In 1972 Broderick Crawford & I were staying at the same hotel. He was kind enough to give me directions to a Hollywood restaurant we were going to. He gave the directions the same way he gave orders on this show. I was tempted to say 10-4 when he was done but just thanked him & went on our way lol
@@ArmyOne519 Why would he need to "provide proof of 'that'?" It is an interesting moment in this person's life, and he (Steven W.) simply wanted to "casually" share it with us. Would you like to challenge me (now) if I told you I lived quite close to actor Dan Blocker's home where I lived in Northridge (San Fernando Valley, L.A. Co.), California in the 1960s? He and his family lived for a while on Halsted Street, across Tampa Street, which the latter reference ran along the side of our home. And that Dusty Rogers, the son of famed cowboy/girl stars Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, attended the same high school I did , although he was ahead of me by, I think, one grade level? And that character actor, Claude Akins, lived for a while in our neighborhood, that was called Chateau Highlands Estates, and I delivered the "Valley News and Greensheet" to his home (also in the 1960s)...? These were interesting people with "bigger-than-life" careers, and they often made wonderful stories...or just wonderful moments to share with others. ~drs (09/04/24)
If you want to get a glimpse, for example, into what the west and northwest areas of the San Fernando Valley (Los Angeles County) were like during the time this program was being filmed, circa mid-1950s, you actually will, but it will be fleeting. You will see some healthy orange groves and rural roads, where, in the course of the next 10 years, the trees would have been all torn out, the roads widened and paved, and housing subdivisions, with backyard swimming pools, then built where once stood those beautiful orange trees. I lived in Northridge from 1961 to 1966. Our home was built in 1960 (in Northridge, next to the community of Chatsworth) in what had been one of those orange groves; but we did end up with about 10 trees on our property that were not ripped out at the time of our home's construction. ~ Actually, in one episode I saw recently, the bad guys had parked their car on a gravel road next to an orange grove, and there was a construction sign that rose up behind them, but in front of the closest trees to this country lane, making it visible from the road itself, and for us, the viewers. Now, what was unique about that particular setting for me was the sign, as it was a "developer's advertising (small-ish) billboard that said on it, in large letters, Chateau Highlands; and in the background you could hear bulldozers working/clearing the land, in preparation for starting the construction of new homes, ours included. My family ended up living in Chateau Highlands Estates (moving there in 1961), so I got to see, for the first time--and the only time, at least what the rural lane would eventually become, as well as what the entrance to our neighborhood had looked like just ahead of the new housing development pushing through that orange grove and becoming, actually, a quite nice housing tract. And I am going to assume, given the sparse evidence I had to work with, that the dirt lane In the foreground of that show clip, is now Tampa Street, a wide, busy, four-lane road that runs from Porter Ranch in the local mountain foothills to the north, before dropping down onto the Valley floor, past the Northridge Mall (were there used to be a healthy orange grove and the Shasta Trailer Manufacturing Company, where I worked the summer between my second and third years of college); and then across the width of the San Fernando Valley towards Woodland Hills, I believe. ~ Sometimes I'm not sure how to define "progress," especially when seeing "before photos" that show you the "Rural Experience," and then the "afterward photos," which are the ones that make you ponder why. However, it was still a great life in both my "immediate" and extended neighborhoods in Northridge, where we were "surrounded" by wonderful neighbors and good friends. Ultimately, you have to "weigh it all out;" and in the final analysis, you really don't have any concert answer answers--just blacktop results. ~drs (08/22/24)
Actress Lorraine Dell Wood who played the dispatcher, sure was easy on the eyes. According to IMDb, she played the dispatcher on 6 episodes of Highway Patrol with no credits for any other tv shows or movies. With her looks, I would have thought she would have had more parts in tv shows and movies.
Plus she had one non speaking role (at the award ceremony for the young man in the episode "License Plates") She may have been a ZIV employee or ??? Others who appeared on the show didn't have much of a career after HP. Most of Lorraine's appearances she did have decent screen time. Also there is no birth or death dates on her so it's possible she could have died very young and not had time to kick off an acting career.
Muffs 55mercury, I found some more info about her and tried to post a link. Unfortunately, the platform deleted it. Anyway, there is another page about her, but it uses a slightly alternate spelling of her name. Search Laraine Dell Wood. Sometimes spelled Lorraine Del Wood. It doesn't list HP in her credits, but she was in Hollywood and involved in the movie industry during the time that it was being filmed, so apparently it's the same person. I'll try adding another reply to see if I can get you the page.
*As someone else pointed out (4 years earlier) the actress who played the cold-blooded female scam artist (Judy Lewis) was the daughter of actor Clark Gable. Her performance was quite good, which is why I looked up her background. A real surprise, finding out who her dad was.*
When I saw this on TV a year or two ago, I would have sworn the actor playing Fred, the male villain, was Harvey Korman. He's actually William McGraw. Judy Lewis, who played Honey, was the "adopted" daughter of Loretta Young, who later admitted that Judy was her actual daughter by Clark Gable. I thought Ms. Lewis was excellent in this.
More likely the water piped in from the Owens valley via the aqeduct built about 1914. That is what resulted in the great development of So.Cal. Hoover or Boulder dam was much later and supplied electricity. Still does but most of it comes from the hydroelectric plant at the Dales in Oregon and the "Four Corners" plant .
Great episode. As a LA native it's hard for me to point out exactly where the locations were. The orange groves were more than likely Chatsworth, California, just outside the Spahn Movie Ranch. They used that location before and I was able to see the street signs for that episode. However, they mentioned "Larchmont" in the show which is an older up-scale shopping area in LA- before the malls. Larchmont is only a few blocks long and its almost all retail. It was blocks away from the studio where they filmed so that might be the location for the restaurant and other stores. Anyone recognize any of the businesses from 1958? I was born that year!
Same year for me too! Thanks for the great information. Only visited Berkley, CA as a family back in 1963. A great trip...CA was a beautiful state with so many places to see!
8814 Reseda Blvd, Northridge, LA as Hochman Hardware Store 8827 Reseda Blvd, Northridge, LA as The Bigg Jewlery Store N Larchmont Blvd & W 1st St, Windsor Square, LA was a hot spot during the silent era.
@@Zebra_3 Interesting - I couldn't place the busy street. I thought it may have been La Brea Ave, but Reseda out in the Valley would have looked similar at the time.
@@jasonsan9517 Yes, there are cops committing atrocities. Temptation to evil assails us all. But we must not treat all policemen badly because of a few. The goal must be to weed out the ones who do evil, not to destroy the whole profession. We still need the police because there are still people everywhere doing evil things.
Ma Davis, played by Actress Terry Blake has no bio on the Internet. If anyone has any information on her, it would be nice for them to supply her birth and death dates. I was able to find that she also played on one episode of Mr. Ed too. In a book written by Barbara Payton, entitled: "I am Not Ashamed", she mentioned that the part for Mr. Ed called for Terry Blake to faint while watching an operation. While in the waiting room, waiting to be interviewed, she screamed and faked her fainting spell so convincingly that the others who were there waiting to be interviewed called an ambulance. She got the part. :)
You know I was just thinking, when this show was on the air, Alaska & Hawaii were becoming States,and Live TV wasn't yet invented,and man hadn't yet walked on the moon. We were just beginning to orbit the Earth. No satellites, nothing like we have today. Amazing once we achieved all those, technology seemed to explode. Back then more homes had TV's than had Telephones.
there was more live TV then than now. and the "live TV" now may be taped "live" but broadcast later... most of the live TV of the 50s is lost because video tape was not yet available, some of the live shows were filmed from the tv image .....
First television signals sent over the air was in 1914, by the early 1930 we had television stations in New York, and in Germany the 1936 Summer Olympic Games were broadcast on television form opening to closing ceremonies. All done as "live" as they come.
"No satellites"? Though Plymouth would not launch their Satellite until 1965, the USSR launched Sputnik on October 04, 1957. The U.S. sent its first, 'Explorer 1', on Jan. 31, 1958. By the time the last episode of Highway Patrol originally aired June 29, 1959, there had been successful launches of 4 Russian and 11 U.S. satellites. Alaska became a U.S. state on January 03, 1959, though the 49th star was added to the U.S. flag on July 04. Hawai'i was admitted August 21, 1959, the 50th star added to the flag on July 04, 1960.
I love this show.... because it is so damn goofy. G-o-o-f-y. I was there during the first run on TV..... and no one we knew acted so wacky. The people... the cops... what a disaster. Which is why i love it more than ever!
@@danruble1894 Plymouth never had a Hemi until 1964. Plymouth Fury base engine for this 1958 model year was 318 CID V-8 but could be optioned with a 350 CID V-8 (not to be confused with Chevy's) and the only year for this 350. The 350 was the ancestor to 361's, 383's and 400's.
What is truly amazing is that after the man shot her they kept talking while the phone was still connected to the Highway Patrol! Talk about dumb criminals!
Obviously an accomplice ! And Sgt. Joe Friday is the coolest and most bad ass cop there ever was, or ever will be.....just the facts !! But Highway Patrol had cool cars - and hot women 😉
That grove is near present day Santa Ana most likely as they did a lot of filming there. It's hard to believe that much of LA was surrounded by citrus groves then. Now that land is completely developed with homes, office bldgs,and freeways......
Our parents were careful about our tv use. I remember only comedy shows, Donna Reed was my favorite. These kinds of shows were for after we were in bed. I love them, now, though! There is violence, but no blood or autopsy stuff.
I think these Highway Patrol cops got a good racket going. They have everyone programmed to say "Give me the Highway Patrol!" whenever they dial the operator.
I used to eat at ma Davis diner as a lil shaver! I remember Ma saying , Eat all of your eggplant so you'll grow big and strong! Man was she right, I grew up to be a sandhog !
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Realistically portrayed citizens/criminals/law enforcement officials. Enjoy viewing 👀 the automobiles/police communications equipment/interior of hard ware. Store of that era-!!!🤗. Although not a Walter Winchell. Art Gilmore contributed to the series with his narratives.
Criminals were really stupid then. Murders like that would almost certainly get them the electric chair. Not like now where in some states they can be out in 20 years. Brod's voice is really gravelish and he looks tired in this one so he may have had a few too many. (???) For car lovers like me this episode has lots of street traffic to show many. The pretty dispatcher is Lorraine Dell Wood who appeared in six episodes, plus one non speaking role (at the award ceremony for the young boy in the episode "License Plates") She had no other acting credits (hopefully she didn't die really young or suddenly) A real cutie !!
Not much different than todays stickups were a couple of kids with a gun stick up a convenience store and panic shooting the cashier only to find no cash in the till. Only difference is they usually run off in crappy Japanese cars instead of something really cool like these 1950's finned beauties.
You just committed a murder, and yet you are going to stay in the same area and continue operations?? And on the same day! And these people are supposed to be professionals?? Only rank amateurs would be that stupid. Sometimes audacity can work, but when you are potentially facing Murder 1 charges, common sense and discretion take over. Otherwise it's the California gas chamber.....The intuitive capacities of Brod and William Boyett are truly impressive.....ace crime fighters!
What am I missing here why doesn't anyone in this time use the driver side door . This was long before I drove a car but never in my driving career in a two door car or a four door for that matter ever scoot across the car to exit via the passenger door . Was this a common trait in the late 50'S and if so why ?
Brian Salomon I know. I started school in 1966 so when they came out with computer dating, we ALL laughed. These gift cards to me, it says, Here I don't know you well enough nor do I care, buy what you want. Then these cards make it easier for the scammers to scam. It would be extremely hard for me to be scammed. When they call from "Microsoft" and tell me they have been getting error messages from my computer I play with them and the longest I had a scammer on the phone was 30 minutes before he finally started cussing me out. You know, I don't get many phone calls any more. I have messed with the scammers so much, I think maybe they put my number on their Do Not Call Lists. haha
Brian Salomon That's good too. I do believe the scammers have my number on a Do Not Call list and sent it around. haha I don't get the scam calls like I used to get since I started messing with them. haha Sometimes I'm bored and it's fun.
In 1972 Broderick Crawford & I were staying at the same hotel. He was kind enough to give me directions to a Hollywood restaurant we were going to. He gave the directions the same way he gave orders on this show. I was tempted to say 10-4 when he was done but just thanked him & went on our way lol
Can you provide proof of that?
@@ArmyOne519 It was the Players hotel in Hollywood. August of 1972. He had a mustache then. It was by the pool. That's all I remember. Long time ago
Was Broderick bleep-faced ?
@@ArmyOne519 Why would he need to "provide proof of 'that'?" It is an interesting moment in this person's life, and he (Steven W.) simply wanted to "casually" share it with us. Would you like to challenge me (now) if I told you I lived quite close to actor Dan Blocker's home where I lived in Northridge (San Fernando Valley, L.A. Co.), California in the 1960s? He and his family lived for a while on Halsted Street, across Tampa Street, which the latter reference ran along the side of our home. And that Dusty Rogers, the son of famed cowboy/girl stars Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, attended the same high school I did , although he was ahead of me by, I think, one grade level? And that character actor, Claude Akins, lived for a while in our neighborhood, that was called Chateau Highlands Estates, and I delivered the "Valley News and Greensheet" to his home (also in the 1960s)...? These were interesting people with "bigger-than-life" careers, and they often made wonderful stories...or just wonderful moments to share with others. ~drs (09/04/24)
I loved watching Highway Patrol when I was a child. Always loved it.
Same here. Watched with my parents who were big fans.
Me too!
That's the way so.cal used to look like, orange groves as far as the eyes could see. 1958 was a time of fond memories.🍋🍊🍓🍇🍒
good looking criminals driving cool cars.
@@Zebra_3 cousin to Christine. Choosy criminals choose Plymouth 😂
1958 was a time of fond memories ... if you're a racist who likes garbage cars.
@@gregmoore66 1958 is my favorite year. I have a passion for garbage cars and have a large collection of them!!!!
Watched these when I was 6 years old...1962.
If you want to get a glimpse, for example, into what the west and northwest areas of the San Fernando Valley (Los Angeles County) were like during the time this program was being filmed, circa mid-1950s, you actually will, but it will be fleeting. You will see some healthy orange groves and rural roads, where, in the course of the next 10 years, the trees would have been all torn out, the roads widened and paved, and housing subdivisions, with backyard swimming pools, then built where once stood those beautiful orange trees. I lived in Northridge from 1961 to 1966. Our home was built in 1960 (in Northridge, next to the community of Chatsworth) in what had been one of those orange groves; but we did end up with about 10 trees on our property that were not ripped out at the time of our home's construction. ~ Actually, in one episode I saw recently, the bad guys had parked their car on a gravel road next to an orange grove, and there was a construction sign that rose up behind them, but in front of the closest trees to this country lane, making it visible from the road itself, and for us, the viewers. Now, what was unique about that particular setting for me was the sign, as it was a "developer's advertising (small-ish) billboard that said on it, in large letters, Chateau Highlands; and in the background you could hear bulldozers working/clearing the land, in preparation for starting the construction of new homes, ours included. My family ended up living in Chateau Highlands Estates (moving there in 1961), so I got to see, for the first time--and the only time, at least what the rural lane would eventually become, as well as what the entrance to our neighborhood had looked like just ahead of the new housing development pushing through that orange grove and becoming, actually, a quite nice housing tract. And I am going to assume, given the sparse evidence I had to work with, that the dirt lane In the foreground of that show clip, is now Tampa Street, a wide, busy, four-lane road that runs from Porter Ranch in the local mountain foothills to the north, before dropping down onto the Valley floor, past the Northridge Mall (were there used to be a healthy orange grove and the Shasta Trailer Manufacturing Company, where I worked the summer between my second and third years of college); and then across the width of the San Fernando Valley towards Woodland Hills, I believe. ~ Sometimes I'm not sure how to define "progress," especially when seeing "before photos" that show you the "Rural Experience," and then the "afterward photos," which are the ones that make you ponder why. However, it was still a great life in both my "immediate" and extended neighborhoods in Northridge, where we were "surrounded" by wonderful neighbors and good friends. Ultimately, you have to "weigh it all out;" and in the final analysis, you really don't have any concert answer answers--just blacktop results. ~drs (08/22/24)
Talk about your age will you. Must be older than the dirt.
Actress Lorraine Dell Wood who played the dispatcher, sure was easy on the eyes. According to IMDb, she played the dispatcher on 6 episodes of Highway Patrol with no credits for any other tv shows or movies. With her looks, I would have thought she would have had more parts in tv shows and movies.
Plus she had one non speaking role (at the award ceremony for the young man in the episode "License Plates") She may have been a ZIV employee or ??? Others who appeared on the show didn't have much of a career after HP. Most of Lorraine's appearances she did have decent screen time. Also there is no birth or death dates on her so it's possible she could have died very young and not had time to kick off an acting career.
Muffs 55mercury, I found some more info about her and tried to post a link. Unfortunately, the platform deleted it.
Anyway, there is another page about her, but it uses a slightly alternate spelling of her name. Search Laraine Dell Wood. Sometimes spelled Lorraine Del Wood.
It doesn't list HP in her credits, but she was in Hollywood and involved in the movie industry during the time that it was being filmed, so apparently it's the same person.
I'll try adding another reply to see if I can get you the page.
She's hottest when she says "10-4"...😍
She's hottest when she says "10-4"...😍
*As someone else pointed out (4 years earlier) the actress who played the cold-blooded female scam artist (Judy Lewis) was the daughter of actor Clark Gable. Her performance was quite good, which is why I looked up her background. A real surprise, finding out who her dad was.*
She was the secret biological daughter of actors Loretta Young and Clark Gable.
That guy rob him blind she set him up big time he doesn't have no idea why
My cousin was a police dispatcher for 19 YRS. Stressful job very compelling, times have changed but not human nature.
Back when California was a great place to live, fast forward 2023 not so much. Today it's govt serves not the people but complete Insanity lol.
I believe she was told around 1965 that Gable was her father. By then he'd been dead for five years.
That Plymouth convertible was reserved for only the most violent episodes.
Christine's cousin. Choosy criminals choose Plymouth 😂
that woman dispatcher sure has a clear sounding voice. Great episode...👍👍
She's easy on the eyes too!
Judy Lewis sounds a lot like her mom, Lorretta Young. Face wise she does look similar to Clark Gable and Young.
She keeps her ears covered.
Fry `em both..RIP Ma Davis..;-)
CHRISTINE as the convertible.
All three cars have FINS.
The migrant workers will chase him out of the orange grove.
@@johnbockelie3899 How in the hell did the police think to got straight to the orange grove?
Southern California in Ventura and the SFV. They used to plant these trees as a windbreak for crop lands. Eucalyptus trees.
When I saw this on TV a year or two ago, I would have sworn the actor playing Fred, the male villain, was Harvey Korman. He's actually William McGraw.
Judy Lewis, who played Honey, was the "adopted" daughter of Loretta Young, who later admitted that Judy was her actual daughter by Clark Gable. I thought Ms. Lewis was excellent in this.
+GR46404 can you see his eyes in her?
McGraw was in a Sea Hunt episode as well
Well yes, she is beautiful.
Beautiful Orange Trees...
thanks to the Hoover Dam !
To me they all look gray. lol
More likely the water piped in from the Owens valley via the aqeduct built about 1914. That is what resulted in the great development of So.Cal. Hoover or Boulder dam was much later and supplied electricity. Still does but most of it comes from the hydroelectric plant at the Dales in Oregon and the "Four Corners" plant .
that woman who is playing the part of the Criminal was the daughter of Clark Gable & Loretta Young. she passed away not too long ago. RIP
Great episode. As a LA native it's hard for me to point out exactly where the locations were. The orange groves were more than likely Chatsworth, California, just outside the Spahn Movie Ranch. They used that location before and I was able to see the street signs for that episode. However, they mentioned "Larchmont" in the show which is an older up-scale shopping area in LA- before the malls. Larchmont is only a few blocks long and its almost all retail. It was blocks away from the studio where they filmed so that might be the location for the restaurant and other stores. Anyone recognize any of the businesses from 1958? I was born that year!
Same year for me too! Thanks for the great information. Only visited Berkley, CA as a family back in 1963. A great trip...CA was a beautiful state with so many places to see!
@@sarahshouse1890 I agree about its’ beauty but damn, elections have consequences.
Highway Patrol often filmed at the Spahn Ranch.
8814 Reseda Blvd, Northridge, LA as Hochman Hardware Store
8827 Reseda Blvd, Northridge, LA as The Bigg Jewlery Store
N Larchmont Blvd & W 1st St, Windsor Square, LA was a hot spot during the silent era.
@@Zebra_3 Interesting - I couldn't place the busy street. I thought it may have been La Brea Ave, but Reseda out in the Valley would have looked similar at the time.
Thank you to any law enforcement officers who might see this. Things are getting rougher out there. May God be with you.
Amen to that. Very well said👍🏻
Yes, totally agree. I stand with all law enforcement 100%!👍👍
And to any would be criminals,”don’t get any ideas!”
God bless the people who have to fairly deal with unruly cops! There are some awful cops out there!
@@jasonsan9517 Yes, there are cops committing atrocities. Temptation to evil assails us all. But we must not treat all policemen badly because of a few. The goal must be to weed out the ones who do evil, not to destroy the whole profession. We still need the police because there are still people everywhere doing evil things.
My formative years were certainly in simpler times.
Definitely! This was THE show to watch.
Send em to the chair, for Ma Davis.
Anybody's formative years are always "simpler times"....
Broderick Crawford.... What an absolute DREAM!!!
Thats what i like about this job. You get to meet such nice people. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Lol!!!
That safe in the opening scene was so small I think they could have taken it with them.
I see your point..might be bolted down.
Lol... That's what I said in my comment!
Ma Davis, played by Actress Terry Blake has no bio on the Internet. If anyone has any information on her, it would be nice for them to supply her birth and death dates. I was able to find that she also played on one episode of Mr. Ed too. In a book written by Barbara Payton, entitled: "I am Not Ashamed", she mentioned that the part for Mr. Ed called for Terry Blake to faint while watching an operation. While in the waiting room, waiting to be interviewed, she screamed and faked her fainting spell so convincingly that the others who were there waiting to be interviewed called an ambulance. She got the part. :)
That drug store guy should have been wise to the fact that those people hit the drug store down the street.
You know I was just thinking, when this show was on the air, Alaska & Hawaii were becoming States,and Live TV wasn't yet invented,and man hadn't yet walked on the moon. We were just beginning to orbit the Earth. No satellites, nothing like we have today. Amazing once we achieved all those, technology seemed to explode. Back then more homes had TV's than had Telephones.
there was more live TV then than now. and the "live TV" now may be taped "live" but broadcast later... most of the live TV of the 50s is lost because video tape was not yet available, some of the live shows were filmed from the tv image .....
First television signals sent over the air was in 1914, by the early 1930 we had television stations in New York, and in Germany the 1936 Summer Olympic Games were broadcast on television form opening to closing ceremonies. All done as "live" as they come.
"No satellites"?
Though Plymouth would not launch their Satellite until 1965, the USSR launched Sputnik on October 04, 1957. The U.S. sent its first, 'Explorer 1', on Jan. 31, 1958.
By the time the last episode of Highway Patrol originally aired June 29, 1959, there had been successful launches of 4 Russian and 11 U.S. satellites.
Alaska became a U.S. state on January 03, 1959, though the 49th star was added to the U.S. flag on July 04. Hawai'i was admitted August 21, 1959, the 50th star added to the flag on July 04, 1960.
@@-oiiio-3993 while Dan Mathews was ordering roadblocks here, here, and here.
@@Zebra_3 _Fifty one fifty, bye._
Mr Hochman the last guy the couple tried robbing was on a HP episode as a narcotics dealer himself in Dan's Vacation
Mr Jeweler. You were swindled.
Christine's convertible sister. That car is the same type.
Nephew ? I've got no nephew!!!
Oh yeah, the place that would give a free box of fish.
Where can I get one of those self cleaning suits Dan put lead in him he hits the ground and comes up with not a spot of dirt
At the self loading revolver store?
Crush on the HP dispatcher!
That's what I like about this job. You meet such nice people.
I want that old convertible.............in the shape it was in back then.
Forget Columbo, Kojak, and the like because Dan wraps up the case in 25 min lol. Great episode and thanks for the upload.
Dan always get's his man. Crime doesn't pay.
Except if you are a democrat politician.
She said the pickings are not so good.🤧. Didn’t get any snot at all.
The best thing for someone who has everything, an empty box to put it in.
...or a Republican. Anymore, they are both just flip sides of the same dirty coin.
The crooks always have such nice cars in this show.
And often so well dressed. Suit and tie.
Just like Christine. Choosy criminals choose Plymouth 😂
Love those Plymouth cars they were classy
YES they were,
Choosy criminals choose Plymouth 😂
Good episode. Good story line.
They put a lot of miles on that Plymouth convertible.
This is a clever plot!
Just love the 50's cars in this show..cool was Mathew on vacation show when he was driving his own car. A 58 chevy
I bet to Granny from the Beverly hillbillies would have given them both barrels! I wish ma Davis had the chance
These shows sure depict gruesome people. It is not very fun knowing we are living with real people that are probably like this or worse.
The police deal with some gruesome people everyday. Thank god for the police. We would be ion one hell of a fix without them.
I love this show.... because it is so damn goofy. G-o-o-f-y. I was there during the first run on TV..... and no one we knew acted so wacky. The people... the cops... what a disaster. Which is why i love it more than ever!
Theme of this show. Let's pull one last job. Bad idea.
@@coilmanjoe after a murder let's do two last jobs.
24:00
The only asphalt burnout in all of the Highway Patrol episodes!
+Hot80s No! I saw some GOOD ones the other day!
That thing got a HEMI in it?
A better burnout in episode #10 Breath of a child from 3:18 to 3:25 .
@@danruble1894 Plymouth never had a Hemi until 1964. Plymouth Fury base engine for this 1958 model year was 318 CID V-8 but could be optioned with a 350 CID V-8 (not to be confused with Chevy's) and the only year for this 350. The 350 was the ancestor to 361's, 383's and 400's.
It isn't WHAT YOU DRIVE, BUT HOW YOU DRIVE that COUNTS! #mgmlion #roar
That convertible looks like the car from the movie "Christine".
you are absolutely right ! christine is a 58' fury Plymouth coupe, this is a 58' convertible belvedere plymouth
I thought it looked like the Bat mobile .
@@rachedi2005 - There was also a Plymouth model called a Savoy at that time. It was almost identical to the Fury.
the lady couldn't be so bad shes Driving a beautiful 58' Plymouth convertible, hope red one !
What is truly amazing is that after the man shot her they kept talking while the phone was still connected to the Highway Patrol! Talk about dumb criminals!
The scripts on Highway Patrol were terrible. That is what eventually killed the show.
Not as dumb as every 'crime wave' staying in the same area and working every bank or hotel on the same road.
The Highway Patrol always gets their man.
And woman.
Dan Matthews is always nearby to the crimes in progress.
I know eh it;s like their in Mayberry he's always just a few blocks away gotta love it :) Peace
Obviously an accomplice ! And Sgt. Joe Friday is the coolest and most bad ass cop there ever was, or ever will be.....just the facts !! But Highway Patrol had cool cars - and hot women 😉
Another One😄 Thank You For Sharing😄
This show is so much better than the trash on tv these days
That grove is near present day Santa Ana most likely as they did a lot of filming there.
It's hard to believe that much of LA was surrounded by citrus groves then. Now that land is completely developed with homes, office bldgs,and freeways......
I'm from Phoenix, AZ and a lot of our lands had orange and grapefruit groves back then and still some in the 1960s.
He otta meet the nice people now days
One of the requirements for a main female character was to be absolutely beautiful!!!
💕 Those were the days 😍👌
Judy Lewis, said to be the daughter of Loretta Young and Clark Gable, was a very pretty lady!
Highway Patrol: Special 24 of 41.
Season 4. Episode 17. "Narcotics Racket".
Gold Episode 20.
Bad Woman: Judy Lewis.
Wednesday - December 28 - 2022.
@ 4:12 what a beauty 👀
It amazed me how this show always found these great classic cars when they filmed these weekly episodes. Alot of them are worth some good money....
They weren’t considered classic cars at the time. They were just…cars.
One thing I've noticed in a lot of these episodes. Same as the killer car Christine. Choosy criminals choose Plymouth 😂
@@saulchapnick1566 Wow. That went zooming right over your head.
Interesting scam. It almost worked for them. Greed always gets you in the end
Our parents were careful about our tv use. I remember only comedy shows, Donna Reed was my favorite. These kinds of shows were for after we were in bed. I love them, now, though! There is violence, but no blood or autopsy stuff.
I think these Highway Patrol cops got a good racket going. They have everyone programmed to say "Give me the Highway Patrol!" whenever they dial the operator.
We used to call most of these big lumbering cars 'land yachts' back then.
He seriously couldn't hit Broderick in the orchard being 10 feet away and almost in front? LOL...love Television.
And Broderick is so big you could hit him from outer space with a 38...!
It actually is that easy to miss with a handgun. Even at 10 feet or less.
@@roysterfutrell8889 Today we use both hands
That lady robberette sure was a cutie!
AND HOW!!!!!
Judy Davis was the daughter of Loretta Young and Clark Gable. She inherited their looks.
All bad things come to an end!
Might be the only one wit TWO good looking babes. These are better than the 2 lady bandits
HP always had hot looking dispatchers.
I used to eat at ma Davis diner as a lil shaver! I remember Ma saying , Eat all of your eggplant so you'll grow big and strong! Man was she right, I grew up to be a sandhog !
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Realistically portrayed citizens/criminals/law enforcement officials. Enjoy viewing 👀 the automobiles/police communications equipment/interior of hard ware. Store of that era-!!!🤗. Although not a Walter Winchell. Art Gilmore contributed to the series with his narratives.
Euro 87 Saved.
Sunday, November 12 - 2023.
Walter Bigg, was quite small :-/
Looks like a Plymouth Fury convertible
Come on this looks like a set up from Batman.
Criminals were really stupid then. Murders like that would almost certainly get them the electric chair. Not like now where in some states they can be out in 20 years.
Brod's voice is really gravelish and he looks tired in this one so he may have had a few too many. (???) For car lovers like me this episode has lots of street traffic to show many.
The pretty dispatcher is Lorraine Dell Wood who appeared in six episodes, plus one non speaking role (at the award ceremony for the young boy in the episode "License Plates") She had no other acting credits (hopefully she didn't die really young or suddenly) A real cutie !!
2:24..they kill someone.."The safe is locked...let's get out of here" LOL
Not much different than todays stickups were a couple of kids with a gun stick up a convenience store and panic shooting the cashier only to find no cash in the till. Only difference is they usually run off in crappy Japanese cars instead of something really cool like these 1950's finned beauties.
looks like they could have picked up that safe and taken it
@@marctoscano5354 not all ricers are crap.
The « lab boys » are always busy on these shows
I love that old telephone, hanging mouthpiece up.
Classic POT...plain old telephone
Notice the phone sits in between the wall so front room an back room can use the phone pass thru
This is the first series of Highway Patrol that I've seen a woman get shot, usually they never show a female getting shot.
"Come on Move" ! 👍
His' and Hers' 58 Plymouths. Were there any paved roads in California back then?
Love that '59 Plymouth convertible!!!
This is a 1958.
@@jacquesgervais1713 Oops! You're right.... that lower valance slotted grill is the clue :-)
@@terryballard4674 And the brows over the headlights were larger, double half moons, each side for '59.
@@jacquesgervais1713 What' funny is I use to have a '59 Belvedere!
@@terryballard4674 Tell me you had a 361 CID with 305 HP called the "Golden Commando Power" and I will be happy!
All those cars driving along the busy commercial street - I bet none of them knew they were being filmed.
walter bigg's mustache! must take hours to keep it clipped just right! honey is one of the hotter bad girls in HP.
mitchell freifeld daughter of Clark Gable and Loretta Young
I loved the Loretta Young show, too!
Gorgeous!
Girlfriend was psycho!
Sexy but psycho.
Was that jewelry store owner the same guy who played the prospector who found the stolen money?
No
thanks
How did she gets two shots in her and how did the dispatcher hear two shots and the guy only fired one shot?
First shot @ 2:27 and second shot @ 2:31
Dan says two shots downed lady but it was one.
paul broderick I think I heard another shot before he came out of the back room..
First shot @ 2:27 Second @ 2:31
The second one was heard over the phone.
24:12 in those days police took the bull by the horns lol
58,747 Views So Far August 6 - 2019.
Point blank range and no one gets shot. Ahhh, 50s TV shows! LoL
Bungalow courts were once common in SoCal. Hardly any left now. Property is too valuable.
They didn't wreck a bunch of cars every episode like they do now.
What the hell, man. The safe is small. Take it with you!
never have i seen so many female villans as this show
And the cops play just as rough them right down to cuffing them behind the back. In one episode, they actually tackled the female suspects.
Dukes of Hazzard has not only female villains but they are also in charge.
That's equity.
You just committed a murder, and yet you are going to stay in the same area and continue operations?? And on the same day! And these people are supposed to be professionals?? Only rank amateurs would be that stupid. Sometimes audacity can work, but when you are potentially facing Murder 1 charges, common sense and discretion take over. Otherwise it's the California gas chamber.....The intuitive capacities of Brod and William Boyett are truly impressive.....ace crime fighters!
You do realise that this isn't real, right moron?
Damn the script to hell!
EDIT: AND DAMN UA-cam TO HELL FOR SUPPRESSING THE "1 REPLY " TWO THE COMMENT.
Judy Lewis, love child of Clark Gable and Loretta Young
Larchmont. . Nice LA area. Upscale.
This one was comical!
Is there anyone I would pay $4500 to keep out of jail?
Me, myself and I - that's about it.
$45,000 in todays money.
God Bless our LEOS 🇺🇸
What am I missing here why doesn't anyone in this time use the driver side door . This was long before I drove a car but never in my driving career in a two door car or a four door for that matter ever scoot across the car to exit via the passenger door . Was this a common trait in the late 50'S and if so why ?
Good question. It was common practice@1 time so you wouldn't be stepping out into passing traffic.
My dad used to do that till I was about 10. That's what they did in the 50s & 60s.
0:01. 😮.
They are playing this one today. They call saying they are the IRS, police & someone has been arrested, etc.'Tis all the same.
Brian Salomon I know. I started school in 1966 so when they came out with computer dating, we ALL laughed. These gift cards to me, it says, Here I don't know you well enough nor do I care, buy what you want. Then these cards make it easier for the scammers to scam. It would be extremely hard for me to be scammed. When they call from "Microsoft" and tell me they have been getting error messages from my computer I play with them and the longest I had a scammer on the phone was 30 minutes before he finally started cussing me out. You know, I don't get many phone calls any more. I have messed with the scammers so much, I think maybe they put my number on their Do Not Call Lists. haha
Brian Salomon That's good too. I do believe the scammers have my number on a Do Not Call list and sent it around. haha I don't get the scam calls like I used to get since I started messing with them. haha Sometimes I'm bored and it's fun.
@@helenkruse 😂😂😂😂😂
@@helenkruse I told one I was from North Korea and they asked how I was able to immigrate to America.. I tell them I was kidnapped and they hang up!