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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

That could've really been something this episode...like a Warner Bros. cartoon.
Heh. I'm picturing Johnny as Wile E Coyote after a dynamite mishap. :rommie:

Once as I recall, and very awkwardly shot. I belatedly realized the obvious reason why they've been showing the Emergency! dispatcher primarily from behind lately--so they could reuse the same footage of him for various calls.
Oh, yeah, that figures. I wonder if he still got paid.

For the record, I had to look up the character name, but the Karl Malden association was straight outta my head.
I wondered if you'd remember. It's pretty much forgotten now, but it was on the tip of everyone's tongue in those days.

I don't recall that one, but former IMFer Lynda Day George will be coming up early on as a Nazi WW impersonator.
And I forgot about that one. Gretchen Corbett not only impersonates Wonder Woman, but she's the one who uses the trained gorilla. Now that's pure comic book stuff. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



The Six Million Dollar Man
"Target in the Sky"
Originally aired October 26, 1975
Wiki said:
When Oscar discovers missiles have been installed near a lumber camp, Steve goes undercover as a lumberjack to investigate.

Unshaven Steve hoofs it to the camp while in contact via walkie talkie with Oscar, who's driving around the area. They're following up on a report from now-missing agent Ben Cosgrove, who claimed to have seen a guidance antenna in the vicinity. Steve's conveniently offered a ride from heiress camp boss Kelly Wixted (Barbara Rhoades), who introduces him to antagonistic-to-newcomers foreman Jeremy Burke (Denny Miller with a 'stache). Burke tests Steve to see if he's got what it takes, having him climb a tree to take the top 15 feet off. The chain of Steve's saw breaks off because of a bolt loosened by Burke, so Steve bionic-drives a wedge into his cut and pushes the treetop down. From the treetop, Steve bionic-spots the tracks of a missile carrier.

On the job, Steve tries asking about Cosgrove; and Burke warns Steve to stay away from Kelly. Steve's next job is to join Burke atop a pile of jammed logs. Burke deliberately rolls their log erratically to cause Steve to fall in the water. Once back on, Steve bionic-rolls the log so fast that Jeremy can't keep up and is tossed; and Kelly chastises the two of them for playing games. Steve learns from Kelly that the company's on the edge of bankruptcy and that Jeremy claims to have a plan to come up with $60,000 that Kelly needs to keep the payroll coming in. Approached by Thad Jones (Rafer Johnson), Steve learns more about where Cosgrove was last seen, and spots a shuttered shed in the area. Meanwhile, Oscar proceeds to Stockwell Aerospace to have Dr. Morton Craig (Ivor Francis) check inventory to see if the equipment in the camp came from there.

Burke leaves Steve to chop down some trees with an axe, or he can "kiss [his] axe goodbye". Once alone, Steve makes fast work of the trees, then bionic-sprints to the shed. Peeping into a hole in the knotty wood, he sees the carrier, but no missiles. Steve's about to bust in when Kelly drives up, so he has to make an excuse for wandering off. Back at the camp, Jeremy wants to fire Steve, thinking he didn't have time to do the assigned job, but Steve shows him otherwise. Burke then calls an unseen party to warn him that they've got another Cosgrove, and is offered $100,000 to do something he seems reluctant about. Oscar updates Steve that two missiles are missing, and Steve tells Oscar to check into any VIP flights scheduled over the area.

At the next opportunity, Burke uses a crane to send a log rolling downhill over Steve, then calls his side-employer--Dr. Craig. Steve, wedged into a ditch, rolls the log back off him, but finds his walkie talkie smashed. After bionic-spotting a missile nosecone being deilivered via van to the shed, steve sneaks up and breaks into the shed by tearing out some boards. Inside, he finds missiles on the launcher, and Ben Cosgrove (Hank Stohl) laid up on a bunk in a room. Steve rips out the launcher's wiring. Just as Oscar's telling Craig how there must be a high-ranking inside man in the company, Craig intercepts Steve's call to Oscar, learning that he sabotaged the launcher controls and is onto Burke.

Steve confronts Jeremy about the murder attempt and missiles, bionic-roughing-him-up for info, but is caught by Kelly, who tells Steve that Oscar's looking for him, informs Jeremy that men have walked off the job for lack of payroll, and learns what Jeremy was being paid to do. The three of them proceed to the shed to find not Oscar, but Craig with armed goons. Craig informs them that the plane of interest is Air Force II, carrying key members of the President's cabinet; and he's brought a back-up unit to replace the one that Steve tore up. Craig has Steve, Jeremy, and Kelly locked up in a shed full of explosives with orders that a crate be detonated by a sharpshooter outside if they try to escape. While Craig and goons track the plane, Steve bionic-rolls a ball of string and tosses it through the window to take out the sharpshooter; then bionic-kicks down the door and heads for the launcher. With seconds to spare, Steve tosses a stick of dynamite into the missiles, blowing them up. Jeremy stops Craig from escaping and AFII flies safely overhead.

In the coda, Kelly's got the camp running again but is shorthanded, and updates Steve that Jeremy's looking at serving a light sentence. Steve offers to continue helping out at the camp until the workers come back.

Steve: Well, Oscar, you sure you don't wanna lumber along with us?​
Oscar: You're barking up the wrong tree, pal.​

Rudy3.jpg



All in the Family
"Mike Faces Life"
Originally aired October 27, 1975
Wiki said:
Gloria loses her job at Kressler's Department Store due to her pregnancy, so she and Mike decide to protest.

The episode opens with Edith at the Stivics', aiding Mike while he tries to fix the sink. Archie enters in a good mood and singing a saucy song because he's heading off to a veterans' convention for the weekend, where he and his old war buddies plan to primarily indulge in prankery. Edith tells Mike of two more dead uncles, one who smoked in the basement when there was a gas leak, another who was hit by a trolley at the ripe old age of 80. Gloria comes home for once, now showing. After injuring his hand working on the water heater, Mike emphasizes how he has to do things himself as he and Gloria are struggling to make ends meet. A talk about the Bunkers' leaner early years turns into a trip down memory lane about Milton Berle, complete with a singalong of his show's Texaco-promoting theme song. The bubble bursts when Gloria opens her check to find it accompanied by a pink slip.

While Mike tries unsuccessfully to cheer Gloria up, Edith takes a prank call from a drunk Archie. Gloria's visited by work friend Sheila Tishman (Diane Shalet), who, being a well-connected gossip, tells her she was fired for being pregnant. Mike and Gloria drop in on personnel manager D. Bertram Crenshaw III (George Furth), who, when confronted with a law against firing a woman for being in Gloria's condition, denies that being the reason. Mike threatens to unleash his infamous rage on Crenshaw, but Crenshaw records the whole thing. He then turns off the recorder to admit that she was fired for that reason, as she won't fit the store's image while looking like "Alfred Hitchcock in drag". Mike and Gloria leave while threatening to take action.

Gloria: Power to the preggos!​

Later, Mike and Gloria rush home to catch Gloria on TV, marching in a picket line that she organized, consisting largely of pregnant women, who threatened Crenshaw when he tried to cross it incognito. Mike then takes a call from a loudmouth drunk and realizes after he hangs up that it was Archie.



M*A*S*H
"The Kids"
Originally aired October 31, 1975
IMDb said:
The 4077th takes in Nurse Cratty's Korean orphans during a shelling attack, including a pregnant girl with a bullet wound. But Frank accuses one of the orphans of stealing his newly (and dubiously) awarded Purple Heart.

After a seventeen-hour surgery session, the 4077th gets notice that because of shelling, Nurse Meg Cratty (Ann Doran) is bringing the occupants of her orphanage to the camp. Meanwhile, Frank is showing off a Purple Heart that he got for taking an eggshell fragment in the eye during a sniper attack. (I don't recall this being in the episode about the sniper.) The truckload of mostly very young orphans arrives, and following some washing up and eating, they bunk in twos with the regulars. B.J. puts the pair in the Swamp to sleep with the story of Androcles and the lion; while Potter does the same with a manual for stripping and reassembling a rifle.

In the night, a pregnant young woman named Sung Lee (Haunani Minn) who came in with the orphans collapses from having been shot in the abdomen. B.J. performs a Caesarian section assisted by Cratty, and the baby is delivered successfully, while Radar's told that the girl will be fine. Frank gets worked up because he can't find his Purple Heart, and goes after an urchin whom he refers to as a "slicky boy" (Mitchell Sakamoto), who'd previously relieved him of a couple of quarters, but the lad gives Frank the slip in the shower. Potter awards the newborn baby with Frank's Purple Heart, which the guys swiped...a move that even Houlihan approves of. As the orphans are leaving in the coda, Radar has to take his teddy back from one who'd been sleeping next to his bunk.

Alan Alda was nominated for an Emmy for directing this episode. Contrary to the Wiki description, this does not appear to be a Christmas episode.



Hawaii Five-O
"Sing a Song of Suspense"
Originally aired October 31, 1975
Paramount+ said:
When a singer witnesses a murder committed by a racketeer, Five-O has to protect her until she can give evidence.

Chelsea Merriman (Lois Nettleton) performs a folksy song called "I'm Not There" on acoustic guitar at a private party hosted by career-aiding club owner Koko Apaleka (Tommy Atkins). Also present are Apaleka's right-hand man, Walter Mapu (Jimmy Borges), and drunk and disgruntled singer Julene Balli (Karen Ericson). While making a call in a dressing room adjoining the bedroom, Chelsea witnesses as Koko and Julene get into an argument about some shady dealings involving an Aleno Kimura that turns physical--Julene scratching Koko's face and Koko punching her off the balcony, then not helping her as she loses her grip on the railing.

When Five-O investigates, Chelsea's gone, having left her expensive guitar behind; and Steve notices Koko's bandaged face. At HQ, Officer Oliver MacDougall (Shelly Novack) helps with questioning witnesses, who all seem to have a practiced story. Trying to track down Chelsea, Chin talks to a cabbie (Chuck Chuck Akamine) who took her back to her hotel. Koko learns that Chelsea was in the dressing room when her purse is found there. Danno shows up at Chelsea's room to return her guitar, but she evades questioning and takes the first opportunity to split the scene. But her taxi to the airport is intercepted by a sedan full of heavies who nab her, causing her to suspiciously miss an afternoon charity concert. Aleno Kimura (Jerry Waialae) then shows up at 5OHQ with Chelsea, wanting her kept alive to testify at his rival's trial.

Chelsea nevertheless denies having seen anything. Bergman confirms that Julene was alive when she went over, having found a bruise on her face and skin under her fingernails. Steve tries to coax the truth from Chelsea by quoting a socially conscious song of hers.

Steve: Did you write that?​
Chelsea: Yeah. But I was much older then.​

Goons who are waiting for Chelsea outside her hotel are scared off by Duke and Chin driving her back; but she finds Koko already in her room. Both keep their conversation overtly casual, focusing on him owing her a dinner; though she betrays signs of tension. He comes around to probing her about her being in the dressing room and having talked to Five-O. She maintains ignorance of having seen anything; but he makes a point of ominously asking her about her seven-year-old daughter, Marissa (Traci Weled). After he leaves, Chelsea calls to check on Marissa just as the girl receives a package containing a doll with a broken head. Chelsea tells her mother (Mrs. Stroud [Jean Tarrant]) to take Marissa to an uncle in Arizona, then calls Five-O.

The press soon gets wind that Chelsea's under police protection to testify against Apaleka. She gives the true story to McGarrett and a stenographer from a hospital bed, and is reassured that her mother and daughter are now in L.A. under 24-hour police protection. When Danno and Duke arrive at Koko's office with a search warrant, they find that he's "gone fishing". A hitman named Dewey (Ward Benson) gets embedded in a hospital room across the hall; and a hood named Taplin (Robert Lui) smuggles in a Five-O Special, then creates a distraction to get Chin and a uniformed officer away from the door so Dewey can cross the hall to plug her occupied bed full of holes, producing blood stains. Dewey doesn't know that his victim was a dummy with a blood pack on its back. Steve proceeds to a beach house that he rents (specified not to be his main residence), where he engages in his usual beach-jogging routine while keeping Chelsea with an undercover cop staking the place out.

Chelsea uses the opportunity to get to know Steve better while flirting with him. He assigns plainclothes MacDougall as her bodyguard. Apaleka believes that Chelsea's still alive and orders her found. Chelsea is sniffed out when Apeleka's secretary (Reri Jobe) pretends to be an operator connecting a long-distance call to the beach house from Marissa. Koko and Dewey move in on Kimura at a Japanese restaurant to force him to call in with a fake tip on Koko's whereabouts. Steve is skeptical, but is seen leaving in his car. Koko then moves in on the beach house, posing as a courier from Kimura to get in and hold MacDougall at gunpoint. But Kimura's lured to a particular spot by what turns out to be a recording of Chelsea singing, and finds McGarrett with a gun on his back.

Koko: I saw you drive down the coast. How'd you get back?​
Steve: The beach, I like to jog. Book him, Danno.​

Chelsea confirms that she intends to testify, and offers to make Steve dinner.


 
Unshaven Steve hoofs it to the camp while in contact via walkie talkie with Oscar
"Oscar, I swear, if you tell me that I'm a lumberjack and I'm okay one more time...."

now-missing agent Ben Cosgrove, who claimed to have seen a guidance antenna in the vicinity
Presumably there was previously some indication of illicit activity if he was already undercover amongst the lumberjacks.

Kelly Wixted (Barbara Rhoades)
Frequently seen character actor of the 70s.

antagonistic-to-newcomers foreman Jeremy Burke
A useful trait for a foreman to have. :rommie:

Kelly chastises the two of them for playing games
"Can't you wait for the log-rolling contest on Saturday night?"

Burke leaves Steve to chop down some trees with an axe, or he can "kiss [his] axe goodbye".
Quite a jokester. :rommie:

and is offered $100,000 to do something he seems reluctant about.
He just wants to save the logging business for Kelly.

Oscar updates Steve that two missiles are missing, and Steve tells Oscar to check into any VIP flights scheduled over the area.
And, y'know, divert them.

then calls his side-employer--Dr. Craig.
So why didn't Craig just lie to Oscar about the missile inventory?

and Ben Cosgrove (Hank Stohl) laid up on a bunk in a room.
I'm surprised he's alive. I wonder if Burke was ordered to kill him and locked him up instead.

Just as Oscar's telling Craig how there must be a high-ranking inside man in the company
Come on, Oscar!

bionic-roughing-him-up for info
Did he make the sounds? :rommie:

Craig informs them that the plane of interest is Air Force II, carrying key members of the President's cabinet
"Oh. Okay."

and he's brought a back-up unit to replace the one that Steve tore up.
And he's capable of swapping out this sophisticated piece of technology by himself within minutes. :rommie:

Steve bionic-rolls a ball of string and tosses it through the window to take out the sharpshooter
As long as it works, I suppose. :rommie:

With seconds to spare, Steve tosses a stick of dynamite into the missiles, blowing them up.
And burning down the forest, I imagine.

Jeremy stops Craig from escaping and AFII flies safely overhead.
So what is Craig's story? Foreign agent? Sympathizer? Mercenary?

Steve offers to continue helping out at the camp until the workers come back.
He's in like Flynn. Take that, Burke.

Steve: Well, Oscar, you sure you don't wanna lumber along with us?
Oscar: You're barking up the wrong tree, pal.
View attachment 49908
:rommie:

"Mike Faces Life"
Now the title writer is on strike.

Archie enters in a good mood and singing a saucy song because he's heading off to a veterans' convention for the weekend
This guy goes off to a lot of conventions.

another who was hit by a trolley at the ripe old age of 80.
But there were five nuns on the other track, so it was the best solution.

A talk about the Bunkers' leaner early years turns into a trip down memory lane about Milton Berle, complete with a singalong of his show's Texaco-promoting theme song.
Those were the dayyys.

The bubble bursts when Gloria opens her check to find it accompanied by a pink slip.
That's cold.

Edith takes a prank call from a drunk Archie.
"No, the refrigerator's not running, and Irene has disappeared!"

Mike threatens to unleash his infamous rage on Crenshaw
"You wouldn't like me when I'm angry. Just ask Gloria."

she won't fit the store's image while looking like "Alfred Hitchcock in drag".
What a psycho.

Gloria: Power to the preggos!
:rommie:

Later, Mike and Gloria rush home to catch Gloria on TV, marching in a picket line that she organized, consisting largely of pregnant women, who threatened Crenshaw when he tried to cross it incognito.
So she's still unemployed. Is this it or do we have a story arc on our hands?

Nurse Meg Cratty (Ann Doran) is bringing the occupants of her orphanage to the camp.
A nurse unconnected to the 4077th, I take it.

Frank is showing off a Purple Heart that he got for taking an eggshell fragment in the eye during a sniper attack. (I don't recall this being in the episode about the sniper.)
It was so minor it took weeks for him to notice. :rommie:

In the night, a pregnant young woman named Sung Lee (Haunani Minn) who came in with the orphans collapses from having been shot in the abdomen.
You'd think they would have given everybody the once over on arrival.

B.J. performs a Caesarian section assisted by Cratty, and the baby is delivered successfully, while Radar's told that the girl will be fine.
Hopefully the baby was at term. I don't think they have a NICU at a MASH unit.

Potter awards the newborn baby with Frank's Purple Heart, which the guys swiped...a move that even Houlihan approves of.
Heh. This is foreboding for Frank. :rommie:

As the orphans are leaving in the coda, Radar has to take his teddy back from one who'd been sleeping next to his bunk.
I'm surprised that Teddy survived the war intact.

"Sing a Song of Suspense"
Now that's a good title. :rommie:

Chelsea Merriman (Lois Nettleton)
Popular character actor. I feel like I should be remembering her from something specific, but I can't put my finger on it.

that turns physical--Julene scratching Koko's face and Koko punching her off the balcony, then not helping her as she loses her grip on the railing.
This seems like a pretty easy-peasy case right off the bat.

Koko learns that Chelsea was in the dressing room when her purse is found there.
She's really not very good at covering her tracks.

Danno shows up at Chelsea's room to return her guitar
"It's evidence, but whatevs."

Aleno Kimura (Jerry Waialae) then shows up at 5OHQ with Chelsea, wanting her kept alive to testify at his rival's trial.
Cute twist. :rommie: But if Aleno is Koko's rival, what were the shady dealings that Koko and Julene were arguing about?

Bergman confirms that Julene was alive when she went over, having found a bruise on her face and skin under her fingernails.
Which should be readily identifiable as Koko's.

Steve: Did you write that?
Chelsea: Yeah. But I was much older then.
"And Bob Dylan wrote that. Book her, Danno. Plagiarism One."

Chelsea calls to check on Marissa just as the girl receives a package containing a doll with a broken head.
Creepy.

A hitman named Dewey (Ward Benson) gets embedded in a hospital room across the hall
How'd he manage that?

Chelsea uses the opportunity to get to know Steve better while flirting with him.
"Do you find that being this close to death is an aphrodesiac?"

Koko then moves in on the beach house, posing as a courier from Kimura to get in and hold MacDougall at gunpoint.
Okay, I can buy that Chin and the other officer allowed themselves to be distracted as part of the plan, but MacDougall is just a failure. :rommie:

Koko: I saw you drive down the coast. How'd you get back?
Steve: The beach, I like to jog. Book him, Danno.
Was Danno jogging with him? :rommie:

Chelsea confirms that she intends to testify, and offers to make Steve dinner.
"Cook 'em, Chelsea."
 
"Oscar, I swear, if you tell me that I'm a lumberjack and I'm okay one more time...."
I've heard of it plenty.

Presumably there was previously some indication of illicit activity if he was already undercover amongst the lumberjacks.
Good question; if they elaborated on why he was there in the first place, I didn't catch it.

And, y'know, divert them.
You'd think. The episode opened with a commercial flight passing over the camp, so apparently this was a busy route.

So why didn't Craig just lie to Oscar about the missile inventory?
Maybe underlings who weren't in the know were involved.

Come on, Oscar!
Maybe the OSI isn't even a real agency...the government is just humoring Oscar.

Did he make the sounds? :rommie:
I think so, or I wouldn't have noted that he was using bionic power.

And he's capable of swapping out this sophisticated piece of technology by himself within minutes. :rommie:
Evidently so. He was a missile scientist.

And burning down the forest, I imagine.
The launcher was in a clearing, but good point.

So what is Craig's story? Foreign agent? Sympathizer? Mercenary?
Don't think they got into that.

The actual context of that cap, from "Return of the Bionic Woman" Part 1, is that hospitalized Steve just said that he saw Jaime. Rudy's actually looking up at Oscar like, "Whadda we tell him, boss?"

Now the title writer is on strike.
Indeed.

But there were five nuns on the other track, so it was the best solution.
I'm sure that must be from something specific.

"No, the refrigerator's not running, and Irene has disappeared!"
Is that?

So she's still unemployed. Is this it or do we have a story arc on our hands?
Good question.

A nurse unconnected to the 4077th, I take it.
Apparently, though it was noted that the camp had hosted the orphans before.

You'd think they would have given everybody the once over on arrival.
I wasn't clear how or when she was supposed to have been shot.

Popular character actor. I feel like I should be remembering her from something specific, but I can't put my finger on it.
Looks like she guested in episodes of various series that you might have seen. One that caught my attention was Twilight Zone's "The Midnight Sun"--one of the episodes that's routinely included in marathons.

She's really not very good at covering her tracks.
She wouldn't have gone in expecting that she had to.

"It's evidence, but whatevs."
Is it? She was a witness, not a suspect.

Cute twist. :rommie: But if Aleno is Koko's rival, what were the shady dealings that Koko and Julene were arguing about?
I didn't catch the details, just the gist of it.

And quite contrived, that they were just getting and opening the package when Chelsea called.

How'd he manage that?
Faking and power of persuasion, apparently.

Was Danno jogging with him? :rommie:
I assume it was part of the plan that he was waiting to swoop in.

"Cook 'em, Chelsea."
That uses one of your Rudy discounts.
 
Maybe underlings who weren't in the know were involved.
They're looking for work now. :rommie:

Maybe the OSI isn't even a real agency...the government is just humoring Oscar.
Oscar is Rudy's slow nephew. "We'll put you in charge of the robot men, Oscar."

I think so, or I wouldn't have noted that he was using bionic power.
True.

Evidently so. He was a missile scientist.
I question the likelihood of being able to replace a component like that literally in the field singlehandedly in any reasonable amount of time. But, of course, I'm being picky. :rommie:

Don't think they got into that.
We just need to know he's the bad guy. :rommie:

The actual context of that cap, from "Return of the Bionic Woman" Part 1, is that hospitalized Steve just said that he saw Jaime. Rudy's actually looking up at Oscar like, "Whadda we tell him, boss?"
"And why didn't we already?"

I'm sure that must be from something specific.
It is. :rommie:

Well, the first part refers to the classic prank call "Is your refrigerator running?" ("Well, you better go catch it"). The second part refers to Irene being the one who would fix their refrigerator if it wasn't running, and she disappears around this time. Kind of a stretch, I guess, since the explanation is four times as long as the joke. :rommie:

Looks like she guested in episodes of various series that you might have seen. One that caught my attention was Twilight Zone's "The Midnight Sun"--one of the episodes that's routinely included in marathons.
Ah, yes, the Twilight Zone is what I was trying to think of.

She wouldn't have gone in expecting that she had to.
Yeah, but I mean she left her expensive guitar and her pocket book.

Is it? She was a witness, not a suspect.
Well, actually, I don't know. But it was found at a murder scene, so I'm thinking it could be forensically significant.

And quite contrived, that they were just getting and opening the package when Chelsea called.
Well, yeah, that's true.

Faking and power of persuasion, apparently.
"Wow, you have really pretty eyes. By the way, I really like the number 205. Can I be in Room 205?"

That uses one of your Rudy discounts.
Worth it. :rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week


November 9
  • News of the mutiny on the frigate Storozhevoy reached the KGB, and Vice Admiral Anatoly Kosov ordered the Soviet Baltic Fleet to locate, chase, and intercept the ship as it sped away from the U.S.S.R.

November 10
  • By a vote of 72–35 (with 32 abstentions), United Nations General Assembly Resolution 3379 was approved, equating Zionism with racism. Sixteen years later, on December 16, 1991, the General Assembly would adopt another resolution revoking the 1975 measure, with 111 nations approving the recission.
  • The freighter SS Edmund Fitzgerald sank at 7:20 pm during a storm in Whitefish Bay on Lake Superior, taking the 29-member crew with it. Singer Gordon Lightfoot would later write a ballad about the ship's demise.

November 11
  • Angola became independent after five centuries of being ruled as a colony of Portugal. The last High Commissioner, Admiral Leonel Cardoso, had ordered the Portuguese flag lowered at sundown the evening before, and that the ships, transporting the remaining Portuguese troops, leave Angolan waters by midnight. At Luanda, poet Agostinho Neto was sworn in as president.
  • Japanese authorities turned down a request by Wings to play concerts there because of Paul and Linda McCartney's drug convictions.
  • Died: Richard Paul Pavlick, 88, retired postal worker who had conspired to assassinate U.S. President-Elect John F. Kennedy on December 11, 1960.

November 12
  • Andrei Sakharov was denied permission to leave the Soviet Union to accept the 1975 Nobel Peace Prize. Sakharov, a nuclear physicist who had overseen the development of the hydrogen bomb for the U.S.S.R., had later become the nation's most famous dissident. An exit visa was denied him on grounds that "he possesses state secrets".
  • William O. Douglas, whose 36 years as a justice of the United States Supreme Court remains the longest tenure ever, retired at the age of 77. Douglas, who had been debilitated by a stroke on December 31, said in a statement that "I have been unable to shoulder my full share of the burden." Douglas had been on the Court since April 17, 1939.
  • Alabama Governor George C. Wallace became the tenth person to declare his candidacy for the Democratic Party nomination for the 1976 U.S. presidential race. Wallace had run as a third-party candidate in 1968 and had been running for the nomination in 1972 when he was paralyzed by an assassin.

November 13
  • The 1973 agreement that had ended the "Cod War" between the United Kingdom and Iceland expired after two years. Under the pact, the two nations had agreed on fishing rights in the best fishing waters, located within 50 miles of Iceland. With no agreement in place, Iceland attempted again to bar British fishing, and the disagreement would go on for seven months.

November 14
  • Israeli troops pulled back from their positions in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula in the first step of carrying out the agreement that had been made in September, and turned over the 450 square mile Ras Suhr oil fields, captured in 1967, to United Nations control. In return for giving up the fields, the U.S. agreed to pay Israel $350,000,000 for loss of revenue from the sale of oil.

November 15
  • The "Group of Six" industrialized nations (G-6) was formed at its first summit at the Château de Rambouillet in France. The leaders of France, West Germany, Japan, Italy, the United Kingdom and the United States began their economic summit at a castle 30 miles from Paris.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Island Girl," Elton John
2. "Lyin' Eyes," The Eagles
3. "Who Loves You," The Four Seasons
4. "Miracles," Jefferson Starship
5. "Heat Wave" / "Love Is a Rose", Linda Ronstadt
6. "That's the Way (I Like It)," KC & The Sunshine Band
7. "This Will Be (An Everlasting Love)," Natalie Cole
8. "Feelings," Morris Albert
9. "The Way I Want to Touch You," Captain & Tennille
10. "Low Rider," War
11. "Games People Play," The Spinners
12. "I'm Sorry," John Denver
13. "Sky High," Jigsaw
14. "Nights on Broadway," Bee Gees
15. "SOS," ABBA
16. "Fly, Robin, Fly," Silver Convention
17. "Something Better to Do," Olivia Newton-John
18. "Do It Any Way You Wanna," Peoples Choice
19. "My Little Town," Simon & Garfunkel
20. "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes," Esther Phillips
21. "Let's Do It Again," The Staple Singers
22. "I Only Have Eyes for You," Art Garfunkel
23. "Eighteen with a Bullet," Pete Wingfield
24. "Bad Blood," Neil Sedaka
25. "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain," Willie Nelson

27. "Saturday Night," Bay City Rollers
28. "I Want'a Do Something Freaky to You," Leon Haywood
29. "Our Day Will Come," Frankie Valli

32. "Secret Love," Freddy Fender
33. "Brazil," The Ritchie Family
34. "Lady Blue," Leon Russell
35. "Diamonds and Rust," Joan Baez
36. "Venus and Mars/Rock Show," Wings
37. "I Love Music, Pt. 1," The O'Jays
38. "It Only Takes a Minute," Tavares
39. "You," George Harrison

42. "Born to Run," Bruce Springsteen
43. "Ballroom Blitz," Sweet
44. "The Last Game of the Season (A Blind Man in the Bleachers)," David Geddes

47. "Fox on the Run," Sweet
48. "I Write the Songs," Barry Manilow

51. "Love Rollercoaster," Ohio Players

52. "Part Time Love," Gladys Knight & The Pips
53. "Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)," Diana Ross

56. "Rock and Roll All Nite," Kiss
57. "Times of Your Life," Paul Anka
58. "For the Love of You (Part 1 & 2)," The Isley Brothers


63. "Country Boy (You Got Your Feet in L.A.)," Glen Campbell

66. "You Sexy Thing," Hot Chocolate

71. "Full of Fire," Al Green
72. "Walk Away from Love," David Ruffin

76. "Love Machine (Pt. 1)," The Miracles
77. "Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady," Helen Reddy

79. "Over My Head," Fleetwood Mac

86. "Baby Face," The Wing and a Prayer Fife and Drum Corps
87. "Evil Woman," Electric Light Orchestra

90. "Theme from S.W.A.T.," Rhythm Heritage


94. "Rockin' All Over the World," John Fogerty

96. "Dance with Me," Orleans
97. "Fame," David Bowie

Leaving the chart:
  • "Letting Go," Wings (6 weeks)
  • "Mr. Jaws," Dickie Goodman (10 weeks)
  • "Rocky," Austin Roberts (17 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Times of Your Life," Paul Anka
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(#7 US; #1 AC)

"Fox on the Run," Sweet
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(#5 US; #2 UK)

"I Write the Songs," Barry Manilow
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(#1 US the week of Jan. 17, 1976; #1 AC; 1977 Grammy Award for Song of the Year)

"Love Rollercoaster," Ohio Players
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(#1 US the week of Jan. 31, 1976; #1 R&B; #51 UK)

"Theme from S.W.A.T.," Rhythm Heritage
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(#1 US the week of Feb. 28, 1976; #6 AC; #11 R&B)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Six Million Dollar Man, "The Bionic Criminal"
  • All in the Family, "Grandpa Blues"
  • M*A*S*H, "Dear Peggy"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "How to Steal a Submarine"
  • The Secrets of Isis, "No Drums, No Trumpets"
  • Emergency!, "The Lighter-Than-Air Man"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Lou Douses an Old Flame"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time"



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



Oscar is Rudy's slow nephew. "We'll put you in charge of the robot men, Oscar."
:D I'm picturing Oscar playing with dolls while imitating the bionic noise.

I question the likelihood of being able to replace a component like that literally in the field singlehandedly in any reasonable amount of time. But, of course, I'm being picky. :rommie:
It was just a plug-in control console.

I've probably heard of that, but wasn't particularly familiar.

Well, the first part refers to the classic prank call "Is your refrigerator running?" ("Well, you better go catch it").
Wasn't familiar with that one offhand.

Yeah, but I mean she left her expensive guitar and her pocket book.
The guitar was in the living room surrounded by party guests.

Worth it. :rommie:
Aren't you a little ashamed that Steve and Oscar beat you to the punch? :p
 
News of the mutiny on the frigate Storozhevoy reached the KGB, and Vice Admiral Anatoly Kosov ordered the Soviet Baltic Fleet to locate, chase, and intercept the ship as it sped away from the U.S.S.R.
An interesting story. I wonder where they were headed exactly. It's a shame they didn't make it. It would make a good name for one of those supernumerary ships in Star Trek or something.

By a vote of 72–35 (with 32 abstentions), United Nations General Assembly Resolution 3379 was approved, equating Zionism with racism. Sixteen years later, on December 16, 1991, the General Assembly would adopt another resolution revoking the 1975 measure, with 111 nations approving the recission.
Wow, okay. That's a bit weird.

The freighter SS Edmund Fitzgerald sank at 7:20 pm during a storm in Whitefish Bay on Lake Superior, taking the 29-member crew with it. Singer Gordon Lightfoot would later write a ballad about the ship's demise.
Now there's a hard song to listen to. A real heartbreaker.

Angola became independent after five centuries of being ruled as a colony of Portugal.
Five centuries? 1475? That doesn't seem possible.

Japanese authorities turned down a request by Wings to play concerts there because of Paul and Linda McCartney's drug convictions.
"We shall punish our economy for your recreational activities."

Died: Richard Paul Pavlick, 88, retired postal worker who had conspired to assassinate U.S. President-Elect John F. Kennedy on December 11, 1960.
Never heard of him. I guess he got overshadowed. :rommie:

Andrei Sakharov was denied permission to leave the Soviet Union to accept the 1975 Nobel Peace Prize. Sakharov, a nuclear physicist who had overseen the development of the hydrogen bomb for the U.S.S.R., had later become the nation's most famous dissident. An exit visa was denied him on grounds that "he possesses state secrets".
Yeah, he was a hot topic for a while.

Alabama Governor George C. Wallace became the tenth person to declare his candidacy for the Democratic Party nomination for the 1976 U.S. presidential race. Wallace had run as a third-party candidate in 1968 and had been running for the nomination in 1972 when he was paralyzed by an assassin.
You're embarassing yourself, George.

"Times of Your Life," Paul Anka
I do know this, but my brain's not connecting it to anything. No nostalgic value.

"Fox on the Run," Sweet
Good one. Strong nostalgic value. The Sweet had a nice handful of songs around then.

"I Write the Songs," Barry Manilow
Good one, even though he didn't write it. :rommie: Strong nostalgic value.

"Love Rollercoaster," Ohio Players
Fun. Strong nostalgic value.

"Theme from S.W.A.T.," Rhythm Heritage
Not my favorite TV theme, since I never watched the show, but certainly not bad. A bit of nostalgic value.

:D I'm picturing Oscar playing with dolls while imitating the bionic noise.
Poor Oscar. :rommie:

It was just a plug-in control console.
Okay, that makes sense in context, I guess. I kind of question any resemblance to real-world technology, though. :rommie:

Wasn't familiar with that one offhand.
Interesting. I thought that was a classic along the lines of Prince Albert in a can. Maybe it's one of those regional things.

The guitar was in the living room surrounded by party guests.
Ah, okay.

Aren't you a little ashamed that Steve and Oscar beat you to the punch? :p
Well, they didn't give me a chance. :rommie:
 


70 Years Ago This Month



Recent television debuts not previously covered:

July 2
  • The Lawrence Welk Show on ABC (1955–1982)

October 1
  • The Honeymooners on CBS, starring Jackie Gleason (1955–1956)

October 3
  • Captain Kangaroo on CBS (1955–1984)
  • Mickey Mouse Club on ABC, featuring "Mouseketeer" Annette Funicello (1955–1959)



November (cover date; released in July)
  • The first issue of Atlas Comics' Snafu is published, but it will only last three issues and disappear in March 1956 [released in November]. [This Mad-style humor mag is notable for bringing us Irving Forbush.]

November 1
  • "Official" date of the beginning of the Vietnam War between the South Vietnam Army and the North Vietnam Army in which the latter is allied with the Viet Cong.
  • A Douglas DC-6B Mainliner Denver, operating as United Airlines Flight 629, is destroyed over Longmont, Colorado, by a time bomb planted in the cargo hold by Jack Gilbert Graham, who is attempting to cash in his mother's life insurance policies. All 44 on board, his mother among them, are killed. Graham would be executed for the crime on January 11, 1957.

November 3
  • The musical film Guys and Dolls, starring Marlon Brando and Frank Sinatra, is premiered in New York City.
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November 4
  • Died: Cy Young, 88, American baseball player

November 5
  • Racial segregation is outlawed on trains and buses in interstate commerce in the United States.

November 6
  • The 1955 Ryder Cup golf competition, held at Thunderbird Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California, United States, ends in a seventh consecutive win for the home team.
  • Born: Maria Shriver, US TV journalist, in Chicago, to Eunice Kennedy Shriver and Sargent Shriver.

November 12
  • Billboard magazine DJ poll names Elvis Presley as the most promising new country and western singer.



Charting the week of November 12:

"Rock-a-Beatin' Boogie," Bill Haley & His Comets
(#41 US; #4 UK)

"Burn That Candle," Bill Haley & His Comets
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(B-side of "Rock-a-Beatin' Boogie"; #9 US; #9 R&B)



November 13
  • Born: Whoopi Goldberg, US actress and comedian, in Manhattan, New York, as Caryn Elaine Johnson

November 17
  • Born: Yolanda King, African-American activist and oldest child of Martin Luther King Jr., in Montgomery, Alabama (d. 2007)

November 20
  • Bo Diddley makes his debut TV appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show on CBS television.
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November 22
  • A Soviet Tupolev Tu-16 (NATO reporting name "Badger") drops the first Soviet thermo-nuclear bomb, RDS-37, in Siberia.
  • "Colonel" Tom Parker signs US singer Elvis Presley to RCA Records.
  • Died: Shemp Howard, 60, The Three Stooges member (heart attack). The death requires use of a Fake Shemp to complete The Three Stooges films which he has commenced.

November 26
  • Sir John Harding, the British Governor of Cyprus, declares a state of emergency on the island as a result of the EOKA campaign.



On the weeks of November 26, 1955, through January 7, 1956, "Sixteen Tons" by Tennessee Ernie Ford tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
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November 29
  • A partial meltdown of the nuclear reactor core of Experimental Breeder Reactor I near Arco, Idaho, United States, takes place during a coolant flow test.
  • Born: Howie Mandel, Canadian comedian, actor and host, in Toronto

November 30
  • The 1st Soviet Antarctic Expedition, led by Mikhail Somov, begins; it would last two years.



Released in November:

"Poor Me," Fats Domino
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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.



An interesting story. I wonder where they were headed exactly.

Five centuries? 1475? That doesn't seem possible.
1484.

"We shall punish our economy for your recreational activities."
This is a foreboding bit of business concerning what will happen to Paul in 1980.

You're embarassing yourself, George.
I find it interesting that a Southern segregationist would still be running as a Democrat by this point.

I do know this, but my brain's not connecting it to anything. No nostalgic value.
Started out as an advertising jingle, that wiki tells me was for Kodak.
That's what I read, though I don't recognize the jingle. This one's higher chart peak edged a much more recognizable classic single out of this week's post.

Good one. Strong nostalgic value. The Sweet had a nice handful of songs around then.
I don't have any firsthand recollection of this, but it's energetic and kinda catchy.

Good one, even though he didn't write it. :rommie: Strong nostalgic value.
Well, I guess that makes it seem less like he's blowing his own horn. One of his classic numbers from this peak era.

Fun. Strong nostalgic value.
Enjoyable funk classic.

Not my favorite TV theme, since I never watched the show, but certainly not bad. A bit of nostalgic value.
I did watch the show in the day, though I have no practical memory of it. This is one of the first TV themes to top the chart (following "TSOP [The Sound of Philadelphia]"), though it's a cover, not the version used in the show.

Okay, that makes sense in context, I guess. I kind of question any resemblance to real-world technology, though. :rommie:
Looks like a modular component.
SMDM30.jpg

Interesting. I thought that was a classic along the lines of Prince Albert in a can. Maybe it's one of those regional things.
I may have heard it in the day, but I must not have found it very memorable.

Well, they didn't give me a chance. :rommie:
I'd been sitting on that for a couple of months!
 
Last edited:
Started out as an advertising jingle, that wiki tells me was for Kodak.
Okay, then, I probably heard the commercial but not the single. That would explain it.

The Lawrence Welk Show on ABC (1955–1982)
I used to watch this with my Grandmother. Did not like it. Zero nostalgic value.

The Honeymooners on CBS, starring Jackie Gleason (1955–1956)
Actually, I used to watch this with my Grandmother too. It was on late at night on Channel 56 and we'd sit up and watch it waiting for my Mother to get home from the night shift at the hospital.

The first issue of Atlas Comics' Snafu is published, but it will only last three issues and disappear in March 1956 [released in November]. [This Mad-style humor mag is notable for bringing us Irving Forbush.]
I was going to say I didn't know that, but I think I did at one time. :rommie:

The musical film Guys and Dolls, starring Marlon Brando and Frank Sinatra, is premiered in New York City.
Never saw it. Brando and Sinatra? Probably never will. :rommie:

Racial segregation is outlawed on trains and buses in interstate commerce in the United States.
It's always interesting to be reminded that what we think of as the 60s really started a lot sooner.

Billboard magazine DJ poll names Elvis Presley as the most promising new country and western singer.
But will he be able to make the crossover to Rock'n'Roll?

"Burn That Candle," Bill Haley & His Comets
He does have a very specific sound, doesn't he?
:rommie:


A Soviet Tupolev Tu-16 (NATO reporting name "Badger") drops the first Soviet thermo-nuclear bomb, RDS-37, in Siberia.
I hope their aim was better than their space probes. :rommie:

Died: Shemp Howard, 60, The Three Stooges member (heart attack). The death requires use of a Fake Shemp to complete The Three Stooges films which he has commenced.
I'm not sure if I want to know what scenes included Fake Shemp.

On the weeks of November 26, 1955, through January 7, 1956, "Sixteen Tons" by Tennessee Ernie Ford tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
Good one. I always think of the time that Dietrich used it as one of his deadpan punchlines on Barney Miller. :rommie:

The 1st Soviet Antarctic Expedition, led by Mikhail Somov, begins; it would last two years.
They finally showed up in Scituate.

"Poor Me," Fats Domino
Not bad.

So he wasn't trying to defect. Definitely not what I expected. Surely he must have expected to die even if he had succeeded.

Hmm. The first Portuguese explorer reached there in 1484. The linked article, Portuguese Angola, indicates that its colonial status began in 1575, but the further linked article (how many separate articles do they need? :rommie: ), Colonial History of Angola, says that it wasn't incorporated as a colony until 1655.That's probably closer to what I would have guessed, if I had guessed.

This is a foreboding bit of business concerning what will happen to Paul in 1980.
Chekhov's Jail Cell.

I find it interesting that a Southern segregationist would still be running as a Democrat by this point.
Yeah, like with the segregation thing in the 50s, what we think of as distinct eras now were not so clearly defined in real time.

I did watch the show in the day, though I have no practical memory of it. This is one of the first TV themes to top the chart (following "TSOP [The Sound of Philadelphia]"), though it's a cover, not the version used in the show.
I didn't even realize it was a cover.

Looks like a modular component.
View attachment 49988
Maybe it is realistic, I don't know. Strikes me as far fetched, though.

I'd been sitting on that for a couple of months!
:rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



The Secrets of Isis
"The Show Off"
Originally aired November 1, 1975
IMDb + Wiki said:
Steve feels he has to draw attention to himself by showing off, which gets him into situations where Isis has to rescue him. An escaped gorilla menaces the Science Club's camping trip.

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Steve is a distinct case of a twenty-something actor not being convincing as a teenager. And his titular situation didn't really play into the climactic gorilla angle at all.



Emergency!
"One of Those Days"
Originally aired November 1, 1975
IMDb/MeTV said:
An elderly woman's stomach problems lead to a family brawl. Roy and Johnny treat a drunk in a hotel with a broken elevator. Doctors treat a boy with meningitis. Paramedics respond to a two-car accident with no victims, treat a man who fell in the bathtub, and rescue a child trapped in a burning building.

The paramedics are fixing the squad when their called to the poolside of the well-to-do Larson residence, where elder Mrs. Larson (Shirley Mitchell) is complaining of abdominal pain but dramatically refuses treatment. Her son Mike (uncredited Charles Robinson) and his wife, Jane (Penelope Windust), argue over the latter's role in upsetting Mother Larson. Jane tells Mother L what she wants to hear, including that she'll stop wearing slacks, so that ML will agree to treatment. The vitals prove inconclusive, but Brackett asks the paramedics to bring her in anyway. When Jane realizes that ML has been faking, she slaps Mike so hard that he falls to the ground, then has to be pulled off him by Roy. Roy and Johnny return to the station with a ripped shirt and kicked knee, respectively, and while they're unable to agree on who did what in the general melee, both express frustration at the ingratitude of the people they're trying to help.

Squad 51 is then called by the overcautious manager of a fleabag hotel (uncredited Bill McLean), where resident Joseph R. Healey (uncredited Jack Perkins) appears to be badly smashed but insists he doesn't need help. After the paramedics have descended three flights of stairs, the manager calls down to them from the window that Healey's stopped breathing and they have to climb back up. After mouth-to-mouth and oxygen, we cut to an ambulance crew carrying him out. At Rampart, Brackett explains that Healey was taking disulfiram to make him sick when he drank, and his inability to kick the habit threw him into respiratory arrest.

Next at Rampart, a woman named Rita Hudson (Marla Adams) brings in 10-year-old son Donnie, who's been mildly sick, but collapses and goes into a grand mal seizure. Running a 104-degree fever, the boy is examined by Early and Brackett, who find signs of upper respiratory infection and think Donnie may have meningitis. All the while, Mrs. Hudson is more concerned about the volunteer group activities she's missing, talking on the phone more than to Brackett, and trying to get him and members of the hospital staff involved in her causes.

Mrs. Hudson: You know, that's the big problem in this community...I mean, the whole country, for that matter. Apathy.​
Brackett: Mrs. Hudson, I couldn't agree with you more.​

While Johnny's having trouble under the hood of the squad, the station's called to a bad car smash-up, where they find no occupants in the vehicles, though there are signs of injury. The paramedics follow two trails of blood droplets and question a woman (uncredited Michele Noval) who's out watering plants near where the trails end in the middle of the street, but claims to have seen nothing. At the station, Roy expresses his frustration that they've been spinning their wheels for the whole shift.

Squad 51 next gets a call that's cancelled en route, but decide to check it out anyway. At the scene, Betty Grinnell (Lara Parker) apologetically takes them to her father, Henry (Ross Elliott), who fell in the tub and hit his head. He tells the paramedics that he's been weak and dizzy, and has more recently been experiencing abdominal pain. Later at Rampart, Brackett informs the paramedics that Henry has abdominal aortic aneurysm. Betty thanks the paramedics, as she's been unable to get her father to go to take care of himself. Brackett then updates Mrs. Hudson that Donnie doesn't have meningitis, he's just experiencing a viral syndrome...and she's torn away by the phone again.

While the paramedics are on their way back, Station 51 and other units are called to a shabby apartment building fire. A woman returning from shopping (uncredited Carol McEvoy) says that her daughter Lucy's in the building. The crew searches the building while hoses are passed up through the stairs. Johnny finds Lucy (uncredited Shannon Terhune) sheltering in a pull-out bed nook, and carries her out to her mother, with whom she communicates in sign language. Chet and Marco are working on creating a ventilating hole in the roof when it collapses under Chet, leaving him dangling into an apartment. After the paramedics cut his tank and help Marco pull him out, Cap'n Stanley gives Chet the rest of the fire off.

At the station, Johnny's attempting to reason that their streak of bad luck can't be expected to continue when he breaks a shoelace (which had been the beginning of Roy's day) just as they're getting a call for a woman stuck in a tree.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Mary's Delinquent"
Originally aired November 1, 1975
Frndly said:
Mary becomes a "big sister" to a juvenile delinquent and is put in a compromising position when the girl steals some money from the office.

About to leave for an out-of-town dental appointment, Lou uses his toothache as an excuse to swig scotch in the morning. Doing a story on the Big Sisters Association for Juvenile Delinquents, Mary tries to get Ted into the cause and is challenged into donating time herself. Murray tries to caution Mary about the sorts of experiences the delinquents may have, which motivates her to defend her own level of experience. (This definitely seems like a subject she'd want to avoid with Murray after the other week.) When Mary updates Murray that she's been assigned a 15-year-old, Sue Ann jumps on the bandwagon, wanting a good charitable cause to put on her resume for an award nomination. Mary's charge, Francie (Mackenzie Phillips immediately prior to ODAAT, which starts in December), arrives at the apartment, acting surly and asking if Mary has any grass. Sue Ann then pops in with her "little sister," Celestine (Tamu), whom Sue Ann is quick to point out is black. When Celestine offers Tic Tacs, Mary assumes they're something else.

After Mary shows Francie the newsroom, Murray finds that betting pool money he's been holding for Ted is missing from his desk, and the guys assume the worst.

Mary: Francie doesn't steal money from desks. She happens to be a shoplifter.​

At Mary's preparing a soul food dinner, Sue Ann tells Mary how she and Celestine went to a double feature of Shaft and Super Fly.

Sue Ann: Oh, it was wonderful watching them stick it to the honkies!​

Against Mary's will, Sue Ann starts a game of "I Confess" to try to coax the truth from Francie. When Mary's turn comes up and Sue Ann insists she participate, she brings up a newsroom subgag in which an offhand remark to underling Gus Brubaker (Phillip R. Allen) was taken as an order because she didn't know Lou was out of town and had left her in charge.

Mary: Okay, I bought a helicopter without knowing it.​

Sue Ann tells of how, at the age of 13, she stole a bag of walnuts (to bake a cake) from a grocer who died that night, a fate that she assumes was All About Her. When Francie doesn't want to play, Sue Ann blurts out a direct question about the stolen money, and contrary to Mary's protest, Francie confesses.

The next day, Francie comes in to excitedly tell Mary how she stole a jacket and felt guilty about it afterward, citing this as progress. Lou returns to ask Mary, who's sitting in his chair, about why there's a helicopter in his parking space. When he learns what Francie did, he begins to chastise the girl before realizing that he's out of the loop.

Lou: Who is she, does anybody know her!?!​

Lou proceeds to persuade Francie to return the jacket, then informs Mary that she'll need to do likewise with the helicopter.

In the coda, Mary informs the newsroom crew that the store won't be pressing charges, and Sue Ann pops in after taking her cultural immersion one step too far.
MTM31.jpg



The Bob Newhart Show
"What's It All About, Albert?"
Originally aired November 1, 1975
Wiki said:
After realizing that he's not actually helping any of his patients, Bob goes to his old mentor for guidance.

Bob's telling Jerry how he values accomplishment in seeing his patients become happier people when Elliot Carlin comes in soaking wet from having been sprayed by a fire boat, and proceeds to do the session with his pants off--after managing to get Bob's office furniture soaking wet. Elliot's discouraged about his lack of progress in therapy, and Bob tries to tell him that it's a journey, like a train with different stops for different passengers/patients. At home, Bob becomes jealous that Howard's passed an exam to become a co-pilot and Emily's in the running for a vice-principal position. At the office, Carol's even won a Menial Award ("Meanie") from a private group of receptionists. Emily encourages Bob to talk to another psychologist, so he looks up his old college mentor, Dr. Albert (Keenan Wynn), at a psychology library where everyone effects an overly positive and welcomingly huggy attitude--the professor pretending to be overwhelmingly pleased to see Bob, though he doesn't actually remember who he is. Albert shares that he's studied psychology for 45 years and tried every type of therapy imaginable...

Dr. Albert: I screamed before it was fashionable.​

...and the conclusion that he's come to is that psychology is all a crock--that they charge patients to sit and listen to them spill their guts, and he now places more importance in golf.

After trying the golf thing and finding that it stinks, Bob decides to hold a meeting of all 42 of his patients and give them the opportunity to be set free from what he sees as his fraudulent care. When Emily argues against this, Bob tries to demonstrate how little he does by calling Howard over and sitting him down. With minimal prodding, Howard opens up about his insecurity and frustration being a crewman on standby, while Bob just listens, nodding and saying "uh-huh"; but Howard brings himself around to expressing enjoyment in what he does and exits declaring that he feels great.

Back on the job, Bob tries cramming 42 assorted chairs into his office. When Elliot arrives early and learns what the mass session is about, he sits Bob down to remind him how he was Bob's first patient. Elliot proceeds to cite his baby steps of progress, and ultimately declares on behalf of all of Bob's patients that they love him...though he finds Bob hugging him to be a step too far.

In the coda, Emily's deflated because she's not getting the promotion, and Bob tries telling her that education is like a train journey...



I used to watch this with my Grandmother. Did not like it. Zero nostalgic value.
It was on at Grandma's. I think it used to run back-to-back with Hee Haw in Sundy afternoon syndication.

Never saw it. Brando and Sinatra? Probably never will. :rommie:
I was surprised to learn that they'd worked together. I wonder how they got along.

He does have a very specific sound, doesn't he?
:rommie:
Yeah, his singles kinda blend together.

Good one. I always think of the time that Dietrich used it as one of his deadpan punchlines on Barney Miller. :rommie:
This classic is one of those "Oh, that!" songs that I never recognize by name.

They finally showed up in Scituate.
Had to look that up, and check out how it's pronounced.

Nor terribly distinctive.

Hmm. The first Portuguese explorer reached there in 1484. The linked article, Portuguese Angola, indicates that its colonial status began in 1575, but the further linked article (how many separate articles do they need? :rommie: ), Colonial History of Angola, says that it wasn't incorporated as a colony until 1655.That's probably closer to what I would have guessed, if I had guessed.
Good to know.

Yeah, like with the segregation thing in the 50s, what we think of as distinct eras now were not so clearly defined in real time.
I assume he thought he was trying to take back the party or something.

I didn't even realize it was a cover.
The TV version was performed by the orchestra of its writer, Barry De Vorzon.
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"The Show Off"
"The ladder fell when he was all the way up."
"There's an escaped gorilla in this area."
"It's a landslide!"
"We're trapped in a cave with some wild animal!"
This is definitely the SHAZAM-o-verse. :rommie:

Steve is a distinct case of a twenty-something actor not being convincing as a teenager. And his titular situation didn't really play into the climactic gorilla angle at all.
At least there's a gorilla. Was it Carmine Infantino who said that book sales double whenever you put a gorilla on the cover? :rommie:

When Jane realizes that ML has been faking, she slaps Mike so hard that he falls to the ground, then has to be pulled off him by Roy.
"One Adam-12, handle Code 415...."

Roy and Johnny return to the station with a ripped shirt and kicked knee, respectively, and while they're unable to agree on who did what in the general melee, both express frustration at the ingratitude of the people they're trying to help.
No good deed goes unpunished. :rommie:

manager of a fleabag hotel (uncredited Bill McLean), where resident Joseph R. Healey (uncredited Jack Perkins)
Must be a No-Tell Motel. Haha. See what I did there? :rommie:

Brackett explains that Healey was taking disulfiram to make him sick when he drank, and his inability to kick the habit threw him into respiratory arrest.
I thought they were going to do the legit-medicine-mimics-intoxicatin trope.

All the while, Mrs. Hudson is more concerned about the volunteer group activities she's missing
They go to this well a lot too.

Mrs. Hudson: You know, that's the big problem in this community...I mean, the whole country, for that matter. Apathy.
Brackett: Mrs. Hudson, I couldn't agree with you more.
The Brackett Burn. :mallory:

the station's called to a bad car smash-up, where they find no occupants in the vehicles, though there are signs of injury. The paramedics follow two trails of blood droplets and question a woman (uncredited Michele Noval) who's out watering plants near where the trails end in the middle of the street, but claims to have seen nothing.
Presumably the cops took over, but that's a hell of a loose end to leave us with. It's like the opening of a Night Stalker episode or something.

Squad 51 next gets a call that's cancelled en route, but decide to check it out anyway.
They should just make that standard procedure at this point. :rommie:

Betty Grinnell (Lara Parker)
Angelique!

Betty thanks the paramedics, as she's been unable to get her father to go to take care of himself.
These old men who don't take proper care of themselves are a pain in the neck. :rommie:

Brackett then updates Mrs. Hudson that Donnie doesn't have meningitis, he's just experiencing a viral syndrome...and she's torn away by the phone again.
It's a good thing they didn't have cell phones in those days or he never would have spoken to her at all. :rommie:

Cap'n Stanley gives Chet the rest of the fire off.
:rommie:

just as they're getting a call for a woman stuck in a tree.
Probably that catty woman from the opening scene.

About to leave for an out-of-town dental appointment
Why would he need to leave town for a dental appointment? Am I missing some kind of ribald joke or something? :rommie:

Mary tries to get Ted into the cause and is challenged into donating time herself.
Walk the walk, Mary.

(This definitely seems like a subject she'd want to avoid with Murray after the other week.)
Oh, man, she's going to get him all worked up again.

Sue Ann jumps on the bandwagon, wanting a good charitable cause to put on her resume for an award nomination.
She's such a good SuemaritAnn.

Mary's charge, Francie (Mackenzie Phillips immediately prior to ODAAT, which starts in December)
And there is nobody more perfect to play a juvenile delinquent. :rommie:

When Celestine offers Tic Tacs, Mary assumes they're something else.
"I've fallen for that once too often."

Mary: Francie doesn't steal money from desks. She happens to be a shoplifter.
Don't pigeonhole people, Murray!

Sue Ann: Oh, it was wonderful watching them stick it to the honkies!
And fifty years later, the Internet has given us an entire subculture of Sue Anns. :rommie:

Mary: Okay, I bought a helicopter without knowing it.
That's coming out of her paycheck. Back to the old apartment.

Sue Ann tells of how, at the age of 13, she stole a bag of walnuts (to bake a cake) from a grocer who died that night, a fate that she assumes was All About Her.
Fate punished the grocer for her crime? :rommie:

When Francie doesn't want to play, Sue Ann blurts out a direct question about the stolen money, and contrary to Mary's protest, Francie confesses.
:rommie:

The next day, Francie comes in to excitedly tell Mary how she stole a jacket and felt guilty about it afterward, citing this as progress.
I like how she wasn't miraculously reformed in one episode.

Lou returns to ask Mary, who's sitting in his chair, about why there's a helicopter in his parking space.
That's hilarious. :rommie:

In the coda, Mary informs the newsroom crew that the store won't be pressing charges, and Sue Ann pops in after taking her cultural immersion one step too far.
View attachment 50027
Hopefully that was short lived. :rommie:

Elliot Carlin comes in soaking wet from having been sprayed by a fire boat
How did Elliot manage to encounter a fire boat? :rommie:

Howard's passed an exam to become a co-pilot
There's a separate exam for co-pilots? I just assumed they were all pilots.

Emily's in the running for a vice-principal position
It's interesting that she wants to move on to an administrative position.

Dr. Albert (Keenan Wynn), at a psychology library where everyone effects an overly positive and welcomingly huggy attitude
This is funny, because he played a police captain on Night Stalker who had adopted an "I'm Okay, You're Okay" attitude-- until Kolchak annoyed him back to his usual grouchy state.

Dr. Albert: I screamed before it was fashionable.
Bro's a Hipster. :mallory:

...and the conclusion that he's come to is that psychology is all a crock
After thirty-six years in Health Care, I'm inclined to agree that this is mostly true, aside from genuinely serious conditions.

Bob decides to hold a meeting of all 42 of his patients
Hmm. That seems like a lot, but I suppose it could be a mix of weekly and monthly patients. I never really wondered what the typical client load of the average psychologist might be.

and give them the opportunity to be set free from what he sees as his fraudulent care.
And what does he plan to do for a living? :rommie:

With minimal prodding, Howard opens up about his insecurity and frustration being a crewman on standby, while Bob just listens, nodding and saying "uh-huh"; but Howard brings himself around to expressing enjoyment in what he does and exits declaring that he feels great.
Happens all the time in real life.

When Elliot arrives early and learns what the mass session is about, he sits Bob down to remind him how he was Bob's first patient. Elliot proceeds to cite his baby steps of progress, and ultimately declares on behalf of all of Bob's patients that they love him
This is kind of an amazing moment for Mr Carlin. Just the fact that it happened kind of proves his point. :rommie:

It was on at Grandma's. I think it used to run back-to-back with Hee Haw in Sundy afternoon syndication.
Lawrence Welk and Hee Haw back-to-back? I think that's a violation of the Geneva Convention.

I was surprised to learn that they'd worked together. I wonder how they got along.
Good question. Probably with mutual fear and respect. :rommie:

Had to look that up, and check out how it's pronounced.
It rhymes with "barbituate," which I think is hilarious. :rommie:

I assume he thought he was trying to take back the party or something.
That sounds about right, I think.

The TV version was performed by the orchestra of its writer, Barry De Vorzon.
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Wow, I didn't realize, or forgot, that Mark Shera was on the show. From action hero to Barnaby Jones's wimpy nephew-- what a career arc. :rommie:
 
"The ladder fell when he was all the way up."
"There's an escaped gorilla in this area."
"It's a landslide!"
"We're trapped in a cave with some wild animal!"
This is definitely the SHAZAM-o-verse. :rommie:
Yep. The first episode definitely caused me to misjudge the show.

At least there's a gorilla. Was it Carmine Infantino who said that book sales double whenever you put a gorilla on the cover? :rommie:
I think it was Julie Schwartz.

Must be a No-Tell Motel. Haha. See what I did there? :rommie:
I think I do.

Presumably the cops took over, but that's a hell of a loose end to leave us with. It's like the opening of a Night Stalker episode or something.
Now that you mention it, this was another situation that fairly screamed for police to be on the scene. They're usually the first responders to auto accidents, aren't they?

Angelique!
Collinsed.
Emg99.jpg

And that was Stanley's crack, not mine.

Why would he need to leave town for a dental appointment? Am I missing some kind of ribald joke or something? :rommie:
Had to go back and check, I guess they didn't establish that he left town, just that he was going to the dentist. I misunderstood a crack Murry made suggesting that Mary fly in the copter to the dentist.

She's such a good SuemaritAnn.
That's maybe worth this one.
POTA01.jpg

And there is nobody more perfect to play a juvenile delinquent. :rommie:
She's really devoted to method acting! I was just reminded that she was in American Graffiti...she definitely grew up some between that and this.
MTM32.jpg

Fate punished the grocer for her crime? :rommie:
Or the Almighty, I think that's what she was getting at.

How did Elliot manage to encounter a fire boat? :rommie:
Walking dockside watching them practice, I believe.

There's a separate exam for co-pilots? I just assumed they were all pilots.
He's a navigator, so that sounds right to me that he wouldn't automatically be qualified to fly the plane.

It's interesting that she wants to move on to an administrative position.
Just an episodic contrivance.

Bro's a Hipster. :mallory:
And that was practically a Beatles reference, given John's role in helping popularize primal therapy.

After thirty-six years in Health Care, I'm inclined to agree that this is mostly true, aside from genuinely serious conditions.
Mm-hmm...Mm-hmm....

Hmm. That seems like a lot, but I suppose it could be a mix of weekly and monthly patients. I never really wondered what the typical client load of the average psychologist might be.
I have to wonder how he managed to scrounge up 42 mismatched chairs all by himself, even if he scoured all the other offices on the floor.

And what does he plan to do for a living? :rommie:
Don't know if he thought that through.

This is kind of an amazing moment for Mr Carlin. Just the fact that it happened kind of proves his point. :rommie:
BN26.jpg
BN27.jpg

Lawrence Welk and Hee Haw back-to-back? I think that's a violation of the Geneva Convention.
:lol: Just Sunday afternoon at Grandma's.

Good question. Probably with mutual fear and respect. :rommie:
Such a potentially major clash of egos. Of course, I'm reminded that Brando later played Not Frank's Godfather....

Wow, I didn't realize, or forgot, that Mark Shera was on the show. From action hero to Barnaby Jones's wimpy nephew-- what a career arc. :rommie:
:lol: I just recognized him myself when I was grabbing that video. I was motivated to put on an episode of S.W.A.T. from MeTV+ last night, but fell asleep during it. It expired, too, so I'll never know how it turned out.
 
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I think it was Julie Schwartz.
Yeah, that makes sense.

Now that you mention it, this was another situation that fairly screamed for police to be on the scene. They're usually the first responders to auto accidents, aren't they?
Or at least a close second, depending on logistics.

I love her smile. :rommie:

And that was Stanley's crack, not mine.
A wisecrack from the Cap'n. Good for him. :rommie:

Had to go back and check, I guess they didn't establish that he left town, just that he was going to the dentist. I misunderstood a crack Murry made suggesting that Mary fly in the copter to the dentist.
Oh, okay. I thought maybe they were trying to subtly suggest something.

That's maybe worth this one.
View attachment 50043
:D

She's really devoted to method acting! I was just reminded that she was in American Graffiti...she definitely grew up some between that and this.
View attachment 50044
Watching One Day At A Time was such a roller-coaster ride. :rommie:

Or the Almighty, I think that's what she was getting at.
The Almighty works in mysterious ways.

Walking dockside watching them practice, I believe.
"There's my neighbor, Eliot Carlin. Pretend he's on fire."

He's a navigator, so that sounds right to me that he wouldn't automatically be qualified to fly the plane.
No, but it makes sense that a pilot and co-pilot would be the same. But then I suppose a new pilot would have to put in time as a co-pilot, like a resident, before they can take the big chair. That's probably what they meant.

Just an episodic contrivance.
True. I'm kind of going back and forth about whether I consider it in character or not.

And that was practically a Beatles reference, given John's role in helping popularize primal therapy.
And it also gave us a Night Stalker episode title just a few months prior.

Mm-hmm...Mm-hmm....
Ah, I feel much better having gotten that off my chest.

I have to wonder how he managed to scrounge up 42 mismatched chairs all by himself, even if he scoured all the other offices on the floor.
Carol stole them from all the other floors. She earned that Meanie!

:rommie:

:lol: Just Sunday afternoon at Grandma's.
We got Lawrence Welk on Saturday night. I know that I saw Hee Haw a few times, but I have no idea how. I can't imagine either 38 or 56 carrying it, or where it would even fit on their schedules.

:lol: I just recognized him myself when I was grabbing that video.
It occurred to me that we've seen another such career arc-- the guy who played Barclay was previously in the main cast of The A-Team.

I was motivated to put on an episode of S.W.A.T. from MeTV+ last night, but fell asleep during it. It expired, too, so I'll never know how it turned out.
I hate that feeling. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



The Six Million Dollar Man
"One of Our Running Backs Is Missing"
Originally aired November 2, 1975
Edited Wiki said:
Football player Larry Bronco is kidnapped as part of a plan to make his team lose and generate a fortune for his abductors. Steve determines to find him before the start of the game.

The only episode of the series directed by Lee Majors opens at the Pasadena Rose Bowl, where Steve watches practice and reacquaints himself with college football teammate turned pro player Larry Bronco (Larry Csonka) and his wife Pam (Pamela Csonka). When Larry makes a crack about Steve's throwing arm, Steve tosses Larry a pass that threatens to raise his security clearance. Also in the stands are Rick LaPort (Les Josephson) and a guy named Tatashore (former Tarzan Mike Henry), who are planning with Larry's rival teammate and Rick's younger brother, Bobby (Dick Butkus), to kidnap Larry.

Larry further challenges Steve to race to Steve's car several blocks away, and Tatashore, who's tailing them, has trouble keeping up. Parked outside a bowling alley, not-winded Steve challenges an exhausted Larry to a game inside and wins a double-or-nothing bet by putting a little bionic into it--smashing the pins, natch. Afterward, Steve claims that it was a gag that he set up with the manager. Elsewhere, Rick introduces Bobby to his burly team of ex-prison mates--Stolar (Carl Weathers), Ailes (O. William Faison), Harnell (uncredited Terry Leonard), Rosen (uncredited Allan Graf), and Kibbie (Tom Mack). At the hotel, Steve's lured away via page and then trapped in an elevator by Stolar (fortunately, Steve's not expecting). While he's prying himself out in front of an astounded maid, Stolar, Rosen, and Rick make their move on Larry, shooting him with a tranq dart and smuggling him out in a laundry bin. Steve busts into Larry's hotel room and finds a pair of smashed sunglasses.

Making the scene as usual, Oscar questions why there's been no ransom demand, and Steve speculates that it's to keep Larry out of the game, which would affect the points spread in a way that an in-the-know gambler could take advantage of. Oscar, who happens to have been a public prosecutor in Pasadena, enlists bookie George Yokum (Al Checco) to sniff out unusual betting activity of that nature, which leads to Stolar, whom Steve recognizes from having seen him impersonating hotel staff. Steve tails Stolar to a ranch in the countryside, doing the last part offroad on foot. He finds that the place is occupied by Bobby and his squad, and finds Larry chained, doped up, and singing. As Steve's preparing to get away with Larry, he's caught by a rifle-sporting Tatashore, who spotted him running in.

When Tatashore brags about his old prison team, Steve sees an opportunity, challenging Bobby and crew to a game against him and Larry. Steve and Larry end up playing against four of the baddies, while the four others stand guard with rifles. Steve improvises a plan to get him and Larry closer to a nearby van (which is consistently referred to as a truck). Rooting on the sidelines, Tatashore gets so invested in the game that he jumps in and tackles Larry. Steve and Larry put up such a good game that Steve's also able to lure Harnell into playing. When the duo get close enough to the van, Steve turns up the bionics while setting up a pass to Larry, and Larry uses his run to plow into one of the guards; while Steve ultimately tosses the ball at another guard, breaking his rifle. Larry gets the van started, while Steve kicks in the wheels of the baddies' other ride, a sedan...enabling Steve and Larry to drive off unchallenged.

Bronc makes the game, though the coach (Russ Grieve) fines him for being late. By this point Larry has picked up that Steve's bionic, though he doesn't understand what that means...and demands Steve pay him back for their bowling bet.



All in the Family
"Edith Breaks Out"
Originally aired November 3, 1975
Wiki said:
Edith gets a volunteer job despite Archie's objections.

Archie comes home to an empty house and no beer in the fridge. Edith rushes in behind him with TV dinners and beer, hurrying to get everything ready before noticing that he's already there.

Edith: When did you come in?​
Archie: Just before this Road Runner cartoon started.​

Edith explains that she was working at the old folks' home as a volunteer from a church group called the Sunshine Ladies. She's enthusiastic to tell stories about her interactions with the residents at the expense of Archie's usual routine of wanting to talk about his day at work. Edith tells him that she enjoys what she's doing, which makes her feel like she has a purpose in life, and Archie declares that her purpose is to see to his needs, and insists that she quit. She tries to convince him that she still loves him, but gets bored while he's at work. As an example of how he promised her a life of fun and excitement before they were married, she produces a letter that he wrote her during the war.

Edith (reading the letter): "I hope you will be waitin' for me when I come marchin' home and the world is safe from democracy."​

Edith also reminds him of an early routine they had of eating at a Chinese restaurant called Hop Sings on Friday nights. But Archie insists, so Edith, on the verge of tears, refuses to serve him dinner until he takes back saying that her volunteer work isn't worth anything. Then he tries to call the Reverend Fletcher...

Edith: Felcher!​

Whatever. And she refuses to let him, slamming the phone down. What's more, when he's about to storm out to Kelcy's, she anticipates that he'll slam the door in her face and beats him to the punch, storming out and slamming the door herself.

When Mike brings the dry-cleaning on Edith's behalf, Archie runs downstairs for his "welcome home kissy". (This is the last of Sally's strike episodes.) Following that bit of awkwardness, the two of them get into a discussion about Edith's situation, Archie citing passages in the Bible that support women serving men, and Mike asserting that Archie's jealous. When Edith comes home, she gives Archie the cold shoulder. After Mike leaves, he tries to sit her down to talk, and she makes it clear that she's still mad at him and wants him to take back what he said.

He tries to make up with her by taking her to Hop Sings, where they're waited on by the owner (James Hong), who remembers Archie's old ordering gags and lousy tips from 26 years ago. Archie toasts Edith, thanking her for 26 beautiful years of marriage and telling her that she's his Sunshine Girl, which earns him a kiss. While they read their fortune cookies, Edith breaks the news that she won't be volunteering at the home anymore, which Archie is happy to hear...until she explains that now they'll be paying her $2 an hour.



M*A*S*H and Hawaii Five-O will not be viewed this week so we can check out what's on ABC....



The New Original Wonder Woman
Newly originally aired November 7, 1975
Edited Wiki said:
Princess Diana (Lynda Carter) volunteers to return Steve Trevor (Lyle Waggoner) to Washington, D.C., after he crashes his airplane on Paradise Island. Upon arriving, she establishes the secret identity of Diana Prince and begins working for Steve.

The TV movie opens with a faux newsreel establishing the setting as Summer 1942. An impersonated announcement by FDR transitions into the classic opening credits with their very memorable theme song.
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WW02.jpg
WW03.jpg

Comic book-style captions introduce us to a secret Nazi manor in Germany, where Oberst (Colonel) Von Blasko (Kenneth Mars) briefs pilot Captain Drangel (Eric Braeden) about a secret mission to use the advanced XV-12 bomber to conduct a pinpoint strike on an American factory producing the new Norden bombsight. (I should be taken out of the period by the '70s hair, but at this point I'm immersed in the mid-'70s, so it all looks normal to me.) They're attended to by a flunky named Nikolas (former Laugh-In poet Henry Gibson), who sneaks out a message via carrier pigeon. In Washington, DC, General Phil Blankenship (John Randolph) briefs Major Steve Trevor with the intel. In order to keep the attack on the lowdown for morale, Steve plans to intercept Drangel by himself over the Bermuda Triangle. Steve's civilian secretary and love interest, Marcia (Stella Stevens), reports back to the Nazis via Morse code, causing the Oberst to suspect a leak.

Trevor and Drangel engage in a dogfight, ultimately destroying each other in a head-on pass and simultaneously bailing out. While Steve salutes his worthy adversary on the way down, Drangel pulls out his Luger, wounding Steve...only to meet his reward when he lands in a school of sharks. Steve washes up on an uncharted island, where he's found by Princess Diana and her friend Rena (Inga Neilsen), who wear toga-style short dressees and have never seen a man before.
Edited Wiki said:
The island is home to the Amazons: beautiful, ageless women with great strength, agility, and intelligence.
An Amazon doctor (Fannie Flagg) reports Steve's identity to Queen Hippolyta (Cloris Leachman chewing the scenery), who fears what this means, remembering how the Amazons were slaves in Greece and Rome. Diana, who wants to believe that some men can be trusted, takes an interest in observing Major Trevor as he's nursed back to health while his eyes are kept bandaged for his brief periods of consciousness, during which he describes the conflict between America and the Nazis.

Hippolyta wants to shield her daughter from contact with Trevor and the strange feelings that he evokes, which threaten to rob the princess of her Amazonian immortality.
Queen Hippolyta decrees that Olympic-style games shall be held to select one Amazon to return Trevor back to America. But she forbids Diana to participate. Diana states that since she is not allowed to participate, she does not want to be present for the games and will take a retreat to the other side of the island. The games are held with participants wearing masks and numbers, shown as Roman numerals in triangles on white sleeveless short tunic-dresses.

Among the contestants is a masked blonde Amazon. During the events, the blonde Amazon shows exceptional skills, and she ties for first with another Amazon. To break the deadlock, the "bullets and bracelets" event is decided as the tiebreaker, wherein each of the women takes turns shooting at the other; the one being shot at must deflect the bullets with her bulletproof bracelets. The blonde woman wins the event, superficially injuring her opponent's arm.
Hippolyta presents the anonymous winner (numbered XXXIII) with the accoutrements that she'll take with her man's world.
A golden belt will be the source of her strength and power while away from Paradise Island. She has her bullet-deflecting bracelets and also receives a golden lasso which is unbreakable and forces people to obey and tell the truth when bound with it.
When she is pronounced the winner, she removes her mask and wig and reveals that she is Diana. Her mother, though initially shocked, relents and allows her to go to America.
Diana's uniform as Wonder Woman, designed by Queen Hippolyta, features emblems of America, the land to which she will be returning Steve Trevor.
The iconic outfit includes a Golden Age touch, an optional skirt that Diana doesn't wear.

Hippolyta: Go in peace, my daughter. And remember that in the world of ordinary mortals, you are a wonder woman.​
Diana: I will make you proud of me. And of Wonder Woman.​

Diana, as Wonder Woman, flies to Washington, D.C. in an invisible plane.
Trevor first sees Diana when he briefly comes to in the plane, which looks like it's made of transparent plastic. Diana creates quite a stir when she drops Steve off at the hospital in her outfit...and all the more so on the street, which is very obviously Rodeo Drive or a backlot lookalike. She tries to shop for a civilian dress, but isn't familiar with the concept of money.
The heroine stumbles upon a bank robbery, which she stops.
This includes tossing the robbers around and stopping their driver from getting away by lifting the back end of the car. Diana identifies herself to a cynical policeman (Tom Rosqui) as Wonder Woman. Ian Wolfe appears as the bank's manager.
A theatrical agent who sees her in action [Ashley Norman (Red Buttons)] offers to help make her bullets and bracelets act a stage attraction. Diana is hesitant, but needing money in this new society, she agrees.

Upon learning that Steve's alive, Marcia calls a Fifth Columnist contact named Carl Hoff. As she and General Blankenship visit Steve at the hospital, he's watched over by a surgically masked nurse who turns out to be Diana.
Marcia's first attempt is arranging for an accomplice to fire a machine gun at Wonder Woman during her stage act.
The act involves having audience volunteers shoot at Diana in front of a metal wall. The accomplice (Maida Severn, billed as Teutonic Woman) brings her own Tommy gun, which Norman acts hesitant to let her use, but Diana agrees to the test and displays her superhuman speed, surprising the collaborators. When Diana declines doing a tour and insists on collecting her pay, Norman makes an attempt on her from behind with a gun, but she flips him over her head. He calls Marcia, identifying himself as Carl Hoff.

Meanwhile, Herr Oberst heads for the States via Argentina, flying the next model, the XV-13, to finish Drangel's mission. Upon leaving the hospital, Steve defies orders to go after Von Blasko himself; but is captured on the road by Hoff and a couple of henchman (including Severn Darden). At the hospital, Diana learns from the head nurse (Helen Verbit) that Trevor's been released. Her first spinning transformation into Wonder Woman is done with a dissolve, sans the later flash and bang effect.

Held in Marcia's apartment in Chevy Chase, blindfolded-again Steve is questioned by Marcia under the influence of truth serum, and while he's a tough nut to crack, she eventually persuades him to give her the combination to the wall safe at Military Intelligence that contains the Nazis' secondary objective, the Norden bombsight plans. But she's intercepted rifling the safe by Diana, who indicates that she was always onto Marcia.
Wonder Woman defeats Marcia in an extended fight sequence in the War Department.
Knowing that her gun is no match for WW, Marcia employs her Nuremburg judo champion skills and knife-throwing ability in a climactic, acrobatic catfight set to the theme tune that tears up a good section of corridor. After coming out on top, Diana questions Marcia with the lasso. While spilling intel, Marcia taunts Wonder Woman that she can't be in two places at once, boasting that the Third Reich will go on for a thousand years.

WW: I heard the Greeks and the Romans say the same thing.​
Marcia: You heart that?​
WW: I may be older than I look.​

Diana proceeds to deliver a bit of propaganda about Nazi-unsupported feminism and sisterhood; then calls the apartment while mimicking Marcia's voice, delaying a rendezvous for a submarine pickup so she can intercept the XV-13 in her invisible plane, which apparently has some sort of magnetic tractor beam that forces an attachment with the bomber. She boards the Nazi craft, knocks the Oberst out, and uses her mimicry power to impersonate him, requesting the coordinates of the sub. When the Nazi craft surfaces, she dives the bomber into it and escapes in her plane.

WW delivers an unconscious Von Blasko to police HQ (also knowing nothing of jurisdiction), where she refuses for the second time to stick around and fill out reports. She then proceeds to Marcia's apartment and defeats Norman and his goons, the theme tune briefly recurring. As she frees Steve, he finally sees her in costume again. She reports her success in busting the spy ring and drops the bomb that Marcia was their leader.

The film closes as Trevor and Brigadier General Blankenship talk about Trevor's new secretary, whom Blankenship selected not only for her outstanding clerical test scores, but her decidedly plain appearance in contrast to Marcia: the bespectacled Yeoman First Class Diana Prince USNR(WR), Wonder Woman in disguise.
Steve struggles to dictate a letter expressing his feelings to his mysterious benefactress. The final shot is a closeup of Diana that transitions into a comic book panel.

I don't recall offhand how much it will carry over into the first season, but this initial installment emulates to some extent the campy tone of Batman.



It occurred to me that we've seen another such career arc-- the guy who played Barclay was previously in the main cast of The A-Team.
But he was the crazy guy on that show.
 
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