Showing posts with label Television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Television. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

T.V.'s Top Five Favorite Detectives and Private Eyes



[Part 1 of a series]

We've decided to do a series on T.V's gumshoes, first up, five of our favorite 1970's private eyes.

From a milk swilling geriatric P.I. who spirits crime scene evidence back to his office lab, to a rumpled, Peugeot driving, cigar chomping Lt. who befuddles his suspects into confessing, a wise ass beach bum who hates carrying a gun, a guy tough enough to withstand 17 gunshot wounds, and a smooth talking lollipop licking operator with a shiny dome, these were the guys we loved to watch solve T.V. crime.






James Garner as Private Eye Jim Rockford

The Rockford Files debuted in 1974 and lasted five seasons. Produced by Roy Huggins and written by Stephen J. Cannell, Rockford's character lived in a trailer by the beach, preferred to B.S. his way out of a tight spot rather than fight and rarely carried a gun.

(When one surprised client asked why, Rockford replied, "Because I don't want to shoot anybody.")






According to Museum TV, Cannell decided to make Rockford, the "Jack Benny of private eyes".

Rockford's character served time in 1960's for a wrongful conviction of armed robbery then received a pardon. His trailer house, which was on a parking lot near a Malibu beach, doubled as his office. He kept his gun, which he didn't have a permit, in a cookie jar. He might of lived in a dilapidated trailer but he drove the requisite fast car, a Pontiac Trans-Am. Source - Wiki





Mike Connors as Joe Mannix

Mannix premiered in 1967. Mike Connors played an Armenian detective who was knocked unconscious 55 times and suffered 17 gunshot wounds during the show's eight seasons.





The first season had Mannix working for a "secretive" computer company called Intertech who had a computer called Intertech that doled out Mannix's assignments. This confusing concept was dumped after the first season when Mannix was allowed to become a "standard" private eye.

Peggy Fair, played by Gail Fisher, was his black secretary. Peggy's husband was a cop killed in the line of duty and her character was frequently kidnapped. Source - Wiki

Mannix drove "cool" cars.

A 1968 Toronado especially customized by George Barris for the popular TV series of the sixties. The back seat was removed and the extra space, covered with a leather tonneau, was used as a storage area for crime fighting gadgets. The armrest between the two front seats held a gun, a short-wave radio and a telephone. Source - Telus.net




Kojak premiered in 1973 and starred Telly Savalas as bald lollipop loving New York cop, Lt. Theo Kojak, whose favorite catch-phrase was "Who loves ya baby?"





The lollipop was introduced into the series after several years of Kojak's character puffing on cigarettes. Bowing down to the television industries' political correctness against smoking, Kojak's character switched from cigarettes to lollipops to appease the Smoke Nazis.

Kevin Dobson, who went on to star in the soap series, Knots Landing, played Det. Bobby Cracker. Savalas' brother played Det. Stravos.

Future stars who had guest stints on Kojak included Richard Gere, John Ritter, Lynn Redgrave, and James Woods. Source - Wiki

It was Savalas' smooth style and demeanor, cynical wit and a tendency to bend the rules that enamored viewers.

Savalas died in 1994 but his "Who loves ya, baby" lives on.






Peter Falk as Lt. Columbo


The series Columbo, starring Peter Falk as the overly-polite, slow-witted shabbily dressed detective, Lt. Columbo, aired in 1971.





He chomped on cigars and drove an old Peugeot and was the only character in the series. No faithful side-kick or grizzly stressed out Commander. There were only 3 episodes where Columbo didn't wear his old raincoat when his character had to wear a tuxedo. Patrick McGoohan was the only "guest" cast member, starring on the series more than three times as a murderer and the only one to inquire about Columbo's first name, which was never revealed. Source - Columbo Trivia

Time and again, it was Colombo's demeanor which lulled criminals into a false sense of security, misjudging the Lt.'s inherent ability to solve a case.
Columbo's signature interrogation technique is to politely conclude an interview with a suspect and exit the scene...but to then stop in the doorway (or even return a moment later from outside) and ask the suspect "just one more thing". The "one more thing" always brings to light the key inconsistency in the suspect's alibi. Source - Wiki




Buddy Epsen, Lee Merriweather, Barnaby Jones

Premiering in 1973, Epsen played the geriatric P.I. Barnaby Jones. Jones' character comes out of retirement to track down his son's killer with the help of his daughter-in-law, Betty (Merriweather).

Barnaby Jones was a "crossover" show, Barnaby and Betty had appeared on the detective show Cannon to track down Jones' son killer with the help of the fat detective. The character, Cannon, played by William Conrad, appeared on Barnaby Jones. Source - IMDB

Barnaby also had his own CSI "crime lab" back at his office for not only was he a private eye but also an "expert in forensic chemistry, clinical psychology, forensic medicine, toxicology and criminology."



His folksy charm fooled villains as did his age:
Once a female commented "A man of your age, Mr. Jones? You're a new kind of private eye." Barnaby replied: "It's a nice way of saying I'm an old kind of private eye. Besides to me old age has always seemed to be 15 years older than I am."
Barnaby had a thing for milk and his own quotes:

At this moment I'm not looking for the needle in the haystack,
I'm looking for a haystack.

Believing everything you see is nearly as badly as having
to see everything you believe.

Dead people don't leave fingerprints.

That boy is as loose with his purse-strings as a nimbus cloud
is with rain. Source - TV Acres
Famous for his stint as the most brightest bulb in the bunch, Jed Clampett in the Beverly Hillbillies, Ebsen passed away at age 95 in 2003.

Next up, more of TV's most famous quirky detectives and private eyes.

Part 2- Five 1970s TV Detectives We still Love

By LBG
Source - Youtube - Rockford Files
Source - Youtube - Kojak
Image - Rockford
Image - Mannix
Source - Youtube - Mannix
Image - Kojak
Image - Columbo
Source - Youtube - Columbo
Image - Barnaby Jones

Source - Youtube

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Tuesday, February 5, 2008

DBKP Today in Weird History: February 5, 2008

Kidnappings, Inventions, War, Television, Periodicals, Births, Deaths, Terrorism, Lost Bets, Government, The Clintons, Convicted Racist Murderers, Space Frontier


1974 - Patty Hearst is kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA)


Government

1783 - Sweden recognizes U.S. independence.
1900 - The United States and Great Britain sign the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, giving the United States the right to build a canal in Nicaragua but not to fortify it.
1904 - American occupation of Cuba ends
1917 - Congress passed the Immigration Act, which restricted Asian immigration, over President Wilson's veto.
1937 - FDR proposed increasing the number of Supreme Court justices—"packing" the court.
1969 - US population reaches 200 million
1972 - US airlines begin mandatory inspection of passengers & baggage
1981 - President Reagan, in a nationwide address, said the United States was in "the worst economic mess since the Great Depression" and called for sweeping spending and tax cuts.
1992 - The House of Representatives authorized an investigation into whether the 1980 Reagan-Bush campaign conspired with Iran to delay release of the American hostages. (The task force investigating the "October Surprise" allegations later said it found no credible evidence of such a conspiracy.)



"Mad" King George III

1811 - After George III was declared insane, the Prince of Wales became Prince Regent of England, and later George IV.

1788 - London’s finest, known as Bobbies, were named after Robert Peel, who was born on this day in Lancashire, England.

Television

1969 - For one of the few times in television history, a scheduled series (usually 13 or 26 weeks of shows) turned into a one-night wonder. ABC-TV premiered Turn On, hosted by Tim Conway, a show similar to NBC’s Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In. TV critics called the show, “offbeat and distasteful.” It never aired again.



1967 - "Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour" premieres on CBS (later ABC, NBC)



THE CLINTONS

1996 - A judge ordered President Clinton to testify in the Whitewater trial.

CONVICTED RACIST MURDERERS

1994 - Byron De La Beckwith was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of Medgar Evers, 30 years after the crime in Jackson, Mississippi.

TERRORISM

2001 - Four disciples of Osama bin Laden went on trial in New York in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa. (The four were convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole.)

BIG BUSINESS

1901 - Pierpont Morgan forms US Steel

PERIODICALS

1846 - The Oregon Spectator became the first newspaper published in American territory west of the Rocky Mountains.
1922 - The Reader's Digest begins publication in New York.

SPACE FRONTIER

1971 - The US Apollo 14 (Shepard and Mitchell onboard) lands on the Moon

PRIZES

1988 - Mikhail Gorbachev and President Reagan nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize

COMMUNISM

1918 - The Soviets proclaim separation of church and state.

WAR

1864 - Federal forces occupy Jackson, Miss.
1865 - The three-day Battle of Hatcher's Run, Va., begins.
1973 - Funeral for LC William Nolde, last US soldier killed in Vietnam War
1981 - A military jury in North Carolina convicted Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood of collaborating with the enemy while a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

INVENTIONS

1850 - Gail Borden of Brooklyn, NY, was issued a U.S. patent his process that baked a combination of extracts from meat with flour to produce a meat biscuit capable of long term storage No. 7,066). This gave a convenient method that a preserved meat-based product could be carried by the military, seamen and other travelers. Because it could be reconstituted with hot water as a soup, the patent title was "Preparation of Portable Soup-Bread."



1861 - Samuel Goodale of Cincinnati, OH patented the moving picture peep show machine.

1861 - A U.S. patent was issued for the kinematoscope - a photographic attempt to show motion - to Coleman Sellers of Philadelphia as an "improvement in exhibiting stereoscopic pictures of moving objects.

1870 - An animated photographic picture projection before a theater audience was presented by Henry R. Heyl using his Phasmatrope. This was a converted projecting lantern in front of which rotated a disc with 16 openings near the edge, each carrying a photographic plate. The series of plates showed dancers, who appeared to move as the rotating disc showed successive positions. The pictures were a continuous loop that did not change.

1884 - Black American inventor Willis Johnson of Cincinnati, Ohio, was issued a U.S. patent for an "Egg Beater" (No. 292,821). It was designed so that eggs, batter and similar ingredients used by bakers or confectioners could be mixed intimately efficiently.

1899 - Thomas A. Edison was issued a U.S. patent for a "Phonograph Recorder and Reproducer" (No. 397,280).

1901 - A loop-the-loop centrifugal railway was patented by Edwin Prescott of Arlington, Mass. (No. 667,455) which he had installed at Coney Island in 1900 where it was known as Boynton's Centrifugal Railway. It had a 75-ft incline and a 20-ft-wide loop.

1922 - William Larned's steel-framed tennis racquet gets its first test.

1929 - The first U.S. patent for starting blocks, titled "Foot Support," was issued to George T. Bresnahan of Iowa City, Iowa (No.1,701,026). He described his invention as "what might be termed a starting block" to be used on a running track or field.

BETS

1991 - Howard Stern kisses NY Giant Leonard Marshall's ass over bet, Stern lost claiming the Giants would lose the Superbowl

BIRTHS

1723 - John Witherspoon, clergyman signed Declaration of Independence
1837 - Dwight Lyman Moody, US evangelist (Moody Institute in Chicago)
1840 - Hiram Stevens Maxim, inventor (automatic single-barrel rifle)
1840 - Scotsman John Dunlop, inventor of the pneumatic tire
1848 - Outlaw Belle Starr
1900 - Adlai E Stevenson, (Gov-D-Ill), intellectual, politician, and presidental candidate (D) (1952, 1956)
1906 - Actor John Carradine
1934 - Henry Aaron (Baseball Hall of Famer: Milwaukee & Atlanta Braves: home run champ: eclipsed Babe Ruth's record of 714; baseball executive: Atlanta Braves)
1942 - Roger Staubach (football: Dallas Cowboys QB: Super Bowl V, VI, X, XII, XIII; Heisman Trophy Winner: Navy [1963])
1943 - Craig Morton (football: Dallas Cowboys QB: Super Bowl V, VI; Denver Broncos: Super Bowl XII)
1947 - Darrell Waltrip (auto racer: Daytona 500 winner [1989])

Deaths

1973 - L C William Nolde, last US soldier killed in Vietnam, funeral
U.S. Ambassador Pamela Harriman died in Paris at age 76.


Image - Patty Hearst
Image - King George III
Image - Smothers Brothers
Image - Peep Show
Source - Today in Science
Source - Infoplease
Source - tnl
Source - Today in History

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