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Because of the various discussions and whatnot about the 50th Anniversary of the Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album, I think I'll start off with what I said about my view of the Beatles in general about eight years earlier:

I suppose I have a rather skewed view of the band compared to most people. You see, I was a baby in their heyday (I was born around the time Revolver came out) but they had already broken up by the time I was allowed to listen to the radio in the early Seventies. So I knew all four of them as solo artists FIRST. It wasn't till much later in life that I got the message that these guys were THESE GUYS and so on.

The media establishment was so quick to move on that their songs as a group were largely out of circulation for some years. Besides, Paul kept on making hit records with Wings. There was no point to look back at that time...unless you were looking back to the Fifties in the wake of American Grafitti and Happy Days. It took the Disco backlash, Elvis' death, the Beatlemania Broadway show (anybody remember that?) and the Sgt. Pepper's movie/soundtrack to start a Beatles nostalgia trend in earnest.

Anyway, I come from a time warp with regards to that realm of pop culture. I'm like a baseball fan who has to remember that the Dodgers once played in Brooklyn, or a car nut who must be prompted that GM used to have a brand of cars called LaSalle. Well, I'm not THAT bad. After all, I can ask my brother (who played a role in his High School's Beatles-based revue).

--So, what about the album itself?  Really I took my own sweet time getting to it.  You see, my sister had the vinyl of the movie soundtrack, which of course threw the original narrative of the album out in favor of a contrivance of both it AND Abbey Road.  So my own views of what the songs were and what they meant were very very wrong, on many levels.

I only got to hear the songs that were on the album that were not remade for the movie in the early Eighties when a family friend let me borrow her vinyl of the Beatles LP--and I never heard the Beatles LP all the way through till just after the start of this Millennium when on a road trip with my brother.  The new PBS special about the album's making swung my compass on it completely around.

The new remaster is going on my Xmas Wishlist.

FP

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In 1977, the only night of the week on which NONE of the three major U.S. television networks showed a feature film in Prime-Time was TUESDAY.
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Sagittarius Horoscope for week of September 4, 2014

In Roald Dahl's kids' story James and the Giant Peach, 501 seagulls are needed to carry the giant peach from a spot near the Azores all the way across the Atlantic Ocean to New York City. But physics students at the U.K.'s University of Leicester have determined that such a modest contingent wouldn't be nearly enough to achieve a successful airlift. By their calculations, there'd have to be a minimum of 2,425,907 seagulls involved. I urge you to consider the possibility that you, too, will require more power than you have estimated to accomplish your own magic feat. Certainly not almost 5,000 times more, as in the case of the seagulls. Fifteen percent more should be enough. (P.S. I'm almost positive you can rustle up that extra 15 percent.)

Oddly enough I noticed that the film version of Jonathan Livingston Seagull was available on DVD from Oldies.com and I was rather curious about that.  Was it a sign?

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Sagittarius Horoscope for week of August 8, 2013

You have both a poetic and a cosmic license to stretch yourself further. It's best not to go too far, of course. You should stop yourself before you obliterate all boundaries and break all taboos and smash all precedents. But you've certainly got the blessings of fate if you seek to disregard some boundaries and shatter some taboos and outgrow some precedents. While you're at it, you might also want to shed a few pinched expectations and escape an irrelevant limitation or two. It's time to get as big and brave and brazen as you dare.


I'll leave the playing of saxophones to others. I don't think Scotch Whisky is for me either at this point. Do I have a name when I lose?
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In the summer of 1979, we moved again from Pittsburgh to the Tampa Bay area. The second TV was placed in a "Florida room" of the house, that was originally designed as a garage but never actually built as such. After some months of sharing a bedroom with my brother I somehow persuaded my parents into replacing the old sofa in the Florida room with a Castro Convertable bed and took the room over as my own bedroom. As a result, I was watching a lot more TV...even though I was just as scrupulous about curfew times as I was in previous years. Except in summer of course, when I began watching a lot of late late shows--and network reruns of prime-time shows in latenight slots.

1978-'79 Season
*Favorites At-The-Time: Hardy Boys, Battlestar Galactica, Operation Petticoat, Project UFO, Taxi, The Dukes of Hazzard, Sword of Justice, Mork & Mindy
*Eventual Favorites: M*A*S*H, WKRP in Cincinnati

1979-'80 Season
*Favorites At-The-Time: Mork & Mindy, The Associates, 240-Robert, That's Incredible, M*A*S*H, WKRP in Cincinnati, Real People, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, 20/20
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(This is part III, I Started With THIS Entry and then Continued In THIS One.)

We moved to Pittsburgh in the Summer of 1976. And that brought changes...I was allowed to watch much more prime-time programming...and we installed a TV in the lower-floor family room next to the bedroom I shared with my brother. A lot of habits changed because of that second television.

1976-'77 Season
*Favorites At-The-Time: Hardy Boys, Baa Baa Blacksheep, The Bionic Woman, The Six Million Dollar Man, Happy Days, Welcome Back Kotter, Chico & The Man
*Eventual Favorites: The Rockford Files, M*A*S*H

1977-'78 Season
*Favorites At-The-Time: Project UFO, Hardy Boys, Happy Days, Eight Is Enough, CHiPs, Logan's Run, Operation Petticoat, New Adventures of Wonder Woman, The Rockford Files
*Eventual Favorites: M*A*S*H
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http://www.bmh-ltd.com/midget.htm

Or BETTER THAN THE ORIGINAL II?

My research addiction led me to British Motor Heritage, which produces repro parts of British cars from the Sixties and Seventies. As my father had two MG Midgets in his driving lifetime, this has immediate appeal to me...the possibility of buying a brand new body of a classic sports car and making a 21st century iteration.

Maybe something to add to the "if I win Publishers Clearinghouse" wishlist.

(I'm "relieved" they don't have TR7/TR8 bodies in white yet. That would really bend some minds.)

FP
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The Bill Clinton Administration is just as far back in history now as the Dwight Eisenhower Administration was when George Lucas made American Grafitti.
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Continuing on to the middle of the Seventies...

Seventy-Four/Seventy-Five was a year heavy on the adaptations, Planet of the Apes, Born Free, Paper Moon, and so on. The best of these, and arguably one of the best drama shows of the whole decade, was Little House On The Prarie, which, while a hit, was very low-key compared to other hits of the era. I personally didn't watch a lot of it till it hit syndication, tho' I did see some when it was new.

I could probably waste a whole post on why I preferred Chico & The Man to The Jeffersons, both of which premiered that year. But I can be much more succinct: Norman Lear's shows BORED me. I got into Chico & The Man when NBC Daytime ran it as a lead-in to the soap operas the following years; Mom was addicted to NBC's soaps and so on time off of school I saw that often.

The Rockford Files also came that year, tho' I didn't start watching that till a few years in, I remember.

1974-'75 Season
*Favorites At-The-Time: Emergency!, Happy Days, The Six Million Dollar Man, The Wonderful World Of Disney
*Eventual Favorites: M*A*S*H, The Rockford Files, Chico & The Man

Seventy-Five/Seventy-Six continued the theme of adaptations to television, which included The Swiss Family Robinson (which broke my habit of following The Wonderful World Of Disney), Rich Man, Poor Man, Ellery Queen, and The Invisible Man.

When Things Were Rotten and The Bionic Woman were my two favorite new shows of that year. We also liked Welcome Back, Kotter--but who didn't? Later on in the season, we got Laverne & Shirley, and perhaps the show that not only set the trend for variety shows for the rest of the decade, but wore out the genre for a generation, Donny & Marie.

1975-'76 Season
*Favorites At-The-Time: Emergency!, Happy Days, The Six Million Dollar Man, When Things Were Rotten, The Bionic Woman, Welcome Back Kotter, Chico & The Man
*Eventual Favorites: M*A*S*H, The Rockford Files

MORE TO COME.
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And my apologies to all my readers who haven't seen much of me lately.

This blog, and likely the ones after it, will only be personal by degrees. I'm still dealing with the aftereffects of the death of my mother back in April; life with Dad is kind of strange. It's hard to tell when Brave ends and Numb begins. Neither of us is self-medicating, but aside from brief bursts of humor we are neither happy nor super-depressed.

I'm trying to remember how I coped long ago when my grandparents died. But that was decades ago. I don't know how different I am today.

* * *

I'd had this grand idea to poke through Wikipedia at the history of television and about my own relationships and fandoms with the shows. I realized that making it a regular series, year by year, would take quite a piece and a lot of text. So I'm going to take something of a middling approach.

I'm starting with the season BEFORE the first one I was old enough to watch primetime programming: 1972-'73. Lots of shows that were in primetime that year became staples in syndication, of course. Also, there was a mechanism between primetime and syndication that the networks had well into the Eighties but dropped when syndication companies got big enough to produce so much of their own content. They re-ran primetime show episodes in daytime (or late-night) slots, often only the following year from initial broadcast. This was how I saw things like Sanford & Son, The Partridge Family, The Brady Bunch and some others before my parents would let me stay up past 8PM. In fact, my elementary school used to let us students watch some shows between classes, while the teachers and their aides graded papers.

1972-'73 Season
*Favorites At-The-Time: Emergency!, The Wonderful World of Disney
*Eventual Favorite: M*A*S*H (tho' it was YEARS before I was allowed to watch it!)

The following season would bring in two shows that would engage my fandom and set a lot of my psychological tendencies for life: Happy Days and The Six Million Dollar Man.

People who weren't alive back in the early Seventies don't realize what a cultural phenomenon Happy Days was and how much something like it was needed at the time. It was like a national reset button, a reminder of what America is and is supposed to be, and the American character. Yes, it was silly, and much too aware of its impact on pop culture for its own good. Heck, that's why the show HAD to Jump The Shark.

What little kid in the Seventies did NOT want to be The Six Million Dollar Man? While Happy Days looked to the past for its optimism, this show built it into an action hero's anatomy...piece by piece. We had a lot of problems, but maybe technology could solve them. What if everybody had telescopic vision and parabolic hearing? What if we had power-boosted limbs and super speed? What if we all had COMPUTERS? Was this the future we wanted?

1973-'74 Season
*Favorites At-The-Time: Emergency!, Happy Days, The Wonderful World of Disney
*Eventual Favorites: M*A*S*H, The Six Million Dollar Man

MORE TO COME.
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Kool & The Gang, "Too Hot"

Knoxville hit an ALL-TIME high temperature today at 105° F/41° C. Seven generations of records and this broke every single one.

All I can do is stay out of the sun, drink lots of beverages and somehow keep my Precious and its peripherals from overheating.
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I'm in Facebook chat conversation with my wonderful sister Lynn. We're all handling Mum's departure from our lives in different ways...tho' really there's no point in getting into details.

I was reminded of the time back when we were children, when Lynn's first cat Fluffy died. Lynn was so upset and hurting that she wrote the news opinion commentator of a local TV station--and he responded by reading some of her letter on air and expressing his condolensces to her for everybody.

On a whim I did a websearch for the name of the cat and the name of the TV station together: THIS is what came up.

The Circle of Life is a very real thing. Sometimes the next world is Heaven or Paradise, and maybe we don't see loved ones again. Or maybe we just come back to this one, in a form that befits us better and fated to find love and happiness. You know love can endure--and you know it will!--one of Mum's favorite songs from Crosby, Stills and Nash.
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[Error: unknown template qotd]

I loved a LOT of One-Season Wonders. The most recent being the Americanized LIFE ON MARS. ABC just kept screwing around once it premiered, messing with the time-slot and keeping it off air when it was building an audience. I wish it had been given further seasons and a chance to live up to its potential. I suppose I'll have to eventually get the British version and its sequel on DVD to figure out where it was actually headed.

PS: I decided to do a quick survey of one-season wonders of my lifetime. I've only made it through most of the Seventies and Eighties when I was watching much more television than I do now.

One-Season Wonders:
ABC: 240-Robert, The Associates, Best of the West, Blue Thunder, Breaking Away, Call To Glory, The Insiders, Masquerade, Masters of Science Fiction, Max Headroom, Operation Petticoat, The Phoenix, Renegades, Salvage, Strike Force, When The Whistle Blows, When Things Were Rotten
CBS: Bring 'Em Back Alive, California Fever, Concrete Cowboys, The Flash, Frank's Place, Mr. Merlin, Otherworld, Q.E.D., Spencer's Pilots, Square Pegs, Whiz Kids
NBC: Amazing Stories, Games People Play, Mike Nesmith in Television Parts, Misfits Of Science, Project UFO, Sword of Justice, Voyagers
FOX: Adventures of Brisco County Jr., Space: Above & Beyond
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http://www.thepetitionsite.com/535/467/666/save-the-love-boat/

These earnest souls are attempting to rescue the internationally famous Pacific Princess from the shipbreakers. They're trying to get 10,000 signatures on the petition.
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There has been a steady stream of potential buyers for the neighbor's Mustang Mach 1 today, including one from a dealership (so I noticed from the dealer license plates on his white, last year's model van).
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A friend-of-a-friend name of Chris is selling this car. Contact details and further information are available for serious inquiries. It's in the shape I expect a forty-year-old toy to be in, especially for East Tennessee.

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Stephen R Bierce

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