of Malaysian descent (Takei, initially sporting a 'stache).
Whew! I thought Takei just had a Police Squad!-style cameo.

president-in-exile of Camponesia
Man, that's worse than Mission: Impossible. :rommie:

played by John Colicos
Baltar. And a Klingon whose name escapes me. Kor, maybe?

maintaining a cover as an old acquaintance while inviting him out to her and Harold's place.
Good thing she wasn't really an old acquaintance.

She then arranges for a couple of ringers dressed to resemble her and Timor to leave the hotel from the room next door
Kind of an ironic twist. :rommie:

When Blake spots a jigsaw puzzle of a SAM missile and handheld launcher with one missing piece, he takes the piece from Ambok's pocket--the previously enigmatic item having been found among Ambok's possessions--and puts it in place
That's a cool little spy movie maneauver.

Mr. T uses Ambok's component to assemble a missile, and the progress of Lianuk's plane is being tracked via radio.
Luckily, Five-Oh had the foresight to disable the component. Right? ...right?

she asks for her jacket and tries to find her cyanide capsule, only for McGarrett to hold it in front of her.
"Fool me once...." Was this woman delivering a component for yet another SAM? She seems kind of superfluous to the plot.

Blake escapes in a helicopter that's just arrived with the last part for a second missile, from which he radios McGarrett about the departure time of the unknown flight from New York before the chopper is shot down by a handheld SAM launcher.
They killed Sulu?! He didn't get to parachute out?

Jonathan Kaye fills McGarrett in regarding the highly classified VIP on the flight, which is too far along to turn back.
That seems unlikely, but they still must have a bunch of options in Hawaii alone.

While a launcher-armed Thorncrest rides in the back of a van onto the runway, McGarrett orders a barrage of flares fired along the plane's approach. Thorncrest gets his missile off just before Danno jumps into his moving van from another vehicle. The missile veers off to one of the flares and detonates and the plane lands safely.
Cool. This was a nice little Bondian adventure.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


October 13
  • The bicentennial American dollar coin was placed into circulation by the United States Treasury. For the first time, the dollar coin had no silver content; the 1974 coins had 40 percent silver. The dollar still had the image of President Dwight D. Eisenhower on the obverse, with "1776–1976" beneath, but the reverse featured a new image, showing the Liberty Bell and the Moon.

October 16
  • The first of the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) series, GOES 1, was launched by the United States and placed in geosynchronous orbit over the Indian Ocean to gather meteorological data.

October 17
  • The Justices of the United States Supreme Court voted 7–1 not to assign any decisions to the ailing Justice William O. Douglas, and to postpone resolution of any cases where his vote would be important, after the ailing Douglas had been observed falling to sleep during arguments. Douglas did not participate in the vote, and Byron R. White, who wrote a protest to his brethren on the Court, was the only dissenting vote. Douglas was hospitalized again two weeks later and retired from the Court.

October 18
  • Died: Al Lettieri, 47, American movie actor (The Godfather), of a heart attack


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:


Leaving the chart:
  • "Daisy Jane," America
  • "Fallin' in Love," Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds
  • "Feel Like Makin' Love," Bad Company
  • "Main Title (Theme from 'Jaws')," John Williams

New on the chart:

"Secret Love," Freddy Fender
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(#20 US; #10 AC; #1 Country)

"Our Day Will Come," Frankie Valli
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(#11 US; #2 AC; #10 Dance; #51 UK)

"My Little Town," Simon & Garfunkel
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(#9 US; #1 AC; #52 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Six Million Dollar Man, "The Wolf Boy"
  • M*A*S*H, "The Bus"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "The Case Against McGarrett"
  • Shazam!, "The Odd Couple" (season finale)
  • Emergency!, "The Indirect Method"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Mary's Aunt"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "Carol's Wedding"



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




Interesting that he's doing tracks from Piano Man rather than the more recent Streetlife Serenade.


He doesn't have to belong to one decade or the other. He really broke out later in the '70s and had a solid streak than ran through the '80s.


I'm sure they've got a system.


Oh yeah, I remember those now.


Crystal them persuasion
Mm-hmm
It's a new vibration

View attachment 49379
Three good ones 👍
 
Over the years, my impression of Six-Million Dollar Man was that it started out cool like James Bond, became kind of boring and mainstream in the middle, and then got cool and comic-booky again at the end. My timeline was obviously a little off,
Was it? Season 3 of 5 would be the middle.

"Steve, meet Dawn."
Wrong variety show. :p

I mainly remember her as being a possible replacement for Kate Jackson on Charlie's Angels.
Interesting. She was certainly very striking, and it would have brought a little more diversity to the Angels.

"We're assigning you to the case because of the conflict of interest."
And because he could tag along without arousing suspicion.

You'd think they'd be prepared to deal with changes and delays, considering they're using a touring musician without his knowledge.
Apparently Linda had some sway on the itinerary.

A song about working in zero gravity, no doubt. :rommie:
Heh, I hadn't thought about that connection. And I can't find anything about the song, so it may have been written for the episode.

Steve's lucky streak of not being knocked out by anybody willing to kill him continues.
At least his foes don't routinely leave him in colorful death traps and not stick around to watch.

That's pretty cool. :rommie:
The fighter we saw in the air was an F-104 Starfighter with a camo paint scheme. The one that landed was a silver/gray F-105 Thunderchief.

"Face it, Oscar, he's just too dumb."
Harsh.

If he was smart, he would have just dropped the whole scheme once he knew OSI was onto him.
Then we wouldn't have episodes.

I actually do get a kick out of Sonny Bono. He reminds me a little of my Uncle Mike. :rommie:
Lee Majors seemed to have an easy rapport with celebrity guests.

That's part of the problem. Steve didn't really come up against much of a challenge in this episode.
It was more about the personal stake for him.

I remember that character. I wonder if she was in more than one episode.
Only this one unless they recast her.

I think I remember that. "God said, 'Youse?'"
Yep. And Archie kept quoting it that way.

I remember this too. "You've been keeping that there for ten years just waiting for me to shake your hand." :rommie:
And IMDb pointed out at least two previous occasions when they'd shaken hands, including when they made their bet, which was just last season, IIRC. Of course, a guy who quotes God as saying "youse" may not be a reliable narrator....

Sybil is correct.
Thus maintaining benefit of the doubt for her supernatural gift. It's worth noting that Edith's first reaction was to express a little disappointment.

Aww. But that's not the part that freaks people out. :rommie:
I guess you'd have some stories to tell in that department.

He didn't just send Klinger up into them thar hills? :rommie:
Say, maybe it's not a Korean...maybe it's Private Jenkins.

He's not too honest when it comes to two bottles of Scotch. :rommie:
Off-the-record procedures are one thing...letting someone steal supplies from his camp is another. Honestly, I'm not sure why the guys were so invested in helping the sergeant.

Who would steal a microscope?
Not addressed.

I would have asked somebody about it first, on the off chance that security was keeping it in a safe or something.
Which they were.

This strikes me more as stating the obvious than speculation. :rommie:
Postulation, perhaps?

Whew! I thought Takei just had a Police Squad!-style cameo.
Having arranged the cast list before watching, I was a little confused in the early scenes and thought maybe the Ambok character was a guy named Blake in disguise in the first place. This was fed into by the makeup job looking more extreme to me in the first scene.

Man, that's worse than Mission: Impossible. :rommie:
Not really. :lol:

Baltar. And a Klingon whose name escapes me. Kor, maybe?
Yep.

That's a cool little spy movie maneauver.
I recall M:I using a drawing completion as a secret sign that an infiltrating agent had to figure out...I think it was Dan in one of the handful of Season 1 episodes that I'd most recently reviewed.

Luckily, Five-Oh had the foresight to disable the component. Right? ...right?
It was really just a hollow cylinder that screwed into the other parts.

"Fool me once...." Was this woman delivering a component for yet another SAM?
Yes.

She seems kind of superfluous to the plot.
Well, they closed a loose end by bagging MM; and identified the organization she was affiliated with, which helped them to narrow down the target. Also, it would have meant one less missile for the CLF. They also used one to splash Blake's getaway chopper, so the one they fired at the jetliner may have been their only shot at that point.

They killed Sulu?! He didn't get to parachute out?
Splashed over the drink...by Kor, no less.

That seems unlikely, but they still must have a bunch of options in Hawaii alone.
Seemed believable to me. They couldn't go back to the mainland because of fuel; and there probably aren't that many airfields that can take large jetliners in Hawaii. A quick lookup indicates that the only other international commercial airport is Kona, which started in 1970 and may not have been taking overseas jets at that point.

Cool. This was a nice little Bondian adventure.
Danno and Kor's stunt doubles even got to roll out of the moving van onto the tarmac.
H5123.jpg
 
Last edited:
Was it? Season 3 of 5 would be the middle.
But I think we've already started getting the comic booky stuff that I associate with the final seasons. I think. Unless I'm mixing up timelines again.

Wrong variety show. :p
:rommie:

Interesting. She was certainly very striking, and it would have brought a little more diversity to the Angels.
She would have been a much better choice. I forget the actress who replaced Kate, but the character's name was Tiffany and that pretty much described her. Jayne Kennedy would have had the glamour they were looking for, but also the physicality of Kate Jackson, which is kind of important for an adventure show.

And because he could tag along without arousing suspicion.
Well, I guess that part makes sense. :rommie:

At least his foes don't routinely leave him in colorful death traps and not stick around to watch.
I might be up for that. :rommie:

The fighter we saw in the air was an F-104 Starfighter with a camo paint scheme. The one that landed was a silver/gray F-105 Thunderchief.
I almost never noticed stuff like that. :rommie:

Being a bit simple was kind of his schtick.

Then we wouldn't have episodes.
True. :rommie:

Lee Majors seemed to have an easy rapport with celebrity guests.
His easygoing personality was pretty much half the show, I think.

It was more about the personal stake for him.
True.

Only this one unless they recast her.
Another Stretch Cunningham. :rommie:

Of course, a guy who quotes God as saying "youse" may not be a reliable narrator....
Everybody knows that God said, "Thouse."

Thus maintaining benefit of the doubt for her supernatural gift. It's worth noting that Edith's first reaction was to express a little disappointment.
Yeah, the stereotype is that women want girl babies and men want boy babies.

I guess you'd have some stories to tell in that department.
I was musing about it later. It was actually ten years to the month after this episode that I went to work in Women's Health. By the time I was running the Midwifery Service, it was normal to see not only husbands in the room, but mothers and siblings and even the patient's other children. The funniest, to me, were the patients' younger sisters, who almost invariably would stagger out into the corridor swearing that they would never have kids. :rommie:

Say, maybe it's not a Korean...maybe it's Private Jenkins.
It was no accident! Hail Hydra! :rommie:

Off-the-record procedures are one thing...letting someone steal supplies from his camp is another. Honestly, I'm not sure why the guys were so invested in helping the sergeant.
They were drunk. :rommie:

Not addressed.
Probably another MASH unit.

Which they were.
Then he definitely jumped the gun, if Five-Oh wasn't on to him yet.

Postulation, perhaps?
Definitely. :rommie:

Not really. :lol:
:rommie:

I recall M:I using a drawing completion as a secret sign that an infiltrating agent had to figure out...I think it was Dan in one of the handful of Season 1 episodes that I'd most recently reviewed.
It was a nice gimmick.

It was really just a hollow cylinder that screwed into the other parts.
Hmm. It seems to me that they could have done something if it's a vital component. But then again, that might just have made it more dangerous.

Well, they closed a loose end by bagging MM; and identified the organization she was affiliated with, which helped them to narrow down the target. Also, it would have meant one less missile for the CLF. They also used one to splash Blake's getaway chopper, so the one they fired at the jetliner may have been their only shot at that point.
Ah, okay.

Splashed over the drink...by Kor, no less.
Oh, that's just wrong. :rommie:

Seemed believable to me. They couldn't go back to the mainland because of fuel; and there probably aren't that many airfields that can take large jetliners in Hawaii. A quick lookup indicates that the only other international commercial airport is Kona, which started in 1970 and may not have been taking overseas jets at that point.
But even on the other islands? It seems like they would have enough fuel for that.

Danno and Kor's stunt doubles even got to roll out of the moving van onto the tarmac. View attachment 49475
Nice. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



Shazam!
"Speak No Evil"
Originally aired October 11, 1975
Edited iTunes said:
A boy realizes that his silence to protect his friends, who are guilty of causing a small fire at a high school, is causing an innocent person to be accused of the crime.

Vic (Scott Rogers) and his crony Sam (Eric Chase) persuade Paul Jerome (Danny Bonaduce, thankfully not showing his midriff) to accompany them in breaking into the school on Sunday by playing the chicken card. At the van, the cultural quote is in play again as the guys work on a Mona Lisa puzzle. The Elders call to talk of friendship carrying advantages and obligations, and about knowing when to stop. At the school, the boys slip through a loosely chained gate, followed by Paul's dog, Rex. Messing around in a chemistry lab, one of the boys knocks over some chemicals, causing fumes. When they tease him again for being a chicken, Paul leaves, inadvertently leaving Rex behind. The other two boys decide to split when a fire starts, Vic carrying out a typewriter. When the van passes the school, the guys see the smoke, get out to look, and hear Rex.

Billy: Holy moly, there's a dog inside there.​

Unable to squeeze through the gate, Billy changes to Cap, and instead of going over the gate, takes the time to bust the chain. He passes Rex out through a window, then uses a fire extinguisher on the small blaze. Called by Mentor, Sheriff Dave Isbeck (Melvin S. Allen) arrives as the situation is under control.

The Shazamic Duo then coincidentally pay a visit to Paul's place, where his father, John Jerome (Hal Lynch), runs a fishing spot with RV accommodations. Billy sees Rex and recognizes him from the school. Confronted with this, Paul denies knowing anything about the fire, but his truth-valuing father is doubtful, chastising Paul that silence can be a lie. Mentor assesses that Paul was genuinely surprised about the fire, but is hiding something.

Passing by, the sheriff updates the guys that he's apprehended a suspect--a new, ESL custodian who had books from the library in his locker, whom he thinks was after the typewriter. Paul slips by asserting that Mr. Atropolis didn't do it, triggering an Elder flashback. Paul promptly goes to confess his part in the incident to his father, but won't fink on his friends. Mentor and Billy encourage him to do the right thing, but Vic and Sam intercept Paul as he's walking to the sheriff's office and chase after him.

The sheriff returns to the fishing spot with further news that the custodian was found to have an alibi, as he was being tutored at the time by an English teacher who loaned him the books. Paul scales the gate of a power plant in an attempt to give his friends the slip, but they follow. Vic carelessly knocks over an electrical thingy into another electrical thingy, causing electricity to arc and spark over and around him and Sam. Paul goes out to get help, and the sheriff is still with the guys when he gets the call. Billy changes and flies to the scene, where he lands inside instead of busting in and separates the two electrical thingies.
Sz51.jpg

Cap PSAs the audience through a lecture to the boys that electricity is very dangerous and they must never try to do what he just did.

The boys wait for the sheriff, and are accompanied by Paul and his father to talk to the local judge. Mentor and Billy return to their fishing, the latter turning on a portable radio.

Mentor: Billy...you do believe it is the duty of a friend to tell another the truth, don't you?​
Billy: Yeah, of course.​
Mentor: Well, in that case, your taste in music...is awful.​

Billy: Paul learned a very valuable lesson in today's story. He learned that words like "chicken" and "fink" are awful words that are used by people who have done something wrong and have something to hide. So never be afraid of being called a name. As long as you're sure what you're doing is right, there's no word, no name, that can harm you. See ya next week.​



This week's Isis gets pretty heavy, delving into Very Special Episode territory.
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Emergency!
"The Inspection"
Originally aired October 11, 1975
IMDb/MeTV said:
The station becomes aware of the Battalion Chief's impending inspection. A wife is convinced that her husband's heart transplant means he no longer loves her. Paramedics aid a parachutist snagged on a radio tower. Dr. Brackett treats a veterinarian. An accident victim goes into shock.

Boot returns! While the crew is waxing and polishing their vehicles, Johnny plays a prank on Chet, sending him out to his car so he can find a dummy in the trunk, which he initially thinks is a dead body (not for the first time, we're told). After Cap'n Stanley informs the crew of a visit that day from Chief Houts (the actual name of the chief at the time), Engine 51 and other units are called to a garbage fire. Cap'n Stanley briefly puts a barking Boot on the mic with the dispatcher (who's seen yet again). Squad 51 is then called to a heart case at the home of Frank and Evelyn Fenady (Warren Berlinger and Jeanne Cooper, whose characters share the surname of the episode director). They learn that Frank, the victim, had a heart transplant six months prior--which his wife resents and was the subject of the argument they were in when he had his attack. At Rampart, Evelyn is outspoken that Frank's no longer the man she married because of his replacement organ. The Brackett takes her into his office to give her a stern lecture describing what the heart actually is and warning her that her giving Frank grief about his transplant could threaten to cause him to psychosomatically reject the organ.

Johnny's expressing his anxiety concerning the titular event when the squad is called to accompany another engine to a unknown rescue. Racing to the scene, the squad is splashed by a car going through a puddle in the opposite direction, following which the call is cancelled. Once they're back at base, Station 51 is called to aide an injured skydiver up in the hills. They find the skydiver dangling unconscious from his parachute, which is caught on an electric tower. A personality from KJV, standing on top of a brightly decorated station van with a cameraman, explains that the victim, Lucky Collins, was doing a stunt for a promo.
Emg95.jpg
The paramedics climb the tower and wake the victim to enlist his cooperation in securing himself on the tower framework while they detach his chute and hook him up to a line so that Johnny can rappel down with him attached.

At Rampart, Brackett and Dix tend to veterinarian Felix Schell (Roger Bowen), who's got bad lacerations on an arm obtained from one of his patients, a boxer. Dr. Schell explains that this is a routine hazard in his field given his patients' inability to vocally communicate, and that he'd normally patch himself up for a less severe injury. The trio proceed to casually chat about their professions.

When the paramedics return to the station, still needing to clean the squad, they find the rest of the crew busily going out of their way to make the place more presentable, which includes having thrown out leftovers from a lunch that the paramedics didn't have. Johnny reminds Cap'n Stanley of a novelty clock hanging in his office that has a cartoonish figure on it with a photo of Chief Houts as its head. The station is called to an accident in the L.A. riverbed--the scene of exciting chases on Adam-12. They find a young dragracer named Paul (the last acting credit of former child actor Gerald [Jean-Michel] Michenaud, who went on to rack up a lot of producer credits in later decades) trapped in his overturned vehicle in a channel. The paramedics pry open the door with a power tool and prybar, but as they're starting to tend to the victim, Johnny cuts his hand on a sharp edge and has to be treated. Chet and Stoker assist Roy as he carries on. Paul is dragged out onto a board and his legs and lower torso are placed in an inflatable suit for containing blood loss and channeling his blood flow up to vital organs. An ambulance arrives to transport the stabilized patient to Rampart.

At the hospital, Roy chats with the Fenadys as they're checking out, to find that they're getting along much better now that Evelyn is acting contrite. X-rays reveal that Paul has hip and pelvis fractures and potential abdominal lining damage. As Brackett and Early start to deflate the suit, a previously conscious Paul reacts badly and they have him taken up for immediate operation.

In the coda, while Johnny's rewaxing the squad and the engine crew is waiting at attention, Roy opines that they've been stood up. Cap assembles the crew to update them that the chief came by for inspection during their first morning call, and that his only comment was about the clock in Stanley's office being three minutes fast.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Ted's Moment of Glory"
Originally aired October 11, 1975
Frndly said:
Ted lands an audition for a job as a game-show emcee, but Lou and Mary aren't so sure they want him to go.

Ted makes it known that he's been asked to fly out to New York to audition for hosting a new game show, and goes into boasting about his old and new salaries, citing everybody else's for comparison. Everyone takes the announcement itself in stride. At Mary's, Georgette expresses her fear--stoked by Ted's own boasting--that Ted will leave her for Barbara Walters.

Cut to Obligatory Establishing Shot of the Empire State Building and Ted's bow-tied audition for 50,000 Dollar Steeplechase, which seems like it would just be one rotating segment on The Price Is Right. Aided by a hostess named Ginger in a sexy jockey costume (Dian Parkinson), Ted laughs at scripted jokes as he delivers them while greeting the contestants--Elliott Jensen from Denver, Colo. (Frederic Franklyn); Mrs. Charlotte Gruen of Pasadena, Calif. (Marilyn Roberts); and Mrs. Joyce Franklin of Cape Cod, Mass. (Olive Dunbar)...all sitting on fake horsies and wearing jockey hats while they're answering questions with the help of light-up buzzers that make theme-appropriate sound effects, and their progress is tracked on a board depicting horses on a racetrack. When the audition is over, the producer (Richard Balin) matter-of-factly tells Ted that he has other people to see and he'll be in touch.

Two weeks later at the newsroom, Ted's anxious for a call, and the others try to console him about presumably not getting the job. Ted finally gets his call and exclaims that he did get it, then takes turns lifting everyone in bear hugs, which a latecoming Lou agrees to once Ted explains.
MTM30.jpg
At the bar, Mary and Lou discuss their options for replacing Ted, but their enthusiasm is diminished as they're forced to face their affection for him.

After what's supposed to be his last newscast, Ted exchanges goodbyes with Mary and Murray. Then Lou enters and lures Ted into his office with one word: "Stay." Inside, Lou stokes Ted's pride in being a newsman, making clear along the way his own appreciation for Ted's role. Ted makes a call from Lou's phone to decline the job, and Lou has to encourage him to turn down a series of increasing salary offers.

In the coda, Ted's back to his newscast, now using jokes scripted for the game show.



The Bob Newhart Show
"The Heavyweights"
Originally aired October 11, 1975
Wiki said:
Carol is stuck with one of Bob's overweight patients on a date.

Bob's now running an "Overweight Workshop," attended by Michelle Nardo, Dr. Tupperman, Leonard de Paolo (Cliff Osmond), and Louise Gross (Marcia Lewis). While Michelle credits the group for having helped her lose ten pounds, they discuss silly alternate names for the workshop, and an ahead-of-his-time Mr. de Paolo gruffly expresses that being overweight isn't the problem, it's the people who have issues with it. At home, Emily learns that Bob's been overeating on his workshop days and it comes out that he doesn't know how to relate to overweight people because he's never been one of them. Emily gives him the idea of having Carol, who's said to have formerly been overweight (I'm wondering if this has come up before), sit in on the group.

For the next session, Bernie brings an office scale for everyone to weigh in, and a jar for anyone who's gained to put quarters in--which Bob makes sure hasn't been used. Carol tries to encouragingly share her own experiences and finds herself maneuvered into going out with de Paolo to prove her sincerity. Carol calls Bob at home to object to de Paolo's lewd suggestions for the evening, which she's negotiated down into going to an adult theater and back to his place. She then comes by the apartment the next day to accuse Bob of using her. He encourages Carol to go into the office and confront de Paolo about her issues with him in front of the group. At the session, she describes his behavior in no uncertain terms and doesn't let him hide behind his weight as an excuse. After Carol leaves, Leonard makes a show of turning over a new leaf, but turns down a date proposal from Louise on the basis that he's not blind.

In the coda, Emily attempts to downplay her own weight while declining to use the scale in Bob's office.



NBC's Saturday Night
Episode 1, hosted by George Carlin
Originally aired October 11-12, 1975

Well, it seems that Peacock now has all seasons of SNL available except for the first. Whatever the reason behind that, it keeps the viewing load more manageable. Anyway, here's another famous first from the show's YouTube account:
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First musical guests were Janis Ian and Billy Preston.



But I think we've already started getting the comic booky stuff that I associate with the final seasons. I think. Unless I'm mixing up timelines again.
Bigfoot's still in our future.

Another Stretch Cunningham. :rommie:
I was thinking about that, wondering if maybe she's been referenced before.

It was no accident! Hail Hydra! :rommie:
Or all of his attacks were just misfires.

Probably another MASH unit.
Or locals.

MI07.jpg

Hmm. It seems to me that they could have done something if it's a vital component. But then again, that might just have made it more dangerous.
Might've tipped off the bad guys, too.

But even on the other islands? It seems like they would have enough fuel for that.
Which other islands? I'm not following you.
 
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Paul Jerome (Danny Bonaduce, thankfully not showing his midriff)
Still showing that face, though....

the guys work on a Mona Lisa puzzle
"Hey, these pieces have a smile, but these other ones don't."

followed by Paul's dog, Rex.
The Wonder Dog?!

Messing around in a chemistry lab, one of the boys knocks over some chemicals, causing fumes.
Drink!

Paul leaves, inadvertently leaving Rex behind.
Wow.

The other two boys decide to split when a fire starts
"There's bound to be a sinkhole or something any second now."

Vic carrying out a typewriter.
"This experience will make a great book."

Billy: Holy moly, there's a dog inside there.
"He's saying, I've been abandoned by my heartless owner to die painfully in a flaming chemical hell."

He passes Rex out through a window, then uses a fire extinguisher on the small blaze.
Eh, he should have blown it out or clapped his hands or something.

Called by Mentor, Sheriff Dave Isbeck (Melvin S. Allen) arrives as the situation is under control.
"Glad to see you boys, because this county has no deputies or firefighters. I'm lucky to have this car."

Billy sees Rex and recognizes him from the school.
"Those burn patterns are very familiar."

Paul slips by asserting that Mr. Atropolis didn't do it, triggering an Elder flashback.
There's no way the Elders would let a guy named Atropolis take the rap. :rommie:

Paul promptly goes to confess his part in the incident to his father, but won't fink on his friends.
You'd think the dad or sherrif would be able to figure it out from there.

Mentor and Billy encourage him to do the right thing, but Vic and Sam intercept Paul as he's walking to the sheriff's office and chase after him.
"We're gonna beat the crap out of you and compound our problems!"

The sheriff returns to the fishing spot with further news that the custodian was found to have an alibi, as he was being tutored at the time by an English teacher who loaned him the books.
That kind of lowered the stakes.

Vic carelessly knocks over an electrical thingy into another electrical thingy, causing electricity to arc and spark over and around him and Sam.
Drink!

Billy changes and flies to the scene, where he lands inside instead of busting in and separates the two electrical thingies.
View attachment 49488
Are those legit power plant thingies or just a couple of Van de Graaff generators? :rommie:

Cap PSAs the audience through a lecture to the boys that electricity is very dangerous and they must never try to do what he just did.
"Don't try this at home, kids."

The boys wait for the sheriff, and are accompanied by Paul and his father to talk to the local judge.
The county has a judge, anyway. :rommie:

Mentor: Billy...you do believe it is the duty of a friend to tell another the truth, don't you?
Billy: Yeah, of course.
Mentor: Well, in that case, your taste in music...is awful.
"The Monkees, man. You either love 'em or you hate 'em."

Billy: Paul learned a very valuable lesson in today's story. He learned that words like "chicken" and "fink" are awful words that are used by people who have done something wrong and have something to hide.
"He also learned not to break into school after hours, play with dangerous chemicals, allow a non-English speaking janitor to be falsely accused of a crime, trespass on private property, and mess with high-voltage equipment. Paul had a busy day."

This week's Isis gets pretty heavy, delving into Very Special Episode territory.
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Yikes. I already know you didn't like that one.

Boot returns!
This must have been National Dog Week or something.

Johnny plays a prank on Chet, sending him out to his car so he can find a dummy in the trunk, which he initially thinks is a dead body (not for the first time, we're told).
"Fool me 37 times, shame on me."

a visit that day from Chief Houts (the actual name of the chief at the time)
Nice touch.

the dispatcher (who's seen yet again)
Looks like he's in every episode now. He must be making some good extra money.

They learn that Frank, the victim, had a heart transplant six months prior--which his wife resents and was the subject of the argument they were in when he had his attack. At Rampart, Evelyn is outspoken that Frank's no longer the man she married because of his replacement organ.
Yeah, even today people think of the heart as the seat of emotion, which is one reason they're weirded out by transplants.

The Brackett takes her into his office to give her a stern lecture describing what the heart actually is and warning her that her giving Frank grief about his transplant could threaten to cause him to psychosomatically reject the organ.
Which is true.

Johnny's expressing his anxiety concerning the titular event when the squad is called to accompany another engine to a unknown rescue. Racing to the scene, the squad is splashed by a car going through a puddle in the opposite direction, following which the call is cancelled.
Was this just to get the vehicle dirty prior to inspection? :rommie:

A personality from KJV, standing on top of a brightly decorated station van with a cameraman, explains that the victim, Lucky Collins, was doing a stunt for a promo.
Man or beast, having Lucky for a nickname is tempting fate.

Is that the Wolfman?

The paramedics climb the tower and wake the victim to enlist his cooperation
"...five... more... minutes...."

Dr. Schell explains that this is a routine hazard in his field given his patients' inability to vocally communicate, and that he'd normally patch himself up for a less severe injury.
That probably does happen a lot.

Johnny reminds Cap'n Stanley of a novelty clock hanging in his office that has a cartoonish figure on it with a photo of Chief Houts as its head.
It's too bad Houts didn't have a cameo and see the clock. :rommie:

the L.A. riverbed--the scene of exciting chases on Adam-12.
A popular shooting location, if it's what I'm thinking of.

Paul is dragged out onto a board and his legs and lower torso are placed in an inflatable suit for containing blood loss and channeling his blood flow up to vital organs.
That's cool.

Roy chats with the Fenadys as they're checking out, to find that they're getting along much better now that Evelyn is acting contrite.
"Evelyn learned a valuable lesson today...."

As Brackett and Early start to deflate the suit, a previously conscious Paul reacts badly and they have him taken up for immediate operation.
Great, just when we think we know the outcome, they take it away from us! :rommie:

Cap assembles the crew to update them that the chief came by for inspection during their first morning call, and that his only comment was about the clock in Stanley's office being three minutes fast.
Which also means they didn't have to throw away those leftovers. :rommie:

Ted makes it known that he's been asked to fly out to New York to audition for hosting a new game show
No doubt a more appropriate gig for him. :rommie:

Georgette expresses her fear--stoked by Ted's own boasting--that Ted will leave her for Barbara Walters.
Actually, not a bad idea for an episode. :rommie:

Aided by a hostess named Ginger in a sexy jockey costume (Dian Parkinson)
Who I think was on the real Price is Right or some other game show.

the contestants--Elliott Jensen from Denver, Colo. (Frederic Franklyn); Mrs. Charlotte Gruen of Pasadena, Calif. (Marilyn Roberts); and Mrs. Joyce Franklin of Cape Cod, Mass. (Olive Dunbar)...
Go, Joyce! Go, Joyce!

all sitting on fake horsies and wearing jockey hats while they're answering questions with the help of light-up buzzers that make theme-appropriate sound effects, and their progress is tracked on a board depicting horses on a racetrack.
Sounds good. :rommie:

At the bar, Mary and Lou discuss their options for replacing Ted, but their enthusiasm is diminished as they're forced to face their affection for him.
This strains credulity a bit. But then his continued presence at the station all these years strains credulity a bit. :rommie:

Ted makes a call from Lou's phone to decline the job, and Lou has to encourage him to turn down a series of increasing salary offers.
Aha! Now I see Lou's true motivation. :rommie:

an ahead-of-his-time Mr. de Paolo gruffly expresses that being overweight isn't the problem, it's the people who have issues with it.
Like doctors. Those jerks. :rommie:

Emily gives him the idea of having Carol, who's said to have formerly been overweight (I'm wondering if this has come up before)
I'm not sure if it's come up before, but I'm pretty sure that it's true that she had a serious weight problem in her youth.

Bernie brings an office scale for everyone to weigh in, and a jar for anyone who's gained to put quarters in--which Bob makes sure hasn't been used.
That would be a good way to prevent theft. :rommie:

Carol calls Bob at home to object to de Paolo's lewd suggestions for the evening
"I'm telling your therapist on you!"

In the coda, Emily attempts to downplay her own weight while declining to use the scale in Bob's office.
I'll accept you as you are, Emily.

Anyway, here's another famous first from the show's YouTube account:
I love this routine. "In baseball, the goal is to go home." :rommie:

Bigfoot's still in our future.
True. Maybe I wasn't so far off.

I was thinking about that, wondering if maybe she's been referenced before.
Right, even if it was her only appearance, Edith may have talked about her.

Or locals.
Yeah, but what good would a microscope be except to sell it to another MASH unit, or maybe a hospital or something.

That wasn't George Takei-- it was Rollin Hand!

Might've tipped off the bad guys, too.
That's true.

Which other islands? I'm not following you.
Like Maui, mostly. They must have a big airport and it doesn't seem like it should be out of range.
 
Still showing that face, though....
:lol: Three-Rudy discount for that!

"Hey, these pieces have a smile, but these other ones don't."
Da Vinci'ed.

The Wonder Dog?!
Ooh, that's a deep cut.

I should explain...Paul had shooed Rex away at the gate and didn't see him bolt through the gate opening behind them. He never knew that Rex was in the building.

"There's bound to be a sinkhole or something any second now."
:lol:

Eh, he should have blown it out or clapped his hands or something.
I don't think Marvel-breath was in his repertoire. And they were probably trying to show the kids at home what to do.

There's no way the Elders would let a guy named Atropolis take the rap. :rommie:
FWIW, it looks like the actual makeup of that group is 1 Hebrew, 2 Roman, 3 Greek.

"We're gonna beat the crap out of you and compound our problems!"
It was one of those cases where the other kids were acting vaguely threatening enough to make Paul run from them, but were given some benefit of the doubt regarding how far they'd go.

That kind of lowered the stakes.
But you woulda been asking later! :p

Are those legit power plant thingies or just a couple of Van de Graaff generators? :rommie:
I though maybe you'd know, but it seems like the latter. I spent some time looking up what electrical doohickeys like that were called. FWIW, they were just sitting on a wire rack out in the open, and so easily knocked over that you'd think wind would be an issue. There was also a handy ladder there that Cap stepped up on, though he shouldn't have needed it.

"The Monkees, man. You either love 'em or you hate 'em."
Actually generic instrumental music with a mid-'70s flavor.

"He also learned not to break into school after hours, play with dangerous chemicals, allow a non-English speaking janitor to be falsely accused of a crime, trespass on private property, and mess with high-voltage equipment. Paul had a busy day."
:D

Yikes. I already know you didn't like that one.
It was touching, but I actually didn't see the dog's death coming.

This must have been National Dog Week or something.
Or just Day.

Looks like he's in every episode now. He must be making some good extra money.
I don't know what his arrangement was...even when he appears on camera, he's non-credited.

Yeah, even today people think of the heart as the seat of emotion, which is one reason they're weirded out by transplants.
So this is actually a thing? You'd think people would have more sense, but look where we're at these days....

Was this just to get the vehicle dirty prior to inspection? :rommie:
Yep, or at least so they thought.

Is that the Wolfman?
Is it the '70s?
Emg96.jpgEmg97.jpg
I'm in a bit of a rush at the moment or I'd take the time to transcribe his Wolfman-authentic dialogue, can ya dig it?

"...five... more... minutes...."
[Whacks Johnny's head thinking it's the snooze button.]

A popular shooting location, if it's what I'm thinking of.
I'm sure it is.
Emg98.jpg

That's cool.
And it gave us the novelty of a dramatic shot of Early using a foot-pump.

Who I think was on the real Price is Right or some other game show.
Ah, yes...that rang a bell.

This strains credulity a bit. But then his continued presence at the station all these years strains credulity a bit. :rommie:
Ah, when the chips are down, they're all just one big, huggy family, Ted included.

I'm not sure if it's come up before, but I'm pretty sure that it's true that she had a serious weight problem in her youth.
You mean the actress?

That would be a good way to prevent theft. :rommie:
I love how they keep the running gag about Tupperman being a urologist going without bothering to explain it for newcomers.

True. Maybe I wasn't so far off.
And alien android Bigfoot, no less, IIRC.

Yeah, but what good would a microscope be except to sell it to another MASH unit, or maybe a hospital or something.
Curious urchin?

That wasn't George Takei-- it was Rollin Hand!
To clarify, that cap was from M:I.

Like Maui, mostly. They must have a big airport and it doesn't seem like it should be out of range.
Looks like Maui does have one, but it was regional in those days. I'm assuming that regional airports wouldn't have runways that could accommodate jumbo jet landings.
 
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:lol: Three-Rudy discount for that!
:D

Da Vinci'ed.
:mallory:

Ooh, that's a deep cut.
And I'm wondering how I know about him. Probably could have seen him in a magazine article or something, but I have this strange feeling that he showed up in Englehart's 70s JLA run for some reason. I could be hallucinating that, though.

I should explain...Paul had shooed Rex away at the gate and didn't see him bolt through the gate opening behind them. He never knew that Rex was in the building.
Oh, okay. That's better. :rommie:

I don't think Marvel-breath was in his repertoire. And they were probably trying to show the kids at home what to do.
You're right, that's probably exactly what they were thinking.

FWIW, it looks like the actual makeup of that group is 1 Hebrew, 2 Roman, 3 Greek.
I was going to say that I'm sure they've got each other's backs, but now I'm wondering if they debate who they're going to help. I mean, one person a week out of all the billions on Earth. Unless they have other agents out there.

It was one of those cases where the other kids were acting vaguely threatening enough to make Paul run from them, but were given some benefit of the doubt regarding how far they'd go.
With Danny Bonaduce in the gang, I'd run like hell. :rommie:

But you woulda been asking later! :p
That's true, I would have. :rommie:

I though maybe you'd know, but it seems like the latter. I spent some time looking up what electrical doohickeys like that were called. FWIW, they were just sitting on a wire rack out in the open, and so easily knocked over that you'd think wind would be an issue. There was also a handy ladder there that Cap stepped up on, though he shouldn't have needed it.
It looked like they just ran down to the local science supply store or something. :rommie:

It was touching, but I actually didn't see the dog's death coming.
When the vet took him and said he looked bad, he actually looked perfectly fine.

I don't know what his arrangement was...even when he appears on camera, he's non-credited.
But he gets to call all his friends and say, "I'm on TV tonight." :rommie:

So this is actually a thing? You'd think people would have more sense, but look where we're at these days....
Yeah, people are very superstitious still. Also, badly educated.

Is it the '70s?
View attachment 49496View attachment 49497
I'm in a bit of a rush at the moment or I'd take the time to transcribe his Wolfman-authentic dialogue, can ya dig it?
Super Groovy!

Yup, that's it. It's a great location.

Ah, yes...that rang a bell.
I must have picked that up from my parents watching game shows in the kitchen.

Ah, when the chips are down, they're all just one big, huggy family, Ted included.
They may have overindulged in that as the show wore on.

You mean the actress?
Yeah, I'm pretty sure I remember reading that Marcia Wallace had a serious weight problem in real life when she was a teenager.

And alien android Bigfoot, no less, IIRC.
Definitely a high point. :rommie:

Curious urchin?
True, it could have been just random.

To clarify, that cap was from M:I.
I was pretty sure it was.

Looks like Maui does have one, but it was regional in those days. I'm assuming that regional airports wouldn't have runways that could accommodate jumbo jet landings.
Kinda weird. You'd think they'd want to have a place to divert to for normal emergencies, other than SAMs, like weather or technical difficulties or whatever. Suppose there was a crash at the airport in Hawaii, where would the other planes go?
 
Now I suppose Danny could pull his shirt up over his face... :ack:

And I'm wondering how I know about him. Probably could have seen him in a magazine article or something, but I have this strange feeling that he showed up in Englehart's 70s JLA run for some reason. I could be hallucinating that, though.
That would be exactly it, and also my primary exposure to the canine character.
I had to look it up to verify that it was during Englehart's run. It was a secret origin of the JLA tale that was set as a late 1950s period piece (ignoring the sliding timescale option), which centered around red scare-style paranoia over the Martian Manhunter's existence being revealed; and featured what would have been more or less DC's entire lineup at the time. A very nifty bit of business.

I was going to say that I'm sure they've got each other's backs, but now I'm wondering if they debate who they're going to help. I mean, one person a week out of all the billions on Earth. Unless they have other agents out there.
Or maybe they're just hallucinations projected by Mentor--I think you'd floated something like that once.

With Danny Bonaduce in the gang, I'd run like hell. :rommie:
But he was the runner.

When the vet took him and said he looked bad, he actually looked perfectly fine.
Because no animals were...you know. Actually, I should have looked for that in the end credits. Those notices should be coming along any time now.

Yeah, people are very superstitious still. Also, badly educated.
And will believe preposterous nonsense if it reaffirms their ideology.

Yup, that's it. It's a great location.
I neglected to mention that the competing dragracer was there with the victim the entire time.

I must have picked that up from my parents watching game shows in the kitchen.
Or maybe during the sexual harassment suit in the '90s that the Wiki article refreshed a vague memory of. That's probably when I would have heard her full name.

Yeah, I'm pretty sure I remember reading that Marcia Wallace had a serious weight problem in real life when she was a teenager.
Interesting to work that into the character. Definitely makes it a less random/episodic bit of business.

Definitely a high point. :rommie:
Like the Hulk, Bigfoot was an element that was maybe a little too scary for me at that age, though also a subject of fascination. I think the Bigfoot episodes may have contributed to my watching the show less regularly. And yet I got the action figure as a gift, which I think helped soften the edge.

Kinda weird. You'd think they'd want to have a place to divert to for normal emergencies, other than SAMs, like weather or technical difficulties or whatever. Suppose there was a crash at the airport in Hawaii, where would the other planes go?
They had that option, it was Hilo; hence the baddies arranging to take it out.
 
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Now I suppose Danny could pull his shirt up over his face... :ack:
Kind of a lose-lose situation. :rommie:

That would be exactly it, and also my primary exposure to the canine character.
I had to look it up to verify that it was during Englehart's run. It was a secret origin of the JLA tale that was set as a late 1950s period piece (ignoring the sliding timescale option), which centered around red scare-style paranoia over the Martian Manhunter's existence being revealed; and featured what would have been more or less DC's entire lineup at the time. A very nifty bit of business.
Oh, yeah, Englehart's secret origin of the JLA. Man, he was so great. :rommie: Those issues have never been collected, but I see that they are available individually for the Kindle. That would come out to about twenty-four bucks, so probably worth it.

Or maybe they're just hallucinations projected by Mentor--I think you'd floated something like that once.
Yeah, I was thinking about that. It would be an interesting twist and it would explain a lot. I'd be reluctant to mess with the source material to that degree, though. Better to use the idea in a brand-new concept.

But he was the runner.
Ah, right. I instinctively assigned his face to one of the bad kids. It must have been weird seeing him as the good guy. :rommie:

Because no animals were...you know. Actually, I should have looked for that in the end credits. Those notices should be coming along any time now.
Yeah, it would have been impossible to safely anesthetize him or anything, but they could have wrapped up a stuffed dog in a beach blanket or something.

And will believe preposterous nonsense if it reaffirms their ideology.
Very true.

I neglected to mention that the competing dragracer was there with the victim the entire time.
Aw, that's a nice touch.

Or maybe during the sexual harassment suit in the '90s that the Wiki article refreshed a vague memory of. That's probably when I would have heard her full name.
I see that she was also in Playboy, which would have brought her to my attention more than a game show. :rommie:

Interesting to work that into the character. Definitely makes it a less random/episodic bit of business.
Yeah, it makes me think that it was probably her idea.

Like the Hulk, Bigfoot was an element that was maybe a little too scary for me at that age, though also a subject of fascination. I think the Bigfoot episodes may have contributed to my watching the show less regularly. And yet I got the action figure as a gift, which I think helped soften the edge.
At least he didn't have Kryptonite in his chest! :rommie:

They had that option, it was Hilo; hence the baddies arranging to take it out.
Yeah, okay, I guess that's consistent.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


October 19
  • The last games of the World Football League were played. The largest crowd of the season (35,000) turned out in Birmingham to watch the two best teams (the 8-3-0 Birmingham Vulcans and the 7-4-0 Memphis Southmen) play; Birmingham won 21–0. In other games, the Shreveport Steamer defeated the visiting San Antonio Wings 41-31, the Portland Thunder won at home against the Jacksonville Express 30-13, and, in the last WFL game ever played, the Southern California Sun beat The Hawaiians, 26-7, in Honolulu. The WFL folded three days later.

October 20
  • The U.S. and the U.S.S.R. entered into a five-year agreement for the sale of at least 6,000,000 tons of American grain to the Soviets each year.

October 21
  • The Boston Red Sox defeated the Cincinnati Reds, 7-6, in Game Six of the 1975 World Series, forcing a deciding seventh game, when Carlton Fisk hit a home run in the 12th inning to cap off what many consider to be the best World Series game ever played.
  • Spain's dictator Francisco Franco suffered a heart attack that would leave him bedridden for the rest of his life; Franco would pass away 30 days later.

October 22
  • The Soviet space probe Venera 9 landed on the planet Venus and transmitted Earth's first photographs of the surface of another planet. The first ground-level photos of Venus showed that beneath the thick clouds of carbon dioxide, the planet has a rocky surface. Venera 9 transmitted for 53 minutes before its equipment gave way to temperatures of 485 °C (905 °F) and an atmospheric pressure 90 times higher than that of Earth.
  • The Cincinnati Reds won the seventh and deciding game of the 1975 World Series, 4 to 3, over the Boston Red Sox. The broadcast set a new record for most-watched sporting event in American history. The Red Sox, who were hosting the final game at Fenway Park, had not won Major League Baseball's championship since 1918 but had led, 3 to 0, after five innings before the game was tied 3 to 3 going into the 9th inning. With two outs against the Reds, Joe Morgan was at strike two when he made the hit that brought Ken Griffey in from third base for the go-ahead run. Boston's chance to tie or win the game evaporated after Will McEnaney struck out the first two batters, and Carl Yastrzemski's fly ball hit to center field was caught to give the Reds their first win since 1940.
  • At a meeting in New York, the owners of the 10 remaining teams of the World Football League voted, 6 to 4, to disband the money-losing organization prior to the 12th week of its 20-game schedule.

October 23
  • British cancer specialist Gordon Fairley was killed by a terrorist bomb that had been intended by the Irish Republican Army to assassinate Hugh Fraser of the British House of Commons. Fraser had been preparing to drive Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of President John F. Kennedy, to an errand, but a telephone call delayed him as he was preparing to leave. Dr. Fairley happened to be walking his two dogs past Fraser's Jaguar XJ6 automobile when the time bomb exploded at 8:40 am.

October 24
  • First UK release as a single of John Lennon's four-year-old "Imagine".

October 25
  • Venera 10 became the second space probe to land on the planet Venus. The probe touched down 1,975 miles away from Venera 9 at 8:17 am Moscow time and relayed data, including photographs.
  • Fighting at a soccer football game in England left 102 people injured and 38 arrested at Upton Park Stadium in West Ham. The football hooliganism incident took place in a game between West Ham United F.C. and Manchester United F.C., and involved 400 violent fans. West Ham won 2–1.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Bad Blood," Neil Sedaka
2. "I'm Sorry," John Denver
3. "Miracles," Jefferson Starship
4. "Lyin' Eyes," The Eagles
5. "Games People Play," The Spinners
6. "Feelings," Morris Albert
7. "Who Loves You," The Four Seasons
8. "Island Girl," Elton John
9. "Ballroom Blitz," Sweet
10. "It Only Takes a Minute," Tavares
11. "Brazil," The Ritchie Family
12. "Heat Wave" / "Love Is a Rose", Linda Ronstadt
13. "Dance with Me," Orleans
14. "Do It Any Way You Wanna," Peoples Choice
15. "Something Better to Do," Olivia Newton-John
16. "This Will Be (An Everlasting Love)," Natalie Cole
17. "Lady Blue," Leon Russell
18. "The Way I Want to Touch You," Captain & Tennille
19. "Low Rider," War
20. "SOS," ABBA

22. "Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady," Helen Reddy
23. "You," George Harrison
24. "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes," Esther Phillips
25. "Sky High," Jigsaw
26. "Born to Run," Bruce Springsteen
27. "I Only Have Eyes for You," Art Garfunkel
28. "Rockin' All Over the World," John Fogerty
29. "Fame," David Bowie
30. "Nights on Broadway," Bee Gees
31. "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain," Willie Nelson
32. "Fly, Robin, Fly," Silver Convention

35. "Mr. Jaws," Dickie Goodman
36. "Eighteen with a Bullet," Pete Wingfield

39. "Letting Go," Wings
40. "Rocky," Austin Roberts

44. "Diamonds and Rust," Joan Baez

46. "I Want'a Do Something Freaky to You," Leon Haywood
47. "My Little Town," Simon & Garfunkel
48. "Rhinestone Cowboy," Glen Campbell
49. "Run Joey Run," David Geddes
50. "That's the Way (I Like It)," KC & The Sunshine Band
51. "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights," Freddy Fender

53. "Secret Love," Freddy Fender

55. "Saturday Night," Bay City Rollers

63. "Our Day Will Come," Frankie Valli

68. "Let's Do It Again," The Staple Singers
69. "At Seventeen," Janis Ian
70. "Could It Be Magic," Barry Manilow

76. "How Long (Betcha' Got a Chick on the Side)," The Pointer Sisters

90. "Love Machine (Pt. 1)," The Miracles

Leaving the chart:
  • "Fight the Power, Pt. 1," The Isley Brothers (18 weeks)
  • "Get Down Tonight," KC & The Sunshine Band (15 weeks)
  • "Gone at Last," Paul Simon / Phoebe Snow & The Jessy Dixon Singers (10 weeks)
  • "(I Believe) There's Nothing Stronger Than Our Love," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates (13 weeks)
  • "Katmandu," Bob Seger (11 weeks)
  • "That's the Way of the World," Earth, Wind & Fire (16 weeks)

New on the chart:

"That's the Way (I Like It)," KC & The Sunshine Band
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(#1 US the weeks of Nov. 22 and Dec. 20, 1975; #18 Dance; #1 R&B; #4 UK)

"Let's Do It Again," The Staple Singers
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(#1 US the week of Dec. 27, 1975; #1 R&B)

"Love Machine (Pt. 1)," The Miracles
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(#1 US the week of Mar. 6, 1976; #20 Dance; #5 R&B; #3 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Six Million Dollar Man, "The Deadly Test"
  • All in the Family, "Chain Letter"
  • M*A*S*H, "Dear Mildred"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "The Defector"
  • Emergency!, "Pressure 165"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Chuckles Bites the Dust"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "Shrinks Across the Sea"



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.



Yeah, I was thinking about that. It would be an interesting twist and it would explain a lot. I'd be reluctant to mess with the source material to that degree, though. Better to use the idea in a brand-new concept.
I guess we should just take the premise at face value, though the Elders are cartoons.

Aw, that's a nice touch.
He presumably had someone call them, as he was holding his buddy's head above the water. Now you'd think there'd be police at that scene. Just went back to confirm, not a hint.

At least he didn't have Kryptonite in his chest! :rommie:
Hutched.
 
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The last games of the World Football League were played. The largest crowd of the season (35,000) turned out in Birmingham to watch the two best teams (the 8-3-0 Birmingham Vulcans and the 7-4-0 Memphis Southmen) play; Birmingham won 21–0. In other games, the Shreveport Steamer defeated the visiting San Antonio Wings 41-31, the Portland Thunder won at home against the Jacksonville Express 30-13, and, in the last WFL game ever played, the Southern California Sun beat The Hawaiians, 26-7, in Honolulu. The WFL folded three days later.
This was a weird little dead end in the universe of professional sports.

The U.S. and the U.S.S.R. entered into a five-year agreement for the sale of at least 6,000,000 tons of American grain to the Soviets each year.
Ah, the grain deal. I remember that.

The Boston Red Sox defeated the Cincinnati Reds, 7-6, in Game Six of the 1975 World Series, forcing a deciding seventh game, when Carlton Fisk hit a home run in the 12th inning to cap off what many consider to be the best World Series game ever played.
You'd think I'd have some recollection of this, but no. :rommie:

The Soviet space probe Venera 9 landed on the planet Venus and transmitted Earth's first photographs of the surface of another planet. The first ground-level photos of Venus showed that beneath the thick clouds of carbon dioxide, the planet has a rocky surface. Venera 9 transmitted for 53 minutes before its equipment gave way to temperatures of 485 °C (905 °F) and an atmospheric pressure 90 times higher than that of Earth.
Earth's twin. Not identical twins, by any means. :rommie:

Boston's chance to tie or win the game evaporated after Will McEnaney struck out the first two batters, and Carl Yastrzemski's fly ball hit to center field was caught to give the Reds their first win since 1940.
"Wait'll next year." <-- The Red Sox motto for about a hundred years.

Venera 10 became the second space probe to land on the planet Venus. The probe touched down 1,975 miles away from Venera 9 at 8:17 am Moscow time and relayed data, including photographs.
Credit where it's due. The Soviets always managed to do well with Venus. Kind of ironic, since Russia is not known for its warmth. :rommie:

"That's the Way (I Like It)," KC & The Sunshine Band
Just an empty Disco number, but it's catchy and has some nostalgic value.

"Let's Do It Again," The Staple Singers
I love this one. Strong nostalgic value. I love that little sound right at the beginning. :rommie:

"Love Machine (Pt. 1)," The Miracles
I get a kick out of this one. Strong nostalgic value.

I guess we should just take the premise at face value, though the Elders are cartoons.
Yeah, I never gave that part of it too much thought. I just took it as representing a different reality, I guess.

He presumably had someone call them, as he was holding his buddy's head above the water. Now you'd think there'd be police at that scene. Just went back to confirm, not a hint.
They ran out their budget for that day, probably. :rommie:

Hah. :rommie:
 
This was a weird little dead end in the universe of professional sports.
Can't say that I have any distinct recollection of the WFL, though I may have been exposed to it.

Ah, the grain deal. I remember that.
Heard of it.

You'd think I'd have some recollection of this, but no. :rommie:
There are people in my neck of the woods who are bigger into the Sox than Boston Guy here. :p

"Wait'll next year." <-- The Red Sox motto for about a hundred years.
That sounds about right.

Credit where it's due. The Soviets always managed to do well with Venus. Kind of ironic, since Russia is not known for its warmth. :rommie:
Only Brezhnev could go to Venus.

Just an empty Disco number, but it's catchy and has some nostalgic value.
Fair, I guess, but fun, catchy, and on the shortlist of most memorable disco numbers.

I love this one. Strong nostalgic value. I love that little sound right at the beginning. :rommie:
Sounds good, but this one I have no distinct memory of, from in the day or later listening.

I get a kick out of this one. Strong nostalgic value.
Fun, catchy classic; the last Hot 100-charting single of the post-Smokey Miracles.

Yeah, I never gave that part of it too much thought. I just took it as representing a different reality, I guess.
Like a hallucination... :shifty:
 
There are people in my neck of the woods who are bigger into the Sox than Boston Guy here. :p
No doubt of it. :rommie:

Only Brezhnev could go to Venus.
Heh. There were a lot of people who would have liked to send him there. :rommie:

Sounds good, but this one I have no distinct memory of, from in the day or later listening.
The Staple Singers were kind of low key, but I liked their sound.

Like a hallucination... :shifty:
True. It all fits. :rommie:
 


70 Years Ago This Month



Charting the week of October 1:

"Only You (And You Alone)," The Platters
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(#5 US; #1 R&B)



October 2
  • The ENIAC computer is deactivated at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, having been in continuous operation since 1947.
  • The National Academy of Sciences establishes a Technical Panel for Earth Satellite Program, with Richard E. Porter serving as chairman.
  • Alfred Hitchcock Presents is broadcast for the first time, on the CBS TV network.
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October 4
  • The Reverend Sun Myung Moon is released from prison in Seoul, South Korea.
  • The Brooklyn Dodgers win the World Series baseball competition by 4 games to 3 over the New York Yankees for the franchise's first World Series championship. The Series MVP is pitcher Johnny Podres of Brooklyn.

October 5
  • Under an agreement with Walt Disney, Jack Wrather opens the Disneyland Hotel, first hotel to officially bear the Disney name.

October 7
  • First reading by Allen Ginsberg of "Howl" at the Six Gallery Reading, San Francisco, California.
  • Born: Yo-Yo Ma, American cellist to Chinese parents, in Paris, France



On the weeks of October 8 and 22, "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" by The Four Aces featuring Al Alberts tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
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October 10
  • Helicopters from the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Saipan (CVL-48) play a key role in rescuing people stranded by flooding in Tampico, Mexico.

October 11
  • The Rodgers and Hammerstein musical film Oklahoma!, the first feature photographed in the Todd-AO 70 mm widescreen process, is released in the USA.

October 14
  • The North-West Frontier Province of British India is merged into the new province of West Pakistan. Other Indian states dissolved on this date included Makran and Kharan.

October 15
  • Elvis Presley plays a concert in Lubbock, Texas. Opening act is local duo Buddy and Bob, Buddy being future rock star Buddy Holly.



Charting the week of October 15:

"At My Front Door," The El Dorados
(#17 US; #1 R&B)



October 16
  • The Boeing 367-80 (a Boeing 707 prototype) crosses the United States in a record time of 3 hours 58 minutes.
  • Ceremonial last day of steam locomotives on the Long Island Rail Road.

October 18
  • A U.S. Navy Convair R3Y-1 Tradewind flying boat sets a speed record for a flight from Hawaii to the continental United States, flying from Honolulu, Hawaii, to Naval Air Station Alameda, California, in 6 hours 45 minutes at an average speed of 360 mph (579 km/h).

October 20
  • WERE (AM)-Cleveland disc jockey Bill Randle presents a concert at Brooklyn High School in Brooklyn, Ohio, opened by Elvis Presley and featuring Pat Boone and Bill Haley & His Comets. It is Presley's first performance north of the Mason–Dixon line and his first filmed performance, for a documentary on Randle titled The Pied Piper of Cleveland.
[Alas, footage from this film seems to be unavailable.]​
  • The fifth Miss World contest is held at the Lyceum Ballroom in London, UK, and is won by Susana Duijm, representing Venezuela.

October 22
  • The Fort Macquarie Tram Depot in Sydney, Australia, is closed. Sydney Opera House would later be built on the site.

October 26
  • Ngô Đình Diệm proclaims Vietnam to be a republic with himself as its President (following the State of Vietnam referendum on October 23) and forms the Army of the Republic of Vietnam.



On October 26, Rebel Without a Cause, starring James Dean, Natalie Wood, and Sal Mineo, premieres in New York.
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October 28
  • Born: Bill Gates, US software designer and entrepreneur, in Seattle, Washington



On the weeks of October 29 through November 19, "Autumn Leaves" by Roger Williams tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.



October 31
  • Princess Margaret, sister of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, announces that she does not intend to marry Group Captain Peter Townsend, thus ending media speculation and controversy.



Released in October:

"Adorable," The Drifters
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(#1 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.


 
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"Only You (And You Alone)," The Platters
Classic. Strong second-hand nostalgic value.

The ENIAC computer is deactivated at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, having been in continuous operation since 1947.
"Daisy... Daisssyyyyyy...."

Alfred Hitchcock Presents is broadcast for the first time, on the CBS TV network.
Classic. One of those old movie-quality shows, especially the later hour-long episodes.

"Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" by The Four Aces featuring Al Alberts
Good movie, but the song fails to grab me. I do love that almost-Shakespearian title, though.

The Rodgers and Hammerstein musical film Oklahoma!
I'm pretty sure I've never seen this.

Elvis Presley plays a concert in Lubbock, Texas. Opening act is local duo Buddy and Bob, Buddy being future rock star Buddy Holly.
I don't think I ever knew about Buddy and Bob. That's cute. :rommie:

I never heard this one before. Kinda catchy.

The Boeing 367-80 (a Boeing 707 prototype) crosses the United States in a record time of 3 hours 58 minutes.
The luggage has yet to be found.

Ceremonial last day of steam locomotives on the Long Island Rail Road.
That's kinda sad. The end of an era.

WERE (AM)-Cleveland
That woulda been a good gig for Wolfman Jack. :rommie:

On the weeks of October 29 through November 19, "Autumn Leaves" by Roger Williams tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
I kept trying to sing along....

"Adorable," The Drifters
I'm not familiar with this one, but it's got that classic Drifters sound.
 
Classic. Strong second-hand nostalgic value.
This.

"Daisy... Daisssyyyyyy...."
Dave'd.

Classic. One of those old movie-quality shows, especially the later hour-long episodes.
I was disappointed that we didn't get a "good evening" in that clip.

Good movie, but the song fails to grab me. I do love that almost-Shakespearian title, though.
Indirect exposure to the song is the only thing I know about it.

I'm pretty sure I've never seen this.
I think I saw an outdoor stage production of this in the '80s in Indiana. My uncle's company did lighting and sound for the park that hosted the productions. I know for sure that I saw The Music Man there.

I don't think I ever knew about Buddy and Bob. That's cute. :rommie:
The '50s R&R scene is coming together.

I never heard this one before. Kinda catchy.
Decent.

The luggage has yet to be found.
:D

That's kinda sad. The end of an era.
The phasing-out varied from railroad to railroad, FWIW.

That woulda been a good gig for Wolfman Jack. :rommie:
Ah, yes.

I kept trying to sing along....
It became a bit of an earworm for the day. Here's a Sullivan clip that I was inclined to post, but it wasn't quite single audio:
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I'm not familiar with this one, but it's got that classic Drifters sound.
Not memorable or familiar, though it was in my collection.
 
:mallory:

I was disappointed that we didn't get a "good evening" in that clip.
Yeah, that "Good evening" is as iconic as Serling's "Submitted for your approval."

I think I saw an outdoor stage production of this in the '80s in Indiana. My uncle's company did lighting and sound for the park that hosted the productions.
That's very cool. Did you work with him?

I know for sure that I saw The Music Man there.
There's a good Musical. I used to watch that whenever it popped up on Channel 56.

The phasing-out varied from railroad to railroad, FWIW.
At least they still exist as tourist attractions.

It became a bit of an earworm for the day. Here's a Sullivan clip that I was inclined to post, but it wasn't quite single audio:
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It's not bad. I actually like the opening quite a bit.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



The Six Million Dollar Man
"The Wolf Boy"
Originally aired October 12, 1975
Edited Wiki said:
Kuroda (from "The Last Kamikaze") asks Steve to help him investigate reports about a boy living with wolves.

On the Japanese island of Hoyoko, a man is hunting wolves when he spots a Western youth with long, blond hair (Buddy Foster) running through the forest with his retreating prey. In Tokyo, Shige Ishikawa (Teru Shimada) recruits Kuroda (John Fujioka reprising his role from last season), ostensibly on behalf of the government, to lead an expedition to find the titularly monikered lad. Kuroda declares that he'll need only one man in his party--you can guess what astronaut buddy who brought him out of the Philippine jungle that would be. Oscar has a fit because he's episodically concerned with cutting the OSI's budget (Maybe lay off a few of the moles?), but Steve believes based on a computer search that the boy may be Gary Emerson, the son of an American ambassador who was reported killed in an accident along with his family.

Given one week, Steve arrives in Japan to find Kuroda working in a shoe store, which triggers a viewer-friendly sepia flashback of how they went from adversaries to buddies, including Kuroda discovering Steve's bionics. We come out of the recap with Steve and Kuroda shaking hands over the 1,000-stitch belt that Kuroda gave Steve at the end of the previous episode. On a train ride to their ship, Kuroda explains that he's in lifelong debt to Ishikawa for giving him work when he returned to society. Once on the island, they Jeep out to the forest and hike with packs of gear, Steve refusing to take a rifle. Steve spots a wolf trap, trips it with a stick, and tosses it over the treetops. Kuroda shares that he feels more comfortable in the wild than in a modern world that he doesn't understand. They find a bare human footprint, which puts them on the boy's trail. Upon receiving an update, Ishikawa instructs a khaki-outfitted Bob Masters (Quinn Redeker) to tail the two-man expedition and ensure that the boy isn't returned.

In the island forest, Steve and Kuroda hear a wolf commotion and come upon the sight of the blond boy howling mournfully over the body of what they surmise is his wolf mother (cause of death unclear--either a fight with other wolves or having stepped into a trap). They surround the boy and he ferally fights them off, trying to bite into Steve's bionic arm. Steve chases the boy through the forest until the boy trips on a branch and knocks himself out. (Steve thankfully waves off the ShazamVan.) The men bandage the boy and put pants on him, Kuroda expressing empathy for his situation and planning to teach him words. But the boys wakes up in the middle of the night and escapes back into the forest.

While the guys hunt for the boy by day, an unseen but predictable party triggers a landslide above them, which Steve shields them from with his bionic arm. Soon after, the wolf boy approaches them, so Kuroda has Steve offer the boy a ration tin of sushi...which Steve has to pretend to like while demonstrating that it's food. The boy takes the tin and gobbles it up, following which he accompanies the men as his new pack. Kuroda plays flute for the boy and shows him the picture of three-year-old Gary that Steve brought. Being addressed by name triggers an audio flashback to the boy's human mother. The trio soon have a lighthearted moment when the boy is applying lotion to his accidentally burned hands (which have claw-like nails) and playfully rubs the lotion over his chest. The trio proceed to trek through the forest back to the Jeep, while Masters tracks their progress with binoculars. As Steve's scouting ahead, Kuroda accidentally steps into a wolf trap, and the scared and confused boy ultimately chooses to stay with him. Steve returns and removes the trap, but then Masters and his armed party come out of hiding to take the boy.

Steve puts together that Ishikawa must have sent the men, and Masters spills that it was Ishikawa who killed the Emersons, motivated by old-fashioned nationalism. After Steve's OSI ID is found, Masters lures the boy into the forest with part of the party to stage an accident, while leaving the rest of the party to deal with Kuroda and Steve. Steve overcomes their captors and fires off their rifles a couple times to make Masters think his men have done their job. Then Steve and Kuroda sneak up to pounce on Masters and his men. During the partly bionic brawl, the boy audio-flashes to men attacking his parents and heeds his mother imploring him to "run, Gary, run!" Steve chases after the boy, who trips again, this time into a pond, so Steve bionic-dives in and swims the boy to safety.

In the coda, Oscar comes to Japan to exposit a bit about Ishikawa's motivation to attract others to his cause of making Japan a military power again, and Steve argues that the boy should be given time to adjust rather than be taken back to the States right away. After Oscar agrees, Steve goes to inform Kuroda that he can live in the woods with Gary for a few months before specialists are brought in...an opportunity for which Kuroda is overwhelmingly grateful.



M*A*S*H
"The Bus"
Originally aired October 17, 1975
Frndly said:
Hawkeye, BJ, Frank, Potter and Radar are stranded in unfamiliar territory when their bus breaks down on the way back from a medical conference.

Burns is chastising Hawkeye for being hung over from the 38th Parallel Medical Society get-together when Radar drives onto a very bumpy road and admits that he's lost. Potter--who's now telling stories of service in World War I (or maybe I mistook an early reference as being about WWII; though if he is career military, he likely would have served in both)--has parties split up and search the forest for villages or alternate roads. When that doesn't pan out--Burns and Radar having ultimately turned around out of fear of enemy snipers--Potter makes the more sensible decision to turn the bus around and head back the way they came...but it won't start. Radar and Burns are each unsuccessful in working on it, so the party takes shelter in the vehicle for the night. B.J. initiates a round of stories about everyone's first loves--a subject that makes Radar uncomfortable enough to excuse himself for implied tree business. When it's Hawkeye's turn, he becomes concerned that Radar hasn't returned yet.

Hearing someone approaching outside, the party spots a Korean soldier with a wounded leg (Soon-Tek Oh, now going by the variation Soon-Teck Oh) who promptly surrenders and is patched up in the bus by the guys. When Radar returns, he catches Burns sleeping on guard duty and is frightened to meet the prisoner. It turns out that Radar had gone out to look for help against orders, and by day the prisoner gets the titular conveyance started again despite Major Strawman's objections. In the drive-home coda, the guys enlist the soldier to play a prank on Burns over a walkie talkie with which he'd been ineffectually attempting to call for help earlier in the episode.

This episode has no Loretta Swit, Jamie Farr, or laugh track. We see a Potter/Burns dynamic emerge here that doesn't bode well for the major's future at the 4077th.



Hawaii Five-O
"The Case Against McGarrett"
Originally aired October 17, 1975
Paramount+ said:
McGarrett offers himself as a hostage exchange, but is then put on "trial" by Honore Vashon.

Danno shows Steve a newspaper report that Honore Vashon (Harold Gould reprising his role from Season 5's "V for Vashon" three-parter) is seeking parole. Ordering a detailed report on Vashon's illegal activities while in prison, Steve promptly initiates a recap of the first Vashon episode, in which Vashon's arrogant son, Chris, was shot by McGarrett while attempting a hotel heist. Meanwhile, in the prison yard, Honore Vashon orders his right-hand man, Saito (Seth Sakai), to hit a stoolie named Bukai. A small riot over a ballgame promptly ensues, during which Bukai takes a knife in his back.

McGarrett makes a surprise appearance at Vashon's parole hearing to present the board with his report, which results in denial of parole. Looking for an opportunity to get even, Vashon orchestrates a scheme to take a visiting legislative committee, along with Warden Heller (Kent Bowman) and a couple of guards, hostage with the help of prisoners on the waiting staff, led by William Tasai (R. B. Sorko-Ram). When McGarrett is on the scene to bullhorn-negotiate, Vashon announces his demand that McGarrett be turned over to him in exchange for the hostages. Steve conceives a plan to escape into a storage room with a skylight as soon as the hostages are freed so that the conference room can be assaulted, but his play has been anticipated, such that Tasai is waiting inside armed with a knife. While the willful Tasai insists that the prisoners involved should demand getaway accommodations, Vashon declares his intention to first put McGarrett on trial for the murder of his son--slapping Steve for emphasis.

While protesting the kangaroo court, Steve notices a large vent in the ceiling and Morse code-taps a one-word message on the mic that he's been wired with. Using that info, Danno plans with a pair of HPD assault teams to raid the administration building from the roof vents, then plays SWAT Ken by gearing up to join them.
H5124.jpg
As they climb the building, Vashon lays out his titular argument while Steve repeatedly corrects his prosecutor's twisted details, ultimately declaring Vashon to be insane in time for a dramatic act break.

As the teams sneak in through the ventilation shafts, McGarrett testifies to the circumstances of Chris Vashon's crimes and killing, laying the blame for Chris's death--as in the flashback to the prior episode--on the Vashon family. Tasai gets impatient with the proceedings and Steve turns him against Vashon, noting that Tasai, who's up for parole, is being used. As Tasai attempts to take charge of the situation by approaching the window with the bullhorn, Vashon draws a gun previously smuggled in by Saito on Tasai's back, but McGarrett pushes a table into Vashon. This is immediately followed by the assault team moving in, led by a gas grenade through the ventilation grille. Steve leaps on and disarms Vashon before a squad member puts a gas mask on him.

Outside, as Vashon is being cuffed while pressed against the hood of a squad car, Steve chastises him for stupidly wasting time with his revenge scheme. While being led away, one of the prisoners involved, Afuso (John Gracciano), stops to tell McGarrett that he and others who had no loyalty to Vashon would have voted for acquittal. Steve then fills a little closing time by expressing to Danno how close this one was.



That's very cool. Did you work with him?
No, but there was a point where I was interested in learning the trade.

There's a good Musical. I used to watch that whenever it popped up on Channel 56.
We got trouble...right here in River City...

I found it interesting that the original Rebel Without a Cause trailer didn't show a bit of perhaps the movie's most iconic scene.
 
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