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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

At first I thought I didn't know this one, but I do vaguely remember it. The song is decent, but needs a better singer.

Great song, but I definitely love the Carl Carlton version better.

I'd skipped this one in my collection because I felt the Mickey & Sylvia version from 1957 was sufficient, and it's a little early for '50s retro for my tastes. Should I consider reconsidering? I'll let YOU decide!

"Love Is Strange," Peaches & Herb
The Mickey & Sylvia version is far superior-- it has a nice strangeness to it that underscores the lyrics, and I never cared for Peaches & Herb anyhow. So, yeah, Mickey & Sylvia are sufficient. :D

I do like this okay, but it certainly is a leftover from the 50s.

Oh, yeah, it doesn't get any more classic than this. :mallory:

All of this talk of elephants reminds me that I saw a trained one on one of the Sullivans last week. Hope you caught it. He was pretty impressive (and cute).
Yes, I did see that elephant act and I loved it. :rommie:
 
RJD, Special P.M. Edition!

Peaches & Herb opinion duly noted. Anyone want to make a counter-argument?

Bobby Vinton...I generally avoid the teen idols of that era. Slippery slope.

All this talk of elephants also reminds me of this:

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The song is decent, but needs a better singer.
Funny you should say that, because when I was assessing it for my own purposes, I was thinking, "I guess I'd be getting this if that were Petula Clark singing it." But as it stands, it's a step too close to Robert Goulet / Wayne Newton territory.

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I've fallen a bit behind in all of my non-50th anniversary viewing, but I've got a chance to get some backlogged reviews out while I've got the daily Sullivans on.

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12 O'Clock High

"To Heinie, with Love"
Originally aired February 5, 1965
Xfinity said:
A new navigator (Keir Dullea) displays personality traits that could endanger both missions and crews; guest Ralph Williams.

We've seen Frank on the show...now it's Dave's turn! (Better keep an eye on that bombing autopilot.) His character has a chip on his shoulder because his dad was a Nazi Bundist--It doesn't help that he couldn't find a better picture to carry around in his wallet than one of Pop saluting in front of a swastika. And that's not the only hamfisted element in the story...General Savage also sprouts a backstory detail about an old girlfriend who'd been killed by Bundists; and the father being said to have joined the Bund when Dullea's character was 11 is chronologically problematic. The show's not usually so clumsily written.


"The Clash"
Originally aired February 12, 1965
IMDb said:
Gen. Savage and a Nazi colonel are the only survivors in a raft after shooting down each other's planes at sea, but the Nazi tries to force him to surrender at gunpoint.

We've all seen this story before, though in trying to look up the earliest known example, I came across a Wiki entry for Enemy Mine that gave a small list of antecedents in which a 1965 war film was the earliest entry. I'd be interested to know if somebody knows of one that goes back further than that.

In this example, although Savage and the colonel have their moments of bonding, it doesn't end well...they remain opponents to the bitter end, which comes when the one who isn't the star of the show dies in a struggle over his gun on a barren little island that they go ashore on. In the coda, Savage does look into trying to get the wallet pictures of the colonel's family, which were his most prized possessions, back to them.

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TGs1e2.jpg
"Goodbye, Hello, Goodbye"
Originally aired September 15, 1966
Wiki said:
Ann Marie moves out of Brewster, New York to an apartment in New York City, with the help of her agent Harvey Peck (Ronnie Schell), much to the chagrin of her father (Lew Parker). While looking at her apartment she meets her neighbor, Judy Bessemer (Bonnie Scott), and her independence is tested when her mother (Rosemary DeCamp) moves in after an argument with her father, and the only decent paying gig available is a mop on a kids show.

Taking place before the previously aired episode, this one introduces us to Ann's parents (and her Season 1 neighbor). Ted Bessell is not in the episode.

As one can tell, this is basically a growing up and leaving the nest story with a little poignancy amid the parents being absurdly overbearing.

We do see Ann in her mop costume, but her role on the show isn't shown.

Ann's agent Harvey, who only appears in two early episodes, is played by Ronnie Schell, best known as regular supporting character Duke Slater on Gomer Pyle.

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Kung Fu
"Barbary House"
PC 166269
Originally aired February 15, 1975
Wiki said:
Caine is working for a fighter (Ji-Tu Cumbuka) in order to be near Danny's son, Zeke (John Blyth Barrymore). When Corbino (Leslie Nielsen) learns that Caine has fighting skills, he forces him into the ring.

So the audience meets Danny instantly...there's no suspense or surprise revelation. Caine also runs into him in the teaser, but doesn't know who he is. It seems like they're trying to live up to his scoundrel reputation, but as I've mentioned more than once, Tim McIntire just doesn't sell it for me.

Nephew Zeke accepts Caine's claim to be long-lost kin a bit too easily. And it's a bit much of a coincidence that Zeke's long-lost mother shows up in his life at the same time as Caine.

Once again, no flashbacks.

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Duke Ellington on a 1965 Sullivan...I developed a fondness for "Take the 'A' Train" years back when I was playing Jane's WWII Fighters.
 
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Funny you should say that, because when I was assessing it for my own purposes, I was thinking, "I guess I'd be getting this if that were Petula Clark singing it." But as it stands, it's a step too close to Robert Goulet / Wayne Newton territory.
Yeah, Petula Clark definitely could have sold it better.

His character has a chip on his shoulder because his dad was a Nazi Bundist--It doesn't help that he couldn't find a better picture to carry around in his wallet than one of Pop saluting in front of a swastika.
It was the only time he let someone take his picture. :rommie:

and the father being said to have joined the Bund when Dullea's character was 11 is chronologically problematic.
I ran into this problem with a story of my own and solved it with "artistic license." Maybe the Bund was established earlier in the 12 O'Clock High-verse. :rommie:

We've all seen this story before, though in trying to look up the earliest known example, I came across a Wiki entry for Enemy Mine that gave a small list of antecedents in which a 1965 war film was the earliest entry. I'd be interested to know if somebody knows of one that goes back further than that.
It seems like that situation must go back to the beginning of time. The only thing I can think of right now is the story of Germans and Russians in WWI being attacked by hordes of wolves.

Nephew Zeke accepts Caine's claim to be long-lost kin a bit too easily. And it's a bit much of a coincidence that Zeke's long-lost mother shows up in his life at the same time as Caine.
It must be destiny.
 
May 3, 1964: Almost-14 Stevie Wonder and England's newest singing sensations, Gerry & The Pacemakers.
 
Hope you got today's episode from Nov. 30, 1969 (when I was mere weeks old):

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If it said Muppets in the guide, I recorded it. :D They did this "Mahna Mahna" routine on Sesame Street, too.
 
Not the cable guide, I hope...I just the other day had to manually set no less than three episodes to record in the coming couple of weeks because the cable guide's so screwed up about the show.

Believe I mentioned this before, but they don't appear to have a 50th anniversary episode for Sunday to air today...both of today's will be from early 1967 (still generally fitting with the 50 Year Flashback theme). I do have an episode saved with one odd act from the original Oct. 1, 1967, broadcast...the Best of episode is a highly mixed one taking acts from three different shows between that date and April '68. Since I was already unclear about where that Best of episode should fit into the scheme of things, maybe I'll just review that one odd act for shiggles (as I believe the youngsters are saying it these days).

Glancing ahead at the next couple of weeks...it looks like there won't be anniversary episodes for those weeks either. Well that busts my vibe!

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Belated 51st Anniversary Viewing

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TGs1e3.jpg
"Never Change a Diaper on Opening Night"
Originally aired September 22, 1966
Wiki said:
Ann agrees to babysit for her neighbor and friend, Judy Bessemer, who assures her that she'll be back long before Ann has to leave for her audition for an acting workshop. Judy gets stuck at her sisters house and her husband, Leon, is an obstetrician and gets called to deliver a patient's baby, forcing Ann to take baby Stanley along on her audition. The director of the acting workshop is very no-nonsense and isn't a fan of babies.

This episode's situation has Ann walking on eggshells for an absurdly demanding workshop teacher who's looking for a comeuppance. After plenty of comical overreacting to the situation on his part, she gives him one by standing up to him...but he actually sees something in her and gives her another chance. They do give Mr. Benedict a good tag line at the end that pays off for putting up with his insufferableness.

I really don't see where Benedict had much choice but to keep Ann in his workshop...none of his other students had speaking roles.

The previous episode's gag of Judy's phone cord being able to reach well into Ann's apartment appears to have not been a one-shot thing...they were itching for cordless phones then, weren't they?

Oh, Donald does not appear in this episode.

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50th Anniversary Daytime Viewing

Dark Shadows

Episode 326
Originally aired September 25, 1967
IMDb said:
David relates the details of his dream to his family, so Julia decides to hypnotize him, unaware that she played a key role in his vision.

We start with a recap of last week's climax in the Dream Old House Basement, which looks trippier in color. With those shadow patterns on the wall and the bright colors, it reminds of Dr. Strange's Sanctum. As Dream Barnabas takes his cane to David, the sleeping boy goes all loudly drama queen, such that Victoria comes into his room to wake him up. David asserts that Barnabas is dead and Sarah's a ghost. Vicki, of course, doesn't believe any of it, while David becomes obsessed with finding the room with the coffin in it. If he wants Vicki to believe him, maybe he should just show her the other secret room with a coffin in it that he knows about.

Meanwhile, Barnabas returns to the Old House to share news of Willie's condition with Dr. Hoffman.
Barnabas Collins said:
He clings to life with a leach-like persistence.
Barnabas proposes that he should kill Willie...tonight! (More or less,) Julia discourages him from it, and also from dealing with David when the subject inevitably shifts to the boy. She gets the idea to hypnotize David and holds up her hypnotic medallion just so we all get the connection with the boy's dream.

The next day at Collinwood, Hoffman overhears Vicki telling Elizabeth the juicy details of David's dream. Hoffman all but blows her cover in proposing to talk with David because oh, she just happens to have experience in child psychology. Liz goes up to see if David wants to talk to her, and finds him drawing a picture of Barnabas's coffin and gravestone. David goes down to the drawing room to see Hoffman, but when she pulls out her medallion, David recognizes her as the figure from his dream and freaks out, calling for Vicki.

John at Dark Shadows Before I Die said:
I kept waiting for Barnabas to declare that Willie, Maggie and David must die—tonight!
So it's not just me! :lol:


Episode 327
Originally aired September 26, 1967
IMDb said:
Barnabas worries Willie may recover. David reveals to a disbelieving Burke that Sarah is a ghost. Sarah warns David to stay away from the old house.

Another case of "we" being used in the narration.

After a recap of David's medallion freakout, Hoffman tries to explain what didn't really happen to Elizabeth. Vicki recognizes the medallion from having seen it before at the Evans home. Up in his room, David's back to the crystal ball bit. It shows him where to find Sarah. Vicki lamely lets David go out when he promises to tell her what he and the girl talk about. When Burke learns of what happened to David, he expresses his suspicions of Hoffman, and chides Vicki for letting him go outside unsupervised.

On the practical woods set with the good ol' traditional really obvious back wall, David finds Sarah. As David's telling her about his dream, Burke approaches and Sarah disappears. It's at this moment that David finally remembers to believe that Sarah's a ghost. Back at Collinwood, Burke shares David's assertion with the ladies...and Vicki believes that it's true, challenging Burke to let out his inner dick and prove otherwise.

Later Sarah visits David in his room. He realizes that the room he saw in his dream was the cellar of the Old House, and Sarah warns him not to go there before going all monochromatically superimposed and disappearing before his eyes.

Contrary to the episode description, Frid is off. They pretty much described Barnabas's whole week except for today.


Episode 328
Originally aired September 27, 1967
IMDb said:
Barnabas instructs Julia to murder Willie as he prepares to frame him using Maggie's ring.

In the Collinsport hospital, introduced by Grayson Hall's narration, an extra who's supposed to be Willie, his features obscured by an oxygen tent, is being watched over by Doc Woodard. Meanwhile at the Old House, despite Hoffman's reassurances...
Barnabas Collins said:
As long as Willie's alive, my entire career is threatened. Willie must die...now...tonight!
He's starting to sound like a broken record. And this must be the first time I've heard undead existence based on devouring others' bodily fluids referred to as a "career."

The announcer said:
The part of Sheriff Patterson is played by Vince O'Brien.
Aw, I didn't know they were replacing Dana Elcar! Looks like he has one more appearance tomorrow, then he's off the series. Well, at least unlike the Woodards, they got a remotely similar physical type.

At the hospital, Sheriff Patterson #2 tells Woodard that he doesn't think Willie is guilty. (Too bad he didn't have a handle on that situation before his men turned Willie into Swiss cheese.) Having been told by Hoffman that the new sheriff in town plans to visit for more investigations, Barnabas plants Willie's ring in the Old House as evidence of Willie's guilt, and instructs Hoffman to kill Willie if he refuses to die naturally.

Sam visits Dave (and George) at the hospital to check on Willie's condition. Our new sheriff is a little sharper...he questions where Willie would have hidden Maggie (though he handwaves away the Old House as a possibility). Sam tags along with the sheriff for no particular reason...maybe he's vying to be the new Burke. At the Old House, Barnabas shows them (and us) Willie's modest but cozy-looking room. As they rummage through Willie's belongings, it turns out that Barnabas was too clever hiding the ring in a candlestick that nobody bothers thinking to examine, so he has to devise an excuse to knock it over and find the ring himself. Fortunately for Barnabas, his clumsy ruse has its intended effect, earning him the luxury of a smug smile accompanied by an ominous music cue.

When Hoffman visits the hospital, Woodard sees that Willie is coming out of his coma, leaving Julia alone in the room with his patient and Barnabas's nagging voiceover. At the Old House, Deputy Fred (yes, that's how he's credited on IMDb) reports on Willie's impending recovery, to the concern of Barnabas.


Episode 329
Originally aired September 28, 1967
IMDb said:
Barnabas and Julia eagerly wait for Willie to wake from his coma, each fearing he will destroy their plans.

Our recast recap of yesterday's climax at the Old House features the all-too-brief return of Dana Elcar as Sheriff Patterson #1--Deputy Fred must be pretty confused! Patterson, Sam, and Barnabas head for the hospital, where, in another recast recap of the other half of yesterday's climax, John Karlen is back to playing Willie, who's still comatose but has been retroactively freed of his oxygen tent. Just as Hoffman's reaching for a tube in Willie's arm, Woodard comes back in.

Outside the room, Barnabas tries unsuccessfully to persuade Patterson to let him be there when Willie is questioned. In the room, it comes out that Woodard has told Patterson of Hoffman's true profession. Patterson expresses his renewed belief that Willie was Maggie's abductor, based on having found her ring in Willie's room.

Back outside the room, Hoffman reports to a pacing Barnabas and gets chastised for not having killed Willie when she had the chance. After some time-lapse clock shots, Willie stirs and opens his eyes. Woodard and Patterson try to question him, but find him in a confused mental state. In addition to expressing that he's in great pain, he doesn't recognize Woodard, babbles about being afraid of the dark, and has a Gollum-like reaction to the sight of Maggie's ring.

Back outside the room, Patterson expresses his professional opinion that Willie is criminally insane...never mind that one of the people he's talking to is a psychiatrist. Barnabas and Hoffman are allowed to see Willie, who doesn't recognize his former master and asks if he's a doctor. Barnabas asserts that he is, in his ominously episode-closing way....

They did some pretty clumsy rebooting of elements of yesterday's episode, but it was a pleasant surprise to get a bit more of Karlen as Willie. Gazing into the crystal ball of IMDb, it looks like this will be Willie's last appearance on the show for a decent spell...but he'll be back in May of '68!


Episode 330
Originally aired September 29, 1967
IMDb said:
Convinced Barnabas is hiding something sinister in the basement, David goes snooping around the old house, only to be caught by a distraught Julia.

David is back to staring at the portrait of Barnabas, its eyes now flashing like a lighthouse beacon or a cheap diner sign. The boy melodramatically tells Aunt Liz that he's afraid of Barnabas because..."he. wants. me. to. die!"...tonight? David insists that Barnabas is hiding something in the basement of the Old House--That plus the boy's insistence that Sarah's a ghost warrants an appearance from Roger to put his son in his place. But as soon as Roger and Liz retreat to the drawing room to discuss what to do about the boy, guess what David does...?

You'd think that somebody who desires privacy because he's hiding a dark secret would at least keep his windows locked. As the sun sets, David sneaks into the Old House and finds the locked basement door before he's caught by Undercover Hoffman, who takes him back to Collinwood. When she learns that Sarah's been telling David that Barnabas wants him to die, Hoffman becomes visibly concerned, emphasizing that David must be kept away from the Old House.

Back at the Old House, Hoffman gives Barnabas his latest injection and reports that Willie's been shipped to an institute for the criminally insane (Not Windcliff? That's a surprise, especially since they made a point of letting Patterson in on Hoffman's true profession.) before the subject shifts to David. Learning that she didn't manage to hypnotize the boy, Barnabas renews his intention to deal with David...tonight! (He doesn't even have to say it anymore.) And in a way that takes advantage of the boy's reputation for being highly imaginative.

At Collinwood, Roger has a gentle but firm talk with his son in the boy's room. After Roger leaves, the window blows open and David is menaced by an unseen stagehand holding a pole that just happens to have a rubber bat hanging off of it.

Spotted on David's bedroom desk: a Major Matt Mason Space Crawler!

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Not the cable guide, I hope...I just the other day had to manually set no less than three episodes to record in the coming couple of weeks because the cable guide's so screwed up about the show.
Crap, I forgot you said that. I must remember to check the online schedule.

The previous episode's gag of Judy's phone cord being able to reach well into Ann's apartment appears to have not been a one-shot thing...they were itching for cordless phones then, weren't they?
Back in the 70s, our kitchen phone cord was about a mile long, allowing me to sit in the dining room closet while having certain... uh... private conversations.

Oh, Donald does not appear in this episode.
I'm sure that was all to the good. :angel:

So it's not just me! :lol:
:rommie:

He's starting to sound like a broken record. And this must be the first time I've heard undead existence based on devouring others' bodily fluids referred to as a "career."
He's in the 1960s now. He needs to make some bread.

Gazing into the crystal ball of IMDb, it looks like this will be Willie's last appearance on the show for a decent spell...but he'll be back in May of '68!
Interesting. I wonder why that was.

Spotted on David's bedroom desk: a Major Matt Mason Space Crawler!
Ooooh, I loved Major Matt Mason. I had that space crawler and space station, all the astronauts, and a bunch of other stuff (including the cool glider). There were a million things I didn't have, though. I used to look at the little Major Matt Mason catalogue that came with every item and dream.....
 
Crap, I forgot you said that. I must remember to check the online schedule.
Anytime I have occasion to glance at the cable info on the show, it's horribly inaccurate. The Decades schedule is the only way to go. And if you're interested in when a particular episode is from, give me a few of the acts and I'll look it up on the tv.com page. I do that daily with the ones I'm watching.

Interesting. I wonder why that was.
Karlen may have had other things going on. If it was for story-driven reasons, then I'd say that it was to increase Julia Hoffman's role by making her Barnabas's sole confidante. @TREK_GOD_1 would probably have better info on the matter.

Ooooh, I loved Major Matt Mason. I had that space crawler and space station, all the astronauts, and a bunch of other stuff (including the cool glider). There were a million things I didn't have, though. I used to look at the little Major Matt Mason catalogue that came with every item and dream.....
I have no first-hand experience with Matt Mason, but I have some comic books of that vintage with ads for his stuff. I had to do a bit of Googling to confirm what it was, but the sight of the Space Crawler fired off a neuron that made me think it might be an item of interest. My own first "gotta have 'em all" toy line was the Six Million Dollar Man...though that became yesterday's news when Star Wars came along....

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50th Anniversary Viewing

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The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 20, episode 3
Originally aired September 24, 1967
(as edited for The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show)

The Mamas & the Papas open with their biggest hit from the previous year, "Monday, Monday" (#1 US the weeks of May 7 through 21, 1966; #3 UK):
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The audio sounds nearly indistinguishable from the studio version. I always thought Michelle had a great hippie chick look in this era...performing barefoot puts that over the top.

Next we get Florence Henderson, two years before she became America's favorite mom, performing a medley of "Do-Re-Mi" and "The Sound of Music." This made me curious to see if she was in that show at the time. According to her Wiki page, her most recent gigs were playing Nellie Forbush in South Pacific (1967) and appearing as a regular contestant on Password (1962-67).

Ed Ames, "My Cup Runneth Over"--Acts like this give me a good chance to polish my notes and look things up. This wasn't as cringy as some of the stuff I've already seen him do on other episodes. (He seems to have been a frequent guest.)

Ed Ames, "When the Snow Is on the Roses"--OK, I was willing to be polite for one lame number. Now the mock-gagging commences.

John Byner isn't the best Ed impersonator I've seen on the show already, but he did it with flair, and included impersonations of guests. I think I just saw this one in another Best of episode. If not, he was doing the same routine. The best part was him playing half of a juggling duo appearing by himself for budget reasons, throwing his pins against the back wall.

Topo Gigio I find more mildly annoying than funny, but I like Ed's demeanor when he's interacting with the little guy.

The Mamas & the Papas return, sitting and talking with Ed, whom they give a flower and some beads. They deny rumors that they're splitting up--That would effectively happen in 1968 after Cass's solo hit, with an official announcement in early '69. They then perform "I Call Your Name" (written by a couple of fellows named Lennon and McCartney) and their breakout hit from last year, "California Dreamin'" (#4 US; #23 UK; #89 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time):
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I'm not sure what's up with Michelle eating grapes and a banana during the performance, but that's one way of letting them know you're lip-syncing.

tv.com tells me that they also did their then-current single, "Twelve Thirty," on this date, but it wasn't included in the Best of version. (That song will be dropping off the charts when we move on to the coming week.)

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Mission: Impossible
"The Survivors "
Originally aired September 24, 1967
Xfinity said:
An enemy agent abducts two of the three scientists who together know all elements of a formula for the deadly cobalt bomb.
Contrary to the description, the nature of the weapon is not specified.

Phelps finds his reel-to-reel in a locked panel in what seems to be a parking garage or building under construction.
The voice in the recording said:
This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.
Ah, will specifying "tape" become the standard now? In any case, the voice on the tape makes a flub! Right after identifying the kidnapped scientists as Wilson Cardel and Edward Stoner, he refers to the scientists and their also-kidnapped wives as "the Wilsons and the Cardels"! What's worse, the first time Graves says Stoner's name, it sounds like he's saying "Boner."

In a contrivance that seems typical of the show, the plan revolves around the fact that the third scientist the bad guy is after is completely unknown to him and therefore easily impersonated by Phelps. This week's scheme is interestingly twisted, with Cinnamon's character being estranged from her husband and shacking up with Rollin's character, and Barney and Willy simulating a major earthquake.

There are no guest agents this week, but I hope the IMF was able to do something for the limo driver who was a collateral abductee in the kidnapping of Cinnamon and Rollin.

I got some unintended laughs from this episode being the source of a couple of the bits used in this memorable MeTV spot:
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The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
"The 'J' for Judas Affair"
Originally aired September 25, 1967
Xfinity said:
Solo and Illya pursue the THRUSH bomber responsible for an industrialist's (Broderick Crawford) death; guest Chad Everett.

Open Channel Don't Care About the Guest Characters They're Protecting This Week. But that's just as well since one of them turned out to be one of the bad guys. The security guy was way too obvious from the get-go as another of the bad guys; the industrialist's son was a little less obvious to me until the end; and the secretary was a surprise. Overall, this one was a bit of an unengaging yawner for me, but I'll note that they're still keeping Solo and Kuryakin together.

John Hoyt puts in a one-shot appearance as an eccentric Q-like UNCLE scientist.

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The Rat Patrol
"The Trial by Fire Raid"
Originally aired September 25, 1967
H&I said:
The Rat Patrol's mission to destroy a German supply train faces complications after Dietrich loads the train with Arab civilians and Troy gets captured.

The plan goes wrong when Dietrich lets the workers go inside the train to get out of the sun for a while, so they definitely seem to be going for the honorable foe routine with him. He even tries to give a little girl her doll back, not knowing that Troy had just planted his explosives in it.

Matters are also complicated by the unwillingness to cooperate of Tobar, the father of Safti, the young woman whom Troy enlists to help the Patrol by getting the civilians to safety. Tobar has his moment of character growth when he plants the explosives and gets shot up in the crossfire. In the coda, which takes place sometime later following the liberation of the village, they find that Dietrich had left a German medal for bravery on Tobar's grave.

Guest-starring as Safti, a musical guest I never would have spotted if I hadn't caught her name in the IMDb credits (the episode's credit having been so blink-and-you-miss-it that I missed it the first time even though I was looking for it): Gale Garnett, best known as the wonder behind this one hit...

"We'll Sing in the Sunshine"
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(Charted Aug. 8, 1964; #4 US; #1 AC; #43 Country; 1965 Grammy Award for Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording)

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Batman
"The Wail of the Siren"
Originally aired September 28, 1967
H&I said:
Using her hypnotic voice, the Siren sends Commissioner Gordon on a mission to find the location of the Batcave and Batman's secret identity.

So Siren controls minds by singing two octaves above Hi-C...I guess that must be more effective than singing two octaves above Hawaiian Punch.

We get more cutting-edge household tech in Barbara's apartment..."one of those tricky little gizmos that answers in your own voice and then replays the messages," as O'Hara describes her answering machine.

Ah, finally, the Batgirl Theme Song! It was worth the wait. :D

It's so obvious that Gordon doesn't actually climb out of the Batmobile's trunk, but just rises from behind it and stumbles forward.

I know I mentioned it a couple years back, but it's a great sight gag how Wayne's wall safe is hidden behind a painting of the safe. :lol:

Contrary to an assertion made back then that Batgirl was stealing Robin's thunder in this episode, I think they made quite a good team...each contributed substantially to the case in Batman's absence. Also, to clear up something that Christopher commented on back then...I definitely get the impression that Barbara was putting together that Lorelei Circe was the Siren, whom she'd met the previous episode...hence her making the leap of logic at all, and later dropping the name "Siren" to Robin, expecting him to know who she was talking about. But the episode could have been clearer on that point.

Robin should know that you're always supposed to let Joan Collins die. I'd hate to see what Gotham City's gonna be like 250 years from now....

Next week: Pass the lasagne, Ethel Merman! She's really making the rounds in TV-land this fall...she'll also be featured in a Tarzan two-parter in November!

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Ironside
"Dead Man's Tale"
Originally aired September 28, 1967
Xfinity said:
The police commissioner agrees to let Ironside conceal a mob murder to flush out underworld chiefs; with Jack Lord.

Lord (appearing just a year before he assumes his defining role) plays John Trask, the main chief that Ironside's after, who's a lawyer by day. Ironside plays a game of chess with him, if that's the right metaphor. It's a scam on Ironside's part to make the normally meticulous mobster slip up, but it still involves needing to think a few moves ahead to anticipate how Lord's character will react to the developing situation. When everyone else (including Gene Lyons's strawman commissioner) doubts that the plan is working, Ironside is looking at the bigger picture of how it's affecting Trask's overall pattern of behavior.

For a kept woman type, the murdered mobster's mistress is fairly impressive. She genuinely loved him and is therefore motivated to actively participate in the plan, which ultimately puts her life in jeopardy in the climax.

A little reading tells me that the Ironsidemobile is a converted paddy wagon, not an armored car. We get a better look inside the back this week...it's a regular little mobile office, which includes the requisite map of the city.

I also got curious about the real-life location of the Chief's home/office. It's identified as San Francisco's Old Hall of Justice, which, interestingly, was demolished in 1967, but would live on in TV-land via the stock footage taken before that, which was used in the show.

_______

TGs2e4.jpg
"To Each Her Own"
Originally aired September 28, 1967
Wiki said:
Donald does a news story on computer dating, and takes Ann along for the ride. Much to Ann's chagrin, the girl that the computer dating service assigns to her boyfriend, is a lot like her.

This episode includes Bernie Kopell in his regular gig of the era, Donald's friend/colleague Jerry. It's also Ruth Buzzi's first appearance as Ann's new recurring neighbor/girlfriend Pete Peterson.

Rich Little guest-stars as Ann's computer-picked date, who's supposed to be a lot like Donald. Along the way, he gets in some John Wayne, Ed Sullivan, and Humphrey Bogart.

The episode's resolution has Ann and Donald's computer-picked dates meeting each other and finding that they're a perfect match.

"Oh, Donald!" count: 2

Next week: "Miss Marie, don't make me angry. You wouldn't like me when I'm angry." Having seen this episode before, I encourage Bixby / The Incredible Hulk fans to watch along as Bill puts in his first appearance as a guy named Banner:
https://metv.com/videos/that-girl/the-apartment

_______

Tarzan
"Thief Catcher"
Originally aired September 29, 1967
Xfinity said:
Tarzan must track and capture two escaped convicts before more people are put in danger.

The week's installment opens with a preview of scenes from the episode...which they've done before, but it's not the show's usual M.O., at least not in syndication.

The actual opening has Jai returning from a school, and he acts like he's been away from Tarzan and Cheeta for awhile...I wonder it this was shot as the first episode of the season. In any case, he and Tarzan are both fully involved in the story, which involves the boy being kidnapped in a scheme to get revenge against the Lord of the Jungle for another presumably unseen previous encounter.

The episode features some very pretty coastline shooting. There's a good dramatic scene of Tarzan and one of the bad guys, Kesho, making opposing pleas to the people of the Tribe of the Week about their decision of whether to turn over their chief, N'Duma (and Tarzan).

Noteworthy guests...let's see, we've got:
  • A guy who'll be winning an Oscar for a film he did this year, George Kennedy, as Crandell (one of the convicts, of course);
  • Don Mitchell (whose current regular gig is playing Mark Sanger on Ironside) as N'Duma;
  • and saved for last, playing Kesho...future Bond villain Yaphet Kotto!
_______

Star Trek
"The Changeling"
Originally aired September 29, 1967
Stardate 3541.9
MeTV said:
The Enterprise encounters an ancient Earth probe bent on the sterilization of all life.
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See my post here.

_______

The Prisoner
"Arrival"
Originally aired September 29, 1967 (UK)
Wiki said:
After waking up in the Village and discovering his captivity there, Number Six encounters a friend from the outside who may have a possible escape.

Well, that was interesting. As I'd gathered from what little I knew, it's sort of like the more surreal elements of The Avengers played with a straight face. It's also reminiscent of The Twilight Zone...like a situation that might be featured in that show being played out for a series instead of climaxing in a half-hour.

Number 6 is relatable as our trapped protagonist, yet he's also an enigma to us...we know less about him than his captors do.

The giant white people-devouring balloon (which I've since read is called the Rover) is a bit OTT.

There's a bit of a dichotomy in the Village culture encouraging still tongues, while the people in charge are evidently trying to get information from Number 6. I have to wonder if that's accidental or intended...do they really want the information, or is he being tested...?

_______

The Avengers
"Return of the Cybernauts"
Originally aired September 30, 1967 (UK)
Wiki said:
Scientists are being kidnapped. Mrs Peel is to be the next victim: receiving a new wristwatch the Cybernauts can home-in on, from a deceitful admirer.

It's nice to have Steed and Peel back, however short it lasts.

Going by this episode, they seem to have dropped the "we're needed" scenes and the "Steed does this, Emma does that" subtitles, both of which had become recurring bits in my posts.

This show can be pretty hit-or-miss for me. I found this installment to be a bit too repetitive, frontloaded as it is with Cybernaut abductions (a type of failing that I've seen in other episodes). And I find Steed and Peel to be more engaging when they're being clever and witty...not as much when they spend too much of the episode clueless to what the audience already knows.

The Cybernaut might not look as silly wearing sunglasses if it had ears to hang them on.

The controlled Emma was acting noticeably unrobotic when driving her car.

Our episode's villain: Peter Cushing!

_______
 
Last edited:
Also, to clear up something that Christopher commented on back then...I definitely get the impression that Barbara was putting together that Lorelei Circe was the Siren, whom she'd met the previous episode...hence her making the leap of logic at all, and later dropping the name "Siren" to Robin, expecting him to know who she was talking about.

Well, the leap of logic could've come simply from knowing that Lorelei are the Germanic-myth equivalent of Sirens, and that both Circe and the Sirens were female temptresses faced by Odysseus and his crew. Although, if so, she probably would've explained that in dialogue, since the Bat-family '66 never passed up a chance for a teachable moment.


There's a bit of a dichotomy in the Village culture encouraging still tongues, while the people in charge are evidently trying to get information from Number 6. I have to wonder if that's accidental or intended...do they really want the information, or is he being tested...?

Well, there's a difference between not wanting people to question you and not wanting people to answer your questions. Still, "Whose side are you on?" is not a question you're going to get answered anytime soon...
 
Well, the leap of logic could've come simply from knowing that Lorelei are the Germanic-myth equivalent of Sirens, and that both Circe and the Sirens were female temptresses faced by Odysseus and his crew. Although, if so, she probably would've explained that in dialogue, since the Bat-family '66 never passed up a chance for a teachable moment.
But the way the moment was played, she didn't have any reason to think that the name "Siren" was associated with anything else...it was dropped as a revelation, like she was connecting the two. Likewise, later dropping the name Siren to Robin, like he'd know who she was referring to.

_______

50 Years Ago This Week
October 3 – An X-15 research aircraft with test pilot William J. Knight establishes an unofficial world fixed-wing speed record of Mach 6.7.
October 4
  • Omar Ali Saifuddin III of Brunei abdicates in favour of his son, His Majesty Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah.
  • The Shag Harbour UFO incident occurs.
October 6 – Southern California's Pacific Ocean Park, known as the "Disneyland By The Sea", closes down.



This doesn't relate to an item on this week's timeline, but in keeping my eyes open for videos related to Vietnam news items, I came across this CBS News Special Report that aired on October 1:
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Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "The Letter," The Box Tops
2. "Never My Love," The Association
3. "Ode to Billie Joe," Bobbie Gentry
4. "Come Back When You Grow Up," Bobby Vee & The Strangers
5. "Little Ole Man (Uptight-Everything's Alright)," Bill Cosby
6. "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher," Jackie Wilson
7. "Reflections," Diana Ross & The Supremes
8. "Apples, Peaches, Pumpkin Pie," Jay & The Techniques
9. "How Can I Be Sure," The Young Rascals
10. "Gimme Little Sign," Brenton Wood
11. "To Sir with Love," Lulu
12. "I Dig Rock and Roll Music," Peter, Paul & Mary
13. "Brown Eyed Girl," Van Morrison
14. "Funky Broadway," Wilson Pickett
15. "Dandelion," The Rolling Stones
16. "Get on Up," The Esquires
17. "Expressway to Your Heart," The Soul Survivors
18. "I Make a Fool of Myself," Frankie Valli
19. "Hey Baby (They're Playing Our Song)," The Buckinghams
20. "Soul Man," Sam & Dave
21. "Groovin'," Booker T. & The MG's
22. "You Know What I Mean," The Turtles
23. "Your Precious Love," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
24. "You Keep Running Away," Four Tops
25. "Love Bug Leave My Heart Alone," Martha Reeves & The Vandellas

27. "You're My Everything," The Temptations
28. "Gettin' Together," Tommy James & The Shondells
29. "It Must Be Him," Vikki Carr

32. "People Are Strange," The Doors

37. "San Franciscan Nights," Eric Burdon & The Animals
38. "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman," Aretha Franklin

40. "Let It Out (Let It All Hang Out)," The Hombres
41. "The Look of Love," Dusty Springfield

44. "I Had a Dream," Paul Revere & The Raiders feat. Mark Lindsay
45. "There Is a Mountain," Donovan

47. "The Ballad of You & Me & Pooneil," Jefferson Airplane

50. "We Love You," The Rolling Stones
51. "Please Love Me Forever," Bobby Vinton
52. "Love Is Strange," Peaches & Herb

56. "I'll Never Fall in Love Again," Tom Jones

58. "Holiday," Bee Gees
59. "Incense and Peppermints," Strawberry Alarm Clock

61. "I'm Wondering," Stevie Wonder
62. "The Rain, the Park & Other Things," The Cowsills

67. "Get Together," The Youngbloods
68. "Everlasting Love," Robert Knight
69. "Rock & Roll Woman," Buffalo Springfield

72. "Purple Haze," The Jimi Hendrix Experience

93. "Pata Pata," Miriam Makeba
94. "Boogaloo Down Broadway," The Fantastic Johnny C


New on the charts...this song was totally off my radar, but the spoken part sounds familiar, so I'm pretty sure I've heard it on the radio:

"Pata Pata," Miriam Makeba
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(#12 US; #36 AC; #7 R&B; I'm guessing that she may be coming up in the Sullivan viewing sooner rather than later)


While these I've got:

"I'm Wondering," Stevie Wonder
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(#12 US; #4 R&B; #22 UK)

"Boogaloo Down Broadway," The Fantastic Johnny C
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(#7 US; #5 R&B)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Mission: Impossible, "The Bank"
  • The Man from U.N.C.L.E., "The Prince of Darkness Affair: Part I"
  • The Rat Patrol, "The Darers Go First Raid"
  • Batman, "The Sport of Penguins"
  • Ironside, "Eat, Drink and Be Buried"
  • That Girl, "The Apartment"
  • Dark Shadows, episodes 331-335 (Friday's episode being currently unavailable for viewing)
  • Tarzan, "The Blue Stone of Heaven: Part I"
  • Star Trek, "Mirror, Mirror"
  • The Prisoner, "The Chimes of Big Ben" (UK)
  • The Avengers, "Death's Door" (UK)
  • Get Smart, "Witness for the Persecution"
_______
 
Batman
"Enter Batgirl, Exit Penguin"
Originally aired September 14, 1967

I think I know what we're going to be in for here, since I have been re-reading the Me thread posts from two years ago. :p

Yes. Dozier's Batgirl--the socially regressive time-bomb that was one of the major reasons Batman could not avoid the ABC chopping block not long into its 1967-'68 season.

In other news--Holy character progression--Dick gets his driver's license...and wheels! From vague memory, I'm betting that doesn't really go anywhere in what's left of the series.

He drives the Batmobile in the Londinium three-parter.


Dark Shadows

Episode 316
Originally aired September 11, 1967

We get an interesting bit in Moltke's opening narration...I thought the narrations were supposed to be out-of-character at this point, but she says that "we do not know" that David's benn trapped in the mausoleum.

As David leaves the mausoleum sans Sarah, Barnabas finds the boy and begins to question him about what he was doing in there. Barnabas can tell that David's answers aren't truthful, so he insists that the boy should come with him to the Old House on the premise that nobody will be home at Collinwood. David resists until Burke comes along and gets a great big hug for the save. The two quickly become partners in suspicion of Barnabas, with David shooting his cousin some looks when he finds out that there were indeed people home at Collinwood. Yet David still won't tell anybody where he actually was.

David's in a bind; if he reveals he was in the mausoleum, he will catch an earful for that, and be pressed on its obvious implications--namely Sarah and the other supernatural goings-on.

David is returned home to the relief of Victoria and Roger, the latter of whom abandons his brandy to give his son a hug. Later in his bedroom, David improvises a lie to his father while beginning to voice his suspicions about Barnabas.

At Collinwood, a fearful, sleepless David tells Vicki that he feels like somebody's watching him...somebody evil. Cut to a good ol' money shot of Barnabas staring out the window, now with a clumsy bit of voiceover ominously wishing him a good night and pleasant dreams.

I thought this was an interesting scene in that it implies David has some ability to sense a supernatural presence directed his way--how else would he know "someone evil" is watching him?


Episode 317
Originally aired September 12, 1967

Meanwhile, Barnabas enters the mausoleum, tailed by Hoffman. Barnabas delivers a veiled threat by likening Julia to Jason McGuire without dropping his name

Fine bit of continuity, and sort of grisly, when one thinks of a rotting McGuire corpse just a few feet away.

Episode 318
Originally aired September 13, 1967

In the mausoleum, Barnabas and Julia eavesdrop from the hidden room as Dave tells Sam that he thinks Sarah is the ghost of Sarah Collins. Hoffman has an awkward moment when Barnabas overhears details of things she discussed with Woodard, but he has to stop choking her when she cries out.

Nice to see Barnabas in full-on panic mode. At this point, he's willing to clear out most of Collinwood to save his own ass.


(I could be completely off-base here, but I'm of the impression that Grayson Hall might have gotten off a little on the play-choking...she certainly delivers her side of it with gusto.)

She was just a strong actress that brought everything to each role.

At Collinwood, Woodard questions David about Sarah. David reveals that Hoffman's also been asking about Sarah just as the doctor herself walks in and tries to stop Woodard's questioning. She's there when Dave tells David that whatever the secret of the mausoleum may be, somebody else knows...somebody dangerous. After the boy leaves the room, Woodard demands some answers from Hoffman, but the sound of dogs howling outside keeps her silent. Failing to get answers, he announces that he's taking Maggie out of her care.

Solid, tense scene between the three, and of course, the spectre of Barnabas (the howling dogs) shadows Julia like a cloud. Caught between forces heading toward a collision, she does not really know where to turn.


When Julia returns to the Old House, Barnabas is on his way out to deal with David, but he's stymied by an implied manifestation of Sarah, dramatically blowing open the doors and causing candles to flicker.

The only thing outside of a crucifix that stops a vampire cold in his tracks.


Episode 319
Originally aired September 14, 1967

At the Old House, Willie frantically questions Barnabas about his motives for stirring the town up again when he could just hang around the house looking spiffy in his pimpin' smoking jacket. He proposes that Barnabas was lashing out from fear of Sarah and what she could do to him.

Willie nails it again, and unlike most characters on this show (other than future antagonists Angelique and Nicholas Blair) he's always know how to read Barnabas like a book, or call him out on his obsessions.

At the Evans home, Woodard doesn't need his arm twisted much to share his idea with Maggie, and she expresses an interest in taking the risk to end the nightmare of her former captor being on the loose. After the doc leaves, she calls Sheriff Patterson to come by and get the ball rolling.

Unfortunate that the trap will work...on the wrong person...

Sam reluctantly agrees to go along with a scheme that would involve him dropping the bait of the trap while pretending to be drunk at the Blue Whale. (I understand that's not much of a stretch for him.)

No, for David Ford, he was well prepared to play drunk Sam. I wonder why Nancy Barrett put up with his drinking throughout their marriage.

And guess who happens ta be at da Blue Whale when dey go trough wit it, an' goes straight back ta da Old House ta wahn Bahnabas?

Uh-oh....

biuJweS.jpg


^ "Ya know...that Old Mixah's is about two seconds from me tyin' him to a chair, an' forcing him ta watch Doctah Hoffman perform a feather dance like Uhura in Star Trek V...butt naked!"


Episode 320
Originally aired September 15, 1967

The week closes with its second kinescoper. The freaky image of Bluescreen Barnabas's head growing in size to consume David really needed to be seen in color for full psychedelic effect. David keeps the nature of his nightmare from Vicki, but takes Burke aside to have a shrieky boy-to-man talk. And trusted with confidential information, what does Burke do? He goes straight downstairs and tells all to Vicki! Things get tense between the couple as Burke voices his suspicions of Barnabas again. Barnabas himself shows up for a cameo, acting uncharacteristically frantic while looking for Hoffman.

When will Burke ever learn? Reverse cockblocking never, ever works when the woman thinks the world of the intended target.

When Undercover Hoffman makes an appearance, Burke is back in full dick mode, questioning her involvement with Barnabas. She goes by the Old House to get the fake news about Maggie from Barnabas and Willie, and it comes out that Maggie is no longer her patient. Her life now in jeopardy, Hoffman insists that Maggie's memory couldn't have returned, and tries to convince Barnabas not to take action. Barnabas plays along, but Willie knows bettah--after Julia leaves, he gets Barnabas to admit that he plans to off Maggie...tonight!

Loving the conflicts firing off in several directions. At the time, audiences knew something explosive was on the horizon, but the DS writers were clever enough to avoid the predictable.


Dahk Shadows

Willie is searching for rope....

Episode 321
Originally aired September 18, 1967

Willie tells Hoffman how Bahnabas plans ta kill Maggie...tonight! The ambiguous doctor acts genuinely disbelieving. So she wasn't being coy, she actually thought that Barnabas trusted her...!

I'm not sure it its a matter of Julia thinking Barnabas trusting her, but more about Hoffman thinking there's a line no sane Barnabas would ever cross.


Episode 322
Originally aired September 19, 1967

After recapping his cheesy voiceover, Barnabas goes out for a stroll to kill Maggie (...tonight!), but the commercial gives Hoffman time to intercept him. He tries to lie about his intentions, but this time she senses the deception, so she plays the bluff described in the episode summary. The stymied vampire resorts to staring out his window...while over at the Evans home, Maggie tells her father that she feels like she's being watched.

Two things: as noted, Julia does not think Collins trusts her, but thought he would not go that far, until he proves her wrong in the exchange above.

At the Collinwood terrace, Willie's getting in on the internal voiceover schtick. He wants to help Maggie, but seemingly convinces himself that it would be futile. Alas, this proved to be his last dialogue...I'd have transcribed it at the time had I known, but now the episode is gone from my deletion bin.

Walking in the bluescreen forest, Sam and Joe decide that Maggie needs to leave town (again). Meanwhile, some speaking extras from Patterson's crack force spot somebody moving in the shadows, and open fire on him just as he approaches Maggie's window. As they report success to the startled Evanses, the audience is left hanging as to who they gunned down.

Poor Willie. Ever the reluctant hero to a town incapable of appreciating (or ever knowing) how much he's tried to save Maggie's life over the past few months.


Episode 323
Originally aired September 20, 1967

Joe tells the shocked Maggie and Sam that it was Willie who was shot...and Sheriff Patterson reports that he's still alive. Under the circumstances, everybody assumes that Willie had been Maggie's kidnapper...even though Maggie herself doesn't believe it. Joe and Sam describe to the sheriff what Willie was like pre-Barnabas. Funny, I seem to recall Patterson being involved when everyone was obsessed with getting Willie out of town.

Joe and Sam are full of crap. Pre-Barnabas, Willie's behavior was anything other than the blood-draining, constant shadow of death Maggie felt (and said as much to anyone who would listen). In fact, aside from Willie sharing symptoms of blood loss, near-death spells and nocturnal flights into the streets (which have not been answered, or even questioned at this point), there's nothing about Maggie's testimony which points to Willie. As you point out, Maggie does not believe Willie was the kidnapper--certainly her word holds more weight than Joe and Sam's leap to a fact-free conclusion?

Fortunately, Burke will make the logical leap to a connection to you-know-who.

Hoffman drops by just before Patterson comes over to report the shooting of Willie. Barnabas is genuinely shocked, but plays along with the assumption that his servant was Maggie's abductor while pressing the sheriff for information about Willie's chances of survival and/or talking to anybody..

Barnabas either has Jupiter-sized stones for going to the Evans' house with all of this Willie talk, or his desperation is driving him to make critical errors, such as....

Conveniently for Barnabas's role on the show, nobody puts together that if Willie had been Maggie's abductor while he was living and working in the Old House, then Barnabas would likely have been involved as well.

That's where Burke comes in...


Episode 324
Originally aired September 21, 1967

In a later conversation with Vicki, Hoffman fishes for information about David's fear of Barnabas. In the other room with his aunt, David outspokenly denies that Willie was Maggie's abductor; makes a ruckus about needing to find Sarah; and freaks out about the eyes in the portrait of Barnabas being "alive."

Now, this is good--David (like Maggie) dropping truth on everyone that Willie is innocent. Leave it to prejudice toward Willie to ignore those in the know. Regarding the eyes of the portrait--more Barnabas communicating with those he's trying to lure, much like the heavy heartbeat Willie routinely heard before releasing Barnabas from his coffin.


Episode 325
Originally aired September 22, 1967

The ladies let Barnabas confront David in his room without supervision. Barnabas starts to get stern and demands to know what secret David is hiding. He directly mentions the secret chamber, but David denies his knowledge of it, even after Barnabas produces the boy's knife. Barnabas then goes directly for wanting to know what Sarah's told her playmate about her brother. As things start to get heated, Vicki comes in to check on things and Barnabas leaves. It's more menacing when he wishes David pleasant dreams face-to-face rather than in cheesy voiceover from afar.

Damn. He's so brazen that he would risk David flipping out to a degree that would certainly force the Collins clan to ask questions that only have one answer, if following the logical path and drawing a connection between Willie and Maggie.

I've been somewhat annoyed by David's role in the show overall, but you have to feel for him in his current situation, with all of the adults supporting the person whom he feels threatened by.

Agreed. He's in the middle of a terrifying situation, with the weight of lives on his shoulders. Few children would be able to deal with that, and as it stands, David is struggling.

Later, as David's sleeping, he experiences more voiceover flashbacks. The boy then transitions into an effectively freaky dream in which he first encounters a conspicuously shadowed stand-in for Julia, brandishing her hypnotic pocket watch (or was it an amulet?); then David finds Sarah, who relates the brief story of her birth and death. (David's inability to understand the latter part clearly demonstrates that they've swept his previous theory about Sarah's true nature under the rug.) She brings him to a dream version of the Old House basement, where he sees Barnabas rise from his coffin. Dream Barnabas sees and reacts to Sarah, but when David draws attention to himself, he approaches the boy while raising his cane. Clearly, even Dream Barnabas misses having Willie around.

Overall, an effective way of suggesting David is cracking under the pressure, although his dream (supernaturally supported or not) is so loaded with facts, that it high time he tells this to someone....
 
50th Anniversary Daytime Viewing

Dark Shadows
Episode 326
Originally aired September 25, 1967

We start with a recap of last week's climax in the Dream Old House Basement, which looks trippier in color. With those shadow patterns on the wall and the bright colors, it reminds of Dr. Strange's Sanctum.

Unconfirmed, but I would say the DS crew and Steve Ditko were pulling visual ideas from similar sources. Considering both produced in the same decade, it would come as no surprise if they were (unintentionally) influenced by the same sources.

David asserts that Barnabas is dead and Sarah's a ghost. Vicki, of course, doesn't believe any of it, while David becomes obsessed with finding the room with the coffin in it. If he wants Vicki to believe him, maybe he should just show her the other secret room with a coffin in it that he knows about.

He's a child in desperation mode, so his emotionally-rattled focus is only on the coffin room at the Old House.

Meanwhile, Barnabas returns to the Old House to share news of Willie's condition with Dr. Hoffman.
Barnabas proposes that he should kill Willie...tonight! (More or less,) Julia discourages him from it, and also from dealing with David when the subject inevitably shifts to the boy. She gets the idea to hypnotize David and holds up her hypnotic medallion just so we all get the connection with the boy's dream.

As if you needed anything else to confirm the following, Barnabas' ease with wanting to murder Willie--the man who gave him a second life--is sickening.

Episode 327
Originally aired September 26, 1967

After a recap of David's medallion freakout, Hoffman tries to explain what didn't really happen to Elizabeth. Vicki recognizes the medallion from having seen it before at the Evans home. Up in his room, David's back to the crystal ball bit. It shows him where to find Sarah. Vicki lamely lets David go out when he promises to tell her what he and the girl talk about. When Burke learns of what happened to David, he expresses his suspicions of Hoffman, and chides Vicki for letting him go outside unsupervised.

Completely on Burke's side regarding David. ...and Vicki should know drawing a headstone with the name of a person who is "alive", means something, not just the ramblings of a disturbed child.

Later Sarah visits David in his room. He realizes that the room he saw in his dream was the cellar of the Old House, and Sarah warns him not to go there

...even at this point, Sarah will not tell David exactly what Barnabas is. Why? Is she still trying to protect her brother in some way?




Episode 328
Originally aired September 27, 1967

Aw, I didn't know they were replacing Dana Elcar! Looks like he has one more appearance tomorrow, then he's off the series. Well, at least unlike the Woodards, they got a remotely similar physical type.

Yep. His last work for Dan Curtis.

At the hospital, Sheriff Patterson #2 tells Woodard that he doesn't think Willie is guilty. (Too bad he didn't have a handle on that situation before his men turned Willie into Swiss cheese.) Having been told by Hoffman that the new sheriff in town plans to visit for more investigations, Barnabas plants Willie's ring in the Old House as evidence of Willie's guilt, and instructs Hoffman to kill Willie if he refuses to die naturally.

I think you meant Maggie's ring--the one she gave Willie when she was imprisoned at the Old House.

Patterson is yet another who does not buy Willie being the culprit. Shouldn't he start an investigation into that suspicion, while beating the point into the heads of Sam and Joe?

At the Old House, Barnabas shows them (and us) Willie's modest but cozy-looking room. As they rummage through Willie's belongings, it turns out that Barnabas was too clever hiding the ring in a candlestick that nobody bothers thinking to examine, so he has to devise an excuse to knock it over and find the ring himself. Fortunately for Barnabas, his clumsy ruse has its intended effect, earning him the luxury of a smug smile accompanied by an ominous music cue.

Just sickening. Its rare to see such a self-serving ass never having a moment of reflection on his trying to destroy the man who allowed his to "live" again.

Episode 329
Originally aired September 28, 1967

John Karlen is back to playing Willie, who's still comatose but has been retroactively freed of his oxygen tent. Just as Hoffman's reaching for a tube in Willie's arm, Woodard comes back in.

What's Julia's angle at his point? Is she so morally bankrupt that she would murder Willie just to save her own ass / make some medical breakthrough by curing vampirism?

Back outside the room, Hoffman reports to a pacing Barnabas and gets chastised for not having killed Willie when she had the chance. After some time-lapse clock shots, Willie stirs and opens his eyes. Woodard and Patterson try to question him, but find him in a confused mental state. In addition to expressing that he's in great pain, he doesn't recognize Woodard, babbles about being afraid of the dark, and has a Gollum-like reaction to the sight of Maggie's ring.

It seemed Willie's subconscious mind was protecting him by giving him some form of amnesia--with the trace of fearing the dark, another way of saying Barnabas.

Back outside the room, Patterson expresses his professional opinion that Willie is criminally insane.

Oh brother, Patterson. Amnesia is not a hallmark of being criminally insane. Its clear his behavior was trauma-induced, and again, the fear of the dark deserves greater scrutiny, but that's not happening with Julia around.

Barnabas and Hoffman are allowed to see Willie, who doesn't recognize his former master and asks if he's a doctor. Barnabas asserts that he is, in his ominously episode-closing way....

Ominous, indeed.

They did some pretty clumsy rebooting of elements of yesterday's episode, but it was a pleasant surprise to get a bit more of Karlen as Willie. Gazing into the crystal ball of IMDb, it looks like this will be Willie's last appearance on the show for a decent spell...but he'll be back in May of '68![/quote]

Right after temporarily leaving DS, Karlen guest starred as a conflicted reporter on the original N.Y.P.D. series, which--by the way--was shot at the same New York-based ABC studios as Dark Shadows. Nancy (Carolyn Stoddard) Barrett, Dana (Sheriff Patterson) Elcar and other DS-ers guest starred on the police drama.


Episode 330
Originally aired September 29, 1967

You'd think that somebody who desires privacy because he's hiding a dark secret would at least keep his windows locked. As the sun sets, David sneaks into the Old House and finds the locked basement door before he's caught by Undercover Hoffman, who takes him back to Collinwood. When she learns that Sarah's been telling David that Barnabas wants him to die, Hoffman becomes visibly concerned, emphasizing that David must be kept away from the Old House.

Again, what's her angle? Protecting David--or trying to prevent more chaos from interrupting her all-important experiments if Barnabas murder a child?

Back at the Old House, Hoffman gives Barnabas his latest injection and reports that Willie's been shipped to an institute for the criminally insane

Giving Willie the distance he needs so Collinsport will soon face a flood of evil that cannot be blamed on him. Poetic justice.

Spotted on David's bedroom desk: a Major Matt Mason Space Crawler!

Mattel was not a sponsor, but they received a lot of free advertising on one of the hottest shows in the nation at that time for their new "Mattel's Man in Space" toy line. The Major Matt Mason Space Station will also make an appearance in David's room sometime down the road..
 
Anytime I have occasion to glance at the cable info on the show, it's horribly inaccurate. The Decades schedule is the only way to go. And if you're interested in when a particular episode is from, give me a few of the acts and I'll look it up on the tv.com page. I do that daily with the ones I'm watching.
Thank you. I'll see if I can do some research today. Yesterday, we watched an episode I recorded for Rich Little, but he was nowhere to be seen (unless he was doing some really good impressions), and there was nobody on that episode who I really wanted to see. Also, we can now add Lou Rawls to our list of Vegas lounge lizards. However, on another episode we got to see Lovin' Spoonful doing "Darling, Be Home Soon," one of my all-time favorite songs, and they got an audience response almost as good as the Stones.

The audio sounds nearly indistinguishable from the studio version. I always thought Michelle had a great hippie chick look in this era...performing barefoot puts that over the top.
Yep, those were the days.

Topo Gigio I find more mildly annoying than funny, but I like Ed's demeanor when he's interacting with the little guy.
Topo was on one of the episodes we saw yesterday. Ed says, "Topo, I didn't know you like girls." Topo assures him that he does and then asks Ed for a kiss, which Ed delivers. :rommie:

The Mamas & the Papas return, sitting and talking with Ed, whom they give a flower and some beads.
I haven't seen a single episode yet with a sit-down conversation.

I got some unintended laughs from this episode being the source of a couple of the bits used in this memorable MeTV spot:
That's a good one. :rommie:

"We'll Sing in the Sunshine"
I love this song.

Number 6 is relatable as our trapped protagonist, yet he's also an enigma to us...we know less about him than his captors do.
But he's really cool. :mallory:

The giant white people-devouring balloon (which I've since read is called the Rover) is a bit OTT.
Yeah, Rover was a bit surreal. :rommie:

There's a bit of a dichotomy in the Village culture encouraging still tongues, while the people in charge are evidently trying to get information from Number 6. I have to wonder if that's accidental or intended...do they really want the information, or is he being tested...?
Good question! Watch for my favorite episode, "Many Happy Returns."

"Pata Pata," Miriam Makeba
I remember that one. I remember noticing the click consonants and later learning that they are part of some spoken languages.

"I'm Wondering," Stevie Wonder
Not bad, but not one of his best.

"Boogaloo Down Broadway," The Fantastic Johnny C
I don't remember this one at all.
 
Yeah, Rover was a bit surreal.

Rover was originally going to be some sort of robotic wheeled vehicle (hence the name), but it proved too difficult and expensive, so they went low-budget and just used a weather balloon and an offscreen wind machine. And that added surrealism made it enormously more effective.
 
He drives the Batmobile in the Londinium three-parter.
Ah, that's good to know. I have no recall of that offhand. So the first time he gets to drive the car and he has to drive on the left side of the road? PRESSURE!

David's in a bind; if he reveals he was in the mausoleum, he will catch an earful for that, and be pressed on its obvious implications--namely Sarah and the other supernatural goings-on.
I thought his main motivation there was keeping his promise to Sarah. The others mostly don't believe Sarah's a ghost when he out and tells them that she is.

I thought this was an interesting scene in that it implies David has some ability to sense a supernatural presence directed his way--how else would he know "someone evil" is watching him?
I think that's more about the transmitter than the receiver...Maggie's been the recipient of such broadcasts as well.

Fine bit of continuity, and sort of grisly, when one thinks of a rotting McGuire corpse just a few feet away.
More under their feet, if I'm reading what the show implied correctly. He's not in the coffin...and when Barnabas and Willie went in there to see if anything had been tampered with while David was hiding in the coffin, they inspected a section of the floor.

The poetic justice of that situation just occurred to me...Jason's whole blackmail scheme revolved around what was or wasn't buried under a section of floor in a locked room in the Collinwood basement....

^ "Ya know...that Old Mixah's is about two seconds from me tyin' him to a chair, an' forcing him ta watch Doctah Hoffman perform a feather dance like Uhura in Star Trek V...butt naked!"
He's gonna make Mitchell Ryan jealous. Also, should that be "feathuh"?

Joe and Sam are full of crap.
But Sam and Dave are full of soul.

Fortunately, Burke will make the logical leap to a connection to you-know-who.
That's where Burke comes in...
Interesting if true...I wonder if the episodes I'll be seeing will get to that. Or is this something that happens in the aftermath of Woodard's fate? It would remain to be seen whether I'd be inclined to give Burke any points for figuring out what should have been blatantly obvious to everyone involved.

Unconfirmed, but I would say the DS crew and Steve Ditko were pulling visual ideas from similar sources. Considering both produced in the same decade, it would come as no surprise if they were (unintentionally) influenced by the same sources.
I wasn't suggesting a direct influence...but Ditko's Dr. Strange art has been credited as a major influence on the psychedelic poster art of the era, so it may have been noticed by others.

The couple at Dark Shadows Before I Die were making a big deal about that shadow pattern on the wall having a prominent "V" shape in it, but I think that's a bit of a stretch because there was so much else going on in the pattern.

Speaking of...I think we get another indication that vampirism isn't as well-known in the world of DS as it is in ours, when everybody's discussing the details of David's dream. Even if they think that it's all just David's imagination, nobody connects the details and drops the word.

and Vicki should know drawing a headstone with the name of a person who is "alive", means something, not just the ramblings of a disturbed child.
But that's exactly how it would be taken today...a kid would be pulled out of school for drawing something like that.

...even at this point, Sarah will not tell David exactly what Barnabas is. Why? Is she still trying to protect her brother in some way?
I get the impression that "cryptic" is just her default setting. But earlier you were making the point that she was trying to protect David by not telling him too much.

Also, IIRC Sarah herself acted surprised to learn about her appearance in David's dream, so she may not have been responsible for all that he saw there.

I think you meant Maggie's ring--the one she gave Willie when she was imprisoned at the Old House.
Probably...I stumbled all over another, more confusing name transposition in my notes for this week, when I found an instance in which I'd switched the names Woodard and Patterson and was no longer sure who'd said what.

What's Julia's angle at his point? Is she so morally bankrupt that she would murder Willie just to save her own ass / make some medical breakthrough by curing vampirism?
I think they've clearly demonstrated that she's at least partially motivated by fear of Barnabas.

Right after temporarily leaving DS, Karlen guest starred as a conflicted reporter on the original N.Y.P.D. series, which--by the way--was shot at the same New York-based ABC studios as Dark Shadows. Nancy (Carolyn Stoddard) Barrett, Dana (Sheriff Patterson) Elcar and other DS-ers guest starred on the police drama.
Can't say I'd ever heard of that show.

Thank you. I'll see if I can do some research today. Yesterday, we watched an episode I recorded for Rich Little, but he was nowhere to be seen (unless he was doing some really good impressions), and there was nobody on that episode who I really wanted to see.
I also sometimes have tell my DVR not to record individual episodes, when the only cable info is a generic description of the show, so it wants to record the repeated airings later the same day. I don't know if you're getting the same bad info that I am, but they're both Xfinity, and on my end it's an utter mess.

Also, we can now add Lou Rawls to our list of Vegas lounge lizards.
Aw, Lou's got a little more of a cool factor going on that that....

However, on another episode we got to see Lovin' Spoonful doing "Darling, Be Home Soon," one of my all-time favorite songs, and they got an audience response almost as good as the Stones.
Jan. 22, 1967...also featuring a singer whose name retroactively sounds like an unintended Beatles reference, Abbe Lane.

Good question! Watch for my favorite episode, "Many Happy Returns."
If the series continues to remain available.... :shifty:

Not bad, but not one of his best.
So obscure that the only place I could find it was on that Motown singles collection that the clip came from...not on any of Stevie's available compilation albums.

I don't remember this one at all.
It's got a good sound, but I have to wonder about two songs about "funky Broadway" being on the charts at the same time. Was Johnny C riffing on Wilson Pickett, or were both drawing from another source?

ETA:
I remember that one. I remember noticing the click consonants and later learning that they are part of some spoken languages.
I just relistened to that...I hadn't even realized she was singing that, I thought it was percussion!
 
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