Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - 70s and 80s Cop Shows Encore
Episode Date: January 8, 2024GGACP bids farewell to late "Starsky & Hutch" star David Soul with this ENCORE of a 2016 mini-episode about classic cop shows (and TV movies) from the 1970s and 80s, including "Murder Can Hurt You,"... which included a sendup of Soul and Paul Michael Glaser's popular actioner (and featured two "Amazing Colossal" podcast guests!). Also: Tony Curtis gets paged, David Cassidy goes undercover, Art Carney joins forces with a rabbi and the boys look back at the "NBC Mystery Movie" anthology series. PLUS: "Crazy Like a Fox"! "Tenspeed and Brownshoe"! The dulcet tones of Ernie Anderson! Peter Lorre sells antiques! And Gilbert hangs with Charlie Sheen! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
okay i'm gilbert godfrey and i'm here with my co-host Frank Santopadre.
And this is, let's see if I get it right this time, Gilbert and Frank's amazing, colossal obsessions.
Perfection.
And we're once again at Nutmeg Studios, engineer Frank Verderosa of Verderoso.
He's not a Marx brother this week.
Verderosa.
Thanks again, Frankie.
Yes.
Now, what do you have?
I beg your pardon?
I'm laughed out.
I'm laughed out.
We just had the great Michael McKeon here.
You know, this was something I was inspired by.
You bringing up Murder Can Hurt You.
Oh, yes.
Which was a parody of, it was a murder by death.
Making fun of all of the TV shows.
The TV cops.
Yeah, like Starsky and Hutch and Columbo.
Buck Owens plays McCloud.
Oh, yeah.
And they've got, they literally roll in Victor Bono as Ironside.
And, yeah, Starsky and Hutch, it's Jamie Farr and John Beiner.
John Beiner.
Yeah.
And Tony Danza shows up as a Beretta character.
Oh, yes.
And Burt Young, I think, is Columbo.
He is.
So I got to thinking, I was just sitting at home thinking, well, what do I do for an obsession?
And this is not focused on one thing, but I started thinking about TV cop shows from the 70s.
Less so from the 80s and the 60s, more from the 70s.
And I thought, gee, I wonder how many of these Gilbert remembers.
And I wanted to see where I could go with this.
Oh, I remember a show.
Didn't last long.
It was one of the few shows that wanted to try out a black detective.
Was it Tenafly?
Yep.
I have it on my list.
You're the only person besides myself.
Okay, now wait a minute.
Ten of fly.
The actor's name was James McKeachin.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I don't know what.
He turned up in the 2001 sequel with Roy Scheider.
Do you remember they made 2010?
It was a sequel to Kubrick's 2001.
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
He's in that.
Very obscure.
I think that was part of the NBC Thursday Night Mystery movie.
Yeah, because it had that look and feel of all of those, like the one with Name of the Game.
Right, but Name of the Game wasn't part of the NBC Mystery movie.
Name of the Game was, I think, a stand-up.
The one with Tony Francioso?
Yeah, that was Tony Francioso.
Then there was Rock Hudson.
McMillan and wife was part of it.
Was part of it. There were four on Sunday
in rotation, and the four
were Columbo, McMillan
and wife, McLeod,
Oh, McLeod! That's the one.
And something called Hack Ramsey with
Richard Boone, which was a Western. Yeah.
And those were, if I have this right,
and somebody will correct me, Gino Salamone will call me a corrector.
Those were the four on Sunday, and they had such success with it that they trotted out a Thursday night version.
And that was the Snoop Sisters.
Do you remember this?
Oh, my God, yes.
With Helen Hayes.
Yes.
And Mildred Natwick.
Do you remember her?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
There was one called McCoy with Tony Curtis.
This was the Thursday night.
I believe that's where Tenafly lived on Thursday night,
and I can't remember what the hell the fourth one was.
Do you remember a show called Bracken's World?
Yes.
Having nothing to do with Eddie Bracken.
Yeah.
Why didn't I remember it by title?
The world was fascinated with Eddie Bracken's career.
Who isn't?
Who isn't?
Eddie Bracken. So it was Bracken's World.
It was a Wally World for our listeners that want to make a contemporary connection.
And it was all about Hollywood or what we want to imagine
film studios to be like and what I remember about Bracken's world and when I I did an episode
of anger management okay I remember when you did that and I brought this up to Charlie Sheen and to one of his brothers, Ramon Estevez.
Okay.
Neither one of them knew.
Bracken's World.
Yeah.
But what I remember is, see, the movie, the subject was roses.
That was Jack Albertson and Martin Sheen.
I remember.
Young Martin Sheen, like fresh out of the army, young handsome guy.
And they were like, you know, the father and son who couldn't get along with each other, a drama.
And then I remember shortly afterwards, they did an episode of Bracken's World called My Father Never Spanked Me.
Interesting.
Starring Jack Albertson as an old vaudeville comic and Martin Sheen as this selfish, nasty nightclub comedian. So they were just ripping off?
The subject was roses?
Yeah, but they changed the...
Who was the star of Bracken's World?
Was it Peter Kastner?
Oh, it could have been.
I'm not looking this up.
I don't know.
Who was the...
I gotta figure that out.
But yeah, I remember they cast them again as father and son.
What did it have to do with cop shows?
Yeah, I don't know.
It just got to... I think one time
Martin Sheen's house
might have been held up
and he called the cop.
I was waiting for you
to come back around the bend
and you left me
standing at the curb.
Well, he was a vaudevillian
and he was a nightclub comic,
but at night, they were cops.
If anybody knows what the fourth, and Paul, here's our researcher, Paul Rayburn.
I don't have anything like a Bracken's World.
You got Bracken's World?
What do we got?
Okay, Bracken's World, Peter Haskell.
Oh, my God, yes, yes.
I was thinking of the other guy, the Peter, what did I say?
Laurie.
No, no, not Peter Laurie.
In fact, there was, I think there was a very, very short-lived show.
That was Secret Squirrel.
A very short-lived show of, and I've never seen an episode where they cast Vincent Price and Peter Laurie as, I think they were antique store owners, who would sell primes.
Oh, yes, I've heard you bring this up.
Didn't you bring this up for Vincent Price's daughter, and she didn't know what you were talking about?
That's a stumper.
Okay, these are some of the shows, since you bring up Tenafly.
And, Paul, try to find out what the fourth NBC mystery movie segment was on Thursday nights.
You remember McCoy?
I think he was a master of disguise with Tony Curtis.
Oh, yes.
Maybe he was a former – I'm pulling this out of my butt.
But maybe he was like a former Hollywood makeup man and he was a master of disguise or I'm wrong.
All of those cheap setups.
Here's some from the 70s.
Ten of Fly, Dan August with Burt Reynolds
and your man Norman Fell. Yes, yeah, I love
Norman Fell. Banachek with George Pappard.
Yes, yes. Okay, here's a good one.
Ten Speed and Brown Shoe. Oh, wait a second.
That was 1980, actually. Wait, wait, Ten Speed and Brown Shoe.
That was in Jeff Goldblum, was it? You bet, and Ben Vereen.
Yes. Did you ever see it?
And yes, and then there was also a black and white cop thing, very short-lived with Don
Adams.
Yeah, that was called The Partners.
Yeah.
With Rupert Cross and Don Adams.
Yeah.
Yeah, but that was a comedy.
Yeah.
Yeah, these were kind of legit cop shows.
There was Toma, which we've talked about.
Oh my God, yes.
With Tony Musante, who you brought up in the incident.
Yes.
How about this one?
Long Street, we've talked about.
Oh, the blind guy.
James Franciscus from Underneath the Planet of the Apes.
You remember a show called The Eddie Capra Mysteries?
Oh.
Does that ring a bell?
Not as much.
How about Bill Bixby in The Magician?
Yes.
Yes, because I heard Bill Bixby in real life was a major magic fan.
Really?
So he wanted to be a magician.
I didn't know that.
Yeah.
That's good stuff.
Barnaby Jones, of course, people know.
How about Switch with Eddie Albert and Robert Wagner?
Oh, yes. does this ring a bell
yeah i think they were con men yeah yeah but again i didn't research these i just wrote them down
and some by memory scary enough bixby yeah bill bixby was in that tv production of uh steam bath
written by drew's daddy yes yes and and that's where the very naked Valerie Perrine.
Only I could write down on a card, Helen Hayes and Milton Drew Natwick, and you would somehow get to naked Valerie Perrine.
Valerie Perrine used to be excellent for taking our clothes off.
She was.
Maybe we should call Valerie Perrine.
We got to call her.
Not for the podcast.
Just to see if she's old enough.
Yeah.
How about this one?
O'Hara, U.S. Treasury with David Jansen.
Oh, my God.
Yes.
SWAT.
We remember SWAT.
That was remade as a movie.
It was a bad movie.
Now, what I remember about all those shows of that era.
Well, also, what you might call it um
jack klugman show quincy yeah also from the 70s right quincy might have crossed into the 80s
oh maybe it wasn't late 70s i think you're right but all of those shows they'd have them solve the crime, shoot the killer on a brick, and then there'd be
a commercial, and then they'd come back for the funny ending.
That's right.
Yeah.
That's right.
Which we talked about with, I think, Robert Wool or somebody, or Judy Gold, which was
parodied in Police Squad.
Oh, yes.
Because they would have the fake freeze frame at the end, like the new Geico commercials.
Oh, yeah.
Here's a couple other ones.
How about David Cassidy, Man Undercover?
Yes, I do remember that.
I think that was a Fred Silverman joint.
Now, was David Cassidy, did he do an episode?
There was that show, Police Show.
Police Story. Police Story.
Police Story.
Right, this might have spun off from Police Story.
I think so.
And I think, oh, whatchamacallit, I think Gabe Kaplan played a cop.
Gabe Kaplan?
Yeah, Gabe Kaplan.
That one escaped me.
Wait, Paul Rayburn?
Here's one of the things that was part of that.
NBC mystery movie.
We said that one.
We told that already.
Tenafly.
That was the first thing we said.
We sat down in the chair and we said Tenafly.
And you come in an hour later, just shut the fuck up.
Really shut the fuck up.
We said Tenafly. That was the fuck up. Really shut the fuck up. We said Tenafly.
That was the first thing. He's thinking
of moving his family to Tenafly, New Jersey.
We hadn't even introduced it
yet. Okay, here we go.
I love you, Paul. You're telling
me I made a mistake. Please don't talk again.
Sunday Mystery Movie was
Columbo, McCloud. The original four
were Columbo, three. The original three were Columbo, McLeod. Three.
The original three were Columbo, McLeod, and Macmillan and Wife.
Then they expanded it to Columbo, McLeod, Macmillan and Wife, Heck Ramsey.
I don't know how he was a guy who solved crimes in the Old West.
And Madigan with, I think, Richard Widmark.
Oh, that could be.
Or there was a movie Madigan with Richard Widmark and Henry Fonda.
Cool Million?
Don't know what that is.
And Banachek with George Pappard, who would later do the A-Team.
And then they added Tenafly.
They added the Snoop Sisters.
Okay, so now that cowboy one that you just mentioned.
Heck Ramsey?
No, no, no.
Yeah. You know, no, no. Yeah.
You know, the cop cowboy.
McLeod.
McLeod.
That was based on that Clint Eastwood movie.
Coogan's Bluff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think I got this all screwed up.
I think it started as a Wednesday and then it moved to Sunday.
It was also, the period of time was on Tuesday, according to them.
Right.
And something called Amy Prentiss?
I don't know that at all.
What I remember about the 70s cop shows and other shows around that time, it's when they started to make it look more like movies.
Like they would go like Peter Falk in.
Right.
That's right.
And it was like a movie opening.
That's right. Let's see.
Do you remember Amy Prentiss?
Here's McCoy with Tony Curtis.
Faraday and Company.
Oh, the title
sounds vaguely familiar. I want to say that Stephanie Powers
was in that, but I'm just
basically guessing.
And Quincy.
I didn't know Quincy started out
as part of that series.
And of course, who could forget Lannigan's
Rabbi.
Oh, wait. I'm going to
assume this was a crime-solving moil.
Yeah.
Who was in this?
You've got to look up
Lannigan's Rabbi. I'm going to say, who was that
Irish actor who was
in, like, he was in All the Family? Oh, Barnard Hughes. Barnard Hughes. Right, he's in Where's Papa. I'm going to say, who was that Irish actor who was in, like, he was in All the Family?
Oh, Barnard Hughes.
Barnard Hughes.
Right, he's in Where's Papa.
I'm getting a feeling he might have been in this.
Okay, while Paul is researching that, here's a couple of quick ones.
Do you remember a British show called My Partner the Ghost?
No.
From the 60s?
How about Roger Moore and Tony Curtis and the Persuaders?
That I remember.
In fact, I remember on the Persuaders, they had in one episode, they're in a hotel lobby,
and they go, Paging Bernie Schwartz.
Oh, that's a great inside joke.
Paging Bernie Schwartz, because that was Tony Curtis's name.
And how about Griff with Lorne Green?
Does that mean anything to you?
A 70s cop show?
Oh.
Moving on to the 80s real quickly.
Joe Dancer with Robert Blake.
Yeah.
Don't remember it.
B.L. Stryker with Burt Reynolds.
Oh, like, both titles sound familiar.
Yeah.
B.L. Stryker was like T.J. Hooker.
Yeah, yeah.
Magruder and Loud.
Now, that one sounds a lot more
familiar, but I know not a
goddamn chance. You know, Paul Thomas Anderson,
who made Boogie Nights and Magnolia,
two of my favorite movies,
his father was Ernie
Anderson, who was a voiceover guy. Did you know
this? No. He was a famous voiceover
guy for ABC, and he was the guy that used
to say, coming up on the love
boat. Oh, wow! And then it's Magruder and Loud. Remember this guy? Yes! That was Ernie Anderson. for ABC and he was the guy that used to say coming up on the love boat oh wow
and then it's
Magruder and Loud
remember this guy
yes
that was Ernie Anderson
I got Lanigan's Rabbi
you're gonna love this
you got Lanigan's Rabbi
it lasted half the year
in 1977
yeah
Bruce Solomon
I remember Bruce Solomon
he was on Mary Hartman
and Art Carney
Art Carney
oh
oh
shame on us.
Wow, that is a goddamn shame.
I guess he was Lanigan, not the rabbi.
He was the rabbi.
I would kill to see Art Carney.
He was so versatile, Art Carney.
He made such a convincing Jew.
Good stuff, Paul.
Directed by John Astin.
John Astin directed...
Now we have to get John Astin.
John Astin, by the way, is number one on my get list.
I just want to put that out there.
So we're going to chase after John.
You're going to have to zero right in on Lannigan.
He's in Baltimore.
And I also want my old co-star...
Who do you want?
Alan Arkin.
Yep, we can work on Alan Arkin. Yep,
we can work on Alan Arkin.
You just want
Valerie Perrine,
don't bullshit me.
And from the 80s,
Magruder and Loud,
I just like saying that.
Jake and the Fat Man.
Yes,
with the canon.
Yeah,
William Conrad
made a comeback.
Cop Rock.
Oh my God,
Let's not forget
Cop Rock,
the musical.
That was one of those shows
where the cops and the criminals, and it was not a comedy. No, no. The cops and the criminals would
break into song and dance numbers. Stephen Bosco. Yeah. Yeah. And then. We'd seen a little too much
Dennis Potter, a little too much of the Singing Detective. And they didn't learn their lesson, and then years later they did Vegas.
Oh, yes.
Where it's a drama that takes place in Vegas where the characters break into certain things.
That was called Vegas?
Was it Las Vegas?
Dan Urick, the Robert Urick show?
Look that up.
And don't take Tenafly.
I think the same crew was involved in Tenafly.
You can't fire the guy.
You're not paying him.
And then there was Beverly Hills.
What do you got?
I forgot what I'm looking up.
What are you looking up?
What do you want him to look up?
Oh, the musical.
Vegas.
Vegas. Vegas.
Yeah, that was a fairly recent.
How about Beverly Hills Bunce with Dennis Franz?
Yes.
Yes.
That one I'm vaguely familiar.
I knew it was Dennis Franz.
Okay.
And the last one.
Yeah.
Two last ones.
This I never heard of.
There was a cop show called, not O'Hara, O'Hara with Pat Morita.
Even I'm offended.
Something I did not think was possible.
And then, your old pal Jack Warden.
This is the last one on my list.
Crazy Like a Fox.
Oh, I don't remember that. But Jack Warden. That's what I got on my list. Crazy Like a Fox. Oh, I don't remember that.
But Jack Warden.
That's what I got.
He would have been a great guest.
Jack Warden?
Jack Warden, yeah.
It's a long-distance call, my friend.
Yes.
So it was Vegas 1978.
Is that the right one?
No, that was the one with Robert Urich.
Well, this one in 1978 is Dennis Quaid.
Dennis Quaid.
No, no.
Michael Chiklis.
This is a different one.
So the other one is in the 2000s?
This could have been the 90s.
90s.
Okay.
Somebody will solve it for us.
Did you have anything you wanted to bring up this week, or you just want to go off this silliness?
Well, let's see.
How long have we done?
You got five minutes.
So far.
Yeah.
Darryl will yell at us for doing such a long episode.
We'll have to see if there's another cop show we left out.
Okay.
Well, I got some from the 60s.
You want to go back to Felony Squad, Naked City.
Oh, yeah.
Honey West with Anne Francis.
Oh, yes.
I never saw these.
I'm happy to say these are before my time.
Hawk with Burt Reynolds.
Oh, my God.
I just hoked up something.
Hawk before pre-Dan August.
And Surfside Six.
Oh, my God.
I guess they were beach bums who solved crimes.
I guess that was sort of like Route 66.
One of the stars was Van Williams, who became the Green Hornet.
Oh, yes.
Yeah, that's all I got.
Which, there you go, the Green Hornet with Bruce Lee.
Yeah, one season.
Yeah.
Well, one unfortunate season where they didn't spend any money on that show.
What about Mrs. Columbo?
Oh, my God, what was her name?
Kate Mulgrew.
Kate Mulgrew.
Yeah.
That was one of those horrible ideas.
Not as bad as Lannigan's Rabbi.
Yeah.
Of course, the whole point on Columbo was that you never saw Mrs.
She was this figure that he would say, oh, yeah, my wife.
And that was it.
But you never saw her.
You're not supposed to see her.
It's kind of like giving a show to Vera, Norm's wife, on Cheers.
Yes.
Vera!
With an exclamation point.
Or if they had a show based on Phyllis Diller's husband, Fang.
Right.
Or spooky old Alice.
Yes.
George Goldblatt's wife.
What do you got, Rayburn?
There are so many shows filmed in Vegas or called Vegas.
There was a show called Las Vegas on NBC 2003 to 2008.
That's the one.
Who was in it?
Let me see.
Let me get to it.
And, of course, there was that Joe, Mrs. Calabay.
Right.
James Caan.
No, that's not it either.
James Caan, no.
He didn't sing.
No, no.
I'd like to see that.
He was in another show that took place in Vegas.
This isn't the one.
Okay, so this is the mystery of this week.
What was the, we'll put it out for our fans.
The musical Vegas.
What was the musical?
Was it a cop show?
Yeah, no, no.
It just took place in Vegas.
And people broke into song.
Yeah.
We're going to have to come back in the next mini episode and answer this.
We'll be back in the next mini episode for the answer to this question?
This is horrible.
Did you look up musical Vegas?
Same Gilbert channel.
Gilbert, I know I'm letting you down here.
Vegas musical, that should do it, right?
Yeah.
I'm exhausted.
Anything else you want to say?
Yeah.
About Mrs. colombo i'm gonna say you coming in here
was the worst thing because it's pretty clear to me now you didn't serve any purpose you come in
and say tenafly we go we we talked about that an hour ago. He's just yelling towns in New Jersey. And then we just say, okay, just to make you seem like you're worth 10 cents here,
we said, hey, could you look up that Vegas show?
Which we figure would be like the easiest thing on the fucking planet.
But come on, he found us Lanigan's rabbi.
I think he more than redeemed himself.
But come on, he found us Lanigan's rabbi.
I think he more than redeemed himself.
Well, this has been Gilbert and Frank's amazing colossal obsession with, I guess, Tenorfly and its sequel, Tenorfly. James McKeachin.
Hook him up.
Is he still alive?
I hope so.
Probably not.
What if somebody sends this to him.
He's in 2010.
That's as obscure as I'm going to get.
We'll see you next time.
Give me that French. Col colossal obsessions Give me that fract, colossal obsessions
Give me that fract, colossal Obsessions