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16 for 2016: the best political movies and TV shows

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A couple of weeks ago, while the last presidential debate was on, I noticed TCM had devoted the evening to classic political movies; and since several of them were on my all-time best list, it reminded me of how I'd posted lat list four years ago. No sense reinventing the wheel, I figure, so why not revisit the list?

If you remember that previous piece, you'll notice several differences in this one, namely that there are four additions, so that now instead of 12 for 2012, it's 16 for 2016. (Clever, huh?) You'll also note that while the list is now bigger, it's still missing several titles that might surprise you - Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, for example, or The West Wing. There's a good reason for that, of course: it's my list, not someone else's. However, you'll notice that virtually every one of them concerns greed, corruption, murder, dishonesty, brute force, and irredeemable qualities - in other words, everything that we know and love about American politics.

Some of these are theater movies, while others are made-for-TV movies or episodes of regular series. A couple of the new additions are actual series about politics, albeit ones you might not be familiar with. In any event, check them out - on Netflix, Amazon, Turner Classic Movies, or just read about them at IMDB - and prepare yourself for next Tuesday.  After seeing them, you might even ask yourself whether we really have it so bad after all?

By the way, they're in no particular order except for that in which I came up with them, which may or may not be a clue as to which are my favorites.

The Manchurian Candidate (1962)
Dir. John Frankenheimer
Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Janet Leigh, Angela Lansbury

There’s not much to add to the classic thriller about an assassin brainwashed to infiltrate the American political scene. It was a movie ahead of its time, boasting terrific performances by Sinatra and Lansbury, who makes you forget all about Jessica Fletcher. If you haven’t seen it, get it. And, yes, this happens to be the number one film on my list.  Frankenheimer was a veteran of Golden Age anthologies such as Playhouse 90 (directing well over 100 in total), and won four Emmys in his return to TV movies in the 90s.  You can see his experience with live TV in the way he used a TV camera and monitor during a scene where James Gregory's bumptious Joe McCarthy-knock-off confronts a general.  It's a small touch, but light-years ahead of how it would have been done by other directors of the time.
What to watch for: Most people would choose the hallucinatory brainwashing/tea party scene, which is memorable – but look for the scene late in the movie when Sinatra scans Madison Square Garden in search of Harvey's agonized Raymond. Even during the National Anthem, when protocol demands that Sinatra’s Colonel Marco stand at attention, his eyes are everywhere, darting back and forth in search of any kind of a clue.

Seven Days in May (1964) 
Dir. John Frankenheimer
Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas, Fredric March, Ava Gardner

Another Frankenheimer political potboiler, this time concerning a plot by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to overthrow the U.S. government and replace a weak president (March) whom they fear is unable to stand up to the Communists in Russia and China. While not as good as the best-seller that inspired it, Rod Serling’s screenplay takes extraordinary chunks of the book’s dialogue and presents it whole in the movie. The heavyweight matchup is between Lancaster, as the strong-willed JCS Chairman, and Douglas, not only trying to save the American system of government but also to preserve the integrity of the armed forces and the American tradition of civilian control of the military.  The plot has been borrowed for various mediocre TV movies, but the original still packs a wallop.
What to watch for: For techno-geeks, look for Frankenheimer’s use of closed-circuit cameras throughout the JCS offices.  As a TV veteran, it must have been old hat for him.

Fail-Safe (1964)  
Dir. Sidney Lumet
Henry Fonda, Walter Matthau, Dan O’Herlihy, Larry Hagman

A computer malfunction results in an American bomber group being given an accidental attack order against the Soviet Union. Fonda’s president – almost too virtuous, as is often the case with Fonda roles – is stuck in a no-win situation: unable to recall the group, forced to help the Soviets try to shoot them down in order to convince them of his sincerity (and avoid a retaliatory strike), and having to deal with an Ivy League professor (Matthau, channeling Henry Kissinger) trying to convince him that an all-out strike against the Russians is the only way to go. Since this is a TV site, I'd be remiss if I didn't mention George Clooney's surprisingly good 2000 live version, shot in black-and-white and introduced by Walter Cronkite.  No, Richard Dreyfuss is no Henry Fonda, and you can ask yourself whether or not the plot should have been updated - but why quibble with success?
What to watch for: No music. O’Herlihy’s affecting performance as a world-weary general. Hagman’s underrated turn as Fonda’s interpreter during the hotline talks with the Soviet premier (vastly superior to Noah Wyle's performance in the TV remake).

Suddenly (1954) 
Dir. Lewis Allen
Frank Sinatra, Sterling Hayden, James Gleason

The idea behind this sinister little movie must have been very disturbing for 1954 – a plot to assassinate the president (obviously Eisenhower, although his name is never mentioned in the movie) in the small town of Suddenly, a "town where nothing much ever happens." The hit is financed by an unseen group (whose motive is never explained, which makes it even more sinister) and to be carried out by mercenary gangsters. Sinatra, so good in The Manchurian Candidate, is equally evil here as the psychotic hired gun, holding a family hostage in order while using their house as staging ground for the assassination attempt.
What to watch for: There is a certain nobility about Sinatra’s fellow gang members. There isn’t much they wouldn’t do for cold, hard cash – but assassinating the president? Instinctively it makes them uneasy: what they’re doing is not only illegal, it’s unpatriotic, and that crosses the criminal code.

The Best Man (1964)  
Dir. Franklin J. Schaffner
Henry Fonda, Cliff Robertson, Lee Tracy

A showdown between two candidates for a party’s presidential nomination: Fonda, once again the noble candidate you’re meant to identify with, and Robertson, the ruthless, win-at-all-costs bad guy. Gore Vidal’s darkly comic play becomes a bit more serious on the big screen, and poses a thought-provoking question: is it more important to be virtuous and weak, or cunning and strong? At the time the candidates appeared to be thinly disguised versions of Adlai Stevenson (Fonda) and Richard Nixon (Robertson), but ask yourself if you don’t see more than a bit of JFK (or at least RFK) in Robertson’s heavy-handed tactics. (Vidal, in 1960, was a first-hand witness to the kind of campaign the Kennedy boys ran.)  Schaffner (Patton), like Frankenheimer, cut his teeth in the Golden Age, winning three Emmys for directing such classics as the Studio One version of Twelve Angry Men.
What to watch for: Tracy, as the former president, is courted for his endorsement by both Fonda and Robertson. Watch him quiz each man about their belief in God, and see if you can figure out what Tracy himself believes. Is he telling either man the truth about how he feels, or merely manipulating them to see what their own answer is? Also according to Wikipedia, Ronald Reagan (still then an actor) was considered for a role but rejected because he didn't look presidential enough.

The Great McGinty (1940)  
Dir. Preston Sturges
Brian Donlevy, Muriel Angelus, Akim Tamiroff, William Demarest

This very sharp satire by the brilliant Sturges tells the story of a bum (Donlevy) who in hilarious circumstances rises through the crooked party ranks to become governor, before gaining a conscience and having everything collapse around him. Would that more corrupt politicians reacted the way he does – by fleeing the country.  This can be caught on TCM often around election time.
What to watch for: Besides Demarest’s very funny performance, McGinty and his cronies bring a Three Stooges-like element to politics; appropriate since, again according to Wikipedia, Tamiroff's malaprop-laced performance was the inspiration for Boris Badenov.

A Face in the Crowd (1957)  
Dir. Elia Kazan
Andy Griffith, Patricia Neal, Walter Matthau

The only movie in the list that doesn’t deal directly with a political candidate. I’ve written about it before, but couldn’t pass up the chance to talk about it once again. Sheriff Andy Taylor was never like this!  This also runs frequently on TCM.
What to watch for: This is Matthau’s second appearance in this list, and watching his performances in these two movies reminds you of what an underrated dramatic actor he was. If you know Matthau only from The Odd Couple and Grumpy Old Men, don’t miss him here.

All the King’s Men (1949)
Dir. Robert Rossen
Broderick Crawford, John Ireland, Joanne Dru, Mercedes McCambridge

Another repeat appearance. I discussed the Pulitzer-winning novel here, but while the movie lacks much of the book’s depth and subtlety, it makes up with dominant (and Oscar-winning) performances by Crawford as Willie Stark, who truly was an honest man at one time; and McCambridge as Sadie Burke, Stark’s right-hand woman.
What to watch for: You know you’ll end up hating Crawford by the end of the movie, which makes the actions of the honest Stark at the movie’s beginning even more painful to watch. Jack Burden (Ireland), about whom the book really revolves, is much less prominent here.


The Missiles of October (1974)
Dir. Anthony Page 
William Devane, Martin Sheen, Howard Da Silva, Ralph Bellamy
Sheen, who would later play JFK in a TV-movie, here plays RFK in this riveting drama about the Cuban Missile Crisis, originally shown only a dozen years after the showdown that cast everyone in the shadow of nuclear war.. Terry Teachout’s excellent look back in last week’s Wall Street Journal explains much about why this docudrama is so good, from its dedication to historical accuracy to the minimalist sets that give the production a Golden Age immediacy. This was “event” television when it was shown in a three-hour timeslot on ABC Theatre, and it’s just as powerful today.
What to watch for: When the generals apprise JFK of the possible damage a Soviet attack on American bases might inflict, I’ve always thought Devane (wonderful performance) gave him just a hint of creeping hysteria as he talks about wanting to make sure American planes aren’t lined up wingtip to wingtip – as they were at Pearl Harbor.

Wag the Dog (1997) Dir. Barry Levinson 
Dustin Hoffman, Robert DeNiro, Anne Heche 
Politics can be played for comedy, tragedy or satire; this one manages to incorporate all three, in this viciously delightful story of a movie producer (Hoffman, who might well be doing an impression of Levinson) hired to invent a fake war in order to save a corrupt President’s sorry ass. It’s a very smart, funny and well-acted movie (Willie Nelson’s star-studded “We Are the World”-type song is worth the price alone) , but its real impact comes from what we all know but are afraid to admit, and that’s one reason why we laugh – because it’s too painful to cry.
What to watch for: I’d never been a big Hoffman fan prior to this movie, but I thought he was just terrific (and well-deserving of his Oscar nomination) with his sardonic portrayal of the movie producer for whom each potential disaster simply reminds him of a past movie-making experience. His answer is the same every time: “This is nothing!” I've used that line many times myself, with about equal success.

Columbo: "Candidate for Crime" (1973)
Dir. Boris Sagal
Peter Falk, Jackie Cooper, Joanne Linville, Tisha Sterling

What would any "best-of" list be without an episode of Columbo?  Cooper plays a U.S. Senate candidate carrying on an affair with a member of his staff. When his campaign manager finds out and orders him to end the affair, Cooper murders him and tries to make it look as if he, Cooper, was actually the intended target. He may fool his wife, his lover, the press, and even the voters – but not Lieutenant Columbo.
What to watch for: Cooper, like most of Columbo’s adversaries, takes the Lieutenant far too lightly. Watch him trying to film a sound bite for television, all the while being distracted by Columbo’s poking around his house. By the time he realizes that Columbo’s no fool, it’s too late.

Winter Kills(1979)  
Dir. William Richert
Jeff Bridges, John Huston, and an all-star cast

Like The Manchurian Candidate, Winter Kills was based on a novel by Richard Condon, but unlike Candidate, it’s far less well known. Condon’s dark comedy tells the story of a man (Bridges) trying to discover the truth behind the conspiracy that took the life of his half-brother, an American president who was supposedly killed by a lone gunman. Any similarities to JFK, including gangsters, nightclub owners, and a domineering father (Huston), are purely intentional.
What to watch for: I won’t give away the ending, but suffice it to say that it involves a surreal scene with Bridges, Huston and an enormous American flag.

House of Cards (1990, plus sequels)
Created by Andrew Davies, Dir. Paul Seed
Ian Richardson, Susannah Harker, David Lyon, Diane Fletcher
Not the American version starring Kevin Spacey, but the far-superior UK version, which came to the United States via Masterpiece Theatre. Ian Richardson is brilliant as Francis Urquart (initials FU), who schemes to become Prime Minister after being snubbed by the current PM. As Urquart methodically sets about sabotaging his rivals, he finds that in most cases, they provide him with more than enough rope to do the job. Throw in the most scheming wife since Lady Macbeth (Fletcher) and an impressionable, pliable young journalist (Harker), and the stage is more than set. Be sure to check out the series' two sequels, To Play the Kingand The Final Cut.
What to watch for: Urquart constantly breaks the fourth wall, talking directly to the viewers, making us all parties to his plot. He's evil, but hard to root against. His catch phrase, which I've used many times: "You might think that. I couldn't possibly comment."

Yes Minister/Yes, Prime Minister (1980-1988)
Created by Antony Jay and Jonathan Lynn
Paul Eddington, Nigel Hawthorne, Derek Fowlds
Much like Barney Miller was to police series, Yes Minister and its sequel, Yes, Prime Minister is probably the most accurate political series ever made, far more so than a program such as The West Wing. There is no idealization in this brutal, hilarious satire of British politics, featuring Jim Hacker (Eddington) as the newly-named Minister of Administrative Affairs, his permanent secretary Sir Humphrey Appleby (Hawthorne) and his personal secretary, the well-meaning Bernard (Fowlds). We quickly learn that the aptly named Hacker is far from the brightest bulb on the tree, but we root for him against the smug, obfuscating Sir Humphrey, who's determined to hang on to his power (as a civil servant, he maintains his position regardless of which party is in power). Hacker is full of surprises though, and while he might not be Humphrey's intellectual equal, he more than holds his own as a very good politician.
What to watch for: After listening to Humphrey's tangled, tortured explanation as to why the Department of Administrative Affairs couldn't possibly do what its minister wants, Hacker often is left with a blank, glassy-eyed stare.

Advise and Consent (1962)
Dir. Otto Preminger
Henry Fonda, Walter Pidgeon, Don Murray, Charles Laughton, Gene Tierney
Based on Allen Drury's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Advise and Consent presents the story of a bruising battle over the confirmation of a nominee for Secretary of State, with Fonda as Secretary of State nominee Robert Leffingwell, who may at one time have been a member of the Communist party (a thinly disguised version of Alger Hiss), and Charles Laughton (who disliked Fonda in real life) as Senator Seab Cooley, one of his opponents. It's a spicy story that features blackmail and homosexuality in addition to political ambition and the Red menace, yet Preminger sought to enliven the movie even more, offering roles to both Martin Luther King Jr. and Richard Nixon. Both wisely declined. You'll find some of the speechifying and plot twisting a bit over-the-top, and the movie suffers in comparison with the book, but it remains an entertaining political thriller in the neo-noir tradition, and a cynical, grown-up antidote to Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.
What to watch for: You'll find it hard to believe that Vice President Harley Hudson (Lew Ayers) would be at the airport, without security, flying on a commercial airliner - yet it's true. It wasn't until the mid-60s that the Vice President flew regularly on a government plane.

The Candidate (1972)
Dir. Michael Ritchie
Robert Redford, Peter Boyle
Take a photogenic activist lawyer, introduce him to a savvy political operative looking for a candidate. The result: an earnest, progressive candidate for the United States Senate, fighting an uphill campaign against the incumbent Republican. The Candidate is predictable, but no less captivating, in his look at the phony, cynical world of politics. It's also prescient in its portrayal of a candidate recruited for his telegenic looks, regardless of whether or not he's qualified. Even conservatives might wind up rooting for Redford's character as he takes on the smug, establishment Republican.
What to watch for: Without giving away the ending, Redford's final exchange with his campaign manager (Boyle) is worth the price of admission alone.

Around the dial

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We're a little light on links this week, but for a good reason - most of my colleagues can be found in the "Terror TV Blogathon" hosted by the Classic TV Blog Association. I'm not enough of a horror buff to have participated in this one, but I promise you're going to enjoy reading their pieces - you won't miss me a bit! In other blogs:

At Christmas TV History, Joanna gives us a heads-up on her Christmas schedule, which includes not only great pieces from the past and present, but when your favorite Christmas show might be on. I always look forward to this time of year!

The Broadcast Archives at the University of Maryland has a terrific picture of the cover of a 1930 booklet entitled The Romance and Reality of Television. I don't know if I've ever heard a better description of the promise television held - question is, has it lived up to that promise?

Cult TV Blog has a very interesting article on the Troughton Doctor Who episode "The Invasion," including how this episode expresses the show's traditional caution towards technology. I'm fond of this DVD, because it's out of print and outrageously priced in the U.S., but the U.K. version became my first purchase for my new region-free DVD player.

If you're in the mood for a little old-time radio, Recap Retro has a great piece on "Night Beat," the 50s series set in Chicago, and starring Frank Lovejoy as newspaper reporter Randy Stone. I've heard this on Radio Spirits, and it's pretty good - you can find episodes online to check it out.

A reminder that our friend Ray Starman, author of The Sitcom Class Wars, will be appearing later this month on Ed Robertson's TV Confidential podcast - I'll have more details as we get closer.

And finally, a question for you all from reader Brian, who wants to know if anyone out there has a copy of the Merv Griffin-hosted game show Play Your Hunch from April 8, 1960. Merv's guest singer that day was Beverly Kenney. If so, please let me know via comment or email.

That's it for this week - see you back here tomorrow.

This week in TV Guide: November 7, 1964

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With the first anniversary of John F. Kennedy's death two weeks away, NBC, on Sunday, November 8, debuts the anthology series Profiles in Courage. Based on Kennedy's 1957 Pulitzer Prize winner, the show will, each week, dramatize one of Kennedy's stories of "political deeds performed at great personal sacrifice."

That, of course, is the public line presented for the series debut. In reality, the backstage controversy over the authorship of Profiles in Courage proves to be at least as interesting as the book itself. And, as befits our era, it, too, plays out on TV.

It takes place on the December 7, 1957 episode of ABC's The Mike Wallace Interview; Mike's guest is the infamous political columnist Drew Pearson, author of the syndicated newspaper column “Washington Merry-Go-Round,” and probably the most controversial political writer in the country. During the interview, the subject of Senator John F. Kennedy comes up, and results in the following exchange:

PEARSON: Jack Kennedy is a fine young fellow, a very personable fellow, but he isn't as good as that public relations campaign makes him out to be. He is the only man in history that I know who won a Pulitzer Prize on a book which was ghost-written for him, which indicates the kind of public relations buildup he's had.

WALLACE: Who wrote the book for him?

PEARSON: I don't recall at the present moment, I... [It was Kennedy aide Ted Sorenson.]

WALLACE: You know for a fact Drew...?

PEARSON: Yes.

WALLACE: That the book?

PEARSON: I do know.

WALLACE: Profiles in Courage was written for Senator Kennedy, by somebody else?

PEARSON: I do.

WALLACE: And he got a Pulitzer Prize for it, and...

PEARSON: He did.

WALLACE: And, and he has never acknowledged the fact?

PEARSON: No, he has not. There's a little wisecrack around the Senate about Jack who is a very handsome young man as you know, who some of his colleagues say, "Jack, I wish you had a little bit... uh... less profile and more courage"* And they refer to some of his voting records.

*According to the always-reliable Wikipedia, that line was eventually attributed to Eleanor Roosevelt. It's not known if it was followed by a rim shot.

Needless to say, the Kennedys were none too happy about Pearson's nationally televised accusation. Joe Kennedy, the family patriarch, had his lawyer Clark Clifford (accompanied by Robert F. Kennedy) go to ABC and threaten them with a lawsuit unless they issued a retraction. Although both Wallace and Pearson stuck by the truth of the story, the network did indeed issue an apology and retraction (which didn't sit too well with Wallace, but that's another story). Today, it's come to be a more-or-less accepted fact that Profiles in Courage was, indeed, written by Ted Sorenson, who admitted as much in 2008 although he gave JFK credit for "setting the tone and philosophy of the book."

Oh, yes, back to the TV series. Well, regardless of who wrote the book, it contained profiles of eight U.S. Senators (as Kennedy was in the Senate at the time) who had exhibited the said courage, and additional profiles were prepared and approved by now-President Kennedy, during his lifetime, in order to provide enough episodes for the series.It is one of those additional profiles that is the basis for the premiere episode, the story of Senator Oscar Underwood (played by Sidney Blackmer). Underwood was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1924 who insists the party repudiate the Ku Klux Klan, regardless of the damage which the party might suffer, especially in the South. Despite his courageous stand, Underwood fails to convince the Democratic convention to condemn the Klan, and is never a factor in the presidential balloting. Later, facing strong opposition by the Klan, he would decline to run for reelection.

Profiles in Courage runs for a single season, providing 26 such profiles. It's mostly well-received, although it would take a critic with a hide as thick as an elephant's to criticize a television series based on a book by a president who'd been martyred only a year ago. As far as I can recall, it remains the only non-documentary, non-interview, network televisions series to be based on the writings of a former president.

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During the 60s, the Ed Sullivan Show and The Hollywood Palace were the premiere variety shows on television. Whenever they appear in TV Guide together, we'll match them up and see who has the best lineup..

Sullivan: Jimmy Durante headlines this show with comedian Nipsey Russell, singer Jean Paul Vignon, London's rock 'n' rolling Bachelors, comic Richard "Mr. Pastry" Hearne, pianist Ginny Tiu and her singing-dancing company, the juggling Del Ray Brothers, and Brizio the Clown.

Palace: Host Gene Barry introduces two actresses seldom seen on television: Bette Davis and Oliva de Haviland, who do "The Twilight Shore," a dramatic sketch. Also: comics Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks, who do a "2000-year-old man" sketch; U.S. Olympic Gold Medal winners; songstress Monique Van Vooren; pantomimist Ben Blue; musical clown Yonely; and the Back Porch Majority, folk singers.

Two good lineups greet us this week. Durante would be enough to give Ed the win most weeks, but Gene Barry, Davis and de Haviland, and Reiner and Brooks are enough to overpower Sullivan and give The Palace a clear win.

◊ ◊ ◊

Throughout the 60s and early 70s, TV Guide's reviews were written by the witty and acerbic Cleveland Amory. Whenever we get the chance, we'll look at Cleve's latest take on the series of the era. 

One of the things I like about Cleveland Amory is that he seldom makes you wait long to find out what he thinks. This week, he's reviewing a new series called Kentucky Jones, and - well, we'll let Cleve tell you himself:

Dennis Weaver, who spent the better part of his unnatural life in a better part (as Chester in Gunsmoke), is now, in this new NBC show, cast as a veterinarian, of all things. And if, as Matt Dillon's deputy, he had his troubles - among them a boss who never allowed him to stand on his own game leg - now, as Kentucky Jones, with two good gams and a deputy of his own (ably played by Harry Morgan), he has even more troubles, chief among which is that he bears the sole responsibility of guarding the show against the Yellow Peril.

A time out now to explain the premise of Kentucky Jones, after which Amory's quips will make more sense. Prior to her sudden death, Jones and his wife had arranged to adopt a nine-year-old Chinese orphan, with the admirably American name of Dwight Eisenhower Wong. The newly widowed Jones tries to reverse the adoption, but it's too late, and Wong (Rickey Der) is waiting at the airport to head to his new home. Wong, Amory says, is "the greatest master of intrigue since the late Fu Manchu, but

in contrast to the late Fu, "Ike," as he likes to be called, knows right from Wong. But from the first meeting, when Kentucky arrives at the airport with a hangover and Ike tells him "Lover of wine is cousin of goose," it is obvious that we are in for an Orient express. And when Ike is around, the chances of any mere Westerner getting the better of him are - can you stand one more? - purely occidental.

We know Amory likes Morgan, and he likes Weaver, "a fine actor," as well. What he doesn't like, though, are the writers, who seem to prefer symbolism to actual writing, and don't pay much attention to Kentucky's actual job, treating horses. Even storylines that show promise are ruined by the heavy-handed writing, as when Ike throws his beloved abacus ("Man without abacus is junk without sail") into the fire because his teacher wants him to learn math without it. A little of that speechifying can go a long, long way, and the following episode, in which Ike struggles with his girlfriend (!), leads Amory to describe it as "a bit much for us to take as a steady diet." Concludes Amory, and from the sounds of it I'd be forced to agree, Kentucky Jones, "with or without abacus, was junk without fail."

◊ ◊ ◊

Last week we read about the imminent demise of Les Crane's controversial late-night talk show on ABC; this week, let's travel back in time, a little less than a year, to read the fanfare that accompanied the show's kickoff on Monday, November 9.

Topics as well as guests will hold the spotlight when Les enters the late-night sweepstakes. A variety of moods will prevail: leading proponents of opposing views will come face to face; excerpts from Broadway and off-Broadway shows; comedy acts and other light entertainment; and taped interviews with prominent personalities. Tonight's guests include heavyweight boxing champ Cassius Clay.

Well, we all know how this turned out; the main mood prompted by the program depends on whom who ask. "Despair," if you talk to the ABC executives looking at the ratings, "Anger" if you listen to the viewers who complain about Crane's brash personality and the controversial issues. At that, I suspect the network still would have preferred "Anger" to the "Apathy" that most potential viewers felt. The best way to describe ABC's experiment? "Yawn."

◊ ◊ ◊

Look - there's even a soundtrack album!
And then there's one of the highlights of the week - ABC's Thursday night documentary Sophia Loren in Rome. "Miss Loren shows us her apartment and the square it overlooks, the Piazza del Compidoglio, designed by Michelangelo. We move on to the Appian Way, still lined with ancient ruins but now dotted with exclusive villas, one of which belongs to [movie star Marcello] Mastroianni. He chats about Rome and describes its best known boulevard, the Via Veneto." The score for the program is by Academy Award winner John Barry.

This is one of a series of travelogues which ABC did in the mid-60s; others included Elizabeth Taylor in London and Inger Stevens in Sweden. I don't know how good the program is, but with Sophia Loren, Marcello Mastroianni, and Rome, does it really matter?

◊ ◊ ◊

It's been a while since we've taken a look at TV Guide advertising, so why don't we finish up with some of these visuals? I find it quite interesting that ABC is already using the "Wide World of Entertainment" tagline for its prime-time schedules, long before it was used as a title for the network's late-night block of programming in 1973.


90 Bristol Court was an attempt by NBC to construct three separate sitcoms - Karen, Harris Against the World, and Tom, Dick and Mary - within a common setting, the apartment complex 90 Bristol Court, where all the principals lived. Despite the opportunity for crossover, the only thing the three shows shared (aside from the address) was cast member Guy Raymond, who portrayed Cliff Murdoch, the complex's handyman. Of the three, Karen was the only series to survive the entire season. As Wikipedia points out, when the address is spelled out as Ninety Bristol Court, the initials form those of the network, NBC. No other series (or network) can make that claim.


Football, of course, is big in Texas. It behooves KXII, an affiliate of both ABC and CBS, to let its viewers know it has all the bases covered: college on Saturday, pro on Sunday.


I always enjoy these ads for local programs. Donna's Notebook, hosted by Donna Colburn, ran on KAUZ through the early '70s. I don't suppose there's anything special about it; in the feature-driven world of today's local news, you can probably get these kinds of tips just about anywhere, and yet these were a staple of almost every local station back in the day. There's something quite charming about them.


Finally, an advertisement for the aforementioned Profiles in Courage. It's one of the few series I can think of (The Twilight Zone is another) where the emphasis isn't on the series itself, nor the actors, but the man responsible for the concept of the series. And tonight's episode isn't even from the book!


I was originally going to say that tonight's story wasn't even one that John Kennedy wrote, but then, apparently you could say that about all of the profiles in courage, couldn't you?

What's on TV? Tuesday, November 10, 1964

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This week we return to the Dallas-Fort Worth area, but it's a slightly different look that those we've seen in the past. Unlike those issues from the '50s, by 1964 we've got more stations to choose from, including KERA, the area's first educational channel. In addition to DFW, we've got a full compliment of stations from the Wichita Falls area, as well as KXII in Ardmore-Sherman-Dennison. In case you hadn't noticed, the letters XII are also the Roman numerals for 12, as in Channel 12. Yes, you probably had noticed.





KFDX, Channel 3 (Wichita Falls) (NBC)

Morning


06:45a
R.F.D. 3

07:00a
Today (guests Woody Klein, Phyllis McKinley)

09:00a
Make Room for Daddy

09:30a
What’s This Song? (guests Andy Devine, Rose Marie) (color)

09:55a
NBC News (Edwin Newman)

10:00a
Concentration

10:30a
Jeopardy (color)

11:00a
Say When (color)

11:30a
Truth or Consequences (color)

11:55a
NBC News (Ray Scherer)

Afternoon


12:00p
Weather and News (local)

12:30p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

12:55p
NBC News (Floyd Kalber)

01:00p
Loretta Young

01:30p
The Doctors

02:00p
Another World

02:30p
You Don’t Say! (guests Darryl Hickman, Joanie Sommers) (color)

03:00p
The Match Game (guests Gisele MacKenzie, Milt Kamen)

03:25p
NBC News

03:30p
Funny Company

04:00p
Pinto Bean

05:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report

Evening


06:00p
Weather, News, Sports (local)

06:30p
Mr. Novak

07:30p
The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

08:30p
That Was the Week That Was (color)

09:00p
Bell Telephone Hour (host Henry Fonda, guests Florence Henderson, Gretchen Wyler, John Reardon, Barbara McNair, Susan Watson, Johnny Harmon, John Raitt) (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:10p
Weather and News (local)

10:30p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (guests Bill Cosby, Ruggiero Ricci) (color)

I've always associated The Bell Telephone Hour, NBC's great music series, with another musical program of the time, Voice of Firestone. Both are identified with classical music, but as you can see in this tribute to the late Oscar Hammerstein II, who had died four years before, both programs could also veer into popular music. One thing I didn't know until a few years ago: every episode of Bell Telephone Hour, which ran from 1959 to 1968, was done in color. 


KRLD, Channel 4 (Dallas) (CBS)

Morning


06:30a
Sunrise Semester

07:00a
News (local)

08:00a
Captain Kangaroo

09:00a
CBS Morning News with Mike Wallace

09:30a
I Love Lucy

10:00a
Andy Griffith

10:30a
The McCoys

11:00a
Love of Life

11:25a
CBS News (Robert Trout)

11:30a
Search For Tomorrow

11:45a
The Guiding Light

Afternoon


12:00p
News and Weather (local)

12:30p
As the World Turns

01:00p
Password (guests Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy)

01:30p
House Party (guest surfer Larry Capune)

02:00p
To Tell the Truth (panelists Joan Fontaine, Skitch, Henderson, Marty Ingels, Phyllis Newman)

02:25p
CBS News (Douglas Edwards)

02:30p
The Edge of Night

03:00p
The Secret Storm

03:30p
Jack Benny

04:00p
Bachelor Father

04:30p
Leave it to Beaver

05:00p
Love That Bob!

05:30p
CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite

Evening


06:00p
News, Weather (local)

06:30p
Wanted – Dead or Alive

07:00p
World War I

07:30p
Red Skelton (guests George Gobel, Young Folk)

08:30p
Petticoat Junction

09:00p
The Doctors and the Nurses

10:00p
News, Weather and Sports (local)

10:30p
Regis Philbin (guests Eartha Kitt, Roger Williams, Cornelia Otis Skinner, Freddie Blassie)

12:00a
News (local)

The Doctors and the Nurses began life as The Nurses, but added a couple of docs for the second season, and changed the title accordingly. Evidentelly, there's only so much drama you can wring out of a medical series in which the title characters can neither diagnose nor proscribe treatment.


WBAP, Channel 5 (Fort Worth) (NBC)

Morning


06:45a
Imperials Quartet

07:00a
Today (guests Woody Klein, Phyllis McKinley)

09:00a
Make Room for Daddy

09:30a
What’s This Song? (guests Andy Devine, Rose Marie) (color)

09:55a
NBC News (Edwin Newman)

10:00a
Concentration

10:30a
Jeopardy (color)

11:00a
Say When (color)

11:30a
Truth or Consequences (color)

11:55a
NBC News (Ray Scherer)

Afternoon


12:00p
News and Weather (local) (color)

12:30p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

12:55p
NBC News (Floyd Kalber)

01:00p
Loretta Young

01:30p
The Doctors

02:00p
Another World

02:30p
You Don’t Say! (guests Darryl Hickman, Joanie Sommers) (color)

03:00p
The Match Game (guests Gisele MacKenzie, Milt Kamen)

03:25p
NBC News

03:30p
Movie – “Woman They Almost Lynched”

04:50p
Dateline (color)

05:00p
Bold Journey

05:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report

Evening


06:00p
News, Weather and Sports (local) (color)

06:30p
Mr. Novak

07:30p
The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

08:30p
That Was the Week That Was (color)

09:00p
Bell Telephone Hour (host Henry Fonda, guests Florence Henderson, Gretchen Wyler, John Reardon, Barbara McNair, Susan Watson, Johnny Harmon, John Raitt) (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:15p
Weather, News and Sports (color)

10:35p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (guests Bill Cosby, Ruggiero Ricci) (color)

12:00a
News (Alex Burton) (color)

12:05a
Imperials Quartet

Darryl Hickman's having a busy week, isn't he? Not only is he on You Don't Say! with singer Joanie Sommers, he's also appearing on ABC's Missing Links with Tom Poston and Barbara Feldon. Since they're on different networks, it's fortunate for Hickman that the shows aren't on at the same time.


KAUZ, Channel 6 (Wichita Falls) (CBS)

Morning


06:30a
Modern Almanac

06:45a
R.F.D.

07:00a
Casper and His Friends

08:00a
Captain Kangaroo

09:00a
Romper Room

09:30a
I Love Lucy

10:00a
Andy Griffith

10:30a
The McCoys

11:00a
Love of Life

11:25a
CBS News (Robert Trout)

11:30a
Search for Tomorrow

11:45a
The Guiding Light

Afternoon


12:00p
News and Weather (local)

12:10p
Donna’s Notebook

12:30p
As the World Turns

01:00p
Password (guests Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy)

01:30p
House Party (guest surfer Larry Capune)

02:00p
To Tell the Truth (panelists Joan Fontaine, Skitch, Henderson, Marty Ingels, Phyllis Newman)

02:25p
CBS News (Douglas Edwards)

02:30p
The Edge of Night

03:00p
The Secret Storm

03:30p
Jack Benny

04:00p
Trails West

04:30p
Rocky and His Friends

04:45p
Kauzy’s Korner

05:00p
Woody Woodpecker

05:30p
CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite

Evening


06:00p
The Hired Hand

06:05p
News and Weather (local)

06:30p
Password (guests Eydie Gorme, Tony Randall)

07:00p
World War I

07:30p
Red Skelton (guests George Gobel, Young Folk)

08:30p
Petticoat Junction

09:00p
The Doctors and the Nurses

10:00p
News and Weather (local)

10:30p
Movie – “Duel in the Sun”

The documentary series World War I, narrated by Robert Ryan (and available on DVD), is, like ABC's similar documentary series on Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, the kind of series that could still appear as prime time network programming in the early '60s. Before we get too wrapped up in nostalgia though, it's good to note that even then, series like these weren't ratings winners. As far as we can tell, documentaries seldom have been.


KSWO, Channel 7 (Wichita Falls) (ABC)

Morning


08:30a
Cartoons

09:00a
Ed Allen

09:30a
The Price Is Right (guest Leslie Uggams)

10:00a
Get the Message (panelists Mitch Miller, Frank Buxton, Julia Meade, Georgia Brown)

10:30a
Missing Links (guests Tom Poston, Barbara Feldon, Darryl Hickman)

11:00a
Father Knows Best

11:30a
Ernie Ford (guest Roger Williams)

Afternoon


12:00p
Amos ‘n’ Andy

12:30p
Divorce Court

01:30p
Day in Court

01:55p
ABC News

02:00p
General Hospital

02:30p
The Young Marrieds

03:00p
Trailmaster

04:00p
Highway Patrol

04:30p
The Lone Ranger

05:00p
Science Fiction

05:30p
To Be Announced 

05:45p
ABC Evening Report (Ron Cochran)

Evening


06:00p
News, Weather (local)

06:30p
Combat!

07:30p
McHale’s Navy

08:00p
The Tycoon

08:30p
Peyton Place

09:00p
The Fugitive

10:00p
ABC News (Bob Young) 

10:10p
News and Weather (local)

10:30p
Les Crane (guests Floyd Patterson, Dick Gregory)

Not sure if Science Fiction, the 5:00 p.m. program, is actually Science Fiction Theater. My guess is that it is, but in the interests of accuracy (as well as the shortness of research time), I won't take a chance on something I can't confirm.


WFAA, Channel 8 (Dallas) (ABC)

Morning


06:20a
Operation LIFT

07:00a
Mr. Peppermint

09:00a
Ann Sothern

10:00a
Get the Message (panelists Mitch Miller, Frank Buxton, Julia Meade, Georgia Brown)

10:30a
Missing Links (guests Tom Poston, Barbara Feldon, Darryl Hickman)

11:00a
Father Knows Best

11:30a
Ernie Ford (guest Roger Williams)

Afternoon


12:00p
Sea Hunt

12:30p
Julie Benell

01:25p
News, Weather (Bob Walker)

01:30p
Day in Court

01:55p
ABC News

02:00p
General Hospital

02:30p
The Young Marrieds

03:00p
Trailmaster

04:00p
Lloyd Thaxton

05:00p
Three for the Money

05:30p
Bat Masterson

Evening


06:00p
News, Weather, Sports (local)

06:30p
Combat!

07:30p
McHale’s Navy

08:00p
The Tycoon

08:30p
Peyton Place

09:00p
The Fugitive

10:00p
News, Weather and Sports (local)

10:30p
Les Crane (guests Floyd Patterson, Dick Gregory)

12:15a
ABC News (Bob Young)

12:25a
Checkmate

Operation LIFT, the first show of WFAA's broadcast day, stands for Literacy Instruction For Texas.
It was started by the Greater Dallas Section of the National Council of Jewish Women, and you can read more about this project - which was still an ongoing concern as of 2008 - in this article.


KTVT, Channel 11 (Fort Worth) (Ind.)

Morning


08:05a
News (Bob Hazlett)

08:15a
Farm Show

08:30a
Cartoon Carnival

09:00a
Romper Room

09:30a
Jack LaLanne

10:00a
Movie – “Blaze of Noon”

11:45a
News and Weather (local)

Afternoon


12:00p
Singin’ Time in Dixie

12:30p
Carnival (color)

01:00p
Girl Talk

01:30p
Mike Douglas (co-host Gale Storm, guests Margaret Truman Daniels, George Jessel, Bob Wright)

03:00p
The Mighty Hercules (color)

03:30p
Popeye (color)

04:00p
Slam Bang Theater

04:45p
Superman

05:15p
Woody Woodpecker

05:45p
News and Weather (local)

Evening


06:00p
The Rifleman

06:30p
Laramie (color)

07:30p
The Lawman

08:00p
The Human Jungle

09:00p
Movie – “The Caine Mutiny” (color)

10:00p
News and Weather (local)

10:15p
Movie (continued)

12:00a
News (local)

I've written before about The Human Jungle, the British psychiatric drama starring Herbert Lom, but until now I had no idea it had ever appeared in syndication on American television.


KXII, Channel 12 (Sherman) (NBC, CBS)

Morning


06:30a
S.E. College

07:00a
Today (guests Woody Klein, Phyllis McKinley)

09:00a
Make Room for Daddy

09:30a
What’s This Song? (guests Andy Devine, Rose Marie) (color)

09:55a
NBC News (Edwin Newman)

10:00a
Concentration

10:30a
Jeopardy (color)

11:00a
Woman’s World

11:30a
Truth or Consequences (color)

11:55a
NBC News (Ray Scherer)

Afternoon


12:00p
Twelve Acres

12:30p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

12:55p
NBC News (Floyd Kalber)

01:00p
Loretta Young

01:30p
The Doctors

02:00p
Another World

02:30p
You Don’t Say! (guests Darryl Hickman, Joanie Sommers) (color)

03:00p
The Match Game (guests Gisele MacKenzie, Milt Kamen)

03:25p
NBC News

03:30p
The Californians

04:00p
The Restless Gun

04:30p
Carol’s Clubhouse

05:00p
Huckleberry Hound

05:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report

Evening


06:00p
News, Weather (local)

06:30p
Mr. Novak

07:30p
The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

08:30p
That Was the Week That Was (color)

09:00p
Bell Telephone Hour (host Henry Fonda, guests Florence Henderson, Gretchen Wyler, John Reardon, Barbara McNair, Susan Watson, Johnny Harmon, John Raitt) (color)

10:00p
News, Weather and Sports (local)

10:30p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (guests Bill Cosby, Ruggiero Ricci) (color)

The Restless Gun (4:00 p.m.), stars John Payne as Vint Bonner, and ran in first-run on NBC from 1957 to 1959. It's based on a 1953 radio series called The Six Shooter, which starred Jimmy Stewart. A few tweaks, such as a change in the lead character's name, and voila! a new TV series.


KERA, Channel 13 (Dallas) (Educ.)

Morning


09:00a
Science Lab I

09:15a
Spanish 2A

09:30a
Adventures in Learning

10:00a
The Friendly Giant

10:15a
Sing Hi, Sing Lo

10:30a
What’s New

11:00a
Home Room I

11:15a
Spanish 2A

11:30a
Home and Family Life

Afternoon


12:00p
Portugal Today (special)

01:00p
Home Room I

01:15p
Spanish 1A

01:30p
Flight Six

01:45p
Spanish 3A

02:00p
Around the World

02:30p
Science Lab I

02:45p
Spanish 2A

03:00p
Spanish 3A

03:15p
Industry on Parade

04:00p
Classsroom 400

04:30p
Pathfinder

05:00p
What’s New

05:30p
Sing Hi – Sing Lo

05:45p
The Friendly Giant

Evening


06:00p
Around the World

06:30p
What’s New

07:00p
Driver Education

07:30p
Here’s Texas

07:45p
Live and Learn

08:00p
Your Health

08:30p
Challenge

09:00p
The Computer

09:30p
Virus

With its emphasis on classroom programming, KERA looks like most other educational channels of the time. In my opinion - but then, you probably already know what my opinion is.

The lie's the thing

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At long last, our long national nightmare is over! For at least a few minutes, anyway...

I've chosen to celebrate the occasion with another of my dissertations on television and moral consequentialism. If this isn't your cup of tea, no hard feelings - I'll see you on Friday.

I don’t normally watch Law & Order: Criminal Intent– OK, I never watch it – but the other day my wife had it on when I came home from work, and I got caught up in the final few minutes of the drama. As near as I can tell, the cops were after a bad guy who had stolen some gems and murdered someone. They went to work on the bad guy’s woman, who (as is usually the case in these things) was the weak link, trying to get her to rat on her boyfriend. Finally, one of the cops – the guy cop (nowadays they always work in boy-girl tandems, apparently) – managed to convince her that her boyfriend was HIV-positive due to some things he’d been doing in prison, and that because of the – well, various acts in which they had engaged, she was likely HIV-positive as well. He even offered to have her get an AIDS test if she had any doubts. In the end (no pun intended), she did indeed turn on him, letting the cops know where he’d be when the stolen gems deal went down. As they slapped the handcuffs on to take him away, she told him that, yes, she was the one who’d squealed, and that since thanks to him she was going to die, she thought she’d return the favor.

Whereupon our cop hero turns to her and says – Surprise! You’re not going to die after all! I just lied about that AIDS thing to get you to turn your boyfriend in. No hard feelings, right? I mean, it’s good to be alive, isn’t it?

Well, maybe he didn’t say the last part, but he gleefully admitted to having intentionally lied to her about having AIDS, hoping that it would get her to cough up what they needed to make the bust. All’s fair in love and war and law enforcement. It doesn’t matter how you play the game, and it is a game – it’s all whether you win or lose.

Or is it? The episode got me to thinking, which isn’t a surprise since I wouldn’t be writing about it otherwise, and much to the consternation of my wife, who really prefers a restful, relaxing dinner, I started bouncing around several theories on the moral law as it applied to this case.

Legally, were the cop’s actions right? I don’t know. I can see a case where a judge throws the evidence out, but it all likelihood the cop didn’t break the law. As far as I know, unless you’re running for president or testifying under oath (which may be the same thing soon), you’re not breaking the law by telling a lie. So legally he might have been on safe, if somewhat sloppy, ground.

But, I continued, there are two other ways to look at this – ethically, and morally. They sound similar, but they aren’t.

Ethically, did the cop cross the line by lying to extract information? It’s a tricky question. I don’t think anyone would disagree that a public servant, which is what a policeman is, had better have a damn good reason for lying in the performance of his or her job. And in fact, there are probably times when lying is appropriate, based on the magnitude of the lie and the importance of the results produced by the telling of the lie. But I don’t mind saying this kind of lie makes me uncomfortable. First, there’s a blitheness to it, a suggestion on the part of the cop that lying is part of the job, that the end always justifies the means, that it’s the kind of thing that never gives him pause.

Let’s examine this a little closer, because what it does, at least in part, is reduce law to a game, one with a winner and a loser where the competition to win is what it’s all about. In viewing the law this way, you vastly diminish its moral authority, as well as demonstrate a lack of respect for what it represents. Recall, if you know your TV history, that Perry Mason was always very careful when it came to misleading someone on the witness stand. As he would point out to Della and Paul in the episode’s dénouement, he was always careful to use the phrase “Suppose I were to tell you” as a preface to the allegation which he would use to trap the guilty party. It’s an important distinction – after all, most of the time, in the excitement of the courtroom confession, nobody would give a second thought to the question by Perry that triggered it all. But even if nobody asked about it, Perry would still know. And when he stashes his client at a motel in order to keep them out of the clutches of the police while he investigates the case, he always tells them to register in their own name. As an officer of the law, of course, he has to do that – but there’s an ethical component for Perry as well.  He’ll do anything for his client, but he won’t lie, and he won’t suborn perjury – even if he has a good reason for doing so.

Let’s look at another example. Just last week, I saw an episode of Columbo in which the Lieutenant tricks a murderer into confessing by pretending to arrest the killer’s son and charge him with the murder. The episode is unclear as to whether or not Columbo did this with the cooperation of the son; I don’t think he did, and if this is the case, did he, like our friend in L&O, cross the line? Possibly, although I don’t think it’s quite the same magnitude of lie (which I’ll discuss in the next paragraph) – but in any event, Columbo does something interesting after the real killer confesses. He apologizes to him for having arrested his son, and assures him his son will be released shortly. That tells me that while Columbo may have felt he had to stage this charade in order to get the killer to confess, he didn’t feel particularly good about having done it. In other words, he showed not glee, but remorse.

That leads me to the final way in which this is measured: the moral equation. Legally, the L&O cop is probably in the clear, ethically his actions are dubious at best, but what about morally? Is a lie ever justified? Aquinas thought not; in the Summa, he wrote that "Therefore it is not lawful to tell a lie in order to deliver another from any danger whatever. Nevertheless it is lawful to hide the truth prudently, by keeping it back, as [St.] Augustine says"(In other words, as Mr. Spock once said in response to an accusation that he’d told a lie, something Vulcans are supposed to be unable to do, “I did not lie. I merely withheld a portion of the truth.”)

In discussing whether or not one can ever justify the lie, a Catholic theologian said the following:

It would satisfy a well-formed conscience, I think, to permit the speaking of falsehood when it is the only means we can think of to prevent someone from committing an immoral act. But if so, it is hard to reach such a conclusion only by denying the intention to deceive. There must be something more than that, for we could also say that when we lied to our boss last Wednesday, our intention was not to deceive but to save our skin. Clearly this is just one more possibility for exploration, and so far all the possibilities in history have not led to a formal doctrinal development to settle the matter. It remains the case that, despite our instincts, we don’t quite know how to justify deceiving our proverbial thugs, or telling jokes that involve deception, or doing undercover police work, or engaging in military counter-intelligence activities during wartime. [Emphasis added.]

Let’s look also at the first part of that quote, the discussion of permitting a lie in order to prevent someone from committing an immoral act. The classic example of this is the World War II German who lies to the Gestapo, telling them there are no Jews in the house, when in fact there’s an entire family hiding in the attic. It’s a lie, yes, but one can persuasively argue that the Gestapo officers aren’t entitled to the truth, that they have no right to ask the question in the first place since their purpose is to gather information in order to capture Jews and execute them, an objectively evil act.

You could argue, as the cop undoubtedly would, that he did what he had to do in order to make the arrest – that he did it on order to prevent a future immoral act – but that’s just convenient. What if, for instance, she hadn’t turned on her boyfriend and led the cops to him? What if the combination of a criminal career and the despair of finding out she had AIDS had led her to, say, commit suicide? Or if she’d decided to get even with her boyfriend by killing him first, and then committing suicide? Or blowing up the room, which not only would have killed the two of them but also their partners in crime? Would the cop have had any remorse about that, about his lie having been responsible for the deaths of one, two, three people? Based on what we see of him, we have to doubt it.

I think what troubles me so much about this the lie told by the L&O cop is that it’s dealing with something incredibly personal – telling someone they’ve contracted a terminal disease. That kind of lie strikes me as so intimate; regardless of what that person might have been done, the liar is robbing them of their human dignity by treating their health – and soul – in such a cavalier manner. It is, in fact, a subtle form of torture. Psychological rather than physical, but torture nonetheless. Think about it; what's the difference between telling someone they're going to die when they aren't, and faking an execution or waterboarding a suspect? In all three instances you're trying to convince them they're going to die unless they give you the information you want, when in reality you have no intention of killing them. Granted, physical torture can get out of hand, but so can psychological torture, if that person doesn't act the way you think they will.

At the same time, let’s not overlook the danger the cop is posing to his own soul with this kind of lie. Not only has he violated the human dignity to which everyone – even a crook or killer – is entitled, he’s also scarred his own human dignity. It’s the kind of act that causes someone to say, “C’mon, you’re better than this.” And this last point is an important one, because it cuts to the heart of what it's all about - the responsibility that a person assumes because of their actions. It's why Columbo's showing remorse is crucial. There's no evidence that our L&O cop feels any qualms about what he's done, but were he to discuss it with a priest, for instance, there's every chance he'd be told something similar to what we've discussed here, that his actions carry with them profound moral consequences. Perhaps he hadn't considered them when he told the lie, but now that it's been brought to his attention, he's going to have to change the way he thinks in the future. Can he understand this - can he understand that being a detective and trying to track down and punish the guilty does not give him carte blanche to do whatever he feels is necessary. Now, can he continue to do his job under those circumstances? Can he remain an effective detective without manipulating morality in order to do it?

If the answer to that is "no," then he has only one choice: give up his job. Because ultimately the state of his soul, and the souls of those with whom he comes into contact, is more important.

◊ ◊ ◊

Now, I realize I've gotten kind of far afield of what this program was all about. We've taken a leap from Dick Wolf to St. Thomas Aquinas, and that isn't an easy thing to do. There's a point I've made over and over again, though, and I'm going to make it again: when we see television programs portray law enforcement officials acting in a particular way, and justify that behavior in the name of fighting crime, or combating terrorism, or defending national interests, then we are being conditioned to accept that behavior as a necessary aspect of modern law enforcement. I'm not saying we consciously mimic the way people on television act, but certainly it can influence our thinking, the way we see things, and ultimately our desire to rationalize it.

It's the old story of the frog and the boiling water, and it will be repeated to us again and again until we've accepted it, until we've bought into the idea that only the guilty have reason to worry, that such tactics will never be used against the innocent. And of course before we know it, we as a people have given up a fundamental piece of our freedom, and those sworn to protect us have given up a fundamental part of their humanity.

By presenting this kind of thinking in an uncritical, unchallenged way, we wind up encouraging it. Before long, we'll accept "lying for justice," and might even find ourselves doing it. And when that happens, then we'll know that the Criminal Intent in Law & Order refers not only to the bad guys, but the good guys as well.

Around the dial

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Another prime week in the classic television blogosphere, and some very things in store for those who click on the links. I can't promise you'll like them, because I have no control over your behavior, but hopefully I can influence you to check them out, with the intimation of my confidence that you'll be pleased with the finished product.

The Broadcasting Archives at the University of Maryland has a copy of a great ad from WICU in Erie, Pennsylvania, boasting the four networks from which the station can pick and choose its programming. Who needs one affiliation, when you can get the best of all worlds?

Comfort TV reviews the career of Gordon Jump, whom you'd recognize anywhere based on his many character appearances, but whom you'll always remember for the infamous turkey drop episode of WKRP.

Cult TV Blog looks at "The Desperate People," an episode from Francis Durbridge Presents, a thriller anthology series of the 1960s. In addition to a nice shout-out to yours truly, it's a wonderful description of how a program can capture so well the era in which it was made - one of the great sidelights to classic TV viewing.

British TV Detectives has a review of Chasing Shadows, a series from 2014. It's another one I haven't heard of before, but it co-stars Alex Kingston, whom I've liked since the movie Croupier, and who was so good in her guest appearances on Doctor Who.

A quick rundown of episode reviews:
Television Obscurities reviews the 1969 book The Only Complete Guide to TV 70, written by Dave Kaufman, a nice rundown of what to expect in the new season, including series, specials, sports, stars, and movies!

And of course there's my own essay for the week; if you haven't read it yet, it's a complex look at how television looks at lies told in the pursuit of criminal justice, and whether or not it can be justified.

That should cover this week, and I'll try to do my part to live up to these pieces with one of my own tomorrow. I trust I'll see you then, at least metaphorically.

This week in TV Guide: November 15, 1969

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A funny thing happened on the way to television's coverage of the second manned lunar landing. The funny thing involved an astronaut, Pete Conrad; a camera lens; and the sun. We can all laugh about it now if we choose, but back then nobody was laughing at the funny thing that wasn't really funny.

The lunar module Intrepid touched down early Wednesday morning, and the moon walk was scheduled for about 5:00 a.m. Minneapolis time. I'd gotten up much earlier than I usual, just to see the beginning of the walk, even though I'd have to leave for school before it was over. What I got to see that morning - what anybody got to see - was Conrad, the mission commander, walk down the ladder to the surface of the moon. Unlike Apollo 11, this broadcast was in color (from the moon!), and it promised to be spectacular. Conrad went to set up the camera, and as he did so it accidentally pointed at the sun. There was a flash, a brief flicker of an image, and then about two-thirds of the picture went black. It was still that way by the time I had to head for school, and despite all their efforts, it appeared it was going to be hard to get that camera to work.

As it was, NASA never was able to do anything about the lens - it was destroyed, and that was all anyone got to see of the famed second moon walk. There's no reason not to replay those memorable moments, though, so here's a look at Conrad descending to the moon's surface, followed by the unfortunate incident with Conrad, the camera, and the sun.



I had completely forgotten how absolutely stunning the color video of Conrad was, in comparison to the relatively ghostly images we'd seen of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldren. Of course, the mind boggles at what it would be like today, with HD video of astronauts walking on the moon. But it's all relative.

That little glimpse of the moon's surface was the last we'd see for awhile; Apollo 13, of course, never got to the moon, but had to loop around and head back to earth after the explosion. It wasn't until Apollo 14, in February 1971, before we'd see men walk again on the moon. By December 1972, the moon landings were over, and they have yet to resume. Ah, it was something while it lasted, though.

I feel sorry for those of you too young to have been around when the Apollo program was riding high. You take it all for granted nowadays - back then, we lived through it. What a time it was!

◊ ◊ ◊

Throughout the 60s and early 70s, TV Guide's reviews were written by the witty and acerbic Cleveland Amory. Whenever we get the chance, we'll look at Cleve's latest take on the series of the era. 

If Doris Day can have her own show, you may wonder, why not Debbie Reynolds? Well, Cleveland Amory can tell you why not Debbie Reynolds.

It's not that Debs is bad at what she does - she's very good at it, in fact, displaying "a tremendous amount of drive and spirit and bounce and effervescence and just about any other quality you can name." But, he points out, "these are not necessarily the qualities you want to see coming at you - especially so soon after dinner." Especially not in a sitcom - The Debbie Reynolds Show - that has such a derivative sit to it. Debbie plays the wife of a sportswriter; they live next door to her sister, who's married to his best friend. Debbie's 11-year-old nephew edits the neighborhood gossip rag. "Can you bear it? Please do. Because if you can, you can also bear with the plots," which, Amory writes, appear to be "thought up on the basis of how many different costumes they permit Miss Reynolds to wear."

The maddening thing, he says, is that there's a funny show somewhere here, and Debbie has what it takes to pull off the satire of the housewife who wants to be more. "But it's all so overdone, so overproduced and overacted, that it's a crashing overbore." He has kind words for most of the cast, especially Tom Bosley as Debbie's brother-in-law, but Patricia Smith, playing her sister, is far too broad, as are most of the guest stars. However, the best part of each show comes at the end, when "Miss Reynolds comes out dressed to the nines to say goodnight. We always look forward to that."

◊ ◊ ◊

Yet another week without "Sullivan vs. The Palace." Ed's holding up his end of the deal, with a spectacular guest list including Carol Lawrence, Douglas Fairbanks, ballet dancers Edward Villella and Patricia McBride, Jack Carter, Moms Mabley, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Karen Wyman. I'll say in advance that if The Hollywood Palace had been able to top that, it would have been a hell of a show.

However, ABC has chosen to preempt Palace for a rare prime-time college football matchup (kickoff at 9:30 p.m.!), as Notre Dame travels to Atlanta to take on Georgia Tech. The Fighting Irish, led by star quarterback Joe Theismann, come into the game ranked #9 in the country, and don't disappoint, defeating Tech 38-20. It's a historic season for Notre Dame, the year they finally abandon their decades-long policy of not going to bowl games. Come January 1, they'll play #1 Texas in the Cotton Bowl, their first time bowling since the 1925 Rose Bowl. They lose that game 21-17, but beat Texas in a rematch the next year, and have seldom been out of the bowl picture since.

Tonight's game is on opposite the second of two time capsule episodes on CBS, both out of the Henning factory. First, on Green Acres (9:00 p.m. ET), "Hooterville's alarming population drop (from 68 to 46 in one year) has Oliver crusading to make the farm community more appealing to young people." That's followed by Petticoat Junction at 9:30, in which "Janet and deputy nurses Bobbie, Billie and Betty plan to inoculate everyone in the valley against flu. Then they encounter hard-nosed Jasper Tweedy, patriarch of a large un-inoculated brood." Either of these stories could easily be told today, with only updates to reflect the change in era. Small rural areas still struggle with dwindling populations, still fight to find ways of keeping young people from moving away; and vaccinations have become increasingly controversial over the past few years, although I suspect that as far as opponents go, Jasper Tweedy doesn't cut nearly as fine a figure as Jenny McCarthy.

CBS wraps up the night with the Miss Teenage America contest live from Fort Worth. It's won by Miss Odessa, Texas, Debbie Paton. What's interesting is that the television personalities and judges are probably better known than the winner; the hosts are Dick Clark and former Miss America Marilyn Van Derbur, and the judges include former contestant and current Model of the Year Cybill Shepherd. You might think that Miss Teenage America sounds familiar, but it isn't around anymore, having crowned its final queen in 1997. In that case, you're probably thinking of Miss Teen USA, even though that one hasn't been on TV for years.

◊ ◊ ◊

The Doan Report tells us about ABC's massive shakeup in its schedule, cancelling five series and moving others around. The five facing the ax are mostly unforgettable; Mr. Deeds Goes to Town, a failed attempt by Monte Markham to revive the classic Gary Cooper movie; The New People, a 45-minute version of Lost without the metaphysical existentialism, which was coupled in a 90-minute time slot with The Music Scene, a successor to Hullabaloo that failed despite a plethora of big-name acts; and two long-running series - The Hollywood Palace and The Dating Game. Nanny and the Professor, The Johnny Cash Show, The Englebert Humperdinck Show, and The Pat Paulson Half-a-Comedy Hour are among the newbies, and every night except Sunday and Tuesday will see schedule changes.

Also, there's speculation that David Brinkley might become a solo when Chet Huntley retires from The Huntley-Brinkley Report next year. And indeed, the network does turn to a solo anchor system upon Huntley's adieu, sort of: NBC Nightly News presents a rotating system with Brinkley, John Chancellor, and Frank McGee taking their turns a week at a time. Eventually, Chancellor takes the top spot, with McGee becoming host of Today, and Brinkley doing commentaries until the network calls him back to team with Chancellor. None of it works, and CBS's Walter Cronkite remains on the top spot.

◊ ◊ ◊

What does the rest of the week have to offer?

On Saturday, NBC has some fun at CBS's expense on Saturday Night at the Movies, with the network television premiere of the 1965 movie The Fortune Cookie, starring Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon. Lemmon plays a cameraman for CBS, who's injured while covering an NFL game, and is talked by his shyster brother-in-law Matthau into suing CBS, the Cleveland Browns, and Municipal Stadium. Throw in a greedy wife, suspicious insurance company, and devious private investigator, and you're in for what Judith Crist calls "vicious fun," for which Matthau wins an Academy Award.

Current events rear its ugly head on Sunday's Issues and Answers on ABC, with Senate Minority Leader Hugh Scott (R-PA) facing the inevitable questions on Vietnam and the latest calls for a cease fire, and President Nixon's recent nomination of Clement Haynesworth to the Supreme Court. Meanwhile, CBS's Look Up and Live asks the question "What's Happened to the Catholic Mass?", a question people still ask today, as the pews grow more and more empty. "[A] change from Latin to English, and the experimental [!] use of jazz and rock" might have something to do with that. Cleanse your palate by watching ABC's broadcast of the movie The Flight of the Phoenix later that night. It stars Jimmy Stewart in a role that's anything but the bumbling, sly charmer you're used to seeing from him.

Here's something you don't seen in Minnesota: the programming notice beginning Monday and running for the rest of the week, that independent station WNYC will have coverage of the United Nations General Assembly if it's in session. It's kind of like watching C-SPAN with an international accent, and without taking Novocaine beforehand.

On Tuesday, we see both sides of the coin that is modern America, going head-to-head at 8:30 ET. On CBS, it's Red Skelton, a stalwart on the network since 1951, who welcomes guests Lou Rawls and George Gobel. On ABC, it's the world television premiere* of The Ballad of Andy Crocker, starring Lee Majors, Agnes Moorhead, Joey Heatherton, and Pat Hingle, in what has to be one of the first movies to tell the story of the difficulties facing returning Vietnam veterans. For Majors' character Crocker, "no brass bands welcome him to his Texas home town. His girl friend has been forced into a marriage by her shrewish mother, the small business he left behind has been ruined by mismanagement and friends capable of more than sympathy are in short supply. It's written by Stuart Margolin, whom we probably know better as Angel in The Rockford Files.

*In other words, a made-for-TV movie.

Songwriter Burt Bacharach, whose music is "appealing to both sides of the generation gap," hosts Wednesday's Kraft Music Hall on NBC. (9:00 p.m.) Burt's guests, Lena Horne and Tony Bennett, sing some of his many hits ("I'll Never Fall in Love Again,""The Look of Love,""Alfie," and "San Jose," and ballet dancer Edward Villella dances to a couple more, "Promises, Promises," and "This Guy's in Love with You."

On Thursday, Tom Jones (9:00 p.m., ABC) looks as if he's taken a wrong turn somewhere and wound up in Nashville instead of Hollywood; his guests are Johnny and June Carter Cash, Minnie Pearl, and Jeannie C. Riley. I really dig the picture of Tom and Johnny wearing paisley neckerchiefs. If country ain't your thaing, I'd go with Dean Martin (10:00 p.m., NBC), who has Gordon MacRae, Dom DeLuise, Stanley Myron Handelman, Tommy Tune, and Dean's daughter Gail. If you want to stay up later, catch Johnny Carson during one of his sojurns in Hollywood before he moved The Tonight Show there permanently; he welcomes Charlton Heston, Goldie Hawn, Jane Powell, Fernando Lamas and George Chakiris.

Friday ends the week with an intriguing Hallmark Hall of Fame: "The File on Devlin," (NBC, 8:30 p.m.) a suspense drama with Dame Judith Anderson, Elizabeth Ashley, and David McCallum as, respectively, the wife, daughter, and biographer of Laurence Devlin, an author, journalist, and Nobel Prize winner. He also happened to be an occasional spy for the British government, and now he's disappeared. Has he defected, has he been kidnapped, or has something else happened? NBC follows up on that with George C. Scott in a rare comedic appearance as the star of "Mirror, Mirror, Off the Wall," on the occasional anthology series On Stage. Scott plays a failing author named Max Maxwell who becomes a sensation when he writes a dirty book under the pseudonym N.Y. Rome. The trouble begins when Rome's personality lets it be known he's tired of being kept in the background, and attempts to take over Max completely.

A pretty good way to end the week - you might say we're over the moon about it. Literally.

What's on TV? Friday, November 21, 1969

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This week we travel to New York City for our pre-Thanksgiving listings. There were listings from a few other channels in New Jersey and Connecticut, but we're sticking with New York, New York. After all, if you can make it there, you can make it anywhere, right?

A note on the programs: by now, almost everything is in color, except for old movies and series from the '50s and '60s.  TV Guide, however, has yet to catch up with this, and its preferred methodology is still to let you know which programs are in color. That will be changed in the not-too-distant future but I'm not waiting until then, so if you happen to own an issue from this era, you'll see that I've decided to let you know only if a program is in B&W.


WCBS, Channel 2 (CBS)

Morning


06:30a
Sunrise Semester (Geology)

07:00a
CBS Morning News with Joseph Benti

08:00a
Captain Kangaroo (guests the Borjevas)

09:00a
Leave it to Beaver (B&W)

09:30a
Donna Reed (B&W)

10:00a
The Lucy Show

10:30a
The Beverly Hillbillies (B&W)

11:00a
Andy Griffith

11:30a
Love of Life

Afternoon


12:00p
Where the Heart Is

12:25p
CBS News (Douglas Edwards)

12:30p
Search for Tomorrow

01:00p
The Galloping Gourmet

01:30p
As the World Turns

02:00p
Love is a Many-Splendored Thing

02:30p
The Guiding Light

03:00p
The Secret Storm

03:30p
The Edge of Night

04:00p
Gomer Pyle, USMC

04:30p
Mike Douglas (co-host Shelley Berman, guests Sen. Howard Baker, the Serendipity Singers)

Evening


06:00p
News (Jim Jensen)

07:00p
CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite

07:30p
Get Smart

08:00p
The Good Guys

08:30p
Hogan’s Heroes

09:00p
CBS Friday Night Movies – “Fanny”

11:30p
News (Bob Young)

12:00a
Merv Griffin (guests Jennie’s Daughters)

01:30a
News (local)

01:40a
Movie – “Criss Cross” (B&W)

03:20a
Movie – “The Gift of Love”

Senator Howard Baker of Tennessee, who guests on Mike Douglas' show, was the son-in-law of Everett Dirksen, the famed U.S. Senator from Illinois, who had been Senate Minority Leader until his death two months ago, in September. Baker barely lost the contest to replace Dirksen as Minority Leader to Hugh Scott, whom I mentioned on Saturday.


WNBC, Channel 4 (NBC)

Morning


06:30a
Education Exchange

07:00a
Today

09:00a
For Women Only

09:30a
PDQ (guests Ruta Lee, Scoey Mitchell, Bill Bixby)

10:00a
It Takes Two (guests Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Campanella, Mr. & Mrs. Greg Morris, Kaye Ballard and Roger C. Carmel)   

10:25a
NBC News (Nancy Dickerson)

10:30a
Concentration

11:00a
Sale of the Century

11:30a
The Hollywood Squares (guests Jim Backus, Sammy Davis Jr., Betty Grable, Lloyd Haynes, Ruta Lee, Alan Sues, Wally Cox, Abby Dalton, Charley Weaver)

Afternoon


12:00p
Jeopardy

12:30p
Name Droppers (guests Jim Backus, Polly Bergen, Robert Brown)

12:55p
NBC News (Floyd Kalber)

01:00p
It’s Your Bet

01:30p
You’re Putting Me On (guests Peggy Cass, Bill Cullen, Joan Fontaine, Corbett Monica, Alejandro Rey, Brenda Vaccaro)

02:00p
Days of Our Lives

02:30p
The Doctors

03:00p
Another World

03:30p
Bright Promise

04:00p
Letters to Laugh-In (guests Jack Carter, Teresa Graves, Jill St. John, Alan Sues)

04:25p
NBC News (Floyd Kalber)

04:30p
Movie – “Mary Mary” (part 2)

Evening


06:00p
News (Lew Wood)

07:00p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report

07:30p
The High Chaparral

10:00p
On Stage (special)

11:00p
News (Jim Hartz)

11:10p
Weather (Dr. Frank Field)

11:15p
News (Jim Hartz)

11:25p
Sports (Kyle Rote)

11:30p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (guests Agnes Moorehead, Wayne Cochran, Jack Haley Jr.)

01:00a
News (Jim Collins)

01:15a
Movie – “The Snake Pit” (B&W)

I'm always impressed with the local talent on the New York network affiliates; so many of them are either future network stars, or already appear on the network. Look at WNBC's 11 p.m. news - Jim Hartz, who will succeed Frank McGee as host of Today, is the news anchor; Dr. Frank Field, who frequently appeared on Today as the network meteorologist, gives the weather; and former New York Giants great Kyle Rote, who also provides color on AFL games on Sunday, does the sports. Not bad.


WNEW, Channel 5 (Ind.)

Morning


07:15a
Glenn Swengros

07:30a
The Alvin Show

08:00a
Prince Planet (B&W)

08:30a
Marine Boy

09:00a
Pixanne

10:00a
Movie – “The Mad Doctor” (B&W)

Afternoon


12:00p
Movie – “Young Tom Edison” (B&W)

01:45p
Fran Lee

02:00p
The Naked Truth

02:30p
Pay Cards!

03:00p
Casper the Friendly Ghost

03:30p
The Flintstones

04:00p
Wonderama

05:00p
My Favorite Martian (B&W)

05:30p
McHale’s Navy (B&W)

Evening


06:00p
Lost in Space

07:00p
I Love Lucy

07:30p
Truth or Consequences

08:00p
To Tell the Truth (panelists Orson Bean, Peggy Cass, Bill Cullen, Betsy Palmer)

08:30p
David Frost (guests Harold Robbins, Dina Merrill, Julie Harris, Frank Gorshin)

10:00p
News (Bill Jorgensen)

11:00p
Peyton Place (B&W)

11:30p
Movie – “San Antonio”

01:40a
Reel Camp (B&W)

WNEW first went on the air in 1944 as WABD, the DuMont affiliate in New York. It remained WNEW until 1986, when it became a Fox affiliate and changed its call letters. It's a sister station to WOR - or, as it's known today, WWOR.


WABC, Channel 7 (ABC)

Morning


07:00a
News (Tom Dunn)  

07:05a
Ed Nelson

08:30a
Girl Talk (guests the Simon Sisters)

09:00a
Movie – “South of Tana River” (B&W)

11:00a
The Anniversary Game

11:30a
The Movie Game (celebrities Carol Lynley, Agnes Moorehead, Louis Nye, Rudy Vallee)

Afternoon


12:00p
Bewitched

12:30p
That Girl

01:00p
Dream House

01:30p
Let’s Make a Deal

02:00p
The Newlywed Game

02:30p
The Dating Game

03:00p
General Hospital

03:30p
One Life to Live

04:00p
Dark Shadows

04:30p
Movie – “The Pleasure Seekers”

Evening


06:00p
News (Roger Grimsby)

07:00p
ABC Evening News with Frank Reynolds and Howard K. Smith

07:30p
Let’s Make a Deal

08:00p
The Brady Bunch

08:30p
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town

09:00p
Here Come the Brides

10:00p
Jimmy Durante Presents the Lennon Sisters (guests Kate Smith, louis Nye, Rosey Grier)

11:00p
News (Roger Grimsby)   

11:25p
Weather (Tex Antoine)

11:30p
Joey Bishop (guest Cyril Ritchard)

01:00a
Movie – “Who Are You, Mr. Sorge?” (B&W)

Jimmy Durante Presents the Lennon Sisters will move into the spot vacated by The Hollywood Palace when the latter is cancelled in February. The combination was not a good idea.


WOR, Channel 9 (Ind.)

Morning


07:25a
News and Weather (local)

07:30a
Daphne’s Castle

09:00a
Romper Room

10:30a
What’s My Line? (panelists Bennett Cerf, Arlene Francis, Anita Gillette, Soupy Sales)

11:00a
Journey to Adventure

11:30a
Movie – “The Enchanted Cottage” (B&W)

Afternoon


12:50p
Fashions in Sewing

01:00p
Stock Market

03:30p
Circus, Circus, Circus

04:30p
Movie – “The Blob”

Evening


06:00p
Gilligan’s Island

06:30p
Flipper

07:00p
Dick Van Dyke (B&W)

07:30p
Della Reese (guests Arthur Prysock, Molly Bee, Betty Walker)

08:30p
Joe Namath (guests Sugar Ray Robinson, Rocky Graziano)

09:00p
NBA Basketball – Knicks vs. 76ers (tape delay)

11:00p
Divorce Court

11:30p
Movie – “Vera Cruz”

01:30a
Joe Franklin

02:30a
News and Weather (local) (B&W)

I'm not entirely sure why the Knicks-Sixers game is being shown on a one-hour tape delay. I could understand it more if it were being played in New York, but it's in Philadelphia. Perhaps there was an ongoing relationship with the Knicks radio network, that because of sponsorship they got a one-hour head start. Oh well, it sounds convincing enough to me...


WPIX, Channel 11 (Ind.)

Morning


07:15a
News (Marc Howard)

07:30a
TV High School (B&W)

08:00a
The Little Rascals (B&W)

08:30a
Cartoons

09:00a
Krazy Kat

09:30a
Jack LaLanne

10:00a
David Wade

10:30a
Everywoman   

10:55a
News (local)

11:00a
The Millionaire (B&W)

11:30a
Gumby

Afternoon


12:00p
Underdog

12:30p
Rocky and His Friends

01:00p
The Little Rascals

01:30p
Continental Miniatures

02:00p
Steve Allen (guests Mort Sahl, John Gary, Jerry Shane)

03:00p
Speed Racer

03:30p
Superman

04:00p
The Addams Family (B&W)

04:30p
Skippy

05:00p
Abbott and Costello (B&W)

05:30p
The Munsters (B&W)

Evening


06:00p
Batman

06:30p
Star Trek

07:30p
Beat the Clock (guest Hugh O’Brian)

08:00p
He Said! She Said!

08:30p
Felony Squad

09:00p
Ben Casey (B&W)

10:00p
News (Lee Nelson)

11:00p
Here’s Barbara

11:30p
Perry Mason (B&W)

12:30a
Phil Donahue

01:00a
The Honeymooners (B&W)

I don't remember the original Beat the Clock in the '50s, but I do recall this version, which aired in syndication and featured a celebrity guest. I wouldn't have thought of Hugh O'Brian as one of the celebrities, though. I suppose needing work makes a man do strange things.


WNDT, Channel 13 (NET)

Morning


08:25a
Classroom (B&W)

11:30a
Sesame Street

Afternoon


12:30p
Classroom

04:30p
Sesame Street

05:30p
Misterogers

Evening


06:00p
What’s New (B&W)

06:30p
Astronomy (B&W)

07:00p
En Francais (B&W)

07:30p
New Jersey Speaks (B&W)

08:00p
Book Beat (guest George Thayer, “The War Business”

08:30p
NET Playhouse

10:00p
Newsfront (B&W)

The subject of NET Playhouse is the famed William Jennings Bryan, three-time nominee for the presidency (he lost all three times), giver of one of the most famous political speeches of all time, Secretary of State, and, at the end of his life, a major participant in the Scopes Monkey Trial. James Broderick plays Bryan in this play, with Roy Scheider as Clarence Darrow. I wonder how they chose to portray Bryan in this production - as a statesman, or as a fool?


WNYC, Channel 31 (Ind.)

Morning


10:00a
Staff Meeting

11:00a
Film

11:30a
Community Action

Afternoon


12:00p
Film

01:00p
Interlude

03:00p
All About TV

04:00p
Around the Clock

04:30p
Navy Film

05:00p
Films from France

05:30p
Health Education

Evening


06:00p
Staten Island Today

06:30p
News (Paul Manacher)  

06:45p
Film

07:00p
Dramatic Experience (B&W)

07:30p
Brooklyn College (B&W)

08:00p
American History (B&W)

09:00p
Sight and Sound

09:30p
News (Herbert Boland)   

09:45p
Film

10:00p
Your Right to Say It

10:30p
Astronomy

WNYC is not an educational station, but I have to say that its schedule certainly looks like one.

Robert Vaughn, R.I.P.

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Robert Vaughn was made to play villains, so much so that even his good guys were smarmy. I mean, look at Napoleon Solo. When The Man from U.N.C.L.E. first debuted, Vaughn was clearly the star of the show - remember, it's original title was to be Solo - and there was something indelibly smug and superior about him. Yes, one could say that Sean Connery's James Bond had the same aura of superiority about him, but in Connery's case it was leavened by a certain self-awareness, the knowledge - even when the Bond movies were more serious than they became - that you couldn't really take it all that seriously. U.N.C.L.E., though, was always about the fantastic (even when it was more serious than it became), but you couldn't really tell it by looking at Napoleon Solo.* But then something happened: the Russian agent, Illya Kuryakin (David McCallum), who was intended to be little more than a bit part, struck a nerve with the TV audience - especially the young female segment - who thought Illya deserved a much bigger role. That may well have been the best thing to happen to Napoleon Solo.

*A fact of which you're probably all aware: the name Napoleon Solo came from the Bond story Goldfinger, and was gifted to the show by Ian Fleming, who was originally to have played a role in the development of the series. It was one of his two contributions, the other being the name "April Dancer" - which, of course, became Stefanie Powers' character in The Girl from U.N.C.L.E.

It is something of a testament to the entire U.N.C.L.E. crew - Vaughn, McCallum, the producers, directors and writers - that they rode with the changes brought by making McCallum's character a co-equal, and in so doing made The Man from U.N.C.L.E. a far better show, and Solo a far better character. The addition of Kuryakin brought another side to Solo, the humor that rounded the edges of his smug character, in time even producing a self-deprecating side that would never have been apparent otherwise. Perhaps it was the writing, perhaps it was the way McCallum and Vaughn seemed to click from the beginning, but from this came the Napoleon Solo that we all know and love. And yet -

You remember the smarmy, politically ambitious Walter Chalmers from Bullitt, for example. Frank Flaherty in Washington: Behind Closed Doors. His appearances in Columbo. That kind of character seems to fit Vaughn to a tee. Even in The Protectors, where as Harry Rule he again plays a good guy, there's still something smarmy and smug about him.*

*A quality he displayed off-screen as well, according to at least one source working on the series.

But Vaughn could turn that to his advantage as well, whether parodying his image, as he would many times (one could argue that his occasional appearances with Conan O'Brian were just that), or as in The Magnificent Seven, where his character Lee isn't particularly likable, but becomes suddenly vulnerable - and accessible - when his secret fear is exposed, working to his (and our) advantage. In his Oscar-nominated role as Chet Gwynn in The Young Philadelphians, he's on trial for murder, a jam from which only Paul Newman can rescue him. And when the smugness was in the background, then you could admire the urbanity and charm that was so often on display, and for which he was so well known. Most of all, no matter what role he was playing, he was seldom ever out of work - an extremely valuable knack when you're an actor.

Off-screen, he could display the same tendencies. He comes off as incredibly pretentious and self-important in a TV Guide profile where he talks about his close friendship with Robert Kennedy - adopting similar mannerisms to "Bobby" and decorating his office in the same style. I'll say this for him though; he was a true believer, one who wasn't afraid to get his hands dirty in the political realm. He never would have been satisfied with making grandiose proclamations on Twitter. (I wonder how he felt after this election?) Other stories talk about him being difficult to work with, although Hollywood is one of those towns where everyone has an ax to grind.

If this all sounds somewhat negative, I don't mean it to be, because you can't be the star of a TV series I like a lot without earning some goodwill. And the truth of the matter is that I liked Robert Vaughn. It was easy enough when he played a character with likable tendencies, but even when he didn't, I could admire his considerable skill as an actor. I can't miss his living presence, because I didn't know him; I can't be too sorry that he won't appear in any new work, although he was still busy in this decade. But I can be grateful that so much of his work is preserved, such as The Man from U.N.C.L.E. - where he was never better than when he wasn't flying solo.

Around the dial

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First off this week, a note of shameless self-promotion: with the holidays coming, my novel The Collaborator would make a great gift for that friend or loved one who enjoys combining religion and mystery. Here are a couple of reviews I'm linking to for the first time, as well as an interview I did earlier in the year.

And now back to our regularly-scheduled programming...

At the mystery blog Criminal Element, a writer says it's time for us to admit that The Sopranos wasn't really all that great.

Lincoln X-ray Ida looks at an Adam-12 episode with an appropriate title for our time, reminding us that we are "Citizens All."

We may be counting down to Christmas, but television's already there! Joanna of Christmas TV History tells us where to find our favorite Yuletide movies and shows, and the retro schedule on getTV is especially good news.

One of the year's biggest classic DVD releases was that of season one of The Defenders, and Classic Film and TV Cafe runs down the five best episodes of that first season.

In honor of Veterans Day last Friday, The Twilight Zone Vortex gives us a rundown of the fabled series' war episodes.

Right now I'm putting the finishing touches on my new novel, The Car, so naturally I'd be drawn to Realweegiemidget's top five movies and TV shows where the car's the star.

Remember the View-Master? I do, and so does Comfort TV, where David shares the TV shows that were big hits when viewed through the 3-D viewer.

Cult TV Blog has some observations on a couple of British kids' shows from the '70s: The Owl Service and The Flockton Flyer. I love his phrase about "my jaundiced meanderings," which has to be why we get along so well!

Enjoy the end of your week; see you back here tomorrow!

This week in TV Guide: November 19, 1966

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This week's issue is dedicated to my friend Carol Ford, who wrote that fine biography of Bob Crane that I talk about periodically. I'm sure Carol must have seen this copy of TV Guide, with Bob and Robert Clary of Hogan's Heroes on the cover, even though the feature story inside isn't on Crane.

Instead, it tells the amazing story of "Robert Clary, A-5714." That was his number in Buchenwald, one of the four concentration camps where he spent a good chunk of World War II, subsisting on "one cup of watery soup each midday and one chunk of bread each night," along with any food he might be able to scavenge from the trash. Each day, Clary recalls, he and his fellow prisoners would return from hard labor at the war factories, after which they would stand "at attention for three hours to witness the hanging of some poor wretch who maybe stole a piece of garbage."

With memories like these, one wonders why Clary would sign up for Hogan's Heroes, even if it is just a job. To the critics who ream the show for being in bad taste, Clary reminds them that Hogan takes place not in a concentration camp, but in a POW camp, "and that's a world of difference. You never heard of a prisoner of war being gassed or hanged. Whereas we were not even human beings." In fact, of the 12 people in Clary's family who'd been sent to camps, including his parents, "I was the only one to come back alive." And yet, he says, "I don't live in the past. I didn't suffer as much as a lot of people."

After the war, his remarkable journey took him back to France as an entertainer, and then to America following his hit single, "Put Your Shoes On, Lucy." He became a favorite in supper clubs, added acting to his resume, and now, at 40, lives in Los Angeles where he is happily married to Natalie, the daughter of the entertainer Eddie Cantor. Yes, life has been very bad to Robert Clary. Life has also been very good to Robert Clary. And though he will never forget the bad times, he chooses always to remember the good times.

◊ ◊ ◊

During the 60s, the Ed Sullivan Show and The Hollywood Palace were the premiere variety shows on television. Whenever they appear in TV Guide together, we'll match them up and see who has the best lineup..

Sullivan: The rock 'n' rolling Dave Clark Five; singers Barbara McNair and Bobby Vinton; Metropolitan Opera tenor Franco Corelli; comics Henny Youngman, Nancy Walker and Charles Nelson Reilly; dancer-chorergrapher Peter Gennaro; and Burger's animal act.

Palace: Host Vincent Edwards introduces dancer-singer Juliet Prowse, pianist Peter Nero, the comedy duo of Dan Rowan and Dick Martin, comic Norm Crosby, the rock 'n' rolling Standells, the acrobatic Ghezzi brothers, and Otto and Anna, balancing act.

It's not that the Palace lineup is bad this week; it's just kind of thin. As a singer, Vince Edwards makes a good doctor; if he's your headliner, you're in a spot of trouble - particularly if you're going up against Sullivan's trio of Barbara McNair, Bobby Vinton, and Franco Corelli. Rowan and Martin are good, as is Norm Crosby (if you're in the right mood), but again I don't think they're any better than Henny Youngman (at his best), Nancy Walker and Charles Nelson Reilly. Overall, this week has to go to Sullivan in a clear decision.

◊ ◊ ◊

Throughout the 60s and early 70s, TV Guide's reviews were written by the witty and acerbic Cleveland Amory. Whenever we get the chance, we'll look at Cleve's latest take on the series of the era. 

I've read this week's review of The Monkees twice now, and I'm still not quite sure what Cleveland Amory thinks of them. My wife thinks he doesn't think much of them. And indeed, he spends almost half of his column talking not about The Monkees, but their predecessors, The Beatles. His story about how The Beatles begat The Monkees is very funny - funnier, one thinks, than he thinks The Monkees is. I think, that is.

If pressed, though, I'd say that Amory views The Monkees as harmless, if a bit stupid. "The episodes are so fast-paced that even when they're over-milking the kind of comedy you outgrew in kindergarten, by the time you get mad with them they're on to something else." As for their music, which makes up a good portion of each episode, "once you've heard them sing 'Last Train to Clarksville,' with those beautiful lyrics - both of them - if you're a girl you'll just have to mother them, and if you're a boy. . .well, lots of luck."

Looking at it from today's perspective, I think he undersells the pre-Fab Four a bit; when Davy Jones died a few years ago, there was an outpouring of sadness and affection that very few celebrities from that era get if they haven't made some kind of impact on their audience. Their comedy was silly, in a subversive kind of way, and their songs hold up about as well today as they did then. No, although I was never a big fan of The Monkees, I think Cleve's being a little harsh. If we were to bring this show back today (updated, of course), on, say, Fox or the CW, viewers would probably see it as something new and fresh. Or maybe not. The point is, 50 years to the day from when this review was written, we're still talking about The Monkees, and that ain't bad; not bad at all.

◊ ◊ ◊

SOURCE ALL: HADLEY TV GUIDE COLLECTION
I might as well tell you now that Monday's TV listings are going to be from Thanksgiving Day, so we won't be discussing the holiday as much as we might, but there are still some things we won't want to miss. For instance, on ABC Saturday night Lawrence Welk and his Champagne Music Makers gear us up for Thanksgiving, with songs such as "Thank the Lord for This Thanksgiving Day,""Faith of Our Fathers," and "Bless This House." Monday night Perry Como hosts a pre-Thanksgiving edition of the Kraft Music Hall on NBC, with special guests Angela Lansbury and Bob Newhart. The Young Americans are also guests, but I think we'll just pass by them. It's worth noting, though, that it's not often that you find a show 50 years old where all the guest stars are still alive!

On Wednesday it's the return of CBS's Young People's Concert with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic. It's a good time to have this, on the night before a holiday. I watched these faithfully when I was young; part of Bernstein's genius is that they remain interesting today, no matter what your age. There's a lot to be said about Bernstein, from his flamboyance to his unorthodox lifestyle, and you can argue over whether or not he was overrated as a composer or a conductor, but he was a brilliant teacher, and I think that is the area in which history will adjudge him to have been at his best. For those who argue about the lack of music teaching in schools today, and if that's the reason classical music seems to be dying out, I have one suggestion: buy the boxed set of these shows on DVD, and show them to your classrooms. I can promise kids will learn a lot more than they're learning now, and at a fraction of the cost. Here's part one of the program; you can follow the links to parts two, three and four.


Thanksgiving also marks the beginning of the end of the college football season, and Saturday's doubleheader is a doozy, beginning with the Game of the Century: Notre Dame vs. Michigan State, to decide the #1 team in the country. I wrote about that game here, so I won't repeat myself other than to note that it begins at noon CT on ABC; nowadays a game like this would almost certainly be played in prime time. Of course, it was a little hard to do that in East Lansing in 1966, seeing as how the stadium didn't have lights. For viewers who had anything left after that draining epic, the second game, at 3:00 p.m., isn't bad either: USC vs. UCLA, with the Rose Bowl birth possibly at stake. I say possibly because even though UCLA wins, USC still goes to Pasadena. Explaining the politics of that decision would require a whole other story, probably at a whole other blog. Let's put it this way, though - neither game's a turkey.

And on the day after Thanksgiving, ABC continues its tradition of entertaining the kiddies with a day of Saturday cartoons - or maybe it's just starting it; I don't know, it always seemed to be on when I was growing up, and it was one of the highlights of the day after, along with looking through the Sears and Penney's toy catalogs. The Cartoon Festival runs from 10:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., and includes the animated Beatles, Bugs Bunny, Milton the Monster, Beany and Cecil, Magilla Gorilla, and Hoppity Hooper. Yes, those were the days.

◊ ◊ ◊

How about some industry speculation, via The Doan Report? NBC is apparently talking with Jerry Lewis about a variety show similar to that of his old partner, Dean Martin. This despite Jerry's spectacular flame-out with his big-bucks, two-hour series that flopped in 1963, making way for The Hollywood Palace. The show does indeed come off in 1967, but it only runs for two seasons. Still, better than the before.

That made-for-TV movie with Raymond Burr - you know, the one about the police detective who gets shot and goes sleuthing in a wheelchair - could well develop into a regular series; it's one of three pilots that Universal is making for NBC, and the speculation is right on - Ironside, like Jerry Lewis, will premiere in 1967, but it has a very successful eight season run, making Burr one of the few stars to have two long-running hits.

Two shows that won't be doing so well are the subject of speculation as to who stole from who. On January 9, CBS will premiere Mr. Terrific, a comedy about an ordinary man who becomes a superhero when he swallows a special pill. That will be immediately followed on NBC by Captain Nice, a comedy about an ordinary man who becomes a superhero when he swallows a special potion. One has a pill, the other a potion - obviously, not the same plots at all.

And then there's Charlie Chaplin, the silent film legend who's making noises about wanting to give television a shot - not in the form of a series, but some kind of special. The networks are a little uneasy, though; although Chaplin is a controversial figure for his liberal politics, which have resulted in his self-imposed exile from America, the nets are more concerned that any appearance might be construed as a plug for the upcoming A Countess From Hong Kong, which Chaplin directed and which stars Sophia Loren and Marlon Brando. It was a bomb in this country, but did moderately well in Europe. I don't think Chaplin ever did do that special, although I could be wrong; he finally returns to America in 1972 to accept an honorary Oscar. The protests that some expected never materialized.

◊ ◊ ◊

Finally, Thanksgiving has always been the start of the holiday season - or at least it was back then; today, it's probably Labor Day - and in case we need any reminders, we have two. The first is this ad for M&M's party cookies, because we know the party season is just around the corner!


That looks awfully good to me. And this does, as well - an ad for an Aurora slot-car racing set. I had one of these when I was a kid - a couple to be precise, one in this HO scale, and an earlier one in 1/32. Come to think of it, I might have gotten that 1/32 set for Christmas in 1966.


You'll only see an ad like that in TV Guide around this time of year. I still look on eBay for sets like this though, even though we have no place in the apartment to put it and I have no youngster to race against. Perhaps it means I'm still just a kid at heart - and maybe that's why this is such a special time of the year. It's all fun from here on it!

What's on TV? Thursday, November 24, 1966

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It's Thanksgiving Day 1966, and I'm both glad and fortunate to have a Twin Cities issue, not only because I'm familiar with the stations, but because I would have been watching many of these very programs myself. It hearkens back to a great time; I've always enjoyed Thanksgiving, because it actually means something, because of the wonderful aromas that fill the air, and because it introduces the absolutely best, most wonderful time of the year. It's changed over the years, and not particularly for the better (c'mon - can't you go without shopping for one day?), but it's still a day that can, and should, be appreciated, if you've a mind to. And that will never change.


KTCA, Channel 2 (Educ.)

Afternoon


05:00p
Kindergarten

05:30p
Book Beat

Evening


06:00p
Exploring Space

06:30p
Industrial Management

07:00p
When in Rome

07:30p
Heritage of Latvia

08:00p
German Playhouse

08:30p
College Concerts

09:00p
Playwrights for Tomorrow

09:30p
Town and Country

10:00p
Psychology

The educational channels, KTCA and WDSE,don't sign on until 5:00 p.m. due to the Thanksgiving holiday


KDAL, Channel 3 (Duluth) CBS

Morning


07:35a
Farm and Home

07:45a
Treetop House

08:00a
Captain Kangaroo

09:00a
Thanksgiving Day Jubilee (special) (color)

11:00a
NFL Football – San Francisco at Detroit (special) (color)

Afternoon


02:00p
To Tell the Truth

02:25p
CBS News (color)

02:30p
The Edge of Night

03:00p
The Secret Storm

03:30p
Mike Douglas (co-host Eddie Fisher, guests Henry Morgan, Susan Barrett, Dr. Gilbert Holloway, Allyn Brothers)

05:00p
NFL Football – Cleveland at Dallas (special) (color)

Evening


08:00p
CBS Thursday Night Movies – “Jason and the Argonauts” (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:15p
Movie – “The Horse’s Mouth” (color)

I mention below my love of the Thanksgiving Day parades, but no matter how great they were I'd be ready for football, and CBS obliges, with the Detroit Lions hosting their annual game. For many years, Detroit's opponent on Thanksgiving was Green Bay, but after the Packers were humiliated in 1962, Vince Lombardi supposedly had the league take the game off of Thanksgiving, lest the Packers suffer another debacle in front of a national TV audience. The Lions have been so lousy for so long that we forget they were once an NFL powerhouse back in the '50s. Unfortunately for them, we're not in the '50s at this point, and the Lions get walloped by the San Francisco 49ers 41-14 en route to a record of 4-9-1.


WCCO, Channel 4 (CBS)

Morning


06:30a
Siegfried and His Flying Saucer

07:00a
Clancy and Company

08:00a
Captain Kangaroo

09:00a
Thanksgiving Day Jubilee (special) (color)

11:00a
NFL Football – San Francisco at Detroit (special) (color)

Afternoon


02:00p
To Be Announced  

02:15p
News (Dean Montgomery) (time approximate)

02:30p
The Edge of Night

03:00p
The Secret Storm

03:30p
Mike Douglas (co-host Ann Sothern, guests Tim Conway, Matt Monro, Dukes of Dixieland, Mary Hemingway, Dorothy Sara)

05:00p
NFL Football – Cleveland at Dallas (special) (color)

Evening


08:00p
CBS Thursday Night Movies – “Jason and the Argonauts” (color)

10:00p
News (local) (color)

10:30p
Norm Van Brocklin

10:35p
Movie – “City Across the River”

12:20a
Movie – “Ain’t Misbehavin’” (color) (time approximate)

While others might choose the Macy's parade on NBC, I always preferred the multi-parade coverage on CBS - not just New York, but Detroit, Philadelphia, Toronto, and (later) Hawaii as well. I particularly remember in the early '70s when William Conrad would act as host from New York, his deep, friendly voice booming out as he sat next to a roaring fireplace, managing the traffic between the various parades. To me, that was exactly what Thanksgiving should be, with just a hint of Christmas in the air. (Captain Kangaroo was host for a number of years as well.) In 1966, Arthur Godfrey and Bess Myerson did the honors at the Macy's parade, while Mike Douglas and Marilyn Van Derbur were in Detroit for the Hudson's parade, and Bob Denver and Jim Backus covered the Eaton's parade in Toronto (on tape). Philadelphia wasn't on the lineup that year for some reason. Wonderful memories - you can read about more of that early coverage in this fine article at TVParty!


KSTP, Channel 5 (NBC)

Morning


06:00a
Continental Classroom (American Government)

06:30a
City and Country (color)

07:00a
Today (guests Walt Kelly, Maureen Stapleton, Dr. Thorton age, Aline Saarinen) (color)

09:00a
Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade (special) (color)

11:00a
Jeopardy (color)

11:30a
Swingin’ Country (color)

11:55a
NBC News (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
News and Weather (local) (color)

12:15p
Dialing for Dollars (color)

12:30p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

12:55p
NBC News (color)

01:00p
Days of Our Lives (color)

01:30p
The Doctors

02:00p
AFL FootballBuffalo at Oakland (special) (color)

05:00p
Thanksgiving Special (special) (color)

05:25p
Doctor’s House Call (color)

05:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report (color)

Evening


06:00p
News (local) (color)

06:30p
G.E. Fantasy Theater – “The Ballad of Smokey the Bear” (special) (color)

07:30p
Star Trek (color)

08:30p
Dialing for Dollars (color)

09:00p
Dean Martin (guests Eddie Albert, Phil Harris, Alice Faye, Jan Murray) (color)

10:00p
News (local) (color)

10:30p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (color)

12:15a
M Squad

Tonight, "after two weeks of playoffs, two players emerge to compete for prizes in the final round of the 'Letter Game' tournament." A live broadcast of Dialing for Dollars, in prime time on Thanksgiving night. You have to love it, don't you?


WDSM, Channel 6 (Duluth) (NBC)

Morning


07:00a
Today (guests Walt Kelly, Maureen Stapleton, Dr. Thorton age, Aline Saarinen) (color)

09:00a
Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade (special) (color)

11:00a
Jeopardy (color)

11:30a
Swingin’ Country (color)

11:55a
NBC News (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
Girl Talk

12:30p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

12:55p
NBC News (color)

01:00p
Days of Our Lives (color)

01:30p
The Doctors

02:00p
AFL Football Buffalo at Oakland (special) (color)

05:00p
You Asked for It

05:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report (color)

Evening


06:00p
News, Rocky Teller (color)

06:30p
G.E. Fantasy Theater – “The Ballad of Smokey the Bear” (special) (color)

07:30p
Star Trek (color)

08:30p
The Hero (color)

09:00p
Dean Martin (guests Eddie Albert, Phil Harris, Alice Faye, Jan Murray) (color)

10:00p
News (local) (color)

10:20p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (color)

11:30p
News (local)

American Football League games were often more exciting than their counterparts in the NFL, and one of the great things about Thanksgiving in 1966 was that the two leagues (in conjunction with the networks, no doubt) coordinated their schedules so you could watch the Lions-49ers at 11, the Bills-Raiders at 2, and the Cowboys-Browns at 5. (There's also a college game if you get bored; more below.) If that isn't something to be thankful for, I don't know what is.


KMMT, Channel 6 (Austin) (ABC)

Morning


10:00a
Supermarket Sweep

10:30a
The Dating Game

11:00a
Donna Reed

11:30a
Father Knows Best

Afternoon


12:00p
Ben Casey

01:00p
The Newlywed Game

01:30p
College Football – Nebraska at Oklahoma (special) (color)

04:45p
Movie – “Safari Drums”

05:30p
The Rifleman

Evening


06:00p
Peter Jennings with the News 

06:15p
News, Sports, Weather (local)

06:30p
Batman (color)

07:00p
F-Troop (color)

07:30p
The Dating Game (color)

08:00p
Bewitched (color)

08:30p
That Girl (color)

09:00p
Hawk (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:30p
The Untouchables

Of all the networks, ABC probably has the least amount of Thanksgiving-related broadcast material. They make up for it the next day, though, with 5½ hours of cartoons for the kiddies home from school. 


KCMT, Channel 7 (Alexandria) (NBC/ABC)

Morning


07:00a
Today (guests Walt Kelly, Maureen Stapleton, Dr. Thorton age, Aline Saarinen) (color)

09:00a
Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade (special) (color)

11:00a
Jeopardy (color)

11:30a
Swingin’ Country (color)

11:55a
NBC News (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
News, Weather, Sports (local)  . 

12:20p
Trading Post

12:30p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

12:55p
NBC News (color)

01:00p
Days of Our Lives (color)

01:30p
College Football – Nebraska at Oklahoma (special) (color)

04:45p
King Kong

05:00p
Batman

05:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report (color)

Evening


06:00p
News (local)

06:30p
G.E. Fantasy Theater – “The Ballad of Smokey the Bear” (special) (color)

07:30p
Star Trek (color)

08:30p
The Hero (color)

09:00p
Dean Martin (guests Eddie Albert, Phil Harris, Alice Faye, Jan Murray) (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:30p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (color)

"The Ballad of Smokey the Bear," featuring James Cagney as the narrator, is another of Rankin-Bass' animagic specials, the follow-up to "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer." There's even a Smokey balloon in today's Macy's parade (conveniently telecast on NBC, with Lorne Greene and Betty White). It's never been commercially released, but I happen to have a copy, thanks to the Rankin-Bass historian Rick Goldschmidt. It would be nice to say that it was as charming as Rudolph; alas, it has all of that story's weak plot points, without any of the memorable music. I mean, how does a gorilla get in the middle of a Smokey the Bear story? Smokey's own true story is amazing enough that they could simply have used that. Maybe the Park Service held the copyright.


WDSE, Channel 8 (Duluth) (Educ.)

11:30a


Afternoon


05:00p
Kindergarten

05:30p
Supervisory Practice

Evening


06:00p
Industrial Management

06:30p
What’s New

07:00p
U.S.A.

07:30p
What’s in a Word?

08:00p
Film Feature

08:30p
College Concerts

09:00p
Playwrights for Tomorrow

09:30p
Town and Country

10:00p
International Magazine

I know there's nothing I like better than to sit down with a big plate of turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, and watch Supervisory Practice.


KMSP, Channel 9 (ABC)

Morning


07:30a
Soupy Sales

08:00a
Kit Carson

08:30a
Romper Room

09:30a
Jack LaLanne (color)

10:00a
Supermarket Sweep

10:30a
The Dating Game

11:00a
Donna Reed

11:30a
Father Knows Best

Afternoon


12:00p
Ben Casey

01:00p
The Newlywed Game

01:30p
College Football – Nebraska at Oklahoma (special) (color)

04:45p
Sports (Tony Parker)

05:00p
Peter Jennings with the News 

05:15p
News (Jerry Smith)

05:30p
Leave it to Beaver

Evening


06:00p
Stingray (color)

06:30p
Batman (color)

07:00p
F-Troop (color)

07:30p
The Dating Game (color)

08:00p
Bewitched (color)

08:30p
That Girl (color)

09:00p
Hawk (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:30p
Movie – “The President’s Lady”

The 1971 Thanksgiving Day game between Nebraska and Oklahoma ranks as one of the greatest college football games of all time, but the two schools had a tradition of playing either on Thanksgiving or the day after. This game didn't approach that one, but a sub-par Sooners team (6-4 final record) still manages to pull off the upset of the fourth-ranked Cornhuskers, 10-9. Tony Parker follows up, undoubtedly with a plethora of football highlights.


WDIO, Channel 10 (Duluth) (ABC)

Morning


09:00a
Cartoons

09:15a
Romper Room

10:00a
Supermarket Sweep

10:30a
The Dating Game

11:00a
Donna Reed

11:30a
Father Knows Best

Afternoon


12:00p
Ben Casey

01:00p
The Newlywed Game

01:30p
College Football – Nebraska at Oklahoma (special) (color)

04:30p
To Be Announced

05:30p
News, Sports, Weather (local)

05:45p
Peter Jennings with the News 

Evening


06:00p
The Tall Man

06:30p
Batman (color)

07:00p
F-Troop (color)

07:30p
The Dating Game (color)

08:00p
Bewitched (color)

08:30p
That Girl (color)

09:00p
Hawk (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:15p
Movie – “The Girl He Left Behind”

There's an article in this week's issue about Supermarket Sweep, a game show produced by David Susskind's Talent Associates. Susskind, who prided himself on bringing the highest possible quality programming to television, was so embarrassed by this program (developed by one of his partners, I believe) that he wouldn't even talk about it.


WTCN, Channel 11 (Ind.)

Morning


09:00a
Casey Junior

09:05p
Hank and Casey

09:20p
News, Weather, Sports (local)

09:30a
Gloria (color)

10:00a
Girl Talk (guests Eva Gabor, Betsy Palmer, Ruta Lee)

10:30a
Movie – “Miracle on 34th Street”

Afternoon


12:00p
Lunch with Casey

01:00p
Movie – “Jack and the Beanstalk”

02:40p
Mel’s Notebook

02:55p
News (Gil Amundson)

03:00p
Snowmobile Race (special)

04:00p
Popeye and Pete

04:30p
Casey and Roundhouse

05:30p
The Flintstones (color)

Evening


06:00p
The Rifleman

06:30p
Patty Duke

07:00p
The Twilight Zone

07:30p
Perry Mason

08:30p
Spread of the Eagle

09:30p
News, Weather, Sports (local)

10:00p
Movie – “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn”

12:25a
Bat Masterson

Wonderful lineup on Channel 11 today, starting with Miracle on 34th Street, perhaps the finest Christmas movie. (Certainly it has the best plot.) The 1:00 p.m. version of Jack and the Beanstalk stars Abbott and Costello - perfect kids' fare, especially if they're not into football. 


KEYC, Channel 12 (CBS) (Mankato)

Morning


07:30a
CBS Morning News with Joseph Benti (color)

07:55a
Film Short

08:00a
Captain Kangaroo

09:00a
Thanksgiving Day Jubilee (special) (color)

11:00a
NFL Football – San Francisco at Detroit (special) (color)

Afternoon


02:00p
To Tell the Truth

02:25p
CBS News (color)

02:30p
The Edge of Night

03:00p
The Secret Storm

03:30p
Take 12

04:00p
Bart’s Clubhouse

04:15p
Rocky and His Friends

04:30p
CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite (color)

04:45p
News and Weather (local)

05:00p
NFL Football – Cleveland at Dallas (special) (color)

Evening


08:00p
CBS Thursday Night Movies – “Jason and the Argonauts” (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:40p
Movie – “The Quiet Gun”

This is the first year for the now-traditional Thanksgiving game from Dallas, and their opponents are their oft-rivals in the Eastern Conference, the Cleveland Browns. (This is when the Browns, like the Lions, were actually good.) From 1964 to 1967, one of those two teams would represent the East in the NFL Championship game. It's an odd start time for 1966 - certainly splits the difference between daytime and primetime programming. But it ties in with the AFL game on NBC (a big reason, I suspect), and if your family was like mine and had our big meal in the afternoon, it makes for a very nice post-dessert way to relax and digest. A perfect end to a great day!

But what did you really think, Brett Halliday?

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Did you ever wonder how writers whose work winds up being adapted for television feel about those adaptations? We know they're not always pleased, and if one of them happens to be named Harlan Ellison, we also know we're sure to read about it. Most of the time they profess to be pleased, at least in public, but often they have ways of letting people know their true opinions. Not all of them are as creative as Brett Halliday, though.

Halliday was the literary creator of Michael Shayne, a two-fisted detective out of the Mickey Spillane school, with perhaps a little less sex and violence. In addition to appearing in nearly 80 books (50 of which were actually written by Halliday; the rest by ghostwriters), Shayne also featured on radio and in a a very successful series of movies, with first Lloyd Nolan and then Hugh Beaumont (!) portraying Shayne. Inevitably, Shayne would make it to television, in a 1960 series starring Richard Denning, about which I wrote here.

The pilot episode "This Is It, Michael Shayne," contains an addendum plugging the series to potential sponsors. Halliday himself makes a brief appearance in this section, seeming quite enthusiastic about the potential series.* Denning even uses uses Halliday's continuing involvement in the series as yet another incentive for those sponsors. It's quite an interesting plug.

*At least in words, if not in delivery. Maybe his ghostwriters wrote it for him.


Considering that Michael Shayne lasted just one season, one might be curious as to how Halliday felt about it all. Well, thanks to the fact that the Shayne books continued to come out long after the series ended, we have an idea.

In the book Murder by Proxy, published in 1962 (after the series had been cancelled), we find that the character Michael Shayne now lives in a world in which the Shayne TV series also exists, giving people a chance to ask about his thoughts on the series. It's a very meta concept, but not an unknown one; after all, both Archie Goodwin and Dr. Watson will, on occasion, run into someone who's read one of their books detailing a case solved by their famous bosses. It's natural, then, that it would be updated for the modern age by having had people see the TV series.

Anyway, as we join the story in progress, Mike and his newspaper friend Tim Rourke (played in the series by Jerry Paris) have stopped for a drink in a cocktail lounge, where they're served by Tiny the bartender, who knows Shayne well.

"Aren't you Tim Rourke, now? So it'll be bourbon and water. You can see I read all those books about you, Mike. But what's with this lousy T-V show on NBC Friday nights" He scowled as he poured whisky for Rourke. "Where'd they did up that bird that plays you, Mike? Why in hell aren't you out there playing the part your ownself?"

"A small beer, Tiny," Merrill had Ellen's photograph in his hands and he tapped it on the bar, but Tiny was giving his full attention to Shayne. "Take that show last night now. I turn it on every Friday night here just for laughs. My God, Mike! The way that actor got pushed around by everybody last night. How can you stand to watch it?"

Shayne said, "I don't." He sipped the fine cognac appreciatively. "I haven't tuned it in since the first two shows. Richard Denning is supposed to be a very fine actor."

"He the guy who plays you?" Tiny snorted his disgust. "Maybe he's a good actor, but the things they have him do...." He shook his head sadly. "And how do you like that young wise-cracker they got playing you, Mr. Rourke?"

Rourke said, "I'm like Mike. I just don't watch T-V."

"What's the matter with that friend of yours that writes the show?" Tiny demanded. "That Brett Halliday. Has he gone nuts or something? His books are swell, but God preserve me from those stories every Friday night."

"He doesn't write those," Shayne explained wryly. "The wise boys in Hollywood won't let him. They think they've got writers out there who know better how to do it."

"I'll tell you one thing frankly, Mike. It's a stinker and it's not going to stay on the air very long. Like I say, I turn it on here because it's supposed to be you and from Miami and all, and I hear what people say about it. We're proud of you in Miami, damn it, and it makes people sore to watch it."

Later, Shayne is interviewing a possible witness to a murder he's investigating. After getting the information he's looking for, he tells the man that the police may want to speak with him later.

"Sure. Say, aren't you Mike Shayne, the famous detective?

"I'm a detective and my name is Shayne."

"Gee, my kid'll be nuts when I tell him. He watches your T-V show every Friday night, but that actor doesn't look like you much."

Shayne grinned and got back in his car as a taxi drew up behind him.

Finally, there's the scene in which Shayne is working with Angelo Fermi, a detective on the New York police force. They're introduced by Shayne's old friend Jim Gifford.

"Only inducement I could hang in front of Angelo's nose to get him out here this afternoon, was that you'd tell him how to get a Fermi show on television."

Shayne grinned and told the New York detective, "You wouldn't like it. If you ever watched my show, you'd know why I don't."

"I'd like the money that is in it," Fermi told Shayne with conviction. "I have this idea for a series built entirely on the use of fingerprint evidence to solve otherwise insoluble cases. Everything authentic and taken from the records. I have been gathering material for twenty years, but I do not know how to approach the networks." His liquid black eyes were hopeful.

Shayne said, very seriously, "I'll tell you what, Fermi. If this thing comes off this afternoon the way I think it will, Brett Halliday will be up here getting the dope from you to help him make a book out of it."Brett is the one who knows all the T-V angles. You talk it over with him and he'll give you the straight dope."

I'm not positive, but I think Halliday didn't much like Richard Denning as Shayne. Nothing personal, I'm sure. Having read several of the books, I have to agree - Denning is too smooth, more like Peter Gunn, though if you take the TV series on it's own, he's very good in it. The series, too, is good fun as long as you don't expect the hard-drinking, two-fisted toughness and bodacious babes of the novels. Halliday obviously found the show much too sanitized for his own liking, and it's true that the two episodes he penned do have a harder edge than the rest.

As I mentioned, Halliday had ceded the Shayne books to ghostwriters by the time the book came out; still, they were published under his name, and one would have to think that his feelings about the series approximated those written by the ghost. In the end. both the TV series and the books are worthwhile on their own terms - separate, but reasonably equal.

***

And before I forget - since this is the last piece to appear before Thanksgiving, let me take a moment to wish each and every one of you a very happy Thanksgiving. I may say this every year, but it remains true, that I have much to be thankful for - including those of you who spend a few minutes of your day reading what I've written, and occasionally commenting on it. I"m very grateful to you all, and I'll go on being thankful that you share that time with me.

TV Jibe: Isn't it hard watching TV that way?

This week in TV Guide: November 25, 1967

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Right off the bat we have to acknowledge the most distressing headline stretched across the top of this week's issue, and ask one of today's vital questions: are male models really the most unhappy fellows in TV? And if so, why? Cindy Adams goes behind the scenes with some of television's more familiar faces: the nameless, "ruggedly handsome" men who frequent TV commercials. And believe you me, it's not all it's cracked up to be.

One of the more successful, Barry Bartle, describes some of the hardships he regularly faces. "Women who earn a living by means of their looks look contemptuously on men who are in the same category," he complains. "They treat us like dirt." He cites one female model with whom he was trying to develop some kind of rapport while doing a commercial. "I tried a little conversation," Bartle says. "Well, she turned to me with an icy stare and snapped, 'I don't speak to male models!'"

Lest we think that Barry and his cohorts are being a little paranoid, one female model, a "25-year-old blonde who specializes in perfume ads," tells Adams that "It's obvious why we look down on them. The profession attracts homosexuals who love wearing pancake and who race you to the mirror to primp. The other kind feel obliged to prove their manliness, so they breath too hard on your hair and mess it all up and you come off the set looking like you've been in a wind tunnel." She reminds Adams that "Male models are hired purely to make us look good." Another model adds, "We female models anticipate that these guys will be conceited and many are. They're egotistical and terribly aware they're good-looking. Also it strikes you that their work is a little unmanly."

Bartle, a "happily married husband and father born in Australia, educated at Harvard and now up to his green eyeballs in acting lessons," says the trend on Madison Avenue is away from male models towards actors,much as companies today require college degrees for even menial work. "If they could find a way of peddling their products without ever using us, they would."

Adams finds that when you cut through it all, male models aren't that different from others who make their living in entertainment. Jobs are scarce. Preferred looks come and go. Age and weight are both enemies of those who depend on their appearance for their income. Location work is often grueling, with extremes in temperature. People fuss and work over you while you stand there, "like a dummy."Says Bartle, "We're treated like cattle...This business tears every vestige of self respect from you. I hate it."

So why do they do it? For the reason you might think, the reason why many might scoff at the headline on the cover. Money. The best make $60 an hour, and if your face is in style this year you can earn as much as $50,000 a year. One science teacher-turned model explained to his disapproving mother that he earned more for one Clairol commercial than he did from his annual salary as a teacher ($9,000). Many might think that makes it all worth it, that they don't have it so bad after all. I suppose it all depends on how you look at life.

◊ ◊ ◊

During the 60s, the Ed Sullivan Show and The Hollywood Palace were the premiere variety shows on television. Whenever they appear in TV Guide together, we'll match them up and see who has the best lineup..

Sullivan: The Beatles (on film) in London; singers Jane Morgan, Connie Francis and the Doodletown Pipers; jazz trumpeter Al Hirt and his band; comics Wayne and Shuster, and John Byner; and Rogana, novelty act.

Palace: Host Milton Berle welcomes Nanette Fabray, the comedy team of Jack Burns and Avery Schreiber, singer-pianist Buddy Greco and the singing King Family. Joining the gang are the Los Angeles Rams' Fearsome Foursome (Roger Brown, Deacon Jones, Lamar Lundy and Merlin Olsen) and their sidelined teammate Roosevelt Grier. The gridders sing a football song written by Grier.

Let's see - on one show we have the Fab Four, on the other the Fearsome Foursome, who may have been terrific football players, but singers?


The simple truth is that with this week's Palace lineup, you're not going to best The freaking Beatles. The winner, Sullivan, by a touchdown and extra point.

◊ ◊ ◊

No review by Cleveland Amory this week, but that doesn't mean we're without his wit and wisdom. In the last of his five-part series on "Who Killed Hollywood Society," Amory focuses on "The New Order," and how they've taken over the scene. Gone are the lavish parties of days past, the time when traditional Hollywood Society ruled. It's been replaced by a younger generation, one that dismisses "stuffy dinner parties" in favor of a more informal, looser order.

Jack Hanson, owner of The Daisy, one of the biggest membership clubs around, tells Amory how his place serves this new clientele. Speaking of his membership he says that there are "only things that count here: (1) are they attractive and (2) are they fun? If they're a celebrity, they've still got to be both. Most celebrities, you know,, are a pain in the neck." If those two qualities exist, the "the biggest director of all will sit beside a nobody, and if they're attractive and interesting, he won't give a damn." He points to actors John Ireland and George Hamilton embracing. "They didn't even know each other before they started coming here. They know they're OK, you know, if they are here. I've learned who the good guys are and who the asses are." As proof, he talks of people who've tried to bribe or B.S. their way into membership. "But I won't let just any jerk in - our members would feel like suckers." He modestly refers to The Daisy as "the most famous club in the world."

But not for long, Amory notes. Already there's another club, the "new" place in town. It's called The Factory, and its owned by nine directors - Paul Newman, Sammy Davis Jr., Anthony Newley, Pierre Salinger, Peter Lawford, Jerry Orbach, Peter Bren, Ronnie Buck and Dick Donner, "all of whom, ironically, were either close personal friends or best customers of Jack Hanson." It's The Daisy, just on steroids - four pool tables instead of one, live music instead of recorded, dinners instead of just desserts. It shows how fleeting fame can be in Hollywood, in the celebrity industry. Amory seems to miss the old days, when glamour ruled, when there was a certain elegance that seems to be missing from today's scene. from The Daisy and The Factory and the rest. As a piece of very self-conscious graffiti says, "Aren't We All Too Much." That Amory ends his piece with this phrase tells you all you need to know.

◊ ◊ ◊

SOURCE: ALL: HADLEY TV GUIDES
There's also a brief profile of Ron Harper, star of ABC's Garrison's Gorillas (the network's version of The Dirty Dozen) and this week's cover feature. Harper is a three-time loser in series television, starting with the very good police series 87th Precinct, in which he was upstaged by Robert Lansing, then as the husband of Connie Stevens, both of whom were upstaged by George Burns in Wendy and Me, and finally as the son of Jean Arthur in The Jean Arthur Show - a role in which, Dwight Whitney writes, Harper was reduced to saying, "Yes Mother" a lot.

Harper is, as actors go, pretty much a "what you see is what you get" type; frank about his ambitions to make it big but not given to talking a lot about himself; a man who planned to become a lawyer but was bitten by the acting bug (his political science thesis in college was on "The Efficacy of Art as an Instrument of Propaganda"); one who has always been big with the ladies, including his former girlfriend Marlo Thomas and his current "girl-of-the-hour" Jo Ann Pflug; and very confident that Garrison's Gorillas will be the vehicle that will finally give him the stardom he craves. "It's where it's at for me," he says of the World War II series. Unfortunately, it isn't where the viewers are at, lasting for only 26 episodes before being replaced by The Mod Squad. Harper goes on to more series work, in Planet of the Apes, Land of the Lost, and the NBC soaper Generations. He never becomes the star he'd hoped to be, but he's also a man always seemed able to find work.

◊ ◊ ◊

I wouldn't call this an extraordinary week on television, not like it is sometimes when networks pull out their blockbuster "What a Week!" schedules right around the beginning of the holiday season. Maybe it's because Thanksgiving was early in 1967, allowing for an entire week between Turkey Day and the start of December. (Not such a problem nowadays.) That doesn't mean there aren't some interesting programs for us to take note of, though.

Saturday is rivalry day in college football, and ABC's doubleheader kicks off with the traditional Big 10 showdown between Ohio State and Michigan. It's a rare year when neither team is involved in the race for the Rose Bowl (that honor goes to Cinderella Indiana, winner of a three-way tie with Minnesota and Purdue), but it's a game that always carries bragging rights - which, this year, go to Ohio State 24-14. That's followed by a southern clash between Georgia and Georgia Tech in Atlanta, which Georgia wins 21-14, even though neither team is having a standout season.

ABC's long-running news and public affairs program ABC Scope switched its focus earlier in the '60s to concentrate exclusively on the Vietnam War, and this Sunday the show presents it's 100th Vietnam report, taking a look at the villagers in the Viet Cong-controlled area of Hoa Binh Province, a farming village halfway between Saigon and Danung, and increasingly caught in the crossfire between the government and the Communist rebels. Their prospects, everyone agrees, are bleak. Today, it's considered a tourist destination,

Also on Sunday, NET looks at the Democratic Party's outlook for 1968, including George Wallace's plans to run for president on a third-party ticket. At this point nobody imagines that Lyndon Johnson will withdraw from the presidential race; there's no discussion of any alternative. Later on (8:00 p.m. CT), ABC presents a remake of The Diary of Anne Frank starring Max von Sydow and Lilli Palmer, with Diana Davila in the role of Anne.

On Monday, Ingrid Bergman* narrates an ABC documentary, "Can You Hear Me?", which follows the story of Mary Beth Bull, a deaf 2½-year-old, as doctors try to determine the extent of her deafness, and search for methods of treatment. In one scene, Mary Beth is fitted with a hearing aid, while Mrs. Spencer Tracy, whose son was deaf, discusses training for the deaf. I wonder how that little girl made out - were the doctors able to help her? Did she eventually get her hearing back?

*More on her below.

There's a celebrity softball game on NBC Tuesday at 7:00 p.m., taped at Dodger Stadium. In what must surely be one of the high points of his long and distinguished career, Vin Scully joins forces with Jerry Lewis to call the game, which pits a celebrity team managed by Leo Durocher and including Don Adams, Bobby Darin, James Garner, Hugh O'Brian and Dale Robertson against a major league side with Willie Mays, Roberto Clemente, Harmon Killebrew, Tim McCarver and Don Drysdale, managed by Milton Berle. Right after that, the network's Tuesday Night at the Movies gives us "McHale's Navy" in "their first full-length motion picture," which Judith Crist calls "another instance of television serving itself."

Wednesday might as well be Bob Hope Day on NBC, with the network recognizing the 30th anniversary of Hope's relationship with NBC. First, Today devotes its entire two hours to "The Eternal Hope," a filmed biography of Hope's life. That evening, Hope hosts one of his patented variety specials, taped at UCLA, with David Janssen, Elke Sommer, Jack Jones, the Kids Next Door, UCLA's own basketball star Lew Alcindor (today's Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), and the AP football All America team.

On Thursday NET presents two interviews sure to capture some attention. The first is with former vice president Richard Nixon, who discusses both his and the Republican party's prospects for 1968; Nixon is one of several unannounced candidates, and he's expected to make known his plans just after the new year. He also talks about the "nuts and bolts" of party politics, from grassroots involvement to the role of television to the importance of primaries and the workings of the electoral college. Like him or not, Nixon was always one of the most knowledgeable when it came to politics, which makes his own misjudgment with Watergate all the more inexplicable. I would have loved to hear his analysis of the Trump campaign, which I suspect might have been more accurate than that of many pundits out there.

Later on, NET has an hour-long interview with Ingrid Bergman, still one of the most beautiful actresses in the business. She sits down with Los Angeles Times drama critic Cecil Smith to discuss her professional return to America after an absence of 21 years to act in Eugene O'Neill's play "More Stately Mansions." During the hour the candid Bergman (Jean Renoir once called her "so honest that she will always prefer a scandal to a lie.") also talks about other theater roles she's played, those she'd like to take on, and how it will feel returning to Broadway.

On Friday, dueling documentaries. First, WTCN, the independent station, presents "Freedom's Finest Hour," an award-winning documentary narrated by Ronald Reagan and Robert Taylor. Jimmie Rodgers sings period songs. This pretty much falls under the Reagan category today, and while I couldn't find the video, the audio is available for anyone who'd like to check it out. That's at 7:00 p.m.; at 9:00 p.m. NBC presents a news special, "Same Mud, Same Blood," with Frank McGee reporting on the experience of the Negro soldier in Vietnam. "Is the Negro accepted in the ranks - and does he make a good soldier? Does he command the respect of his men?" This is kind of a two-for-one for the network, hitting two of the hottest buttons that 1967 has to offer: race relations and the war.

What's on TV? Friday, December 1, 1967

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We're now in the week after Thanksgiving, and there's not a holiday special stirring anywhere. Nowadays, you can't start the Christmas season too early - I've seen Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer in November, for crying out loud - but back in the late '60s it seems as if they at least waited until December started. Next week's issue would tell us for sure, but we're not worried about that - we want to know what's on now!

The listings come from Minneapolis-St. Paul.




KTCA, Channel 2 (Educ.)

Morning


09:00a
Classroom

11:15a
British Calendar

11:30a
Your Dollar’s Worth

Afternoon


12:00p
To Be Announced

12:35p
Classroom

03:00p
Managers in Action

03:30p
Teaching English

04:00p
Your Right to Say It (color)

04:30p
Smart Sewing

05:00p
Kindergarten

05:30p
Big Easel

Evening


06:00p
Experiment (color)

06:30p
Communication Skills

07:00p
Folk Guitar

07:30p
Continental Comment

08:00p
Your World This Week

08:30p
The Creative Person

09:00p
You Too Can Write

10:00p
NET Playhouse

As I mentioned on Saturday, NET has a number of very interesting programs this week. Just not tonight.



WCCO, Channel 4 (CBS)

Morning


06:00a
Sunrise Semester

06:30a
Siegfried and His Flying Saucer (color)

07:00a
Clancy & Carmen

07:30a
Clancy & Willie

08:00a
Captain Kangaroo (color)

09:00a
Dr. Reuben K. Youngdahl (color)

09:05a
Merv Griffin (guests George Jessel, Betsy Palmer, Pat Cooper) (color)

10:00a
Andy Griffith

10:30a
Dick Van Dyke

11:00a
Love of Life (color) 

11:25a
CBS News (Joseph Benti) (color)

11:30a
Search for Tomorrow (color)   

11:45a
The Guiding Light (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
News (Dean Montgomery) (color)

12:20p
Something Special (color)

12:30p
As the World Turns (color)

01:00p
Love is a Many Splendored Thing (color)

01:30p
House Party (guest Tennessee Ernie Ford) (color)

02:00p
To Tell the Truth (color)  

02:25p
CBS News (Douglas Edwards) (color)

02:30p
The Edge of Night (color)

03:00p
The Secret Storm (color)

03:30p
The Beverly Hillbillies

04:00p
Mike Douglas

05:30p
CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite (color)

Evening


06:00p
News (Dave Moore) (color)

06:15p
Weather (Bud Kraehling) (color)

06:20p
Sports (Hal Scott) (color)

06:30p
The Wild Wild West (color)

07:30p
Gomer Pyle, USMC (color)

08:00p
Movie – “The Horizontal Lieutenant” (color)

10:00p
News (Dave Moore) (color)

10:15p
Weather (Bud Kraehling) (color)

10:20p
Sports (Hal Scott) (color)

10:30p
Bud Grant (color)

10:40p
Movie – “Town Without Pity”

12:40a
Sports (Jack Lavalier (color)

12:50a
Movie – “Fury of Apache” (color)

I like how The Merv Griffin Show is followed by The Andy Griffith Show. Always reminds me of this bit:




KSTP, Channel 5 (NBC)

Morning


06:15a
David Stone (color)

06:30a
City and Country (color)

06:55a
Doctor’s House Call (color)

07:00a
Today (guests Judith Crist, Alec McCowen, Chuck Eisenmann and the Hobos) (color)

09:00a
Snap Judgment (guests Soupy Sales, Jane Withers) (color)  

09:25a
NBC News (Nancy Dickerson) (color)

09:30a
Concentration (color)

10:00a
Personality (guest Alan King) (color)

10:30a
The Hollywood Squares (guests Frankie Avalon, Barbara Bain, Buddy Hackett, Martin Landau, Shari Lewis, Jan Murray, Wally Cox, Abby Dalton, Charley Weaver) (color)

11:00a
Jeopardy (color)

11:30a
Eye Guess (color)

11:55a
NBC News (Edwin Newman)

Afternoon


12:00p
News (Gene Berry) (color)

12:10p
Weather (Morris) (color)

12:15p
Dialing for Dollars (color)

12:30p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

01:00p
Days of Our Lives (color)

01:30p
The Doctors (color)

02:00p
Another World (color)

02:30p
You Don’t Say! (guests Rod Serling, Rose Marie) (color)

03:00p
The Match Game (guests Allen Ludden, Betty White) (color)

03:25p
NBC News (Floyd Kalber) (color)

03:30p
Dialing for Dollars (color)

04:30p
Of Lands and Seas (color)

05:25p
News (Gene Berry) (color)

05:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report (color)

Evening


06:00p
News (Bob Ryan) (color)

06:15p
Weather (Johnny Morris) (color)

06:20p
Sports (Al Tighe) (color)

06:30p
Tarzan (color)

07:30p
Star Trek (color)

08:30p
Accidental Family (color)

09:00p
NBC News Special – “Same Mud, Same Blood” (special) (color)

10:00p
News (John MacDougall) (color)

10:15p
Weather (Johnny Morris) (color)

10:20p
Sports (Al Tighe) (color)

10:30p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (guest Peggy Cass) (color)

12:00a
Alan Burke (guest Milton Waldor) (color)

There was an article in this week's issue about Lois Nettleton, one of the stars of Accidental Family. The gist was that she was the thinking man's actress, a serious actress appearing in a comedy, someone whose name is more familiar to the industry than viewers. Of course we have the benefit of hindsight, but you see her in so many classic television episodes, it's hard to imagine that people didn't know who she was. One thing that's right - George Roy Hill describes her as "a rare example of a woman who grows sexier as she grows older."



KMSP, Channel 9 (ABC)

Morning


07:30a
Dateline: Hollywood

08:00a
Gypsy Rose Lee (color)

08:30a
Morning Show (color)

09:00a
Romper Room (color)

09:30a
Dobie Gillis

10:00a
The Honeymoon Race (last show of the series) (color)

10:30a
The Family Game

11:00a
Everybody’s Talking (celebrities Pat Carroll, Paul Lynde, Peter Falk)

11:30a
Donna Reed

Afternoon


12:00p
The Fugitive

01:00p
The Newlywed Game (color)

01:30p
Dream Girl (guests Polly Bergen, Ted Bessell, Ron Harper, Rich Little) (color)

01:55p
ABC News (Marlene Sanders) (color)

02:00p
General Hospital (color)

02:30p
Dark Shadows (color)

03:00p
The Dating Game (color)

03:30p
Movie – “Hollow Triumph”

04:55p
News (Jerry Smith)

05:00p
Peter Jennings with the News (color)

05:30p
Leave it to Beaver

Evening


06:00p
McHale’s Navy

06:30p
Off to See the Wizard  (color)

07:30p
Hondo (color)

08:30p
The Guns of Will Sonnett (color)

09:00p
Judd, for the Defense (color)

10:00p
News (Bill Fahan, Jim Steer) (color)

10:25p
Sports (Tony Parker) (color)

10:30p
Movie – “Inherit the Wind”

Off to See the Wizard is an anthology series, similar to Walt Disney's, showcasing MGM's library of movies. This week's presentation is part one of the 1963 movie Flipper, which spawned the TV series of the same name that ended its three-season run earlier this year - on NBC.



WTCN, Channel 11 (Ind.)

Morning


08:55a
News (Gil Amundson)

09:00a
Cartoon Carnival (color)

09:30a
Ed Allen (color)

10:00a
Mr. Blackwell (color)

10:30a
Virginia Graham (guests Patricia Routledge, Muriel Davidson, Dorothy Sara)

11:00a
Brunch Bunch

11:30a
Cooking with Hank

11:45a
News (Gil Amundson)

Afternoon


12:00p
Lunch with Casey

01:00p
Movie – “Her First Romance”

02:30p
Woody Woodbury (guests Mitzi McCall and Charlie Brill, Teddy Neeley, Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band) (color)

04:00p
Popeye and Pete

04:30p
Casey and Roundhouse

05:30p
The Flintstones (color)

Evening


06:00p
Gilligan’s Island (color)

06:30p
Perry Mason

07:30p
Freedom’s Finest Hour (special) (color)

08:30p
Belafonte Premiere (special) (color)

09:30p
News (Stuart A. Lindman)

09:45p
Weather (Rodger Kent)

09:50p
Sports (Frank Beutel)

10:00p
Movie – “Boots Malone”

Following Freedom's Finest Hour, about which I wrote on Saturday, is a special with highlights of Harry Belafonte's opening night at "a Las Vegas hotel," which a casual Google search suggests was Caesar's Palace. Even though it's just highlights, with interviews and rehearsal clips interspersed, it's the kind of concert you don't see on television anymore.

Santa's perfect gift

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With December 1 right around the corner, here's a reminder that as long as television has been around, it's been associated with Santa. There's no question that Santa has the perfect gift on his lap.


Around the dial

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Well, December is finally here, but in the hubbub of the holiday season, don't forget to keep in touch with the classic television blogosphere. Let's get started!

British TV Detectives brings us The Brokenwood Mysteries, featuring as its protagonist a detective who's not "quirky for the sake of quirkiness." What a refreshing idea - would that American television would do that more often.

Staying across the pond, Cult TV Blog has a look at two very different kinds of children's shows: The Owl Service and The Flockton Flyer. Read on for a fascinating review.

How well do you know your Christmas entertainment? Be prepared to be tested, as Christmas TV History quizzes you on Christmas screen shots.

You'll remember a while ago I was on an interview show about the American sitcom - David Hofstede of Comfort TV should have been with us, witness his great article on the ten funniest sitcoms, by decade, starting with the 1950s.

"Hunters and the Hunted." My life sometimes feels like that, with me playing the hunted, but in this case it's actually an episode of The Green Hornet, as reviewed by the Secret Sanctum of Captain Video.

Ah, Hal's back at The Horn Section with another F Troop Friday. This time, it's the 1965 episode "O'Rourke vs. O'Reilly," with Lee Meriwether up to the task as Forrest Tucker's nemesis.

The Twilight Zone, like most well-written series, works just as well when transferred to radio. The Twilight Zone Vortex reviews its appearance on Public Radio's Selected Shorts.

Not long ago Bob Crane's murder was in the headlines yet again. I wondered at the time what my friend and Crane biographer Carol Ford thought of it; she and her co-authors have a brief statement here at Vote for Bob Crane.

The Boris Karloff-hosted series Thrilleris the latest feature in Television's New Frontier - the 1960s, where the show's uneven second season is reviewed.

And speaking of shining a spotlight, this week Television Obscurities takes on a show that certainly is obscure, if you don't keep up with your TV history books - The Second Hundred Years, starring Monte Markham in a most unusual dual role.

That's it for today, but I'm assuming you'll be back tomorrow for another TV Guide review.

This week in TV Guide: November 30, 1968

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According to the cover, this is "A Week of Big Specials," but as far as posterity is concerned, there's only one special this week, and it's spelled E-L-V-I-S.

The "'68 Comeback Special," as it's since come to be known, airs Tuesday at 9:00 p.m. PT on NBC, and as one of the full-page ads proclaims, it's "his first TV special. . . his first personal performance on TV in nearly 10 years!" It's not that The King had been idle all those years, of course; he made a lot of movies during that time, and then there was that stint in the Army. But the idea of Elvis the performer, rather than Elvis the actor or Elvis the personality, has been in remission; and with the music scene having changed so dramatically over those ten years - with the once-radical Presley now being seen as somewhat square - you can imagine the pressure that's riding on the outcome of this special. In anticipation, RCA has already released an album of music from the show (proclaimed in yet another full-page ad), so you get the point: this better be good.

In his feature article on the program, Dwight Whitney goes behind the scenes, writing of the promotional efforts made by Presley's manager, Colonel Tom Parker: holding a mass press conference involving 50 TV editors from around the country, asking Presley the same old questions (at one point, he's overheard muttering "Not that one again," under his breath in response to a query about whether small towns were still the backbone of his popularity); pressuring Whitney for "a signed statement guaranteeing Elvis the cover" (it was not, Whitney notes, forthcoming); working frantically to ensure that the audience for the "live" segment of the concert didn't include "too many oldish people," and all the time playing the role of the carnival huckster to perfection. And no wonder - this would be Presley's first live performance since 1961 - would he be up to it?

Was there ever a doubt? If so, Presley smashes it with a performance that shows that The King, indeed, is back. It's while Elvis, just feet away from where Whitney sits, is singing a song whose lyrics include I"m king of the jungle,/they call me Tiger Man./You cross my path/You take your own life in your ha-aaa-nds!!/You better believe it! that, he writes, "suddenly it dawns on me."

This is the real Elvis story. This is the language - the only language- he speaks, and he speaks it loud and clear. Old hat? Upstaged by the Beatles? Movie grosses slipping? Well, sure, but this man is a performer, one of half a dozen in America today who can step out on a stage and make it his. Nothing eclectic about him. He transcends any era. And he instinctively knows what's right for him.

And that, ultimately, is what it's all about, this '68 Comeback Special. Take away all the baubles and fancy suits and expensive cars, even take away Tom Parker, and what you're left with is - Elvis, "an American original." As one of his concert movies is entitled, "That's the way it is."

◊ ◊ ◊

During the 60s, the Ed Sullivan Show and The Hollywood Palace were the premiere variety shows on television. Whenever they appear in TV Guide together, we'll match them up and see who has the best lineup..

Sullivan: Tentatively scheduled: Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass; comedians Jack Carter and Scoey Mitchell; and dancer Peter Gennaro.

Palace: Host Milton Berle presents comics Martha Raye, Joey Forman and Joe Besser; singer-dancer Barrie Chase; former gridiron star Roosevelt Grier; and the Third Wave, a teen-age quintet from the Phillippines.

That Sullivan lineup just doesn't sound complete, does it? And in fact, there is more to it than that. A quick internet search reveals that in addition to the listed guests, Ed also had Engelbert Humperdinck, Tiny Tim (singing "Great Balls of Fire" and "I'm Glad I'm a Boy"!), Gloria Loring, and actor David Hemmings, reciting Dylan Thomas poems. We have to give points to Herb and the gang doing seasonal music - "The Christmas Song" and "My Favorite Things." On the other hand, the Palace strikes me as exceedingly tired; Berle had bombed in his comeback effort last year, and aside from Barrie Chase and, probably, Third Wave (who are, after all, teens), there just isn't much energy here. Sullivan may not have his best lineup, but this week it's good enough.

◊ ◊ ◊

Throughout the 60s and early 70s, TV Guide's reviews were written by the witty and acerbic Cleveland Amory. Whenever we get the chance, we'll look at Cleve's latest take on the series of the era. 

Every once in a while, one runs across a series of which there simply is no memory. This week, Cleveland Amory reviews one of those series: The Outcasts, what we would probably refer to today as a revisionist Western. It stars Don Murray and Otis Young as, respectively, a former slaveowner and a former slave, each of whom in the post-Civil War finds himself as an outcast. Thrown together by chance, the two wind up forming a team as bounty hunters. As I say, no memory of this whatsoever, and this is from someone who remembers It's About Time.

Obscure and short-lived (26 episodes) doesn't necessarily indicate a lack of quality though, and Amory was mightily impressed with the pilot, of which he said "There was good writing, both Young and Murray proved themselves star-quality series actors and there was  not only a fine performance by Slim Pickens but also a host of lovely little touches" that helped provide both grit and realism. He notes that future episodes have not lived up to that pilot, but "a couple have been almost as good." Even when the plots seem to stretch credulity, the show continually delivers those quality scripts and fine performances, and that's not nothing.

The series, notes the always-reliable Wikipedia, was not only the first Western to feature a black co-star*, it was cancelled after complaints of excessive violence - which we probably wouldn't think anything of today. At an easily-packaged 26 episodes, I'm a bit surprised this never made it to DVD.

*Perhaps a forerunner of Brisco County, Jr.?

◊ ◊ ◊

I mentioned earlier that the Tijuana Brass had a couple of holiday songs on the Sulivan show, but are there any other Christmas goodies for us as November turns to December?

Well, there's a big one: Friday at 7:30 p.m., NBC trots out the perennial favorite Rudolph, the Red Nosed Reindeer. It seems that by 1968, Rudy has taken his place as the unofficial television kickoff to Christmas, so I'd expect more programs in store next week. Of course, it's anybody's guess as to whether or not we'l still be in 1968 next week.*

*I lie, of course. Actually, I've already written next week's piece, and I can authoritatively tell you that it may or may not be from December 7, 1968.

But, you sputter, what about the "Week of Big Specials"? The thing is (and there's always a thing), while the week between Thanksgiving and Christmas is often marked by blockbusters, they don't have to be holiday-themed to be of the time. Take Perry Como, for example. On Sunday night (10:00 p.m., NBC), Mr. C. makes his "only TV outing of the season," and there's nary a Yuletide tune to be found between Perry, Don Adams, Carol Burnett, and the Young Americans. There's also a note that the show would not be seen if the technicians' strike continued, so it's anyone's guess.

There are other things on which similarly lack the Christmas spirit, but which we've come to see as a staple of the season. On Saturday, ABC presents a college football doubleheader - two games that scream "end of the season." First up is the traditional Army-Navy game from Philadelphia, a game that by this time exists so far outside the regular college football scope that it isn't even listed in TV Guide as "College Football," but as "Army-Navy Game," as if it were somehow apart from regular football, or regular sports for that matter. That's followed by a game that's never been mistaken for anything other than big-time, Notre Dame vs. USC from Los Angeles.

Moving from the secular to the sacred, if not directly related to Christmas, at 9:30 p.m. on Thursday night, ABC presents an hour-long documentary on Michelangelo's frescoes in the Sistine Chapel, "one of the world's towering art treasures," narrated by Christopher Plummer and Zoe Caldwell. Great tagline in the ad for the show - "Michelangelo put his heart into the Sistine ceiling. Will you spend an hour looking at it?" Imagine how spectacular this would have been if they'd already restored the ceiling, as they have since. I think this fits the season pretty well.

What makes this a really special weekend, in addition to Elvis, are a couple of variety specials with rookies as hosts. On Sunday at 9:00 p.m., it's the vivacious Ann-Margaret, one of Elvis' old flames, with guest star Bob Hope and special appearances by Jack Benny and Danny Thomas. It's hard to believe this is her first special, but so it is. At the time, and for some time afterward, she was one of the most exciting performers anywhere, and if the cover is any indication, the show packs a wallop. I don't know why, but for some vague reason I feel as if I might have watched this. At eight years old, the obvious reasons would hardly have applied to me.

Nor would they have applied to Brigitte Bardot, the most unlikely host of a "French-produced, bilingual hour of song and travel" appearing on NBC immediately following Elvis. Miss Bardot's guests are singer-actor Sacha Distel, actor Serge Gainsbourg, and flamenco guitarist Manitas de Plata. Frankly, I've never thought of BB as a musical variety star - and I doubt those who saw that picture on the right thought so either. (The European censors had no problem with that shot appearing in the show; not so for NBC.) Her line in the promotions - "How would you like to spend an evening with me?" is undoubtedly considered a leading question.

◊ ◊ ◊

I ought to note one more of the specials mentioned on the cover - an edition of CBS Playhouse entitled "Saturday Adoption," airing Wednesday night at 9:00. I'm not so concerned with the story itself as with the folderol enwrapping it. It's yet another example of a network striving for the "youth" movement.

They trumpet, for example, that the story "puts the accent on youth, the leading players [Rick Gates and Eric Laneuville] are young unknowns, and the playwright, 23-year-old Ron Cowen, is the youngest writer to be commissioned by CBS." The plot itself revolves around race relations, what would be called white privileged today, and the hopelessness of the ghetto. I don't know whether or not the play's any good; Cowen's had what looks to be a fairly successful career, Rick Gates has had a serviceable career, and Eric Laneuville has done a lot of directing for television. The show was directed by Delbert Mann, who won an Oscar for Marty, so there's every possibility that it was good, but the publicity doesn't tell me it's good - it just uses the key words young, young young!

But for all the claims that "TV is waiting breathlessly for new, young, talented writers!" George Bamber isn't so sure. Looking back on his career, he remembers when he was relatively young (35), and relatively talented, even if he does say so himself, but he was caught in the eternal conundrum. You can't get writing credits without work, you can't get work if you don't have a recognized agent, and you can't get a recognized agent . . .unless you have credits!

The thing is (and there's that thing again), Bamber doesn't even blame them. "Today television is firmly entrenched, and doesn't want untried people. It is, after all, a business, and as such must justify its profits and losses." They are in the business of making a profit, and "[o]ne way of doing this is to deal with established writers.""Recently," Bamber writes, "a network announced that it would start an hour-long dramatic anthology that would feature the works of new writers. Later, they announced the names of the writers: Reginald Rose, Tad Mosel . . .I think Rod Serling was unavailable." Combine that with a note in the Teletype that "CBS is talking to Tad Mosel about a 'major dramatic production' to follow his CBS Playhouse entry" from last spring, and I think we know which network program Bamber is talking about.

So maybe CBS felt it had to trumpet a young playwrights' script about young people. Maybe it had to convince everyone that they really were interested in new and promising young talent. Maybe they even had to convince themselves.

◊ ◊ ◊

Finally, a look at this week's letters, which often provide pretty good insight into the minds of America's viewers.

First, Mrs. R.G. Moore of Jackson, Tennessee, writes about the recent presidential election in which Richard Nixon won a narrow victory over Hubert Humphrey and George Wallace. Says Mrs. Moore, "Was it my imagination or did seven out of 10 network commentators have a Democratic Party bias during the election coverage?" At least I think she was writing about Nixon and Humphrey, and not Trump and Clinton.

Howard Wachter of Brooklyn decries those who don't vote on Election Day. "If the American citizen can so degrade the sacred right to vote by letting others decide for him, this country is truly in trouble." Not at all like this year's election, as we haven't heard any stories of people not voting. Right?

John Caswell of Burlington, Vermont, speaks for voters everywhere at all times when he says, "Thank goodness the elections are over. Now the regularly scheduled comics can return to television."

And Edmond H. Davis Jr., writing from Piedmont, Alabama, says that on "Sunday, Oct. 27, I watched the Smothers Brothers for the last time. I enjoy comedy, but when a mockery is made of the Bible and religion such as on this program, then I will watch it no more." An editorial note below the letter says, "Many wrote us in this vein." So many people want to think of the Smothers Brothers as cuddly comedians who simply wanted to shake things up - this is a reminder that a lot of people thought of them as a pretty malignant cultural force as well.

What's on TV? Monday, December 2, 1968

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This week we turn to the Bay Area for our TV festival. It's December 2, but as we saw on Saturday, the televised holiday season isn't fully in swing yet. No matter; people still have to watch TV, and the networks oblige.

I don't have a lot of comments about our shows, although I will note the KPIX morning news programs, which feature Ron Magers. Magers was a legend in Minneapolis-St. Paul television, leading KSTP in battle against WCCO for local news supremacy. Eventually he headed on to Chicago, and was replaced in the hearts and minds of Twin Cities viewers by his brother Paul, who during his long local run made KARE the number one news station in the market, before he headed off to Southern California.

Also, did you notice the KPIX afternoon lineup? Mike Douglas and Merv Griffin back-to-back. Now that's talk-show television.





KTVU, Channel 2  (Ind.)

Morning


08:05a
News (local)

08:15a
Religion

08:30a
Jack LaLanne (color)

09:00a
Popeye (color)

09:30a
Romper Room (color)

10:30a
Dr. Kildare

11:30a
Dennis the Menace

Afternoon


12:00p
Leave it to Beaver

12:30p
Password (guests Amanda Blake, Ray Bolger) (color)

01:00p
Movie – “I, Jane Doe”

03:00p
The Linkletter Show (color)

03:25p
CBS News (color)

03:30p
Captain Satellite (color)

04:30p
Popeye (color)

05:00p
To Be Announced

05:30p
Patty Duke

Evening


06:00p
My Favorite Martian (color)

06:30p
McHale’s Navy

07:00p
I Love Lucy

07:30p
The Farmer’s Daughter

08:00p
I Spy (color)

09:00p
The Untouchables

10:00p
News (local)

11:00p
Movie – “Man and Child” (color)



KRON, Channel 4 (NBC)

Morning


06:25a
Farm News

06:30a
Michigan (color)

07:00a
Today (guests Charles Schulz, Nerin Gun, Aline Saarinen) (color)

09:00a
Snap Judgment (guests Bert Convy, Dr. Joyce Brothers) (color)  

09:25a
NBC News (Nancy Dickerson) (color)

09:30a
Concentration (color)

10:00a
Personality (celebrities Marty Allen, Anne Jackson, Eli Wallach, Zsa Zsa Gabor) (color)

10:30a
The Hollywood Squares (celebrities Barbara Bain, Jack Carter, Wally Cox, Martin Landau, Paul Lynde, Rose Marie, Scoey Mitchell, Charley Weaver, Jo Anne Worley) (color)

11:00a
Jeopardy (color)

11:30a
Eye Guess (color) 

11:55a
NBC News (Edwin Newman) (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

12:30p
Days of Our Lives (color)

01:00p
The Doctors (color)

01:30p
Another World (color)

02:00p
You Don’t Say! (guests Chad Everett, Mary Ann Mobley) (color)

02:30p
The Match Game (guests Orson Bean, Sheila MacRae) (color)

02:55p
NBC News (Floyd Kalber) (color)

03:00p
Joan Rivers (guests Renee Taylor, C. Northcote Parkinson) (color)

03:30p
The Real McCoys

04:00p
The Addams Family

04:30p
The Flintstones (color)

05:00p
Lost in Space

Evening


06:00p
News (local) (color)

06:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report (color)

07:00p
Wide Wonderful World (color)

07:30p
I Dream of Jeannie

08:00p
Laugh-In (color)

09:00p
Monday Night at the Movies – “Games” (color)

11:00p
News (local) (color)

11:30p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (color)



KPIX, Channel 5 (CBS)

Morning


06:00a
Sunrise Semester (English Literature) (color)

06:30a
Communication Is

07:00a
News (Ron Magers)

07:05a
CBS Morning News with Joseph Benti (color)

07:30a
News (Ron Magers)

08:00a
Captain Kangaroo (color)

09:00a
The Lucy Show (color)

09:30a
Hotline (color)

10:30a
Dick Van Dyke

11:00a
Love of Life (color)

11:25a
CBS News (Joseph Benti) (color)

11:30a
Search for Tomorrow (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
News (local)

12:30p
As the World Turns (color)

01:00p
Love is a Many Splendored Thing (color)

01:30p
The Guiding Light (color)

02:00p
The Secret Storm (color)

02:30p
The Edge of Night (color)

03:00p
Mike Douglas (guests Pat Paulsen, E.J. Peaker, Chet Huntley, the Four Freshment) (color)

04:30p
Merv Griffin (guests Orson Bean, Jackie Vernon, Roberta Peters, Rod Perry) (color)

Evening


06:00p
News (local) (color)

06:30p
CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite (color)

07:00p
News (Weston, Tompkins)

07:30p
Gunsmoke (color)

08:30p
Here’s Lucy (color)

09:00p
Mayberry R.F.D. (color)

09:30p
Family Affair (color)

10:00p
Carol Burnett (guests Michele Lee, Flip Wilson) (color)

11:00p
News (local) (color)

11:30p
Perry Mason

12:30a
Movie – “Triumph of Michael Strogoff” (color)



KGO, Channel 7 (ABC)

Morning


06:00a
A.M. (color)

08:00a
Virginia Graham (color)

08:30a
Movie – “Wait ‘til the Sun Shines Nellie” (color)

10:30a
Dick Cavett (guest David Schoenbrun) (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
Bewitched

12:30p
Treasure Isle (color)

01:00p
Dream House (color)

01:30p
Funny You Should Ask (color)

01:55p
The Children’s Doctor (color)

02:00p
The Newlywed Game (color)

02:30p
The Dating Game (color)

03:00p
General Hospital (color)

03:30p
One Life to Live (color)

04:00p
Dark Shadows (color)

04:30p
Movie – “This Love of Ours”

Evening


06:00p
News (local) (color)

06:55p
Opinion 7 (color)

07:00p
ABC Evening News (Frank Reynolds)

07:30p
The Avengers (color)

08:30p
Peyton Place (color)

09:00p
The Outcasts (color)

10:00p
The Big Valley (color)

11:00p
News (local) (color)

11:25p
Opinion 7 (color)

11:30p
Joey Bishop (guest host Art Linkletter, guests Otto Preminger, Keely Smith, Gene Baylos) (color)

01:00a
Film (color)



KSBW, Channel 8 (Salinas) (CBS, NBC)

Morning


07:00a
Today (guests Charles Schulz, Nerin Gun, Aline Saarinen) (color)

09:00a
Snap Judgment (guests Bert Convy, Dr. Joyce Brothers) (color)

09:25a
NBC News (Nancy Dickerson)

09:30a
Concentration (color)

10:00a
Personality (celebrities Marty Allen, Anne Jackson, Eli Wallach, Zsa Zsa Gabor) (color)

10:30a
The Hollywood Squares (celebrities Barbara Bain, Jack Carter, Wally Cox, Martin Landau, Paul Lynde, Rose Marie, Scoey Mitchell, Charley Weaver, Jo Anne Worley) (color)

11:00a
Love of Life (color)   

11:25a
CBS News (Joseph Benti) (color)

11:30a
Eye Guess (color)

11:55a
News (Bud Walling) (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
Let’s Make a Deal (color)

12:30p
As the World Turns (color)

01:00p
Love is a Many Splendored Thing (color)

01:30p
Another World (color)

02:00p
The Secret Storm (color)

02:30p
The Edge of Night (color)

03:00p
The Linkletter Show (color)

03:25p
CBS News (color)

03:30p
The Doctors (color)

04:00p
The Match Game (guests Orson Bean, Sheila MacRae) (color)

04:25p
Dialing for Dough (color)

04:30p
Jeopardy (color)

05:00p
You Don’t Say! (guests Chad Everett, Mary Ann Mobley) (color)

05:30p
Santa’s Workshop

Evening


06:15p
Sports and Weather (local)

06:30p
The Huntley-Brinkley Report (color)

07:00p
News (local)

07:30p
I Dream of Jeannie

08:00p
Laugh-In (color)

09:00p
Mayberry R.F.D. (color)

09:30p
Family Affair (color)

10:00p
Carol Burnett (guests Michele Lee, Flip Wilson) (color)

11:00p
News (local)

11:30p
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (color)



KQED, Channel 9 (NET)

Morning


07:00a
Spanish

07:30a
Reading (color)

09:15a
Classroom

Afternoon


12:00p
Misterogers (guest John Reardon)

12:30p
The French Chef

01:10p
Classroom

04:05p
Yoga for Health

04:30p
Washington News (color)

05:00p
Misterogers (guest John Reardon)

05:30p
What’s New

Evening


06:00p
The Friendly Giant

06:15p
Portrait in Music (color)

06:40p
Time of Your Life

07:00p
Newsroom

08:00p
The Great War

08:30p
Kaleidoscope (guest Alistair Cooke)

09:00p
NET Journal (guest Milovan Djilas) (color)

10:00p
One to One

10:30p
Washington News (color)

11:00p
Washington News (color)



KNTV, Channel 11 (San Jose) (ABC)

Morning


07:45a
History (The Search for Utopia)

08:30a
Hocus Pocus (color)

09:00a
Hocus Pocus Clubhouse (color)

09:30a
Jack LaLanne (color)

10:00a
Treasure Isle

10:30a
Dick Cavett (guest David Schoenbrun) (color)

Afternoon


12:00p
Bewitched

12:30p
Lu Ryden

01:00p
Dream House (color)

01:30p
Funny You Should Ask (color)

01:55p
The Children’s Doctor (color)

02:00p
The Newlywed Game (color)

02:30p
The Dating Game (color)

03:00p
General Hospital (color)

03:30p
One Life to Live (color)

04:00p
Dark Shadows (color)

04:30p
Perry Mason

05:30p
Mike Douglas (guests Pat Paulsen, E.J. Peaker, Chet Huntley, the Four Freshmen) (color)

Evening


07:00p
News (local)

07:30p
The Avengers (color)

08:30p
Peyton Place (color)

09:00p
The Outcasts (color)

10:00p
The Big Valley (color)

11:00p
News (local)

11:30p
Sports Highlights (color)

11:40p
Movie – “The Charge at Feather River”



KEMO, Channel 20 (Ind.)

Afternoon


02:30p
James Beard

03:00p
Captain Fathom

03:30p
Speed Racer (color)

04:00p
Bozo’s Big Top (color)

05:00p
Thunderbirds (color)

05:30p
Batman (color)

Evening


06:00p
Gilligan’s Island

06:30p
The Invaders (color)

07:30p
Of Lands and Sea (color)

08:00p
ABA Basketball (Dallas at Oakland)

10:00p
Movie – “The Brink of Life”

12:00a
Film (color)



KNEW, Channel 32 (Ind.)

11:30a


Afternoon


03:30p
Daphne’s Castle (color)

05:00p
Rocky and His Friends (color)

05:30p
Bob McAllister (color)

Evening


06:30p
Perfect Match (color)

07:00p
PDQ (guests Bill Bixby, Paul Lynde, Will Hutchins) (color)

07:30p
Truth or Consequences (color)

08:00p
Donald O’Connor (guests Linda Cristal, Allen Ludden, Ruta Lee,

09:00p
Les Crane (guests Isidore Ziferstein, Albert Ellis) (color)



KGSC, Channel 36 (San Jose) (Ind.)

Afternoon


03:00p
Cartoon Time

03:30p
Homemaker Highlights

04:00p
Adel Hall (guest Toni May)

05:00p
The Cisco Kid (color)

05:30p
Peter Gunn

Evening


06:00p
The Real McCoys

06:30p
Porter Wagoner (guests Don Reno, Bill Harrell) (color)

07:00p
Movie – “Dark Journey”

08:30p
Merv Griffin (guests Richard Boone, Hermoine Gingold, Enzo Stuarti, Julie Budd, Jackie Kannon, Lilly Tomlin) (color)

10:00p
Every Supernatural Phenomenon

10:30p
John Wiliamson (debut)

10:45p
Movie – “Pride of the Bluegrass”



KBHK, Channel 44 (Ind.)

Morning


11:30a
Cartoons (color)

Afternoon


12:30p
Movie – “Return from the Sea”

01:30p
News (Mark Lett) (color)

02:00p
Father Knows Best

02:30p
Mister Ed

03:00p
Astroboy

03:30p
Capt. San Francisco (color)

04:00p
Bugs Bunny (color)

04:30p
Marine Boy (color)

05:00p
Popeye

05:30p
The Three Stooges

Evening


06:00p
The Little Rascals

06:30p
Superman (color)

07:00p
Dobie Gillis

07:30p
The Honeymooners

08:00p
Hazel (color)

08:30p
Steve Allen (guests Don Knotts, Della Reese, Gene Baylos, Julius Sumner Miller (color)

10:00p
News (local)

10:30p
Joe Dolan! (color)

11:15p
Movie – “The Big Wheel”

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