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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread



50 Years Ago This Week


December 1
  • Sisavang Vatthana abdicated his throne as King of Laos. Crown Prince Vong Savang was never crowned, as the monarchy was abolished the next day. Although the Communist government initially designated the former King as "Supreme Adviser to the President," and allowed him draw his monthly salary and to remain in his palace, Sisavang Vatthana would be evicted in April and moved to the former royal residence at Hong Xieng Thong. In March 1977, the former King and Queen, the Crown Prince and Prince Sisavang would all be arrested and deported to a prison camp in Houaphanh Province, and would die three years later.
  • Gerald R. Ford became the second U.S. president to travel to the People's Republic of China, where he met with Vice-Premier Deng Xiaoping.

December 2
  • The People's Republic of China became only the third nation to successfully conduct photographic reconnaissance from space, recovering the Fanhui Shi Weixing series spy satellite China 4, which had been launched on November 26 to take photographs.
  • The U.S. House of Representatives voted 213–203 to rescue New York City from bankruptcy, narrowly approving a plan for $6.9 billion of short-term loans over a three-year period. Three days later, the U.S. Senate approved the measure 57–30.
  • Laos came under full communist control, when Vientiane fell to the Pathet Lao leader, Prince Souphanouvong, who became the first President of the People's Democratic Republic of Laos.

December 3
  • The wreck of the British hospital ship HMHS Britannic was found by Jacques Cousteau, 59 years after it was sunk off of the coast of Greece by a German submarine on November 21, 1916.

December 5
  • The British policy of "preventive detention" without trial was ended. Beginning on August 9, 1971, any person in Northern Ireland who was suspected of terrorism could be arrested and kept in prison indefinitely. During the more than four years of detention, 1,874 of the 1,981 detainees were Roman Catholic, and only 107 were Protestant.

December 6
  • Before ending a state visit to Jakarta, U.S. President Gerald R. Ford and U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger assured Indonesia's President Suharto that the United States would not interfere with his plans to invade East Timor, although both would later express surprise at the invasion and deny that Suharto had raised the subject at all. A State Department telegram, declassified 26 years later, would show that Suharto told the two that "we want your understanding if we deem it necessary to take rapid or drastic action" in East Timor, and that Ford responded, "We will understand, and will not press you on the issue," and Kissinger added, "If you have made plans, we will do our best to keep everyone quiet until the President returns home."


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Fly, Robin, Fly," Silver Convention
2. "That's the Way (I Like It)," KC & The Sunshine Band
3. "Sky High," Jigsaw
4. "Let's Do It Again," The Staple Singers
5. "The Way I Want to Touch You," Captain & Tennille
6. "Island Girl," Elton John
7. "Low Rider," War
8. "Nights on Broadway," Bee Gees
9. "Saturday Night," Bay City Rollers
10. "My Little Town," Simon & Garfunkel
11. "Fox on the Run," Sweet
12. "Love Rollercoaster," Ohio Players
13. "I Write the Songs," Barry Manilow
14. "Venus and Mars/Rock Show," Wings
15. "Eighteen with a Bullet," Pete Wingfield
16. "Our Day Will Come," Frankie Valli
17. "I Want'a Do Something Freaky to You," Leon Haywood
18. "I Love Music, Pt. 1," The O'Jays
19. "Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)," Diana Ross
20. "Secret Love," Freddy Fender
21. "Who Loves You," The Four Seasons
22. "This Will Be (An Everlasting Love)," Natalie Cole
23. "Feelings," Morris Albert
24. "Heat Wave" / "Love Is a Rose," Linda Ronstadt
25. "Times of Your Life," Paul Anka
26. "The Last Game of the Season (A Blind Man in the Bleachers)," David Geddes

28. "I Only Have Eyes for You," Art Garfunkel
29. "For the Love of You (Part 1 & 2)," The Isley Brothers
30. "Country Boy (You Got Your Feet in L.A.)," Glen Campbell
31. "Part Time Love," Gladys Knight & The Pips
32. "Miracles," Jefferson Starship
33. "Walk Away from Love," David Ruffin
34. "Rock and Roll All Nite," Kiss
35. "Full of Fire," Al Green
36. "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain," Willie Nelson
37. "You Sexy Thing," Hot Chocolate
38. "Bad Blood," Neil Sedaka
39. "Lyin' Eyes," The Eagles

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

45. "Over My Head," Fleetwood Mac
46. "Sing a Song," Earth, Wind & Fire
47. "SOS," ABBA

49. "Evil Woman," Electric Light Orchestra
50. "I'm Sorry," John Denver

53. "Baby Face," The Wing and a Prayer Fife and Drum Corps
54. "Do It Any Way You Wanna," Peoples Choice
55. "Love to Love You Baby," Donna Summer
56. "Games People Play," The Spinners

58. "Fly Away," John Denver

61. "Wake Up Everybody, Pt. 1," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes

65. "Lady Blue," Leon Russell

69. "Hurricane, Pt. 1," Bob Dylan

73. "Love Hurts," Nazareth

75. "Let It Shine" / "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother," Olivia Newton-John

77. "Squeeze Box," The Who

82. "Convoy," C. W. McCall

84. "Theme from S.W.A.T.," Rhythm Heritage
85. "Somewhere in the Night," Helen Reddy

91. "You," George Harrison

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

97. "Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady," Helen Reddy

Leaving the chart:
  • "Ballroom Blitz," Sweet (25 weeks)
  • "Born to Run," Bruce Springsteen (11 weeks)
  • "Brazil," The Ritchie Family (18 weeks)
  • "Diamonds and Rust," Joan Baez (11 weeks)
  • "Something Better to Do," Olivia Newton-John (11 weeks)
  • "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes," Esther Phillips (16 weeks)

Recent and new on the chart:

"For the Love of You (Part 1 & 2)," The Isley Brothers
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(Nov. 15; #22 US; #10 R&B)

"Wake Up Everybody, Pt. 1," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
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(Nov. 22; #12 US; #34 AC; #1 R&B; #23 UK)

"Fly Away," John Denver
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(#13 US; #1 AC; #12 Country; backing vocals by Olivia Newton-John)

"Love to Love You Baby," Donna Summer
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(#2 US; #1 Dance; #3 R&B; #4 UK)

"Convoy," C. W. McCall
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(#1 US the week of Jan. 10, 1976; #19 AC; #1 Country; #2 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Six Million Dollar Man, "Divided Loyalty"
  • All in the Family, "Archie's Civil Rights"
  • M*A*S*H, "The Gun"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "A Touch of Guilt"
  • The Secrets of Isis, "Scuba Duba"
  • Emergency!, "On Camera"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "The Happy Homemaker Takes Lou Home"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "The Article"



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



There we go. A competitor to S&H Green Stamps (forgot about the S&H part), but I don't remember them. According to the Green Stamps article, there were other competitors, too, but they all seem regional or associated with specific store chains.
The odd thing about the grill plotline was how they handwaved being able to assemble the grill and get it working in minutes so Chet and Marco were already preparing the meal in the kitchen. Putting that grill together could've been another's episode's comical subplot.

That does sound familiar. I think I also mentioned an episode of Highway Patrol that spotlighted a female cop.
You did.
 
Sisavang Vatthana abdicated his throne as King of Laos. Crown Prince Vong Savang was never crowned, as the monarchy was abolished the next day.
There's a guy with worse luck than me.

Although the Communist government initially designated the former King as "Supreme Adviser to the President," and allowed him draw his monthly salary and to remain in his palace, Sisavang Vatthana would be evicted in April and moved to the former royal residence at Hong Xieng Thong. In March 1977, the former King and Queen, the Crown Prince and Prince Sisavang would all be arrested and deported to a prison camp in Houaphanh Province, and would die three years later.
Him too.

Gerald R. Ford became the second U.S. president to travel to the People's Republic of China, where he met with Vice-Premier Deng Xiaoping.
Hold on, I thought only Nixon could go to China!

The People's Republic of China became only the third nation to successfully conduct photographic reconnaissance from space, recovering the Fanhui Shi Weixing series spy satellite China 4, which had been launched on November 26 to take photographs.
And then they had to wait for them to be developed....

Laos came under full communist control, when Vientiane fell to the Pathet Lao leader
Known colloquially as "The Pathetics."

During the more than four years of detention, 1,874 of the 1,981 detainees were Roman Catholic, and only 107 were Protestant.
I'm sensing possible bias.

Before ending a state visit to Jakarta, U.S. President Gerald R. Ford and U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger assured Indonesia's President Suharto that the United States would not interfere with his plans to invade East Timor
These are the guys who just declared independence from Portugal. Nice going, Dick and Henry. Why didn't the UN have anything to say about this?

"For the Love of You (Part 1 & 2)," The Isley Brothers
I have no recollection of this whatsoever. Therefore, predictably, no nostalgic value. :rommie:

"Wake Up Everybody, Pt. 1," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
Ditto.

"Fly Away," John Denver
I vaguely remember this one. Poor John has lost his inspiration at this point.

"Love to Love You Baby," Donna Summer
It may be surprising to hear that I like this one. This was before Disco became so obnoxious and pervasive. Also, I may have mentioned before that Donna and I share a hometown. My Uncle Joe claims to have known her. Anyway, strong nostalgic value.

"Convoy," C. W. McCall
A strange and inexplicable classic. Strong nostalgic value.

Coincidentally, I heard "A Blind Man in the Bleachers" on American Top 40 yesterday morning. Very likely it was the first time I've heard it since it was first released.

The odd thing about the grill plotline was how they handwaved being able to assemble the grill and get it working in minutes so Chet and Marco were already preparing the meal in the kitchen. Putting that grill together could've been another's episode's comical subplot.
That's true. I can see them getting it all put together and then it collapses under its own weight. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



The Six Million Dollar Man
"The Blue Flash"
Originally aired November 16, 1975
Edited IMDb said:
Steve goes undercover as a longshoreman to investigate the disappearance of another OSI agent who was on to a smuggling ring dealing in ultra-sensitive detecting devices.

Steve has some in-lab bionic surgery under a substitute Rudy named Harold (uncredited) to install a sensor in his hand that, when waved over a microchip, will trigger the titular effect in Steve's eye. This is to help embedded agent Ed Carpenter in a case on the L.A. docks. Steve exposits to Oscar what a microchip does, and how the smuggled components could be used to build, for nefarious, national-security-threatening purposes...wait for it...mini-computers! Meanwhile in L.A., Carpenter (uncredited), using the alias Abe Brennan, if forced into a car by a fellow longshoreman named Jimbo (Michael Conrad), which is witnessed by his rooming house landlady, Mrs. Cook (Janet MacLachlan).

Sporting a stocking cap, fake 'stache, and ring in his right ear (not that there's anything wrong with that), Steve applies for a room from Mrs. Cook to learn that Brennan skipped out on her. He makes the acquaintance of her young son, Ernie (Rodney Allen Rippy), who's tearful over his banana-seat bike having just gotten run over by a truck, so Steve floats the possibility of Chekhov's Miraculous Bike Repair. At a warehouse chip-smuggling lair, foreman Tony Anderson (Eddie Fontaine) reports to a Mr. Logan (Jason Wingreen) about having disposed of Brennan in the drink, which Logan knows is a bad idea. Steve produces false credentials to get a job on the dock, though Anderson and Jimbo are now on the lookout for feds. Operating a forklift, "Mack Stoffer" takes his first opportunity to wave his palm over stacks of boxes, but is caught loitering by Jimbo, who requests an on-the-spot box-heaving test, which Steve passes by putting a little bionic into it.

Calling in to Oscar...
SMDM31.jpg
...Steve learns that Carpenter's body has been found. After Steve finds Ernie wishing over his bike and receives the obligatory talk from Ernie's mom about filling his head with ideas, Steve waits until nobody's around and bionic-unbends the mangled conveyance, which earns him a packed lunch. While Steve's back to getting touchy-feely with boxes, Det. Olmstead (Barry Cahill) pays a call on Mrs. Cook, offering her government protection if she comes forward with what she saw.

While a friend named Charlie (Benny Nickleberry) pressures Ernie to deliver some bike maintenance from the "spirits," Mrs. Cook visits the dock under the pretense of bringing Steve another lunch, but this catches the attention of Jimbo, who eavesdrops as she tries to warn him, having figured that he's another government agent. Jimbo subsequently attempts to stage an accident involving a one-ton crate, just as Steve finally gets the titular signal. Steve knocks Jimbo out with bionic-opposite reaction and zeroes in on a box marked coconut oil, slow-running and jumping to escape the docs with it. Back at Ma Cook's Boarding House, Ernie witnesses as Ma is grabbed by an uncredited supporting goon in a station wagon.

After an update from Ernie, Steve bargains with Charlie on behalf of the bike elves to let Ernie lay low at his place. Then Steve finds one of the cans with chips in it, hides the rest of the box, and proceeds to the dock to bargain with Logan for Mrs. Cook's safety. Once she's in the clear, Steve jumps into bionic action, taking out Tony, Jimbo, and another assorted goon before a disbelieving Logan's eyes.

In the coda, Oscar swings by L.A. to pick an undisguised Steve up at the boarding house. Learning that Ernie's taken money from his friends to fix all sorts of odd junk, Steve confesses to the lad that he fixed the bikes with the magic of unspecified science, and compensates Ernie for the dollar that he owes them back but already spent.



All in the Family
"Gloria Suspects Mike"
Originally aired November 17, 1975
MeTV said:
Gloria suspects hanky-panky when she meets the beautiful blonde Mike's been tutoring after school hours.

Archie comes home with an expensive baby buggy that the kids had their eye on, the Bunkers planning to give it to them as a surprise gift. He gets locked in the cellar with it when Gloria comes over to unload on her mother about being in her seventh month and her insecurity concerning Linda Galloway, the well-endowed girl Mike's been putting in extra time tutoring. After he's let out, Archie reassures Gloria that Mike wouldn't cheat on her, but he shares a contradictory opinion with Edith after Gloria leaves, and plans to set up a situation to get the truth out of Mike. Meanwhile, Mike puts in his first visit to Linda's (Bernadette Peters) place. Mike acts nervous, showing signs that he is preoccupied with making himself attractive to her. She confronts him about this, letting him know that she's willing. Mike makes a show of protesting her impression, but folds when she starts passionately kissing him.

While Edith and Gloria are at the movies, Archie invites Mike over to talk, going out of his way to be friendly, serving wine and calling his son-in-law Michael. Dissolve to both of them so smashed that Mike's calling Archie "Dad," while Archie makes toasts to Poland and President Richard M. Ford and his wife Lady Bird. After Archie expresses his respect and affection for his son-in-law, Mike confides with Archie about what happened with Linda that night. By the time Mike's getting into how he came to his senses and promptly left, Archie has passed out. Mike lifts Archie's legs onto the couch, kisses Daddy goodnight on the forehead, and stumbles out singing "Oh, My Papa".

The next day, Edith's nursing Archie's hangover, having found him sleeping in the hall closet. Archie remembers the last thing Mike was telling him, how Linda had come on to him, and assumes the worst. Gloria comes over in tears because she found Mike taking a shower with his clothes on and singing. Edith reassures Gloria that Mike was getting drunk with Archie. Then Mike, now sobered up, comes over with a surprise for Gloria, the thing that he's been saving the tutoring money for--the baby carriage that he doesn't know the folks bought.



M*A*S*H
"Of Moose and Men"
Originally aired November 21, 1975
Edited IMDb said:
Hawkeye saves the life of a colonel who wants him reprimanded for disrespect. B.J. tries to save the marriage of a friend who found out his wife is cheating on him, and Frank is paranoid that all Koreans are hiding bombs.

While Hawkeye and Frank are Jeeping their way back to the 4077th, they come upon a checkpoint being overseen by Colonel Spiker (What's with Tim O'Connor playing gruff military types these days?), whom Hawkeye accidentally splashes mud on. The outraged colonel tries to write Hawkeye up, but is told off about how the surgeons just did all-night field surgery on a busload of mine-fragged civilians. Back at camp, B.J. finds Zelmo Zale drinking for breakfast mess and learns that the sergeant received a Dear John letter from his wife, informing him that she's having an affair with their next-door neighbor. B.J. encourages Zale to forgive her, and after the sergeant smashes his right hand by punching a stove pipe, B.J. helps him write a reconciliation letter, smoothing over Zale's harsher contributions. Hawkeye and Frank return to the camp bearing Spiker after the colonel was injured by a grenade. Spiker wants to be sent to a behind-the-lines medical unit and insists that Hawkeye not operate on him, but is overruled by Potter. Hawkeye ends up pulling shrapnel out of Spiker's heart. Meanwhile, Burns has become so outspokenly paranoid about enemy infiltrators that he has the local indigenous personnel lined up for inspection, and in a later scene is extra-cautious about handling his own personal items.

Houlihan finds Hawkeye sleeping near Spiker in the ward, and even she expresses approval of his work. But when Spiker comes to, the first thing he talks about with Potter is how he wants to reprimand Hawkeye, and is outraged to be informed that Pierce operated on him. Potter sets him straight, informing him that Hawkeye was the only man for the job and is the only reason that Spiker is alive. Spiker has Hawkeye brought to his bedside not to thank him directly, but to relay Potter's high opinion of him and inform him that out of respect to Potter, he's letting Hawkeye off the hook. Hawkeye holds himself back as Spiker goes on about how he considers Pierce to be a disgrace to his commission. When B.J.'s looking for Zale, he learns from Radar that the sergeant has a "moose"--a Korean girlfriend. B.J. drops in as Zale's visiting Suki at her place, pressing him a bit about the double standard and producing the finished letter of forgiveness for the sergeant to sign. While Frank's personally sweeping for mines in the area where he saw Koreans digging, Hawkeye references Eisenhower's impending late-1952 visit. The object that Burns has dug up turns out to be a jar of pickled cabbage.

In the coda, Hawkeye and B.J. irreverently compare notes about their respective days.



Hawaii Five-O
"The Waterfront Steal"
Originally aired November 21, 1975
Wiki said:
A warehouse burglary investigation turns up unusual loot...and an interwoven connection between the young burglar, his girlfriend/accomplice, and her businessman father.

A pair of burglars named Harry and Zeno (Ric Marlow and Alan Naluai) sneak up to a waterfront warehouse via raft, knock out a guard named Charlie (Vince Priore), and let in their truck-driving accomplices, Tommy (Richard Hatch) and Elena (Kathy Beller). Steve's called away from boxing at a police gym to see the Governor, who has irate businessman Jose Mendoza (Simon Oakland) in his office demanding action regarding the rash of robberies, which is putting warehouse owners out of business; so the Guv puts Five-O on the case. At the beach, Harry, who relays orders from the operation's mysterious boss, advises Tommy that he should leave his girlfriend at home for their next operation. Tommy takes Elena home to...Stately Mendoza Manor, though her father doesn't approve of her seeing trashy nobodies. Later, Danno's cruising around with a temporary partner, HPD detective Luis Kimura (Tommy Fujiwara), who stops by a pawn shop with a ring and haggles with the owner, H. Kaneho (David "Lippy" Espinda), over money for it. Danno takes silent interest in a cutting-edge '70s digital calculator, and he and Kimura walk out right past Tommy, who recognizes them as cops. At HQ, Danno, interested in determining where the goods stolen from the warehouses are going as none have turned up on the street, begins to investigate a hunch.

At an eatery meeting place, Tommy catches a glimpse of the boss as he drops off Harry--Luis Mendoza. Harry reveals that the boss is motivated to have them pull more jobs to make Five-O look bad; and that some calculators were ripped off from a crate stolen in one of their jobs, which can be traced. Tommy is in possession of one of these calculators, and questions Elena regarding how much she knows about her father's business. Patrolling the warehouse district solo, Kimura comes upon the next job in progress and shoots Tommy in the gut; but is subsequently fatally shot by Harry.

Mendoza is called to scene of the robbery, which is one of his warehouses, and McGarrett questions him about what kind of vehicle the wounded robber could have been taken away in. McGarrett feels that this job doesn't add up as the item stolen was of dubious resale value, and suspects an angle involving Interpacific, a company that's been buying up the warehouses that have been put out of business. Questioning the watchman who was overcome and tied up at the latest warehouse, McGarrett learns that one of the robbers was a woman. Tommy and Elena are driven out to the countryside and left in the back of the truck while Harry and Zeno go to steal a car and call Mendoza for help. Mendoza learns from Zeno that the new guy among the robbers, Tommy, has been bringing a girl along on their jobs, but the conversation is cut short by a hasty getaway in the stolen car.

Mendoza becomes concerned about Elena's whereabouts, and finds a picture of her with Tommy. Danno goes to the pawn shop to redeem a ring that Kimura pawned, and informs Kaneho that Tommy died. Danno asks him about the calculator, and learns that he was given some calculators to sell by his nephew, Tommy Lynd. Duke digs up that Jose Mendoza owns a controlling interest in Interpacific. A Federal Bureau of Standards man named Dorrow (Herb Armstrong) informs McGarrett that the drums stolen in the latest robbery are defectively leaky and contain a chemical that becomes highly explosive in extreme heat. These leaky drums are in the back of the truck with Tommy and Elena, and a conveniently placed thermometer is dramatically rising.

Harry and Zeno are chased by a motorcycle cop and end up driving off the road down a rocky beachside, triggering their stolen car's obligatory TV fate, with them inside. After Five-O puts together the identities of all four burglars, McGarrett visits Mendoza to question him about why he's been calling all over town for Harry and Zeno, and accuses him of being the big man behind the robberies. After Chin updates Steve that Harry and Zeno were identified in the car, McGarrett deduces that Tommy was the one shot and that he and Elena must have been left behind with the ticking truck. Mendoza accompanies Steve and Chin as they search the area that the car was stolen from. Danno assists from the air, and updates Steve that all of the merchandise from the robberies was found in Interpacific's warehouse. The chopper spots the truck (which is always referred to as a van), and McGarrett goes in to help Elena and Tommy, who've been succumbing to chemical fumes. Once everyone's far enough away, the back of the truck goes up in an explosion that's not nearly as fiery as when a car drives off the road onto a rocky beachside. As Tommy is loaded into an ambulance, Mendoza asks McGarrett to go easy on his daughter.

Steve: She's just a kid, huh? She's also a thief and an accessory to murder...and so are you. Book him, Danno.​



Hold on, I thought only Nixon could go to China!
The first time.

These are the guys who just declared independence from Portugal. Nice going, Dick and Henry. Why didn't the UN have anything to say about this?
Got me.

I have no recollection of this whatsoever. Therefore, predictably, no nostalgic value. :rommie:
It's not memorable, but it has a nice, smooth sound.

I think we've gotten to the point in the '70s when a socially conscious song like this seems a little late to the party.

I vaguely remember this one. Poor John has lost his inspiration at this point.
New to me, no real opinion yet. John's streak of hit singles is winding down at this point...this will be his last to chart this high.

It may be surprising to hear that I like this one. This was before Disco became so obnoxious and pervasive. Also, I may have mentioned before that Donna and I share a hometown. My Uncle Joe claims to have known her. Anyway, strong nostalgic value.
Didn't know offhand that she was from Beantown. A memorable disco classic. This compilation album version doesn't appear to be the single edit of the original 17-minute album track, but it is the version that I own.

A strange and inexplicable classic. Strong nostalgic value.
A bit cheesy, but has some novelty value, particularly as my parents were all into CB culture at the time. While the song was a big success on the country chart, I have to wonder how authentic it would've sounded to that crowd, particularly those chorus vocals.

Coincidentally, I heard "A Blind Man in the Bleachers" on American Top 40 yesterday morning.
They must've been doing the week in '75, then.
 
Last edited:
"The Blue Flash"
Sounds like something from DC Comics. "Who Is The Blue Flash And Why Does He Want To Replace The Regular Old Red Flash?"

to install a sensor in his hand that, when waved over a microchip, will trigger the titular effect in Steve's eye.
He can also ring up groceries.

the smuggled components could be used to build, for nefarious, national-security-threatening purposes...wait for it...mini-computers!
"Think of it, Oscar-- a computer the size of a van!"

Sporting a stocking cap, fake 'stache, and ring in his right ear (not that there's anything wrong with that)
I would have neither noticed nor understood. :rommie:

so Steve floats the possibility of Chekhov's Miraculous Bike Repair.
He really could have just said, "Leave it in my room and I'll take a look after work." :rommie:

Calling in to Oscar...
View attachment 50410
"Do you know what time it is? I'm going to have Rudy install a bionic clock in your bionic wrist."

...Steve learns that Carpenter's body has been found.
They never weigh them down properly.

Steve waits until nobody's around and bionic-unbends the mangled conveyance
Nice, but I don't think that bike will ever be the same. :rommie:

she tries to warn him, having figured that he's another government agent.
"Only a G-Man could unbend a bike like that."

Once she's in the clear, Steve jumps into bionic action, taking out Tony, Jimbo, and another assorted goon before a disbelieving Logan's eyes.
Mrs Cook doesn't get her security clearance raised? I'm a little disappointed.

In the coda, Oscar swings by L.A. to pick an undisguised Steve up at the boarding house. Learning that Ernie's taken money from his friends to fix all sorts of odd junk, Steve confesses to the lad that he fixed the bikes with the magic of unspecified science, and compensates Ernie for the dollar that he owes them back but already spent.
This was another one of those "mainstream" episodes that seemed like a waste of the concept to me.

He gets locked in the cellar
You'd think he'd carry a key or something after the prior incident.

Linda's (Bernadette Peters)
Frequently seen character actor of the time. I always found her a little irritating, actually.

Archie invites Mike over to talk, going out of his way to be friendly, serving wine and calling his son-in-law Michael. Dissolve to both of them so smashed that Mike's calling Archie "Dad," while Archie makes toasts to Poland and President Richard M. Ford and his wife Lady Bird. After Archie expresses his respect and affection for his son-in-law, Mike confides with Archie about what happened with Linda that night. By the time Mike's getting into how he came to his senses and promptly left, Archie has passed out. Mike lifts Archie's legs onto the couch, kisses Daddy goodnight on the forehead, and stumbles out singing "Oh, My Papa".
Good Golly, I don't remember any of that, but I wish I did. :rommie:

The next day, Edith's nursing Archie's hangover, having found him sleeping in the hall closet.
:rommie:

Then Mike, now sobered up, comes over with a surprise for Gloria, the thing that he's been saving the tutoring money for--the baby carriage that he doesn't know the folks bought.
:rommie:

the surgeons just did all-night field surgery on a busload of mine-fragged civilians
Yikes. I wonder what happened to the patients. Did they get sent home or transported to some facility or something?

B.J. finds Zelmo Zale drinking for breakfast mess and learns that the sergeant received a Dear John letter from his wife, informing him that she's having an affair with their next-door neighbor.
That sounds like something that could have waited.

Houlihan finds Hawkeye sleeping near Spiker in the ward, and even she expresses approval of his work.
She does that sometimes, especially as time goes on.

Spiker has Hawkeye brought to his bedside not to thank him directly, but to relay Potter's high opinion of him and inform him that out of respect to Potter, he's letting Hawkeye off the hook. Hawkeye holds himself back as Spiker goes on about how he considers Pierce to be a disgrace to his commission.
A jerk to the end. Not everybody is won over by that Hawkeye charm. :rommie:

the sergeant has a "moose"--a Korean girlfriend
That's an odd choice of a word. I wonder what the etymology of that is.

B.J. drops in as Zale's visiting Suki at her place, pressing him a bit about the double standard and producing the finished letter of forgiveness for the sergeant to sign.
That's something that BJ would definitely be upset about.

Hawkeye references Eisenhower's impending late-1952 visit.
I haven't been keeping track of these references. I wonder if they're sequential or if they jump around.

"The Waterfront Steal"
Well, that's an awful title. :rommie:

Tommy (Richard Hatch)
Apollo, of course.

irate businessman Jose Mendoza (Simon Oakland)
Vincenzo, master of irate.

the rash of robberies, which is putting warehouse owners out of business
I find it hard to believe that these penny-ante operators could put any warehouses out of business.

Tommy takes Elena home to...Stately Mendoza Manor, though her father doesn't approve of her seeing trashy nobodies.
"But, daddy, I'm a trashy nobody." Do they specify if she knows that she's actually working for daddy or does she think she's just on a random crime spree?

Danno's cruising around with a temporary partner, HPD detective Luis Kimura (Tommy Fujiwara), who stops by a pawn shop with a ring and haggles with the owner
Is this part of the investigation or does this poor cop really have to pawn his ring?

Danno takes silent interest in a cutting-edge '70s digital calculator
"Wow, it can calculate pi to 37 digits."

Tommy catches a glimpse of the boss as he drops off Harry--Luis Mendoza.
He's not very good at being a secret crime boss, apparently.

Harry reveals that the boss is motivated to have them pull more jobs to make Five-O look bad
Okay, I get that his main motivation is to buy up the inexplicably bankrupted warehouses, but why the grudge against Five-O?

and questions Elena regarding how much she knows about her father's business.
So even Tommy doesn't know.

Patrolling the warehouse district solo, Kimura comes upon the next job in progress and shoots Tommy in the gut; but is subsequently fatally shot by Harry.
Ouch. Should have waited for backup.

McGarrett feels that this job doesn't add up as the item stolen was of dubious resale value
Another flaw in the plan.

Mendoza becomes concerned about Elena's whereabouts, and finds a picture of her with Tommy.
I wonder how this would have affected his grand scheme if it hadn't all fallen apart.

Danno goes to the pawn shop to redeem a ring that Kimura pawned, and informs Kaneho that Tommy died.
I think this should be Kimura, whose real name is, unhelpfully, Tommy. :rommie:

the drums stolen in the latest robbery are defectively leaky and contain a chemical that becomes highly explosive in extreme heat.
When it rains, it pours.

Harry and Zeno are chased by a motorcycle cop and end up driving off the road down a rocky beachside, triggering their stolen car's obligatory TV fate, with them inside.
No need for bookin.'

all of the merchandise from the robberies was found in Interpacific's warehouse
Holy Ill-Advised, Batman.

the truck (which is always referred to as a van)
Forgot to rewrite the dialogue. :rommie:

Once everyone's far enough away, the back of the truck goes up in an explosion that's not nearly as fiery as when a car drives off the road onto a rocky beachside.
:rommie:

Steve: She's just a kid, huh? She's also a thief and an accessory to murder...and so are you. Book him, Danno.
"And book her! And book them! And book the other guys posthumously! Book 'em all!"

The first time.
Ford should have just found his own place to go for the first time.

I think we've gotten to the point in the '70s when a socially conscious song like this seems a little late to the party.
I didn't even notice that it was socially conscious. My mind wandered.

Didn't know offhand that she was from Beantown. A memorable disco classic. This compilation album version doesn't appear to be the single edit of the original 17-minute album track, but it is the version that I own.
Total make out song. :rommie:

A bit cheesy, but has some novelty value, particularly as my parents were all into CB culture at the time. While the song was a big success on the country chart, I have to wonder how authentic it would've sounded to that crowd, particularly those chorus vocals.
It's probably just as cheesy to them. :rommie:

They must've been doing the week in '75, then.
True, so just a minor coincidence. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



The Secrets of Isis
"Funny Gal"
Originally aired November 22, 1975
Wiki said:
An insecure, overweight girl running for student council steals Mr. Mason's boat as a publicity stunt. Isis must call upon Captain Marvel to help with the rescue.

The Big Red Cheese returns the favor.
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They're really overplaying Carrie's weight...the actress is far from morbidly obese.

Convenient how they avoided using Billy or Mentor here. Would Isis and Tut have been able to locate Cap if he'd been Billy at the time?

The Star Tracker...?



Emergency!
"Simple Adjustment"
Originally aired November 22, 1975
MeTV said:
Swamped with paperwork, the paramedics are continually distracted by emergencies: a girl trapped in an overturned car, a beautician who has taken too many diet pills, an elderly man, and workers stuck on a blazing ship.

It just came to my attention during the opening shot of this episode that Station 51 is right across the street from a place that looks like it's auditioning to be next week's climactic structure fire. In fact, I'd be surprised if they haven't already been using the place.
Emg100.jpg
After seven straight runs, the paramedics sit down to catch up on the necessary paperwork that they didn't have time to take notes for, only for the station to get called to where a car has broken through a wood railing and fallen down the hillside, now upside-down and propped up against a small tree. The crew proceed to approach it from a road below and shore the car up with pieces of the railing while the paramedics assess how to unpin the unconscious female driver (Marla Ekberg [Elisabeth Brooks], I presume). When a tow truck arrives on the upper road, its cable is tied to a forward wheel to lift the downward-facing front end of the car up enough to remove the convertible top and free the driver, whose ambulance subsequently arrives. The guys examine her first while consulting with Rampart, finding signs of abdominal injury that cause Early to order the use of the inflatable shock suit.

On the way back, Johnny's hit with the inspiration to rig a tape recorder in the cab that they could play back later to help them in writing up their reports.

Roy: I'm scared.​
Johnny: What?​
Roy: It sounds like a good idea. And I'm agreeing with you. That scares me.​

They get to work on it at the station, to the crew's skepticism--including the cap'n's, despite his having encouraged them to come up with a new system. Johnny causes a short in the cab that blows a fuse, which Roy has just enough time to replace before the paramedics get called to a beauty salon where one of the workers, Ruthie (uncredited Joan Crosby), clearly under the influence of something, is acting delirious and disorderly, which includes spraying customers with a sink hose. She comes on to Johnny while the paramedics get her under control. After she falls into a stupor, Rampart-informed questioning of the salon owner (Jane Dulo) reveals that Ruthie's been fasting for twelve days and borrowed diet pills from one of her customers. As Ruthie's being taken out to the ambulance, the owner agrees with her assessment of Johnny. At Rampart, while Dix informs the paramedics that a little girl they brought in earlier is okay, Early diagnoses amphetamine poisoning.

No sooner have the guys gotten back to their wiring job than the squad gets called to a suburban home where an older man, the occupant's father, has collapsed unconscious during a barbecue. After Brackett advises transport, the outraged daughter (Sheila [Aneta Corsaut]) insists that he be taken to a specific hospital substantially further away, as she considers Rampart to be a "charity hospital". The woman refuses to get on the biophone with The Brackett, but Roy gets the semiconscious victim to agree to Rampart. (Sheila could use a good talking-to from Andy.) At the hospital, Roy discusses the issue of such life-threateningly unrealistic patient/next-of-kin demands with Early.

When Johnny tests his recorder mic in the squad, it turns out to be wired into the radio, which confuses the dispatcher. At the hospital, Dix walks in as Ruthie's crying over her UTI behavior, and reassures her by informing her of how the owner, Miss Bernadette, rode in the ambulance and spoke highly of her.

Station 51 and other units get the climactic call to an oil fire on a ship docked at a marine salvage yard (apparently not the place across the street), which was caused by an accident with a torch in the engine room. After the paramedics treat a burn victim, Stanley takes them with him to rescue two men trapped below decks while dodging the complication of small explosions; and a fire boat gets to work dousing the ship. While the paramedics are seeing to the victims outside, Stanley leads the fire crew back in to deal with the fire on the inside.

In the coda, Johnny and Roy attempt to demonstrate their recorder innovation to the station crew, only to find that it recorded every call the dispatcher sent out.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Mary Richards Falls in Love"
Originally aired November 22, 1975
Frndly said:
Although Mary is enchanted by her new beau, she is embarrassed by his public displays of affection.

Mary's throwing a party in which a big deal is made about Ted and Georgette being newlyweds (which makes me think it was probably produced earlier than last week's), and Lou's being generally grumpy while Sue Ann comes on to him. Then Mary's new boyfriend, Joe Warner, arrives and goes straight into a big kiss.
MTM38a.jpg
It turns out that Mary's embarrassed by Joe's very public displays of affection, an issue that comes up again when they have lunch together near the station. Lou, Murray, and Ted drop into the restaurant and get into a discussion from another table about what kind of guy would be perfect for Mary...after Ted makes it clear that he's no longer available.

Ted: You know who I always see her with? Perfect guy for Mary? Clark Kent. Rugged, square jaw, little shy, little mild mannered...​
Murray: And when he takes his clothes off, Superman!​

Mary ends up being called back to the station, but before she leaves, she decides to go for it and plants a big one on Joe in front of the guys.

Later, Mary makes a late-night call to an old friend in New York.
MTM39.jpg
Mary tells Mrs. Gerard (so the credits inform me) about her current beau, dropping the bomb that she thinks she's in love, but that he's never actually told her that he feels the same, which she admits really bothers her. Mrs. G tells Mary that she should say it first to get it out of him. The fact that both men are named Joe serves as a source of confusion for the half-asleep Mr. Gerard (David Groh), with the New York side of the conversation getting him in the mood.
MTM40.jpg

Mary becomes concerned when Ted and Georgette drop in because they're looking at an apartment in her building. When Joe also drops in and does his usual thing, Ted makes a show of planting a big one on Georgette as the Baxters leave. Once Mary and Joe are alone, she presses him about how he feels about her, and he says positive things while evading those three words. When she says them, his response is a flag-raising "Thanks."

At WJM, Mary goes into Lou's office for advice, and feeling out of his element, he calls one of his daughters to relay Mary's questions about the situation. Following that bit of awkwardness, Lou makes a point by dangling the possibility of telling Mary how he really feels about her and not delivering. Mary drops by Joe's place with the intent of taking the pressure off of him, but the moment takes an uncomfortable turn when a woman named Joan walks out of his bedroom (future Mel's gal Beth Howland). After Joan leaves, Joe admits that he has an issue with settling for just one woman, which is a deal-breaker for Mary. As she's leaving in tears, he finally says those three words, and she decides to give it a try.

"Oh, Joe" count: 0



The Bob Newhart Show
"Over the River and Through the Woods"
Originally aired November 22, 1975
Wiki said:
Bob spends a depressing Thanksgiving with Jerry, Howard, and Mr. Carlin, getting drunk, watching football, and ordering "Moo Goo Gai Pan."

In 1997, TV Guide ranked this episode #9 on its list of the 100 Greatest Episodes.

The episode begins during preparations for Halloween, when it comes up that Emily expects to keep a commitment to visit her family in Seattle for Thanksgiving, while Bob feels he needs to stay in town for his patients. Later at the office, Elliot Carlin's trying to get over Halloween and Bob has to deliver the news that he won't be around for the next holiday. Meanwhile, Jerry's trying to raise money for orphans by selling tickets to win a Thanksgiving bird.

Jerry: You know what they have to eat? Meat loaf!​
Bob: That's because you're raffling off their turkey.​

When Bob explains to Emily why he has to stay home for Thanksgiving, she makes clear that she'll be going to Seattle without him. In case you're wondering about Emily's early-established signature phobia...

Carol: She really got on that plane by herself, huh?​
Bob: Yeah. All the way up the ramp, I could hear her muttering, "Tall bus. Tall bus."​

It's the day before Thanksgiving, and Elliot drops in to inform Bob that he won't be needed because Elliot plans to stay awake all night so that he'll sleep through the holiday. Jerry comes in with the underwhelmingly sized bird that Bob won and offers to come over for dinner and the ball game. Elliot then reverse-invites himself over.

Elliot: Dr. Hartley, I'm not coming to your house for Thanksgiving if Robinson shows up.​

The next day, while Bob's making breakfast, Jerry arrives in an athletic sweater with a big jug of vodka and cider. Elliot arrives in a suit with a bottle of scotch and asks Bob for $9.95. Bob tries to call Emily and gets into a phone gag with her Uncle Chester. Jerry's falling into an already-drunken depression over the game when Howard drops in because his plan to have Howie for the weekend fell through.

Elliot: Boy, this is the pits! You know you're at a bad party when Elliot Carlin is the happiest man in the room.​

A sunset later, everyone's smashed and singing the titular song when the guys decide to put their heads together to cook the bird, which was never put out to thaw and is frozen solid.

Bob: How long...how long will this take to cook?​
Jerry: Three days?​
Howard: Ridiculous! We can cook that in a half hour, we'll just...turn it up to 2,000 degrees.​
Jerry (holding up the oven dial): It only goes up to 500.​
Bob: Then we'll use four ovens.​

Howard comes up with the idea of sending out for Chinese, which Bob drunkenly orders. At Howard's suggestion, they all decide to have the dish in the episode description.

Bob (on the phone): More Goo to go! My name is, uh...is Bob...is Bob Hartley. It's inna book. "Dur Bob Hartley." Durrr. D-R-period.​

A conspicuously sober Emily comes home unexpectedly early, having missed Bob. Bob declares that he'll be spending Christmas with her, and she informs him that she made a commitment to spend it in Seattle.

The guests are gone and Bob's nursing an early hangover when a very not-Chinese delivery guy (David Himes) arrives identifying himself as "Hoo" and bearing a dolly stacked with boxes--including all the Moo Goo Gai Pan that the restaurant had--for "Durrr Bob Hartley". Then the oven timer dings.

Emily: There's no turkey in the oven.​
Bob: Emily, whatever you do, don't look in the dishwasher.​

This was a particularly enjoyable holiday episode. It brought to mind the show's first Christmas episode.



Sounds like something from DC Comics. "Who Is The Blue Flash And Why Does He Want To Replace The Regular Old Red Flash?"
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He can also ring up groceries.
You may have to explain that to the 1975 audience.

"Think of it, Oscar-- a computer the size of a van!"
:D

I would have neither noticed nor understood. :rommie:
I felt like we got Chekhov's Earring on the Wrong Side.

Nice, but I don't think that bike will ever be the same. :rommie:
Next week, Mrs. Cook's lawsuit.

This was another one of those "mainstream" episodes that seemed like a waste of the concept to me.
It's definitely starting to feel kinda TIH-ish to me. Steve's being assigned to the same sorts of situations that David will just wander into.

You'd think he'd carry a key or something after the prior incident.
Eh, Chekhov delivered.

Frequently seen character actor of the time. I always found her a little irritating, actually.
Not really my cup of tea, either.

Good Golly, I don't remember any of that, but I wish I did. :rommie:
It was a good sequence. It's always enjoyable seeing the actors on these shows playing their characters smashed.

Yikes. I wonder what happened to the patients. Did they get sent home or transported to some facility or something?
Got me.

A jerk to the end. Not everybody is won over by that Hawkeye charm. :rommie:
Gotta give the Hawkeye righteous indignation a chance to come out now and then.

That's an odd choice of a word. I wonder what the etymology of that is.
A quick search indicates that it may have been adapted from the Japanese musume, for "daughter/girl". And of course, it's considered a slur.

I haven't been keeping track of these references. I wonder if they're sequential or if they jump around.
They seem to be leaning heavily into "sometime in 1952" at this point in the series. This isn't the first time that Eisenhower's visit has come up.

Well, that's an awful title. :rommie:
Perhaps meant to suggest real estate.

Apollo, of course.
Who'll more immediately break out on The Streets of San Francisco. It seemed like he was trying to do an accent again here, though the character being native Hawaiian wasn't a story point.

Vincenzo, master of irate.
General Moore was irate, but was actually the friendly superior officer, keeping the hostile Colonel Lard (Dana Elcar) in check.

I find it hard to believe that these penny-ante operators could put any warehouses out of business.
Well, their boss had inside knowledge.

"But, daddy, I'm a trashy nobody." Do they specify if she knows that she's actually working for daddy or does she think she's just on a random crime spree?
It was played as neither knowing the other was involved until late in the episode.

Is this part of the investigation or does this poor cop really have to pawn his ring?
I wasn't clear on that myself at first, but he was said to be a regular customer. That bit definitely seemed contrived.

He's not very good at being a secret crime boss, apparently.
It was actually shot so awkwardly that I wasn't sure it was supposed to be him, despite the actor's distinctive look. But I could tell from the way it was being played up as an act-ending reveal.

Okay, I get that his main motivation is to buy up the inexplicably bankrupted warehouses, but why the grudge against Five-O?
Apparently to undermine their investigation.

Ouch. Should have waited for backup.
Yeah, that reminded me of Mod Squad.

I think this should be Kimura, whose real name is, unhelpfully, Tommy. :rommie:
Oh, yeah.

When it rains, it pours.
"Duke, tell HPD to be on the lookout for a white 1973 Dodge Motorhome with a red-and-yellow lightning bolt symbol on the front."

I didn't even notice that it was socially conscious. My mind wandered.
I wasn't paying too much attention to the message, but I could tell that was what they were going for.

True, so just a minor coincidence. :rommie:
I haven't put on Casey in many moons.
 
Last edited:
The Big Red Cheese returns the favor.
They've got to stop meeting like this.

They're really overplaying Carrie's weight...the actress is far from morbidly obese.
This is usually, though not always, the case with "ugly" TV characters. They're usually just normal looking and frumpy, and only "ugly" compared to the model looks of the other characters.

Convenient how they avoided using Billy or Mentor here. Would Isis and Tut have been able to locate Cap if he'd been Billy at the time?
Good point. She might think he was dead or something. Although she was aware of the Elders, so maybe she knows he has an alternate identity.

The Star Tracker...?
Isn't that the one with Doctor Spock?

It just came to my attention during the opening shot of this episode that Station 51 is right across the street from a place that looks like it's auditioning to be next week's climactic structure fire. In fact, I'd be surprised if they haven't already been using the place.
That would be convenient. It would also save money on gas. :rommie:

a car has broken through a wood railing and fallen down the hillside
Without exploding? She must have run out of gas.

The guys examine her first while consulting with Rampart, finding signs of abdominal injury that cause Early to order the use of the inflatable shock suit.
And what becomes of her, we'll never know.

Roy: I'm scared.
Johnny: What?
Roy: It sounds like a good idea. And I'm agreeing with you. That scares me.
It is a good idea. I wouldn't be surprised if it's standard practice now.

They get to work on it at the station, to the crew's skepticism--including the cap'n's, despite his having encouraged them to come up with a new system.
That seems a little forced.

As Ruthie's being taken out to the ambulance, the owner agrees with her assessment of Johnny.
Johnny's having a good day. :rommie:

Dix informs the paramedics that a little girl they brought in earlier is okay
At least we're getting updates on patients we never met. :rommie:

she considers Rampart to be a "charity hospital".
Hmph. That describes both of the hospitals I worked at.

(Sheila could use a good talking-to from Andy.)
Sherrifed, but only because you reminded me.

At the hospital, Roy discusses the issue of such life-threateningly unrealistic patient/next-of-kin demands with Early.
They actually don't have the authority to make those demands. An ambulance will take you to the nearest appropriate facility. This is also specified in insurance coverage. Of course, this was fifty years ago, so maybe it was different.

While the paramedics are seeing to the victims outside, Stanley leads the fire crew back in to deal with the fire on the inside.
And nobody on the crew gets hurt this week.

In the coda, Johnny and Roy attempt to demonstrate their recorder innovation to the station crew, only to find that it recorded every call the dispatcher sent out.
It's still a good idea, they just need somebody qualified to set it up. :rommie:

Then Mary's new boyfriend, Joe Warner, arrives and goes straight into a big kiss.
View attachment 50429
Oh, man, I forgot about this. It was not a welcome development. :rommie:

Later, Mary makes a late-night call to an old friend in New York.
View attachment 50430
Mary tells Mrs. Gerard (so the credits inform me) about her current beau, dropping the bomb that she thinks she's in love, but that he's never actually told her that he feels the same, which she admits really bothers her. Mrs. G tells Mary that she should say it first to get it out of him. The fact that both men are named Joe serves as a source of confusion for the half-asleep Mr. Gerard (David Groh), with the New York side of the conversation getting him in the mood.
View attachment 50431
I remember that little crossover scene. "Just say, 'I love you, Joe.'" Boing! :rommie:

Mary goes into Lou's office for advice, and feeling out of his element, he calls one of his daughters to relay Mary's questions about the situation.
I don't remember that. :rommie:

the moment takes an uncomfortable turn when a woman named Joan walks out of his bedroom (future Mel's gal Beth Howland).
The guy's a loser, but he does have good taste in women. :rommie:

As she's leaving in tears, he finally says those three words, and she decides to give it a try.
Disappointingly out of character, but I guess even Mary is vulnerable to the brain-damaging effects of love.

"Oh, Joe" count: 0
:rommie:

Bob feels he needs to stay in town for his patients.
Yeah, kind of an occupational hazard.

Jerry: You know what they have to eat? Meat loaf!
Bob: That's because you're raffling off their turkey.
Valid point. Nice little character moment for Jerry, though.

Carol: She really got on that plane by herself, huh?
Bob: Yeah. All the way up the ramp, I could hear her muttering, "Tall bus. Tall bus."
This is good. Continuity and character development.

Jerry comes in with the underwhelmingly sized bird that Bob won and offers to come over for dinner and the ball game. Elliot then reverse-invites himself over.
Looks like Bob has company whether he wants it or not.

Bob tries to call Emily and gets into a phone gag with her Uncle Chester.
There should be a phone gag in every episode.

Elliot: Boy, this is the pits! You know you're at a bad party when Elliot Carlin is the happiest man in the room.
They should have had an MTM crossover where Elliot shows up at one of Mary's parties.

Bob: How long...how long will this take to cook?
Jerry: Three days?
Howard: Ridiculous! We can cook that in a half hour, we'll just...turn it up to 2,000 degrees.
Jerry (holding up the oven dial): It only goes up to 500.
Bob: Then we'll use four ovens.
And there we have the difference between abstract and applied math. :rommie:

Bob (on the phone): More Goo to go! My name is, uh...is Bob...is Bob Hartley. It's inna book. "Dur Bob Hartley." Durrr. D-R-period.
Sometimes when giving my address over the phone, I pronounce MA as "Mah" instead of Massachusetts. And I don't even have to be drunk. :rommie:

Emily: There's no turkey in the oven.
Bob: Emily, whatever you do, don't look in the dishwasher.
:rommie:

This was a particularly enjoyable holiday episode. It brought to mind the show's first Christmas episode.
That does sound like a good one. Weirdly, I don't seem to remember it.

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Wow, reality anticipated me. That actually looks pretty cool-- although I can't help but mention that tragedy could have been avoided if someone had thought to actually render aid to the guy who was shot in a non-vital area. :rommie:

You may have to explain that to the 1975 audience.
No codes in 1975? I actually can't remember when they came into use.

Next week, Mrs. Cook's lawsuit.
I have a feeling Oscar has to write out a lot of checks. Maybe that's why they can't afford decent security.

It's definitely starting to feel kinda TIH-ish to me. Steve's being assigned to the same sorts of situations that David will just wander into.
Right, it's exactly like that.

It was a good sequence. It's always enjoyable seeing the actors on these shows playing their characters smashed.
Drugs and alcohol (and strange alien diseases) are always good for showing off characters.

Gotta give the Hawkeye righteous indignation a chance to come out now and then.
True. :rommie:

A quick search indicates that it may have been adapted from the Japanese musume, for "daughter/girl". And of course, it's considered a slur.
Interesting that a Korean slur has Japanese origins. But they pass through Japan on the way to Korea, right?

Perhaps meant to suggest real estate.
Yeah, could be.

Who'll more immediately break out on The Streets of San Francisco. It seemed like he was trying to do an accent again here, though the character being native Hawaiian wasn't a story point.
Oh, so he's the replacement guy for Michael Douglas? I remember Michael Douglas leaving the show, but I don't think I realized Richard Hatch was his replacement. I didn't really watch that one on a regular basis.

General Moore was irate, but was actually the friendly superior officer, keeping the hostile Colonel Lard (Dana Elcar) in check.
Vincenzo was actually more nuanced than he would appear too. I wonder what the actor was like in real life. I don't think I've ever seen him interviewed.

Well, their boss had inside knowledge.
Yeah, but those clowns weren't capable of stealing enough to put a warehouse out of business, especially when you consider insurance.

It was played as neither knowing the other was involved until late in the episode.
That's kinda what I figured.

I wasn't clear on that myself at first, but he was said to be a regular customer. That bit definitely seemed contrived.
And kinda sad. There's an untold story there.

Apparently to undermine their investigation.
You'd think it would have the opposite effect, giving Five-O more opportunities.

Yeah, that reminded me of Mod Squad.
:rommie:

"Duke, tell HPD to be on the lookout for a white 1973 Dodge Motorhome with a red-and-yellow lightning bolt symbol on the front."
"Not them again!"

I haven't put on Casey in many moons.
I drive over to my Mother's every Saturday for breakfast, so I hear him just about every week.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



The Six Million Dollar Man
"The White Lightning War"
Originally aired November 23, 1975
Edited Wiki said:
The death of a federal agent investigating a Georgia moonshine operation leads Steve to discover a trail of corruption that starts with a distillery owner, goes through the local sheriff, and ends with a powerful Washington lawyer.

Deliverance-flavored music introduces us to Morgantown, Georgia, where local bigwig Bo Willis (Ben Hammer) inspects the "turpentine" at his refinery, accompanied by Sheriff Weems (Hugh Gillin). An all-purpose underling named Kermit (You knew Robert Donner was gonna be in this episode, right?) informs him that Ted Sullivan, discovered to be a treasury agent, was just killed by "snakebite". Sullivan was, of course, a childhood friend of Steve's, so he wants to investigate Ted's suspicious death personally.

Steve assumes an unusually heavy disguise--a full beard and an off-and-on pair of shades; while Oscar's out in the field as usual, stationed in Atlanta. Driving into town, Steve finds that Willis owns most of the local businesses; though general store proprietor Middy (Katherine Helmond) takes exception to Steve asking about that, insisting that it's her place all the same. Steve runs into Kermit there, who immediately goes into "get out of town" mode, so Steve gets a little bionic-rough with him to find Willis. Steve proceeds to a local pool place and asks the "bartender," Johnny (Randy Kirby), about the titular spirits, though he's informed that it's a dry county. Willis comes out and Steve, posing as an operator with his own organization, propositions Willis about a partnership. He subsequently has to bionically fend off Kermit and other goons, following which the sheriff trumps up charges against him, which includes planting a gun.

Middy drops by Steve's cell to sell him sandwiches that she informs him are marked up so that Willis gets a cut. Suspecting that he's the law, she tries to warn him off, and tells him of how, after her husband died from a snakebite accident, Willis claimed legal ownership of her place. When he's unattended, Steve bionic-bar-bends his way out of his cell to make a call to Oscar, then leaves to pull some jobs on behalf of his "gang".

Steve heads to a local still, knocks out the operator without being seen, and bionic-busts the place up. He proceeds in the direction of a car that had just made a pickup, to find Johnny making a siphoning rendezvous with a gasoline truck driven by Kermit, who inserts cylinders into the tank hatches that he fills with gas. When Johnny stays behind to fish nearby, Steve topples over his car and runs off without being seen. Steve proceeds to catch up with the tanker truck, getting on top and busting the cylinders so the gas gets into the moonshine, without Kermit ever knowing he was there. When Kermit makes his delivery to a gas station run by our old WWW pal Red West, the merchandise is found to be mixed, and Kermit finds the busted cylinders. (An IMDb contributor asserts that a couple of gallons of gas wouldn't be enough to have a dramatic effect on a tank full of moonshine.) Steve then returns to his cell and bends the bars back into place, pretending to have been cooling his heels with his sandwiches the entire time.

Willis is furious over the missed payment to his contact further up the chain, Washington insider Charles Quinten (Austin Stoker), who now wants to fly down and make an inspection. Assuming as intended that this is the work of Steve's gang, Willis orders the head of the snake to be cut off. The sheriff releases Steve in the middle of the night, and Steve spots Kermit waiting in the dark with a rifle, so he grabs the sheriff's gun and uses him as a human shield, ultimately pushing one into the other and disposing of their weapons (driving Kermit's rifle into the ground). Quinten arrives via Lear jet to lean on Willis at his estate. Steve pays a call on Middy and outs himself as a colleague of Sullivans to ask her for more details. She tells Steve of how her husband, Gordie, was Sullivan's contact, and indicates that she now fears for her son who's away at college. She also tells him of the well-dressed stranger who just arrived in town, so Steve pays Quinten a visit at the hotel. Mr. Q entertains Steve's offer to do business if Steve takes over Willis's operation; but the Sheriff and Willis's minions catch Steve making a call to Oscar from Middy's and take him prisoner, while threatening Middy via her son.

The sheriff and Kermit take Steve to the woods, where he lets them push him into a hole with rattlesnakes in it, which bite his legs. They then send him running into the woods, expecting it to help the poison do its work. Steve beats them to Kermit's car, sitting in the back and bionic-shaking some rocks to make them think he has a rattlesnake with him, forcing them to drive him to the refinery. He then bionic-bends a rollbar around their necks to keep them out of the way. Oscar comes to town with backup to ask openly about Steve, and Middy offers to help. Meanwhile, Willis takes Quinten to the refinery, where Steve runs roughshod over Johnny and other workers before busting the place up. Willis and Quinten arrive to find the place in shambles, and Quinten agrees to do business with Steve, too easily handing over paperwork that gives schedules and point of delivery...just as Oscar, who recognize Quinten from the Justice Department, arrives and is handed the evidence. Learning of Middy's involvement, Steve gives her a thankful hug.

In the coda, Steve puts up a new sign reasserting Middy's ownership of the store, and we're told that locals are coming forward to testify against Willis.



All in the Family
"The Little Atheist"
Originally aired November 24, 1975
Edited Tubi said:
Thanksgiving dinner becomes a battleground when Archie discovers that Mike and Gloria don't want to impose the family's religious beliefs on their baby.

Archie's setting himself up by being in a good mood as he gets ready to go to the Stivics' for Thanksgiving dinner; though he wants to dress casually while Edith insists that he wear a suit, and she further annoys him by trying to enlist his help in picking out a dress. Meanwhile, Gloria's preparing the dinner while imitating Lily Tomlin's Edith Ann character. (It's been so long that I had to look that up.) The Bunkers arrive with desserts and family heirloom silver candlesticks to find Mike listening for the baby, and Archie gets the wrong idea.

Mike: Hey, the two of you look terrific! Gee, you didn't have to get all dressed up, Arch!​
Archie: Yes I did, she forced me!​

Over appetizers, Edith talks about all of the things she'd like to do with the baby, still referring to it as a she. When she brings up taking the baby to church, Mike corrects her, telling her that she's welcome to take the baby to the park on Sundays. Archie reacts predictably as the kids explain how they want their child to make up his own mind about religion. Archie goes into a list of all the things that his grandchild should be taught.

Mike: Arch, I think you're forgettin' to teach him the most important thing!​
Archie: Yeah, what?​
Mike: To never listen to his grandfather.​

A discussion of where the baby originated gets into a tangent about the baby potentially being Jewish, based on the friends whose house Mike and Gloria were borrowing at the time. Archie then focuses the discussion on God's wrath, which culminates with Mike, who believes God would be forgiving, irreverently blowing God raspberries, scaring Archie into insisting that the Bunkers leave lest Edith be turned into a pillow of salt.

Mike is persuaded to apologize to Archie on the phone by a fake Gloria cry.

Gloria (to Mike): You know the three subjects you should never discuss with him: religion, politics, or anything else.​

Gloria arranges a signal for Mike to get him to shut up by tugging on his ear, which she says that Edith uses with Archie--if that's the case, you'd think we'd have had plentiful opportunity to see that by now. Irene arrives with a bottle of good wine ahead of the Bunkers' return (Betty Garrett's penultimate appearance). Gloria brings out the bird, and everyone helps themselves smorgasbord-style. When Gloria presents her homemade cranberry sauce, Archie reflects Ex-Mrs. Mixer's preference.

Archie: You ain't got none o' the real kind that slides outta the can?​

Archie makes a comment about Mike's appetite that threatens to get Mike going, so Gloria uses the ear-tug. Everyone sits down to a pair of mismatched tables--Archie taking Mike's spot at the head of the table arrangement. The guys start to get into it when Archie insists on saying grace, motivating both wives to tug to their husbands' ears. Archie pulls out his reading glasses and a pocket Bible that literally saved his butt from a piece of shrapnel in WWII and reads a line from Romans asserting that doubters will be damned. Mike finally has enough and stands up to Archie, both on the subject of having religion forced on his child and another matter...

Mike: I've been waitin' five years to tell you this--Get outta my chair!​

Archie tries to storm out but Gloria blocks the door. The foremost barrier to his exit being his unborn grandchild causes him to relent and swap seats with Mike. When Archie asserts that everyone else agrees with him about the child being raised with religion, Mike asks for a show of hands, and everyone else sides with Mike. After mangling the names of several religions, Archie gets up to walk out through the back this time, but Edith follows him to the kitchen and reasons with him that the matter isn't in their hands. Archie brings himself around by resolving that he and Edith will sneak the child to church every Sunday.



M*A*S*H
"Soldier of the Month"
Originally aired November 28, 1975
Wiki said:
Potter announces a Soldier of the Month contest, which Klinger tries to cheat to win, while Frank gets delirious from Hemorrhagic Fever.

Potter holds a mess meeting with the senior staff, discussing a recent mysterious fever outbreak. Hawkeye sardonically nominates Burns to be in charge of controlling the rats who are believed to be indirectly spreading the disease through fleas and mites. Potter then announces the contest, which is for enlisted men and offers the reward of six days in Tokyo, and appoints Burns as the judge. Mulcahy returns from Seoul with intel from the Japanese identifying the outbreak as hemorrhagic fever. As Frank immerses himself in his extra duties, everyone comments that he's not looking well. Klinger initially attempts to assist him while fully uniformed. When Frank tries to come up with innovative rat traps, the guys point out that killing the rats will just spread the fleas and mites. Frank protests that he's been handling the dead rats, but undermines his intended point by falling unconscious.

Frank ends up delirious in the ward, while Klinger burgles the colonel's office by night for the contest's exam answers, later writing them on his body. Hawkeye and B.J. irreverently judge the contest in Frank's place, the final contestants who take the verbal quiz being Sgt. Zale, Radar, Klinger, and Igor Straminsky. Klinger's thrown off because the questions aren't being read in order, and his protests cause Radar to notice that he's cheating. Back in the ward, at Houlihan's encouragement, Frank dictates a will to Mulcahy, but he only leaves Margaret his clothes. Radar wins the contest and departs for Tokyo in formal uniform. His temperature back to normal, Frank hits the latrine for the first time in days, and comes out his old self, dressing down a passing Pvt. Straminksy. Margaret takes Frank aside and slugs him on the chin over the will.

In the coda, an MP returns a drunk and disheveled Radar to Potter's office and hands the colonel a list of charges.



Hawaii Five-O
"Honor Is an Unmarked Grave"
Originally aired November 28, 1975
Paramount+ said:
A writer who specializes in solving mysteries uncovers the body in a seven year old case, but it raises more questions than it answers.

In the third of six episodes directed by Jack Lord, writer Travis Marshall (James Olson) has a pair of workers dig up an unmarked plot on the grounds of a Japanese cemetery, and finds what he was looking for--human remains. He also has a photographer and a reporter (Bob Sevey as Bob Simpson) on hand, to whom he claims that he's unearthed heir Brian Henderson, who disappeared seven years prior; and attributes his find to painstaking research. A woman who lives across the street (Pat Herman), and has had her eye on his suspicious activities at the cemetery prior to this, sics HPD on him, who arrest him for desecrating a burial ground, as he was denied a permit to dig. Quickly making bail, Marshall milks the moment for more publicity, alleging that the police have been after him since he wrote a book exposing their inefficiency, and calling out Five-O by name.

Marshall subsequently pays a visit to the estate of Brian's grandmother, Agatha Henderson (Eileen Heckart), to strike up a deal for him to solve the case. Henderson seems shrewd and guarded, while her burly servant, Kono (Moe Keale, not Zulu), eavesdrops on their conversation with concern. Five-O's expositional research on the Hendersons includes that Agatha's husband, Thomas, died three years prior; and identifies a former servant named Koji (David Hashimoto). McGarrett pays a call on Henderson, who confesses that an anonymous phone call put him on the trail that led to the gravesite. McGarrett offers to not press obstruction of justice charges if Henderson cooperates with Five-O in his investigation. Henderson suggests that McGarrett doesn't want him upstaging Five-O.

McGarrett: Writers never make me insecure, Mr. Marshall. So many good books have been written in prison.​

Doc Bergman subsequently confirms the identity of the remains, and that the cause of death was a .22 in the cranium. McGarrett pays his own call on Agatha Henderson, questioning her about who might have murdered Brian and learning that she's hired Marshall. While Danno and Chin are working the cemetery side...

Danno: Why does Travis Marshall come out here shooting pictures?​
Chin: Well, maybe he digs graves.​
[Laughter]​
Rudy3.jpg

...Koji walks up to the dug-up plot and solemnly pays his respects.

Mrs. H pays a visit to a young woman named Maru (Elissa Hoopai), who's married to Paul Kanahele (Jerry Waialae) and has a young son not his named Kimo (Stanley Puchalski), whom we quickly get the drift was Brian's, which Maru had always suspected has something to do with Brian's disappearance. Mrs. H implores her not to tell Five-O anything. Afterward, Marshall shakes Duke's tail to make a rendezvous with Paul, who brings him many photos of Kimo, and informs him that Maru was previously married to a George Fowler, but got an annulment. Marshall makes the Kimo/Brian connection and expresses his certainty that it's the reason Brian was murdered.

Chin finds Mrs. H attending a funeral for Koji (who's determined to have died of natural causes), and chats up Koji's son, Shiru (Bernie Ching), while taking an interest that Koji had a young daughter who'd be about 22 now but isn't attending. Marshall confronts Mrs. H with pictures of Kimo, and that Koji's daughter, Maru, who was 15 at the time, was four months pregnant when Brian disappeared. He describes to her how it was Koji's visits to the unmarked grave that turned him on to the location of the body, and speculates that the Hendersons were planning a disappearance for Brian, which somebody took exception to. Mrs. H writes Marshall a check--for his travel mileage, while encouraging him to report his findings to the proper authorities. Catching wind that Marshall's planning a press conference, McGarrett presses him for the identity of his informant, and he tries to claim lawyer/client privilege on the basis that he has an unused law degree, but it doesn't wash with Steve.

Marshall's subsequently horrified to find his office ransacked, and a hand appears through a door to shoot him dead. As the crime scene is investigated, Five-O finds pictures of Kimo and Maru, so they visit the Kanaheles. While Maru seems guileless, Paul tries to escape on a motorcycle, but takes a tumble and is apprehended. He admits that he was the informant and that he went to Marshall's place to collect money and found him dead. When Maru accuses him of selling her out, he confronts her with the phony marriage record, meant to hide Kimo's true father.

McGarrett pays another call on Mrs. H, whom he persuades to talk. She tells of how Koji was like a father to Brian, and asserts that Brian raped Maru. She then goes into a narrated, black-and-white flashback of her husband confronting Brian in another room and a gunshot that she never asked about. McGarrett asserts that while Marshall believed that Koji had killed Brian, it was actually Thomas Henderson, which Koji and Mrs. H knew but kept silent. He then accuses her of having killed Marshall to prevent him from exposing the truth. She proceeds to calmy call her lawyer in front of him.

Agatha: George, this is Agatha. I'd like you to handle a criminal complaint for me. The defendant? I believe I will be. [Pause.] What is the charge, Mr. McGarrett?​
Steve: Murder in the first degree.​
Agatha: It's murder, in the first degree.​
Steve (exiting): Sorry.​



Good point. She might think he was dead or something. Although she was aware of the Elders, so maybe she knows he has an alternate identity.
That's the big question--How much does she know? Mentor had to be clued in about her identity. Can she contact the elders?

Isn't that the one with Doctor Spock?
Something like that, it seems. :D

That would be convenient. It would also save money on gas. :rommie:
But they'd have to avoid getting the station in their shots.

And what becomes of her, we'll never know.
You got the acknowledgment of a little girl's recovery in compensation.

That seems a little forced.
Pretty typical interplay between the station crew.

Sherrifed, but only because you reminded me.
I stumbled upon it myself.

They actually don't have the authority to make those demands. An ambulance will take you to the nearest appropriate facility. This is also specified in insurance coverage. Of course, this was fifty years ago, so maybe it was different.
And also California.

It's still a good idea, they just need somebody qualified to set it up. :rommie:
There ya go--Getting somebody who knows what they're doing would resolve at least half of their comical subplots.

Oh, man, I forgot about this. It was not a welcome development. :rommie:
Ah, so he's recurring--but only for one more appearance, I think you can handle that. :p

I remember that little crossover scene. "Just say, 'I love you, Joe.'" Boing! :rommie:
Pretty much. :D

I was afraid that you might not get the count joke after so many years.

There should be a phone gag in every episode.
There are probably more than I'm noticing or thinking to mention.

They should have had an MTM crossover where Elliot shows up at one of Mary's parties.
There ya go.

Sometimes when giving my address over the phone, I pronounce MA as "Mah" instead of Massachusetts. And I don't even have to be drunk. :rommie:
Is that just you, or is it a regional thing?

Wow, reality anticipated me. That actually looks pretty cool-- although I can't help but mention that tragedy could have been avoided if someone had thought to actually render aid to the guy who was shot in a non-vital area. :rommie:
"I'm a police scientist, not a paramedic!"

No codes in 1975? I actually can't remember when they came into use.
I think that may have actually come up as a news item, but I don't know how commonly they were in use at this point. We don't have barcodes on comic book covers yet.

Right, it's exactly like that.
And this week, moonshiners!

Interesting that a Korean slur has Japanese origins. But they pass through Japan on the way to Korea, right?
Yep. Japan had a strong US military presence after the war.

Oh, so he's the replacement guy for Michael Douglas? I remember Michael Douglas leaving the show, but I don't think I realized Richard Hatch was his replacement. I didn't really watch that one on a regular basis.
I saw it in the day, but it's one of those shows that I don't have any practical memory of.

Yeah, but those clowns weren't capable of stealing enough to put a warehouse out of business, especially when you consider insurance.
I was wondering about insurance, if they didn't quickly handwave it. Premium increases could have been a factor.

"Not them again!"
"And find out how it's being transported from the mainland."

I drive over to my Mother's every Saturday for breakfast, so I hear him just about every week.
I fell out of the habit of putting it on at some point.
 
[NOTE: This was originally named “The Classic/Retro TV Thread,” and has since been renamed to reflect its expanded focus.]

I've had the idea of creating a thread like this for a while now, as I had a tendency to go OT in other threads to bring up whatever Decades was showing.

This is intended to be a general thread for discussing the programming of channels that specialize in classic TV shows, including (but not limited to) MeTV, Decades, Heroes & Icons, Antenna TV, and Cozi. (I understand that there's a Retro TV, which I don't seem to get, but it deserves a mention because I almost named this "The Retro TV Thread".) Even if you don't get or watch any of these channels, feel free to join in and impress us with your knowledge of arcane TV trivia!

*******

In what's liable to be a recurring feature, here's a rundown of the currently scheduled Decades weekend binges (which run from 1 p.m . EST Saturdays to 7:00 a.m. EST Monday mornings)....

  • Currently playing: The Loretta Young Show [Meh, don't know it, no interest.]
  • Jan. 16-17: Hill Street Blues [I understand that this is a well-regarded show, but I didn't watch it in the day and it's a bit past the period that I tune into these channels for. Also, it seems like it's getting plenty of exposure in H&I's lineup.]
  • Jan. 23-24: Kojak [No special interest, but that's a little more in my period of preference at least.]

*******

So this morning, I stumbled across a "new" show on Antenna--a one-season wonder from the Sixties that I'd never heard of in my life: It's About Time, a Sherwood Schwartz production that apparently came on before Ed Sullivan in CBS's 1966-1967 Sunday night lineup. The show was about a pair of astronauts who traveled back in time and got stuck in a stereotypically inauthentic version of the stone age, with cavemen and dinosaurs living side-by-side. The cast included caveperson regulars Joe E. Ross (previously of Car 54, Where Are You?) and Imogene Coca. Cheesy as it was, it was also kind of cute and endearing...but I can definitely see why it got canned.
I remember that shoe! I always thought it was the inspiration for The Flintstones.
 
I found a new channel the other night called Buzzr which focuses on Old game shows. I thought that was kind of cool. I think the show I was watching at the time was Password, but they also had Dawson family feud and Press Your Luck. It's like the old GSN, now that GSN itself is going towards family feud all the time.
I also like Buzzr. I especially like their Science program on Saturday morning. It may be aimed at kids, but you learn a lot of new things.
 
Antenna TV just recently started re-running 'The Tonight Show staring Johny Carson' the complete uncut 90 minute versions. I've been getting a kick out of seeing the old fashions and guests. Also Johny was the perfect host and knew how to ask questions and let the guests talk about a wide range of topics. Not like now when all the guest does is show up to promote a tv show or motion picture.
That's because then it was a talk show that was interesting and funny. Today's talk shows are just boring commercials or foolish politics.
 
Agreed! I miss Charles Nelson, Brett and all the rest...and the "other" Gene (Rayburn) was unmatched!
That's because they were real comedians with a real sense of humor. Today's comedians act like their comedy should be aimed at destroying someone they hate. There is nothing funny about it at all.
 
Except he went to his death believing he'd found a shortcut to the East Indies, which is why the islands he actually found are called the West indies. I'm not sure it makes sense to count someone as a discoverer if they never realize what it was they found. It was Amerigo Vespucci who first proposed it was a new continent, which is why it's named America. So if anything, Vespucci was the better detective. Christopher Columbus was less like his namesake and more like, say, Chief O'Hara on Batman.
Don't be so hard on Columbus. His biggest problem was getting money for his expeditions. Like many salesmen, he said whatever would make the sale.
 
Apparently, Antenna TV has no affiliates in Massachusetts at all. No It's About Time for me. :(


Another of my favorites from childhood. Both Ray Walston and Bill Bixby were great, and they made a great team. I have the entire series on DVD.


That's a fantastic show. My favorite mainstream Western.


Indeed. There's 500 channels on there, but somebody else always has number 501.
For those of you who like sports, you have the same hard time finding your favorite teams unless you subscribe toe fifty different "streaming" sites.
 
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