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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

"Cry Me a River," Julie London
This is okay, but not great.

The Anglo-Egyptian Condominium ended, with the Republic of Sudan becoming an independent nation after nearly 136 years of union with Egypt and 56 years of British occupation.
Those time shares never last.

Carl Perkins's record "Blue Suede Shoes" was released.
Now there's an Uber Classic.

First issue of Showcase (DC comics) [cover-dated March-April]
An innocuous beginning.

Operation Auca: Five evangelical Christian missionaries from the United States (Nate Saint, Roger Youderian, Ed McCully, Jim Elliot, and Pete Fleming) were speared to death by members of the Huaorani people of Ecuador after attempting to introduce Christianity to them.
We'll take that as a "no."

In Charles M. Schulz's Peanuts, Snoopy started walking ice-skating on his hind legs.
Great moments in evolution. :rommie:

On the weeks of January 14 through February 11, "Memories Are Made of This" by Dean Martin topped the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.
I can live without Dean Martin.

"Tutti Frutti," Little Richard
Another Uber Classic.

"See You Later, Alligator," Bill Haley & His Comets
This isn't on the Rolling Stone list? Just kidding. It's cute.

There's a strong argument for Neil Aspinall and Mal Evans sharing the coveted title of Fifth Beatle. As one author put it, they were the only other people who pretty much shared the whole Beatles experience with the actual band members. They went where the Beatles went, slept where the Beatles slept, ate what the Beatles ate, and wore what the Beatles wore.
There were certainly some interesting anecdotes in that article, such as the one where they had to drive without a windshield. It was not a completely glamorous life.

These days, probably Andromeda.
Uh oh. Something up with Thor that I don't know about?

Not even the Cream cover? HW was a big influence on the British blues artists, including them and the Stones.
I've almost certainly heard that, since I have several Cream CDs, but it's not ringing any bells.

I find this to be a pretty vanilla cover that doesn't add anything to the original. It's hard to improve upon peak-era Smokey.
No, but Linda Rondstadt is pretty much always good.

I wasn't familiar with either of these novelty numbers, and can't say I'm motivated to get either. The first one I found to be particularly annoying. They both sound like they're trying to be Ray Stevens.
You never heard "Junk Food Junkie?" Must be another regional thing.

It fits pretty well in the mold of the plethora of Western shows that were on the TV landscape in the '60s. It's fun seeing Mark Lenard as the show's regular rat bastard, though I've read that he becomes less antagonistic as the series goes on. Thus far, the only story where he and the Bolt brothers were on the same side was one in which they tried hiring a sheriff (John Marley), who turned out to be a hard-ass who was enforcing a curfew and the expiration of the saloon's liquor license. They pulled the trick of having the entire town break the curfew; when he refused to arrest them all, they were contractually able to fire him for dereliction of duty.
It actually sounds pretty decent and a Wiki check tells me it lasted two seasons. It's weird that I have no memory of it.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing



Hawaii Five-O
"Legacy of Terror"
Originally aired January 1, 1976
Edited Wiki said:
An aged Japanese importer who may have known the location of a fortune in gold is slain.

In a private apartment above Tahashi Import/Export, attorney Alex Kelsey (Don Porter) meets with Minoru Tahashi (C. K. Huang) regarding finalizing his will, as the latter believes that his time is short. Kelsey takes interest in a cryptic clue left in the will for his nephew and Tahashi gives him the key to a safe deposit box that's supposed to have a letter in it. While leaving, Kelsey covertly locks Tahashi in the room and starts a fire in the warehouse below. He then proceeds to the bank but is told that they have instructions to only open it for the nephew. When Kazuo Tahashi (Mako) arrives in Hawaii, he sees McGarrett, suspicious of foul play--his father having died before signing the will--and knowing of the meeting with Kelsey, who defended Minoru for treason after Pearl Harbor. Kelsey sees underworld figure Din Lee (Moe Keale) to ask him about smuggling $3-4 million in gold bullion off the islands. Smelling the foul play himself, Lee negotiates for a 50% share. Kazuo calls Kim Matsu (Haunani Minn), his father's secretary with who Kazuo has had a discrete relationship, to learn what she knows and share his suspicions.

McGarrett questions Kelsey, to whom he expresses a hostile attitude because the shyster has gotten off crime figures with his legal trickery. When Kazuo is brought in, Kelsey assures him that he's still the legal heir and gives him the box key. At Minoru's funeral, Steve runs into retired Commander Reginald Blackwell (Lew Ayres), who'd been in Naval Intelligence at the time of Pearl and suspected Tahashi of being an espionage ringleader, but couldn't prove it; and dismisses rumors that Tahashi was sitting on a treasure of bullion. Kazuo has a tense meeting with Kim, who was also questioned. She assures him that she didn't tell Five-O anything about the bullion, and informs him that she's familiar with the directions in the letter, having typed it up. Che finds that Tahashi's apartment door was locked from the outside, indicating murder. When Kazuo arrives at the bank, he lets Chin know that he knows Chin's tailing him. Two of Lee's men, Regan and Strang (Bob Apisa and Joe Kuon), are also tailing Kazuo. One of them lets the air out of one of Chin's tires while he's away from the car, so Chin has to call Danno for a ride while the hoods pursue Kazuo.

When Five-O catches up with Kazuo outside Kim's apartment, he's been wounded and Kim is found dead from strangulation. Kazuo turns over the letter to McGarrett, which only has a cryptic reference to a photo album that's supposed to be in Kim's possession. After studying Blackwell's file, Steve pays the commander a visit on his boat and is told of how, during the Pearl attack, Tahashi was supposed to have received a call from a Japanese bank to smuggle out its bullion before it was confiscated; though Blackwell insists that Tahashi wouldn't have had time for such a job before he was arrested. Blackwell also tells of how he and Tahashi became friends after the war, though they later drifted apart. Steve gives Blackwell a ride to a retirement center that his friendship foundation funds. At a meeting, Lee tells Kelsey that his men lost Kazuo; following which Kazuo calls Kelsey wanting to strike a deal that doesn't involve Lee. When Lee's men are tracked down and questioned, they deny having followed Kazuo to Kim's apartment, or of having taken the photo album. Danno thinks they're telling the truth, which makes him and Steve consider that Kazuo was lying, and is thus a suspect in Kim's murder.

Brought in to 5OHQ, elderly Sing Tse (Henry K. F. Lee), a witness to the fire, identifies Kelsey as having been seen at the warehouse just before. Kazuo arrives for his meeting early and attacks Kelsey, who falls from a sixth-story balcony. Kazuo then feigns having just arrived on the scene and admits to having gone there to kill Kelsey, handing over a weapon. Brought in for questioning about the murders of Kelsey and Kim, Lee denies involvement and admits to having conspired to smuggle the bullion, which gets him booked for criminal conspiracy.

Steve: Thanks for the charge.​

A background check of Kazuo turns up that he's an insurance investigator who's prone to violent methods and suspected of foul play, as well as a karate expert. They suspect that Kazuo had been using Kim to keep tabs on his father, got her out of the way, and faked the letter. Che turns up the remains of a deed for a cabin sold to Tahashi by Blackwell in the aftermath of the war. Five-O rushes to the cabin, suspecting that it's where the bullion is hidden and that Kazuo is on the way there. Kazuo arrives and opens a trap door in the floor to find a crate just before Five-O swoops in and calls for his surrender. Kazuo gets Chin at gunpoint and uses him as a hostage. Steve approaches Kazuo while taunting him about not living up to his father's example. When Kazuo takes a shot at Steve, Blackwell wings him from a hiding spot. The commander has the crate opened to reveal that the treasure inside consists of three gold bars. As Kazuo is taken away for booking, Blackwell explains that he and Tahashi used most of the bullion over the years to fund Blackwell's humanitarian projects. Steve indicates in a friendly manner that the governor will have to approve of this arrangement.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Not With My Wife, I Don't"
Originally aired January 3, 1976
Frndly said:
Georgette fears her marriage to Ted is unravelling and considers separation when Ted refuses to see a counsellor.

After Ted comes into the newsroom acting mopey, Georgette visits Mary's to talk about how she's thinking of leaving Ted because, she's reluctant to discuss, their sex life has ceased, to the point that he's sleeping on the couch. Also uncomfortable with the subject, Mary recommends seeing a professional. Ted insists to Georgette that he still loves her, but he refuses to see a psychiatrist until she threatens to leave if he doesn't.

Murray, doing field work for an expose on gun sales, comes into the newsroom armed like Rambo.
MTM47.jpg
Ted asks Lou to come with him to the psychiatrist for moral support and as cover for why he's seeing a shrink. In the waiting room, Ted asks Lou if he ever had a problem in the bedroom. Ted goes in alone to see Dr. Powell (Alan Manson), who asks Ted about himself and initially seems to think that he's paranoid until Ted explains that he's a newscaster.

Ted comes home after three visits telling Georgette that he's now cured and uninhibited, the doctor having determined that he was substituting Georgette for his mother. He's eager to make up for lost time with Georgette, but she's invited Lou and Mary over for dinner. When Ted's obviously trying to hurry them back out, Mary figures out why and clues in Lou. Ted then proceeds to carry Georgette into the bedroom.

In the coda, Ted tells his mother on the phone how he's about to take Georgette on a belated honeymoon; and Georgette seems clearly satisfied with Ted's wellness.



The Bob Newhart Show
"No Sale"
Originally aired January 3, 1976
Wiki said:
Bob and Jerry invest in Carlin's real estate deal, but discover that it involves evicting an old man.

At the close of a session, Elliot gets into his success in real estate.

Elliot: When E. F. Carlin talks, people listen.​
Bob: I'm sorry, what'd you say...?​

He tells Bob how he's renovating tenements into townhouses and pitches for Bob to get in on it. Bob tells Emily (who's proven to be a soft touch to a magazine salesman, ordering titles like Turkey Quarterly) about the offer at home, and the subject of NYC going broke comes up. Back at the office, Bob learns that Elliot called Jerry about the deal, telling him that Bob was already in. Jerry can raise $5,000, but needs Bob to match it, pressuring Bob to agree. Elliot already has contracts filled out for them and personalized pens.

Elliot takes them and Emily to see one of the properties, which is rat-infested and doesn't have a bathroom or power.

Emily: Rustic...yet filthy.​

While Bob's alone in the living room, a disheveled Mr. Arbogast (Malcolm Atterbury) walks in and starts prepping food for an unseen cat, leaving Bob to believe that it's actually the man's dinner. Arbogast tells Bob that he's lived there for 47 years. After Arbogast exits to look for his cat, Bob learns that Elliot knows about him and is unconcerned. Bob isn't comfortable with the idea of kicking the man out, which in turn causes Jerry to be upset with Bob.

Bob and Emily return to the apartment with a sack of groceries to find Arbogast packing. When they tell him that they've pulled out of the deal, he calls them chumps, and clarifies that he sold the building to Carlin, pulling out a fat wad of cash as evidence. In the coda, we learn that he's gone in with Elliot in Bob's place.



This is okay, but not great.
I was hoping for something along the lines of "Hello, nurse." It seems that Dix was already divorced from Uncle Jack at this point.

Those time shares never last.
I knew that name would be commented upon.

Now there's an Uber Classic.
Another Uber Classic.
Both definitive early recordings of the genre.

An innocuous beginning.
With all due respect to firefighters, it seems like they could use a feature that's a little more flashy.

We'll take that as a "no."
[rimshot]

I can live without Dean Martin.
He's got a couple of Christmas numbers that are seasonal must-listens for me.

This isn't on the Rolling Stone list? Just kidding. It's cute.
One of their bigger hits, which I was more familiar with going in than most of their other hit singles.

There were certainly some interesting anecdotes in that article, such as the one where they had to drive without a windshield. It was not a completely glamorous life.
Oh yeah, that's a good story from when they were still on the rise in Britain.

Uh oh. Something up with Thor that I don't know about?
Nah, just a social commentary swipe.

You never heard "Junk Food Junkie?" Must be another regional thing.
If I heard it in the day, I have no memory of it.

In the first week of the Bicentennial, Marvel hits the ground running:
 
"Legacy of Terror"
Also a Night Stalker episode title. Apropos of nothing. :rommie:

While leaving, Kelsey covertly locks Tahashi in the room and starts a fire in the warehouse below.
Did Tahashi not have a phone?

Kazuo Tahashi (Mako)
Uh oh, better get Mako. And they did, often.

Kelsey sees underworld figure Din Lee (Moe Keale) to ask him about smuggling $3-4 million in gold bullion off the islands. Smelling the foul play himself, Lee negotiates for a 50% share. Kazuo calls Kim Matsu (Haunani Minn), his father's secretary with who Kazuo has had a discrete relationship, to learn what she knows and share his suspicions.
If both of these guys knew about the gold, you'd think they would have taken some action before now.

retired Commander Reginald Blackwell (Lew Ayres)
Also a frequently seen character actor.

Kazuo has a tense meeting with Kim, who was also questioned. She assures him that she didn't tell Five-O anything about the bullion, and informs him that she's familiar with the directions in the letter, having typed it up.
I wonder if Tahashi confided in her or if Kazuo informed her. It's kind of unclear who knew what when.

Che finds that Tahashi's apartment door was locked from the outside, indicating murder.
And another clumsy amatuer killer. :rommie:

One of them lets the air out of one of Chin's tires while he's away from the car, so Chin has to call Danno for a ride while the hoods pursue Kazuo.
These guys should carry pumps or cans of Fix-A-Flat or something.

Blackwell also tells of how he and Tahashi became friends after the war, though they later drifted apart.
Blackwell must know that the secret of the bullion will almost certainly come out in the course of the investigation.

they deny having followed Kazuo to Kim's apartment, or of having taken the photo album.
What's the deal with the photo album? Does it contain pictures of the cabin or something?

which makes him and Steve consider that Kazuo was lying, and is thus a suspect in Kim's murder.
He wasn't in Hawaii at the time.

Kazuo arrives for his meeting early and attacks Kelsey, who falls from a sixth-story balcony.
Drink!

A background check of Kazuo turns up that he's an insurance investigator who's prone to violent methods and suspected of foul play, as well as a karate expert.
I wonder if Tahashi was aware of this.

When Kazuo takes a shot at Steve, Blackwell wings him from a hiding spot.
So Blackwell had just been waiting for Kazuo. I wonder what he planned to do if Five-O hadn't been there.

The commander has the crate opened to reveal that the treasure inside consists of three gold bars.
Jackpot!

As Kazuo is taken away for booking, Blackwell explains that he and Tahashi used most of the bullion over the years to fund Blackwell's humanitarian projects. Steve indicates in a friendly manner that the governor will have to approve of this arrangement.
This was a good one. I always like when they call back to Hawaii's involvement in World War II, and this had some good characters. I don't understand what Tahashi was up to, though. Why all the cryptic clues? Why not just trust Blackwell to deal with everything after he died?

Georgette visits Mary's to talk about how she's thinking of leaving Ted because, she's reluctant to discuss, their sex life has ceased, to the point that he's sleeping on the couch.
I remember this one. I thought it was weird, because it implied that they hadn't been having sex before they got married.

Murray, doing field work for an expose on gun sales, comes into the newsroom armed like Rambo.
View attachment 51058
Unlikely to happen these days. :rommie:

In the waiting room, Ted asks Lou if he ever had a problem in the bedroom.
He's going to have one soon. Depending on how you define "problem." :rommie:

Ted comes home after three visits telling Georgette that he's now cured
That was easy. :rommie:

Georgette seems clearly satisfied with Ted's wellness.
MARY: Is everything good between you and Ted now?
GEORGETTE: Whew! Is it ever!
Which was funny because it was Georgette. :rommie:

Elliot: When E. F. Carlin talks, people listen.
This is a reference to a popular advertising slogan at the time. I think it was EF Hutton.

Emily (who's proven to be a soft touch to a magazine salesman, ordering titles like Turkey Quarterly)
Weirdly, I'm picturing this as a 70s Marvel B&W magazine. :rommie:

and the subject of NYC going broke comes up
That's as popular as the Cleveland River going up in flames. :rommie:

Bob and Emily return to the apartment with a sack of groceries to find Arbogast packing. When they tell him that they've pulled out of the deal, he calls them chumps, and clarifies that he sold the building to Carlin, pulling out a fat wad of cash as evidence. In the coda, we learn that he's gone in with Elliot in Bob's place.
Nice twist. And kind of a nice little moment for Mr Carlin.

I knew that name would be commented upon.
How could I not? :rommie: I feel like it should be used for an interstellar empire in Star Trek: "Stardate 1732.8. We have made first contact with the Camelopardalis Condominium."

With all due respect to firefighters, it seems like they could use a feature that's a little more flashy.
My thoughts exactly.

[rimshot]
:rommie:

He's got a couple of Christmas numbers that are seasonal must-listens for me.
Eh, I don't hate him, I can just live without him.

One of their bigger hits, which I was more familiar with going in than most of their other hit singles.
I do remember it from when I was a young kid. We might have had a 45.

Nah, just a social commentary swipe.
Ah, I getcha.

In the first week of the Bicentennial, Marvel hits the ground running:
Ah, the Liberty Legion. I loved The Invaders and I was pretty psyched about The Liberty Legion getting a tryout. I was pretty disappointed when it didn't successfully spin off.
 
Did Tahashi not have a phone?
He was praying, I think.

If both of these guys knew about the gold, you'd think they would have taken some action before now.
Kazuo did. It was just a rumor to everyone else.

I wonder if Tahashi confided in her or if Kazuo informed her. It's kind of unclear who knew what when.
I thought it was clear that she knew more than Kazuo from being his Tahashi's secretary, and Kazuo was using her for information.

These guys should carry pumps or cans of Fix-A-Flat or something.
Was that around in the day?

What's the deal with the photo album? Does it contain pictures of the cabin or something?
Pure red herring planted by Kazuo while he had the real letter.

He wasn't in Hawaii at the time.
He sure was...Kim was the secretary, he was at her place when the body was found.

But it wasn't the Ilikai....

So Blackwell had just been waiting for Kazuo. I wonder what he planned to do if Five-O hadn't been there.
I think he and Steve had enough of a rapport that he could see where things were headed.

Now that you mention it...

I don't understand what Tahashi was up to, though. Why all the cryptic clues? Why not just trust Blackwell to deal with everything after he died?
Good question. There was the drifting apart part. Something about Tahashi having gone back to the traditional ways with age.

I remember this one. I thought it was weird, because it implied that they hadn't been having sex before they got married.
I didn't catch that implication.

Unlikely to happen these days. :rommie:
What's more, Sue Ann set up his entrance with a line about how "a man should be virile and macho and just reeking with masculinity." After his entrance: "Thank you, God. Do you have anything with hair?"

MARY: Is everything good between you and Ted now?
GEORGETTE: Whew! Is it ever!
Which was funny because it was Georgette. :rommie:
Yeah, her guileless delivery really sells what would be ordinary lines coming out of another character's mouth.

This is a reference to a popular advertising slogan at the time. I think it was EF Hutton.
I recognized the slogan, though I wasn't remembering the name.
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My thoughts exactly.
Coming Soon.

Ah, the Liberty Legion. I loved The Invaders and I was pretty psyched about The Liberty Legion getting a tryout. I was pretty disappointed when it didn't successfully spin off.
Seemed a little early for them to be spinning off, and I wonder if Roy would've been up to writing both titles. The really nifty thing is how you can see the seeds of All-Star Squadron being planted.
 
He was praying, I think.
A phone call would have worked much better. :rommie:

Kazuo did. It was just a rumor to everyone else.
Kelsey must have been pretty sure.

I thought it was clear that she knew more than Kazuo from being his Tahashi's secretary, and Kazuo was using her for information.
Or vice versa. If she knew first, she may have been using him until he turned on her.

Was that around in the day?
Good question. I'll Google. Yes, it was actually invented in 1970.

Pure red herring planted by Kazuo while he had the real letter.
Ah, okay.

He sure was...Kim was the secretary, he was at her place when the body was found.
The summary said he arrived in Hawaii after the fire.

But it wasn't the Ilikai....
They were all booked up. The Acrophobics Anonymous convention was in town.

I think he and Steve had enough of a rapport that he could see where things were headed.
Makes sense.

Good question. There was the drifting apart part. Something about Tahashi having gone back to the traditional ways with age.
Okay, I thought the drifting apart thing was misdirection on Blackwell's part.

I didn't catch that implication.
Otherwise I'd expect the problem to have come up years before.

What's more, Sue Ann set up his entrance with a line about how "a man should be virile and macho and just reeking with masculinity." After his entrance: "Thank you, God. Do you have anything with hair?"
She must have loved the 80s. :rommie:

Yeah, her guileless delivery really sells what would be ordinary lines coming out of another character's mouth.
She's got layers. :rommie:

I recognized the slogan, though I wasn't remembering the name.
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Oh, yeah, I forgot about the part where everybody cranes their necks to listen.

Seemed a little early for them to be spinning off, and I wonder if Roy would've been up to writing both titles. The really nifty thing is how you can see the seeds of All-Star Squadron being planted.
I forget what his schedule was like then. He probably would have given something up to write Liberty Legion. He really loved that sort of thing.
 
A phone call would have worked much better. :rommie:
Before the fire, I mean.

Kelsey must have been pretty sure.
Oh yeah, he was obviously scheming. But the pieces just seemed to be falling into place for him as they were finalizing the will...like learning about the letter in the safe deposit box.

Good question. I'll Google. Yes, it was actually invented in 1970.
Good to know.

The summary said he arrived in Hawaii after the fire.
Kim wasn't killed in the fire. Kazuo strangled her in her apartment and led Five-O to believe Lee's men were responsible.

Killed in the fire:
H5146.jpg

Strangled by Kazuo:
H5147.jpg

They were all booked up. The Acrophobics Anonymous convention was in town.
:D

Otherwise I'd expect the problem to have come up years before.
Being married to her might have made a difference.

Oh, yeah, I forgot about the part where everybody cranes their necks to listen.
Me, too. That took me back a bit.

Look who popped up in Seattle today...
HCTB01.jpg
 
Last edited:
Oh yeah, he was obviously scheming. But the pieces just seemed to be falling into place for him as they were finalizing the will...like learning about the letter in the safe deposit box.
Ah, okay.

Kim wasn't killed in the fire. Kazuo strangled her in her apartment and led Five-O to believe Lee's men were responsible.

Killed in the fire:
View attachment 51104

Strangled by Kazuo:
View attachment 51105
Oops, I see. I misread the original sentence to say that Kazuo had become a suspect in Tahashi's murder.

Being married to her might have made a difference.
Yeah, I suppose.

Me, too. That took me back a bit.
Now that I remember it, I remember it being referenced extensively.

Looked who popped up in Seattle today...
View attachment 51110
That would probably turn on Sue Ann, too. :rommie:
 
Now that I remember it, I remember it being referenced extensively.
Yeah, it was a running pop cultural gag in the day.

That would probably turn on Sue Ann, too. :rommie:
Did you catch the $1.9 million dollar lumberjack (converted for deflation) on the end of the noose?

It looks like Asner's character will be making a return appearance in Season 2. Y'know, in general, I'm perfectly willing to buy into the conceit of Seattle's 250-ish population of lumberjacks, prospective brides, and sundry townsfolk as a pool from which guest characters routinely emerge; but the town just doesn't feel big enough for Ed Asner to lurk around unnoticed the rest of the time.

Quoteworthy moment from one of the regulars:
HCTB02.jpg
 
Last edited:
Did you catch the $1.9 million dollar lumberjack (converted for deflation) on the end of the noose?
I did not, but I kind of recognize him now. If I saw him in action and heard his voice, I probably would have recognized him right off the bat.

It looks like Asner's character will be making a return appearance in Season 2. Y'know, in general, I'm perfectly willing to buy into the conceit of Seattle's 250-ish population of lumberjacks, prospective brides, and sundry townsfolk as a pool from which guest characters routinely emerge; but the town just doesn't feel big enough for Ed Asner to lurk around unnoticed the rest of the time.
He does have quite a large footprint. :rommie:

Quoteworthy moment from one of the regulars:
View attachment 51123
Ah, always a gentleman. Except when he's a gorilla. :rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week


January 11
  • Ecuador's President, General Guillermo Rodriguez Lara, resigned from office after five days of political violence in the South American nation, and was replaced by a three-man military junta.

January 12
  • The United Nations Security Council voted, 11 to 1, with 3 abstentions, to allow the Palestinian Liberation Organization to participate in its debate on Middle East peace and to be accorded the rights of a member nation for the limited purpose of the debate. The U.S. voted against, but did not veto, the resolution, while its allies in NATO, the UK, France and Italy, abstain.
  • Died: Dame Agatha Christie, 85, British mystery author. Her writing career had started in 1920 when she published The Mysterious Affair at Styles, the first of 60 novels and numerous short story mysteries.

January 13
  • At a press event in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Ray Kurzweil of Kurzweil Computer Products demonstrated the first computer programmed to recognize written text after scanning it with an optical character recognition system, and then to convert it to audio form as spoken words.

January 14
  • George and Kathy Lutz fled from their home, at 112 Ocean Avenue in Amityville, New York, after having moved in on December 18, 1975, claiming to have been terrorized by several unexplainable paranormal phenomena at the house. The Lutzes' claims would go on to inspire the story of The Amityville Horror, which would be the basis for several movies and books about the phenomenon.
  • Bob R. Dorsey, the chairman of the Board of the Gulf Oil Corporation was fired, along with Vice President for Finance Fred Deering and Division President William I. Henry, after the Board of Directors met to respond to reports that the three of them had used the company's money in an attempt to influence political campaigns for candidates who had pledged to support the company.

January 15
  • The government of Spain announced that elections for both houses of the Spanish Parliament, the Cortes Generales, scheduled for March, would be postponed for a year so that a new electoral law could be drawn up setting the requirements for political parties, campaigning, and democratic multiparty voting. The March 1976 voting had been scheduled before the death in October of Francisco Franco, who had limited voters to voting yes or no on a set of candidates chosen by Franco's party. The action was described as being made "to avoid the election in March of a new Parliament as unrepresentative as the present one".
  • Sara Jane Moore, who had fired a pistol at U.S. President Gerald Ford in San Francisco the previous September 22, was sentenced to life imprisonment by federal judge Samuel Conti, who scolded her for having "no remorse"....Mrs. Moore, 45 at the time of her appearance, said in a statement that her attempt "accomplished little except to throw away the rest of my life," but added that she was not sorry "because at the time it seemed a correct expression of my anger and, if successful, just might have triggered the kind of chaos that could have started the upheaval of change." Moore would spend 32 years in prison before her release at the age of 77 on December 31, 2007, one year and five days after Gerald Ford's passing away at the age of 93.

January 17
  • The Communications Technology Satellite, designated as "Hermes" by Canada's Department of Communications and placed into outer space by the U.S. space agency NASA, was launched from Cape Canaveral in Florida. Described as "a harbinger of 'direct broadcasting' from space to rooftop antennas on earth", the CTS was the most powerful communications satellite up to that time, with a 200 watt transmitter and the first to operate on the super-high frequency (SHF) band. The CTS was sent into its assigned geosynchronous position 22,300 miles (35,900 km) above the Equator on January 29.
  • The 18th and final episode of the ABC television variety show Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell was broadcast, after which Cosell took a hiatus to prepare for the broadcast of the 1976 Winter Olympics and the show was canceled due to low ratings. Having premiered on September 20, 1975, three weeks before the live comedy show NBC's Saturday Night telecast its first episode, the ABC program featured some comedians who would later appear on the NBC program that would be renamed Saturday Night Live, including Bill Murray and Brian Doyle-Murray. Cosell's last guest stars were comedian Billy Crystal and the pop music group Bay City Rollers.
  • On NBC's Saturday Night, comedian John Belushi made his second appearance as "the Samurai," after having debuted the character on December 13 in a sketch called "Samurai Hotel". At the request of host Buck Henry, Belushi's performances would become a recurring feature on the program, and Henry co-starred in the second sketch, "Samurai Delicatessen".


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "I Write the Songs," Barry Manilow
2. "Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)," Diana Ross
3. "Convoy," C. W. McCall
4. "Love Rollercoaster," Ohio Players
5. "Fox on the Run," Sweet
6. "I Love Music, Pt. 1," The O'Jays
7. "Love to Love You Baby," Donna Summer
8. "You Sexy Thing," Hot Chocolate
9. "Times of Your Life," Paul Anka
10. "Walk Away from Love," David Ruffin
11. "Country Boy (You Got Your Feet in L.A.)," Glen Campbell
12. "Sing a Song," Earth, Wind & Fire
13. "Rock and Roll All Nite," Kiss
14. "Fly Away," John Denver
15. "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover," Paul Simon
16. "Evil Woman," Electric Light Orchestra
17. "Saturday Night," Bay City Rollers
18. "Love Machine (Pt. 1)," The Miracles
19. "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do," Neil Sedaka
20. "Over My Head," Fleetwood Mac
21. "Love Hurts," Nazareth

23. "Wake Up Everybody, Pt. 1," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
24. "That's the Way (I Like It)," KC & The Sunshine Band
25. "Baby Face," The Wing and a Prayer Fife and Drum Corps
26. "Somewhere in the Night," Helen Reddy
27. "Theme from S.W.A.T.," Rhythm Heritage
28. "Squeeze Box," The Who

30. "Let It Shine"/"He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother," Olivia Newton-John
31. "Let's Do It Again," The Staple Singers
32. "Take It to the Limit," Eagles
33. "Hurricane, Pt. 1," Bob Dylan
34. "For the Love of You (Part 1 & 2)," The Isley Brothers

36. "Slow Ride," Foghat
37. "Golden Years," David Bowie
38. "All by Myself," Eric Carmen
39. "Fly, Robin, Fly," Silver Convention
40. "Fanny (Be Tender with My Love)," Bee Gees
41. "Deep Purple," Donny & Marie Osmond

43. "Tracks of My Tears," Linda Ronstadt

45. "The White Knight," Cledus Maggard & The Citizen's Band

47. "Sky High," Jigsaw
48. "Part Time Love," Gladys Knight & The Pips

53. "Sweet Love," Commodores
54. "December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)," The Four Seasons

56. "Junk Food Junkie," Larry Groce
57. "Nights on Broadway," Bee Gees

59. "Bohemian Rhapsody," Queen

61. "Love Is the Drug," Roxy Music
62. "Island Girl," Elton John

64. "The Way I Want to Touch You," Captain & Tennille
65. "Only Sixteen," Dr. Hook
66. "Feelings," Morris Albert

69. "Dream On," Aerosmith

71. "Full of Fire," Al Green
72. "Sweet Thing," Rufus feat. Chaka Khan

77. "My Little Town," Simon & Garfunkel
78. "Dream Weaver," Gary Wright

Recent on the chart:

"Love Is the Drug," Roxy Music
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(Dec. 27; #30 US; #2 UK; included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll)


And new on the boob tube:
  • All in the Family, "Archie the Babysitter"
  • M*A*S*H, "Hawkeye"
  • The Bionic Woman, "Welcome Home, Jaime: Part 1" (series premiere)
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Anatomy of a Bribe"
  • Emergency!, "The Girl on the Balance Beam"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Once I Had a Secret Love"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "Warden Gordon Borden"
  • NBC's Saturday Night, Season 1, episode 10, hosted by Buck Henry



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



Yes, he has a very distinctive voice.
As do Brown and Lenard, each in his own way.

I used to think that was his only starring role in a TV show.
See? I learned ya sumthin'.
 
Ecuador's President, General Guillermo Rodriguez Lara, resigned from office after five days of political violence in the South American nation, and was replaced by a three-man military junta.
Yeah, that sounds like an improvement.

Died: Dame Agatha Christie, 85, British mystery author. Her writing career had started in 1920 when she published The Mysterious Affair at Styles, the first of 60 novels and numerous short story mysteries.
And was still writing pretty much up to the end-- and publishing after the end, thanks to some foresight on her part.

At a press event in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Ray Kurzweil of Kurzweil Computer Products demonstrated the first computer programmed to recognize written text after scanning it with an optical character recognition system, and then to convert it to audio form as spoken words.
And now we have ElevenLabs. It's kind of amazing sometimes to find out what technologies existed in the dim and distant past.

Bob R. Dorsey, the chairman of the Board of the Gulf Oil Corporation was fired, along with Vice President for Finance Fred Deering and Division President William I. Henry, after the Board of Directors met to respond to reports that the three of them had used the company's money in an attempt to influence political campaigns for candidates who had pledged to support the company.
Well. Imagine that.

Mrs. Moore, 45 at the time of her appearance, said in a statement that her attempt "accomplished little except to throw away the rest of my life," but added that she was not sorry "because at the time it seemed a correct expression of my anger and, if successful, just might have triggered the kind of chaos that could have started the upheaval of change."
Some people are just incurably stupid. :rommie:

The Communications Technology Satellite, designated as "Hermes" by Canada's Department of Communications and placed into outer space by the U.S. space agency NASA, was launched from Cape Canaveral in Florida. Described as "a harbinger of 'direct broadcasting' from space to rooftop antennas on earth"
And now we have Sirius XM.

Cosell's last guest stars were comedian Billy Crystal and the pop music group Bay City Rollers.
Whose biggest hit, I think, was "Saturday Night." Probably not a coincidence. :rommie:

Henry co-starred in the second sketch, "Samurai Delicatessen".
I wonder if they ever did Soup Samurai. "No soup for you! Hai-YA!"

"Love Is the Drug," Roxy Music
Good one. Strong nostalgic value.

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Those are a couple of demurely dressed backup singers. :rommie:

As do Brown and Lenard, each in his own way.
I'm not so familiar with Brown, but Lenard is pretty unique all around (although I do think he's got a resemblance to Martin Landau).

See? I learned ya sumthin'.
Oh, I'm always learning or relearning something in this thread. :rommie:
 
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