Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

EP2992: It’s a Crime, Mr. Collins: The Brown Paper Bag

Gail Collins’ wedding night is ruined when a man dies on the front door of her honeymoon suite.

Original Air Date: March 4, 1957

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EP2991: Box 13: Extra! Extra!

A newspaper boy asks Dan to clear his father of a jewel theft.

Original Air Date: November 14, 1947

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Video Theater 169: Racket Squad Kite High

A funeral home director goes to Vegas to get away from his mother-in-law and finds himself the target of conmen running a private game. ‘

Original Air Date: September 6, 1951

Season 2, Episode 1

Book Review: Dragnet Dailies Septemer-November 1952


Dragnet was not only a radio program, a TV program, and a movie in the 1950s, it was a pop culture phenomenon that not only led to spin-off novels and board games but a daily newspaper strip that spanned from 1952-1955.

Single strips have surfaced. Lewis Lovehaug (aka Linkara) did a review of an Australian Dragnet comic book which appears to have been made up of several edited newspaper strips. A few strips have appeared on various blogs around on the Internet. There does seem to be disagreement on the start date with many websites indicating 1953 as the start date, but this appears to be inaccurate. As best I can tell, it started in June 1952 and continued through May 1955.

This book collects an entire storyline from September 22-November 8, 1952. The overall plot is a good, standard Dragnet story about a search for a drug ring with the first clue coming at the scene of a drug-related accident.

The story features Frank Smith as a young police officer rather than the middle-aged character we came to know on TV. The Dragnet strip began in the interim period between the time Barton Yarborough (who played Friday’s first partner Ben Romero) died and when Ben Alexander was cast as Frank Smith. Clearly, the idea of having Friday with a younger partner appealed to Jack Webb. In addition to the newspaper strip, on a radio show, a young Martin Milner was cast as Friday’s partner Bill Lockwood for a month, but it didn’t work out, with Milner entering the military during Korea foreclosing the possibility. The newspaper strip Frank Smith does have a resemblance to Milner with a touch of Jimmy Olsen thrown in. The one plot complication is Joe Friday having a young partner makes Joe Friday going undercover as a college student seem silly. Smith would have been a more natural fit.

The art is decent with a fair likeness of Jack Webb as Friday. To be honest, it’s tough to tell how much of the mediocrity in the art has to do with the art and how much of it has to do with the quality of the scan of the material.

If you’ve read other collections of major newspaper strips, such as those published by the American Comics Library, this will probably not be all that impressive. Collections of major strips are often carefully restored. The collections are readable public domain comic strips of fair quality.

In addition, the price of $7.99 for a 42-strip story is a bit steep. Still, if you want to enjoy Dragnet as a newspaper strip and want to own a physical book as opposed to downloading them online then you may enjoy this book.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

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EP2990: Dragnet: The Big Bounce

Jack Webb

Friday and Smith search for a man passing bad checks using the name of a dead actor.

Original Air Date: January 25, 1955

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EP2989: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: Death Takes a Working Day

Edmond O'Brien

Johnny investigates the death of a wealthy insured man.

Original Air Date: February 3, 1950

When making your travel plans, remember http://johnnydollarair.com

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EP2988: Boston Blackie: The Amadon Pearl Murders

Richard Kollmar

Blackie matches wits with two different sets of jewel thieves to steal the million dollar Amadon Pearls.

Original Air Date: March 30, 1949
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EP2987: Rocky Jordan: Cairo Tour

Jack Moyles

While visiting the docks in Cairo, Rocky is kissed by a beautiful American tourist.
Original Air Date: July 23, 1950

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EP2986: Let George Do It: Red Spots in the Snow

George is called to a ski resort to protect a famous Hollywood director.

Original Air Date: Unknown

Likely Rebroadcast Date: November 25, 1952

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EP2985: Box 13: The Radio Actress Murder Case

Dan Holiday receives an impossible call from a woman as she’s being murdered.

Original Air Date: November 7, 1947

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EP2984: Dragnet: The Big Token

Jack Webb

Friday and Smith search for a robber who shot and killed a man during a robbery.

Original Air Date: January 18, 1955

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DVD Review: Television’s Lost Classics, Volume 2:Rare Pilots

This DVD collects four unaired pilots of 1950s television shows.

The first is a pilot for Racket Squad starring Reed Hadley as Captain Braddock. In general, if you’ve seen an episode of Racket Squad, then you have a good idea of what this episode is like as it shows how con men set up a clever scheme to rip off the mark. If there’s any difference between this episode and the series proper, it’s that Captain Braddock is a little harsher to the victim, greeting him with, “Hello, sucker.” Still, it’s an entertaining half-hour of television.

Second is Cool and Lam. After the success of Perry Mason, network officials decided to give another Erle Stanley Gardener detective a chance and so they adapted the story of detective team Bertha Cool (Benay Vanuta) and Donald Lam (Bill Pearson). I enjoyed this one. There’s good humor and a decent mystery. This a series I wish had been picked up.

A bit of an oddball in this collection featuring crime dramas is the 1948 pilot for The Life of Riley. The series had been a successful radio program starring William Bendix. However, due to Bendix’s movie contract, he wasn’t able to reprise the role over television. We get to see the first choice to play Riley over television instead–horror movie legend Lon Chaney, Jr.

The pilot is historically significant. It was a taped program back in 1948 when live Kinescopes would dominate early television for the better part of five years. However, the big problem was Lon Chaney playing Riley. He  wasn’t cut out for the part. The TV script was based on a radio script and Chaney tried to play it like Bendix did and it just doesn’t work.

His delivery is flat and uninspired. When Jackie Gleason became the first TV Riley in 1949, he gave it his own spin. I’m not a huge fan of his approach, but at least he realized he couldn’t be Bendix.

Note we get to see John Brown as Digger O’Dell, the undertaker, often heard on the radio program. I have mixed feelings on this because Digger is such a broad character. I imagine him walking around with a black mustache and black coat and being tall. However, John Brown just looks like an ordinary guy in an ordinary suit. So that was a bit jarring.

The final pilot is 1959’s Nero Wolfe starring Kurt Kazner as Wolfe and William Shatner as Archie Goodwin. Shatner is a great choice for Archie, bringing great charisma to the role. Kaszner is an interesting choice for Wolfe. Kaszner was Austrian born. Having a European play Wolfe is closer to the book than most other portrayals of Wolfe which ignore the fact that he was from the Eastern Europe country Montenegro. William Shatner brings that swagger that’s a requirement to play Archie Goodwin and is pretty fun to watch. The plot was decent. Wolfe solved this case mostly from reading the newspaper and that was clever. Though the episode wasn’t based on the Wolfe stories by Rex Stout, it captured the spirit of them nicely.

On the other hand, this was a series that would have needed to be an hour rather than the pilot’s half-hour length. The episode was a bit bare-bones and lacked the style I associate with a Wolfe story or any of Wolfe’s and Archie’s supporting cast. Kaszner wasn’t quite big enough to play Wolfe which the wardrobe seemed to try to make up for by putting him in clothes that were a bit too big, which doesn’t work. Also, Wolfe has a cold in the pilot and is stuck in bed, which is a weird thing for a pilot to do as its establishing what a normal episode is like.

The bonus feature with this set is a not-for-air blooper reel that was sent out by CBS to managers of its affiliates, featuring many bloopers and flubbed lines. The programs featured are mostly Westerns, but with the Twilight Zone and The Red Skelton Show. I will warn that this is not really for kids. The unscripted bad language is not censored, so it’s PG-13 stuff.

Overall, for those interested in classic television, this set does offer some fun rarities. While this wasn’t the best the 1950s had to offer in television, it’s a mostly entertaining look at what might have been.

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EP2983: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Haiti Adventure Matter

Charles Russell

Johnny travels to Haiti where a desolute ensured man is dying…by voodoo.

Original Air Date: December 17, 1949

When making your travel plans, remember http://johnnydollarair.com

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EP2982: Boston Blackie: The Charity Ring Murders

Richard Kollmar
Blackie investigates when a charity casino fundraiser Mary signed a letter for turns out to be a fraud.

Original Air Date: March 23, 1949

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EP2981: Rocky Jordan: The Lotus Cup of Amin Ra

Jack Moyles
Rocky agrees to hold a package for a beautiful woman and gets caught up in an adventure involving a religious artifact and murder.

Original Air Date: July 16, 1950
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