OK I've just watched 8 hours of these episodes, back to back lot's of coffee lot's of cigarettes. bloody fantastic great car and gal's and the fabulous 50s. thanks for uploading.
10:40 love these old episodes where the San Fernando valley was covered with orange groves. Was a beautiful place back then. Now that it's covered with houses... not so much.
@@mr.majestic8713 Southern California was just yet another part of the world to be ruined by the Yanks, who had already ruined an entire continent that they named the USA. Shouldn't be any surprise....
Wow, I loved this show when I was a little kid and even more now as an old fart (66). I sure didn't notice the foxy babes back then, whoever did the casting for the ladies sure knew how to pick them. Also many quality stars appeared in these episodes. Its fun to look them up and see what else they acted in. The cars, where do I start? What a show, reminds me of a museum.. The occasional disparaging comments about Broderick Crawford don't change my opinion at all. He reminds me of a Bulldog and did a great job as a tough fair minded cop. Not sure if they knew much about gasoline and the explosive ignition it has. I was clearing some brush and weeds for a friend and had the brilliant idea that about a cup of the gas I was using for the chain saw would make my day easier. I never did that again and was relieved when my eyebrows returned after being just about singed off. Thanks for posting the episodes and the incredible trips down memory lane to a simpler time they provide.
No one will see this probably but I worked for county parks here and did the same thing to a pile of dirt enveloped me very lucky I only had sinegd hair
Always wondered about Dan's personal life. Darn it, the guy asks him if he has any grandkids and Dan says "Well you see........" No answer as to his family or life off duty. Oh well. I loved this show in the 50's and never stopped loving it. Thanks for posting all the episodes, many hours of wonderful viewing.
There wasn't much for a tv career at that time, but this is one of the many shows that we can find our 'favorites' having one of their first successes. Back in those day, if you could get there, you probably would eventually get a film career... but even those 'stars' were under contract with some rotten bosses - a miserable life of slavery to the bosses... So, you see all you black folks, you were not the only people who had to live under slave conditions and control. And now again today, black folks are living under slavery - this time it is the welfare check mentality, which is still slavery - but now it is your choice. We really have to get rid of the slavery party - the democrats - before we can get back to Trump who did more for the blacks than any other president.
I liked the rural sound of the birds and the clean air that I once had back in the 60’s, so nice to have watched this gem, Dan’s great team work went a long way catching that nut.
Robert Fuller of "Emergency" and "Wagon Train" played the arsonist. I miss '50s Westerns and cop shows like this and Dragnet. It's past time to go back to the way things used to be - God, country and family.
Thanks for placing these episodes on UA-cam. I remember being 5 or 6 years old watching this TV show in the late 1950s and this is the partner of Broderick Crawford I remember. I had a toy police car with 2 toy policemen that I imagined weRe this pair barking out orders just like Broderick Crawford.
I discovered this show on MeTV when it played in the middle of the night, while I worked the overnights at Walmart. We had a hour lunch and so we could watch this, providing the digital TV didn't freeze up which it tended to do 90% of the time.
Fabulous show. I love seeing the world round about the time I was born. Fab cars, great manners, and wonderful (if overly convenient) plots. I only wish the images were clear enough to make out the car badges.
The guy was not too experienced. He should have apprenticed with a professional arsonist, then he would have known that lighting the straw would work just fine!
I started watching these episodes at approximately 10 p.m. on Feb. 4, 2023 and it is now 10:46 a.m. Feb. 5. I been hooked the whole except restroom breaks and food run to the fridge and pantry. Hard to believe, but it’s true!
Happened to me lately with "The Bill". It's somehow limited, because the latter series is trash. But the first seasons are packed, much to discover like in the series here.
Great episode. Funny how they were fighting the fire and it still had a pretty good blaze, and then all of a sudden it was out. No doubt they were running short on time.
Mark Muffs No. Watsonville grows 80 % of the strawberries in the US. But San Jose is an urban sprawl now covered by a layer of smog on hot days where you can taste the pollution in the air.
AT 12:08-14 you see Mission peak in the background, elevation 2771 ft. I used to hike up there a lot, as a kid. We would call it the "three trees", as there will 3 trees visible from further away. Mission Peak is in the north San Fernando Valley, north of Granada Hills, and Porter Ranch in Northridge. It still looks the same today. Mission Peak is seen again at 20:50-20:57.
Geez, back when tractors weren't air-conditioned, lumbar-supported, wifi land-yachts as big as a house-- however did those farmers get their work done? Answer? They WORKED!
That lumberyard was in North Hollywood at Lankershim at Chandler(which used to be have a railroad down the middle. Blocks and blocks of original buildings were completely torn down during the late 90s for new subway and development of the now, newer NOHO. Developers saved the original North Hollywood train depot, and Phil's diner. (shocking I know)..
The lumberyard was Terry Lumber in Northridge at Reseda Blvd. and Parthenia St. From 12:08-12:15 in the background is pictured Mission Peak. I hiked up there several times while living in Northridge. I'm looking at a picture that I took of that same peak in 1975, and it matches up perfectly.
@@carlc5748 Great observation. I stand corrected. Its obvious now after seeing the R next to the North sign. 😂 it’s amazing how similar that location looks to the North Hollywood one. I could have sworn I spied the Weddington train depot across from it. I have loved these shows since I was a kid. It so great to see them again and identify the Los Angeles I remember that no longer exists today.
@@larkatmic Yes, I loved them as a kid, and now I recognize a lot of the filming locations. I take it that you grew up in the North Hollywood area? I first lived in Sepulveda, then moved to Northridge (Porter Ranch) in 1965, living in Arizona now. Are you still in the San Fernando Valley area still?
@@carlc5748 I remember Sepulveda. My god parents lived there back in the 60s. If I could do heat or snow I would move in an minute. There are just way too many people here now and most have only one mindset, if you know what I mean. I grew up in Studio City/north Hollywood / pacific palisades and Fairfax district. I live in Burbank now going on 22 years. It’s changed a lot. But, you know the saying. You can never go back home 😔 That’s why I enjoy watching old shows and movies from my past seeing things I remember that are now gone. Sounds like you do to. We lived in good times. 👍
@@larkatmic My younger brother has lived in Palmdale for many years, and we have that conversation frequently how privileged we were to have grown up where we lived, at that time, and as you said "you can never go back home", but the joy of seeing how things were, via past TV programs! I lived in WLA, palms, Culver City, Hollywood, and City of San Fernando (during the '94 Northridge quake). When I lived in Sepulveda, the state of California took half of our backyard, of our 1 acre lot to construct the southbound lanes of the San Diego Freeway. I still have a pic that my grandmother took of me, in our backyard, at age 6 with the freeway behind me, and the Roscoe Blvd. exit is visible on the freeway sign, in 1963, behind me!
@@kennethlucas7473 People had to restart somewhere, didn't they. My how I hate society. They throw everything _including_ the kitchen sink in these folk's path and then complain that they didn't "learn" from being in prison. Once imprisoned, always in prison.... even when they've left the prison. One may leave prison but society will surely make sure that prison never leaves them!
Back in the days, when service station owners knew their customers. I miss those days. Middle aged Americans probably only remember, if they were from small towns, outside of metro areas. Another great episode.
Dan Matthews and Ken the patrol officer should have worked for the fire department. Put out a ragging gasoline-soaked hay fire with a horse blanket and portable water extinguisher? lol
It took hearing the voice to make it click that the arsonist was Robert Fuller. I saw him in The Hard Ride when I was a kid. Jack Webb saw him too and signed him up for Emergency
I noticed that the 59 Biscayne that the Arsonist was driving at the beginning of the show had Flags over the V on the hood. That would make it a 348, a very rare car. It was probably part of the Highway Patrol stable.
@@richardcurrin8940 when I was in the military, the Navy had some push button Plymouth cars. I remember driving one to transport the base chaplain from our base to another base one Sunday morning
@ 13:43 look at the old Ford P/U , I owned many pick ups over the years and they were all single seaters, and that's what i wanted. Now a days most pick ups are 4 door and two seater with a small cargo area in back. This is stupid because pick up trucks were work trucks with a large cargo area, now they even have to make trucks "fancy" so damn stupid !
I had a 58' Buick in 1969.That car didn't need safety equipment.I knocked a thick metal pole out of ground in a parking lot with it,but only put a huge hole in my bumper.
I was born in the mid-1950's. Remember lots of old cars and trucks from those days and lots of details, but for the life of me, I do not recall rearview mirrors sticking up from the dashboard. They always hung down from above.
Funny how Dan Matthew's is always actively involved in solving the cases. Cheif of police today won't leave their desk unless their is a press conference or golfing convention. I know there maybe some that actually do but not most.
I thought it was "Like one who grabs a dog by the ears is a passerby who meddles in a quarrel not his own." Firstly: I don't think it makes a difference if the dog is stray or not. Secondly: There's a helluva difference between "hiring any passerby" than meddling in a quarrel going on between others. The funny thing about this, is that the book you are quoting from seemed to cite people who were hiring passerby people. Usually these "passerby" peeps would hangout in the marketplace and those - well at least vineyard owners - would come by and "hire" these people and have them work in there vineyards. It wouldn't have taken much for someone to set a vineyard alight. Finally the USA - a country that seems to call itself "Christian" would really benefit from that proverb and one day, they are gonna get bit by one of those dogs they keep seizing by the ears.
It's interesting how Dan is always a passenger in later shows as a result of racking up numerous DWI arrests after work. As a kid in the 50's I thought this show was great. After a 40+ year career in law enforcement I wish I had realized how easy it is to solve crimes with road blocks! 2150 you are 10-7.
It's ironic (or coincidental) that Robert Fuller just 13 years later would be playing someone with the fire department. Here he's an arsonist. Sure like the white '56 Ford truck. Mine will look just like that in maybe a couple of years.
so cool 4:46 you can see & hear Matthews engage the pushbutton torqueflite into reverse. Robert Fuller ( arsonist ) would become the doctor on Emergency! in the mid-70s
Hot80s The sound of that Dodge cop car had that nice Mopar V8 rumble as he drove away. Chrysler cars had those great transmissions when GM & Ford were still running 2 speed "slushbox's"
That gas ⛽️ station attendant is a pretty cute guy, but it sure dates this film. I wonder how long it’s been since we’ve ever had anyone fill out gas ⛽️ tank and clean out windshield or air our tires up for us???!!!😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅And I love 💕 Dan’s splay footed walk. That man 👨 means business. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Ive said this before : Dan is a real nice, polite guy and he loves kids, but dont fuck with him. That guy just did and he discovered the other side of Dan. Poooowwww !!!! Ouuufff !!!
Inflamable can be traced to the middle ages and still in use. Flammable was first used in the 1850s but was strickly minor compared to inflameable. During WWII it was found some people saw inflamable and since "in" in front of other English word mean non (such as in indisputable or industrutable) they saw inflamable and assume it meant non-flamable. Safty enginners have been advocated dropping the word inflamable in favor of flammable since WWII, but both words are still in use today. I have seem a lot of tanks marked inflamable to this very day.
@@paulmentzer7658 I wish they would drop the "re" in research or the "in" in infamous since research does not mean searching again and infamous does not mean being an "average Joe". There are a few other wack-job words out there.
❤ Love the old cars 🚗 great gest stars alot make it big in moves and TV shows so young back then great acting BC was number 1 great 👍 in his movies 🎬 to remember clowns are funny at a circus on the hi way there deadly BC RIP still watching 2022
_Guest_ stars perhaps? _Alot_ is a town in India. _A lot_ is more than one of something. _Allot_ is to apportion something. You have to sort out _they're, there, their._
Beat show every watching them again Can't get enough of these old shows Thanks
i cant either. i watch all classic shows.
@@daviddowns7552 likewise!
OK I've just watched 8 hours of these episodes, back to back lot's of coffee lot's of cigarettes. bloody fantastic great car and gal's and the fabulous 50s. thanks for uploading.
I like the way you think, bub.
Love watching the scenes showing the city traffic. Those beautiful cars & trucks even if they're not in mint condition.
These episodes are addicting.
10-4 on that Steve Mcqueen!
I guess I am not surprised you like these, being such a fine actor yourself, Steve.
10:40 love these old episodes where the San Fernando valley was covered with orange groves. Was a beautiful place back then. Now that it's covered with houses... not so much.
And the ground and water table full of DDT, and the toxins are sprayed on everything to this day.
It's sad indeed! It only took 12 years to ruin Southern California from 1948 to 1960. 😥
@@mr.majestic8713 Southern California was just yet another part of the world to be ruined by the Yanks, who had already ruined an entire continent that they named the USA. Shouldn't be any surprise....
Wow, I loved this show when I was a little kid and even more now as an old fart (66). I sure didn't notice the foxy babes back then, whoever did the casting for the ladies sure knew how to pick them. Also many quality stars appeared in these episodes. Its fun to look them up and see what else they acted in.
The cars, where do I start? What a show, reminds me of a museum..
The occasional disparaging comments about Broderick Crawford don't change my opinion at all. He reminds me of a Bulldog and did a great job as a tough fair minded cop.
Not sure if they knew much about gasoline and the explosive ignition it has. I was clearing some brush and weeds for a friend and had the brilliant idea that about a cup of the gas I was using for the chain saw would make my day easier. I never did that again and was relieved when my eyebrows returned after being just about singed off.
Thanks for posting the episodes and the incredible trips down memory lane to a simpler time they provide.
A prequel to Robert Fuller's days before the old westerns Laramie and Wagon Train and the show Emergency.
Never mind the "foxy babes" they'll all get old but those cars will remain beautiful forever as long as they are taken care of!
@@dp.oennismaurer205 "Emergency" rocked!
No one will see this probably but I worked for county parks here and did the same thing to a pile of dirt enveloped me very lucky I only had sinegd hair
@@SteveLinney-w8q It’s not much fun, I heard you…
Always wondered about Dan's personal life. Darn it, the guy asks him if he has any grandkids and Dan says "Well you see........" No answer as to his family or life off duty. Oh well. I loved this show in the 50's and never stopped loving it. Thanks for posting all the episodes, many hours of wonderful viewing.
Dan was a lush who drank his way through a remarkable career!
I love Broderick Crawford, I love the sets, fashions, hairstyles and especially the old cars with those great wings!!
10-4
I recognized Robert Fuller. This show must have been a jumpstart for many careers.
Ah yeah Robert Fuller...I knew I recognised the face but couldn't think of his name 🙂
Dr. Kel Bracket from Emergency
There wasn't much for a tv career at that time, but this is one of the many shows that we can find our 'favorites' having one of their first successes. Back in those day, if you could get there, you probably would eventually get a film career... but even those 'stars' were under contract with some rotten bosses - a miserable life of slavery to the bosses... So, you see all you black folks, you were not the only people who had to live under slave conditions and control. And now again today, black folks are living under slavery - this time it is the welfare check mentality, which is still slavery - but now it is your choice. We really have to get rid of the slavery party - the democrats - before we can get back to Trump who did more for the blacks than any other president.
Leonard Nimoy was a member of the cast on one episode. He was a gangster.
Robert Fuller was one ☝️ gorgeous man. 😊😊😊
The beautiful styling lines of the '59 chevy. Detroits' professional auto artistry at it's best.O how I miss those days.
The horizontal fins and the nostrils on the front hood mark this year. Don't know if you can tell the model from the sheet metal.
I liked the rural sound of the birds and the clean air that I once had back in the 60’s, so nice to have watched this gem, Dan’s great team work went a long way catching that nut.
And huge orange trees full of fruit!
Robert Fuller of "Emergency" and "Wagon Train" played the arsonist. I miss '50s Westerns and cop shows like this and Dragnet. It's past time to go back to the way things used to be - God, country and family.
Say not thou, What is the cause that the former days were better than these? for thou dost not enquire wisely concerning this.
no comment...
@@coloradostrong They don't wanna know because then they could not live in denial...
So very true nowadays Hollywood puts out nothing but garbage. Television has lost morality, quality it has been replaced with garbage and woke.
He did Laramie, too!
Thanks for placing these episodes on UA-cam. I remember being 5 or 6 years old watching this TV show in the late 1950s and this is the partner of Broderick Crawford I remember. I had a toy police car with 2 toy policemen that I imagined weRe this pair barking out orders just like Broderick Crawford.
Yes, but disable to comment section so people won't post nonsense about politics and flat earth conspiracies.
The other officer is William Bodette.
@@raymichael7078 Thanks for the info. I remember seeing him acting some on other shows after Highway Parrol.
@@larryloveless2967 Good ole auto spell check. His name is William Boyette with a Y not a D.
@@raymichael7078 You got me to read up on him and I also remember him from Adam 12.
Never failed to watch this when I was a kid with my parents.
I discovered this show on MeTV when it played in the middle of the night, while I worked the overnights at Walmart. We had a hour lunch and so we could watch this, providing the digital TV didn't freeze up which it tended to do 90% of the time.
Those 59 chevy sort of hummed as they went along the road, my uncle Ralph had one I remember it well. Loved the sound.
Robert Fuller was also in one hour series Laramie with Smith. Used to watch it along with Rawhide early 60s. Good old days.
This is ironic. It is episode 51, and that was Dr. Brackett from "EMERGENCY" (Station and Squad 51) playing an arsonist!
Robert Fuller right?
Very cute.
Also "Cooper Smith" from Wagon Train....
@@arober9758 Yep! He fought the law and the law won. lol
@@tubeblack35 gorgeous
Fabulous show. I love seeing the world round about the time I was born. Fab cars, great manners, and wonderful (if overly convenient) plots. I only wish the images were clear enough to make out the car badges.
Oh, and I must say, when a youngster I had a die-cast model of the Chev Impala, so lovely to see them often in this series.
The car badges were nondescript, in order for the series to be universal. Even though filmed in CA, it was supposed to be HPs all around.
Add Stuart Whitman to the list…
I grew up on a farm. With dry straw like that you do not need any gasoline to start a raging fire. City slickers must have written this script.
indeed😂
No! Written by Hollywood "experts."
Hollywood screen writers never let facts get in their way.
never hurts to add a little accelerant.
The guy was not too experienced. He should have apprenticed with a professional arsonist, then he would have known that lighting the straw would work just fine!
Hey-- don't throw that old gas can into the woods, it's collectable! Lol
Those citrus groves in the west SFV are long gone.
...and better than the government mandated crud of today!
I started watching these episodes at approximately 10 p.m. on Feb. 4, 2023 and it is now 10:46 a.m. Feb. 5. I been hooked the whole except restroom breaks and food run to the fridge and pantry. Hard to believe, but it’s true!
Happened to me lately with "The Bill". It's somehow limited, because the latter series is trash. But the first seasons are packed, much to discover like in the series here.
Been there, done that on highway patrol. Oh, and Dragnet. Fun stuff
Loving that 348 powered 1959 Biscayne. I've seen it in a couple of other episodes.
I think it was an unmarked patrol car in another episode. This time the bad buy was driving the '59 Chevy Biscayne.
Great that you picked up on those crossed flags identifying the 348. Predessor to the famous 409! 😄A car guy from way back
Im glad the arsonist didnt torch the car
Classic car with the trademark rear taillights!
@@DavidWilliams-ol3vp or push it off a cliff.
Thank You Foxeema!
Great episode. Funny how they were fighting the fire and it still had a pretty good blaze, and then all of a sudden it was out. No doubt they were running short on time.
The way he fought that fire by beating it with a dry blanket would have actually spread it more.
Great TV Series😄 Thank you Foxeema... For Sharing 😄
This series is great. Thank for the up load.
With a young Robert Fuller!!!!!
I will always remember Robert Fuller for 'Laramie'. I guess that sort of gives away my age.
+Juliaflo He was great in Laramie. A good ole boy.
Dr Brackett from "Emergency" too
@@fhuber7507 Exactly! In fact, I sought out this episode just because I love Emergency! and had to see the episode that Robber Fuller appeared in.
I'm up to episode number 50 and have seen Clint Eastwood, Leonard Nimoy, Ted Night, and few others I can't recall right now.
When we first came to California near San Jose, all you saw were fruit trees & strawberries. 1964. All long gone.
All grown in Mexico now
Yeah likely subdivisions now. YUKK!!!!
Mark Muffs No. Watsonville grows 80 % of the strawberries in the US. But San Jose is an urban sprawl now covered by a layer of smog on hot days where you can taste the pollution in the air.
I see. Hmm, that's a lot of strawberry fields.
Herbie Schwartz If anybody a fruit you are ignorant dumbass
Another good episode.
AT 12:08-14 you see Mission peak in the background, elevation 2771 ft. I used to hike up there a lot, as a kid. We would call it the "three trees", as there will 3 trees visible from further away. Mission Peak is in the north San Fernando Valley, north of Granada Hills, and Porter Ranch in Northridge. It still looks the same today. Mission Peak is seen again at 20:50-20:57.
Just finished a can of oertles 92 and a chesterfield ciggy! Now I'm ready for highway patrol!
Geez, back when tractors weren't air-conditioned, lumbar-supported, wifi land-yachts as big as a house-- however did those farmers get their work done? Answer? They WORKED!
And I will add this, that little tractor wasn't used to bale alfalfa, not enough horse power.
And they had back pain for their entire lives.
WORK is a four-letter word (insult) to some people. They'll just take welfare, thank you!
And didn't cost $100K
It's obvious you have never been to a modern farm. I can guarantee they ALL outwork you as well as outthink your feeble mind
Mr Crawford doesnt walk, he glides! and all man!
Thanks for having ALL thes e shows. A ppreciated
Dan Mathews, tough guy, ace cop, and now fireman! Who knew?
He protects AND serves.
Broderick Crawford should be posthumously awarded the Nobel Prize in Mathematics for popularizing ..."10-4"
That lumberyard was in North Hollywood at Lankershim at Chandler(which used to be have a railroad down the middle. Blocks and blocks of original buildings were completely torn down during the late 90s for new subway and development of the now, newer NOHO.
Developers saved the original North Hollywood train depot, and Phil's diner. (shocking I know)..
The lumberyard was Terry Lumber in Northridge at Reseda Blvd. and Parthenia St. From 12:08-12:15 in the background is pictured Mission Peak. I hiked up there several times while living in Northridge. I'm looking at a picture that I took of that same peak in 1975, and it matches up perfectly.
@@carlc5748 Great observation. I stand corrected. Its obvious now after seeing the R next to the North sign. 😂 it’s amazing how similar that location looks to the North Hollywood one. I could have sworn I spied the Weddington train depot across from it. I have loved these shows since I was a kid. It so great to see them again and identify the Los Angeles I remember that no longer exists today.
@@larkatmic Yes, I loved them as a kid, and now I recognize a lot of the filming locations. I take it that you grew up in the North Hollywood area? I first lived in Sepulveda, then moved to Northridge (Porter Ranch) in 1965, living in Arizona now. Are you still in the San Fernando Valley area still?
@@carlc5748 I remember Sepulveda. My god parents lived there back in the 60s. If I could do heat or snow I would move in an minute. There are just way too many people here now and most have only one mindset, if you know what I mean. I grew up in Studio City/north Hollywood / pacific palisades and Fairfax district. I live in Burbank now going on 22 years. It’s changed a lot. But, you know the saying. You can never go back home 😔 That’s why I enjoy watching old shows and movies from my past seeing things I remember that are now gone. Sounds like you do to. We lived in good times. 👍
@@larkatmic My younger brother has lived in Palmdale for many years, and we have that conversation frequently how privileged we were to have grown up where we lived, at that time, and as you said "you can never go back home", but the joy of seeing how things were, via past TV programs! I lived in WLA, palms, Culver City, Hollywood, and City of San Fernando (during the '94 Northridge quake).
When I lived in Sepulveda, the state of California took half of our backyard, of our 1 acre lot to construct the southbound lanes of the San Diego Freeway. I still have a pic that my grandmother took of me, in our backyard, at age 6 with the freeway behind me, and the Roscoe Blvd. exit is visible on the freeway sign, in 1963, behind me!
@5:23, they go to question a suspect with a rap-sheet for arson.....WHO WORKS AT A LUMBER YARD!!
Some folks get their dream job!
good one
Lumber yards back then were felony-friendly, just like construction, janitorial, and day labor jobs.
Too bad Alanis Morrissette couldn't work that into her song "Ironic".
@@kennethlucas7473 People had to restart somewhere, didn't they. My how I hate society. They throw everything _including_ the kitchen sink in these folk's path and then complain that they didn't "learn" from being in prison. Once imprisoned, always in prison.... even when they've left the prison. One may leave prison but society will surely make sure that prison never leaves them!
The way Dan and the deputy put out that fire they should have been fireman. Amazing!
Beating the flames with that blanket would probably make things worse.
Imagine Dan Mathews and Joe Friday working a case together.......
Now that would be a treat to watch!
Throw in Elliot Ness. Remember Robert Stack in the untouchables.
0:01. 😮.
Robert Fuller, AKA "Dr Brackett" from "Emergency!".
William Boyett, AKA "Mac" from "Adam Twelve".
Brings back memories.
I think the gas pump jocky was in the FBI series
Fitzroys gas station, formerly the Walnut Cafe (seating capacity 2).
Back in the days, when service station owners knew their customers. I miss those days. Middle aged Americans probably only remember, if they were from small towns, outside of metro areas.
Another great episode.
Dan Matthews and Ken the patrol officer should have worked for the fire department. Put out a ragging gasoline-soaked hay fire with a horse blanket and portable water extinguisher? lol
It took hearing the voice to make it click that the arsonist was Robert Fuller. I saw him in The Hard Ride when I was a kid. Jack Webb saw him too and signed him up for Emergency
Before that he starred in the Western series LARAMIE then after that show ended joined the cast of WAGON TRAIN...
Fuller is still alive at 89. He now owns a horse ranch in South Texas. He really does love being a cowboy.
Plywood 2.44 and 3.52 A sheet can’t beat that
Best comedy on UA-cam !! Hilarious how bad these actors are !
I know Robert Fuller must have loved it when he landed that Doctor gig on Emergency. Great acting in Highway Patrol.
I noticed that the 59 Biscayne that the Arsonist was driving at the beginning of the show had Flags over the V on the hood. That would make it a 348, a very rare car. It was probably part of the Highway Patrol stable.
We had a push button Chrysler product car. Can't remember what kind though but it fascinated me as a child.
George Senda my neighbor had one too. I thought it was cool
Richard Currin i
There was even a doowop song in the late '50s called Push Button Automobile by The Marathons. It's on UA-cam so you can check it out. Great stuff.
Some Edsel cars had push buttons for the transmission too.
@@richardcurrin8940 when I was in the military, the Navy had some push button Plymouth cars. I remember driving one to transport the base chaplain from our base to another base one Sunday morning
1960 Chevy. I remember my dad bought one new. I was maybe 11 at the time. It was the first Chevy he ever owned and he really loved that car.
59
@ 13:43 look at the old Ford P/U , I owned many pick ups over the years and they were all single seaters, and that's what i wanted. Now a days most pick ups are 4 door and two seater with a small cargo area in back. This is stupid because pick up trucks were work trucks with a large cargo area, now they even have to make trucks "fancy" so damn stupid !
SO BUY A STANDARD CAB
Gotta please the women.
If the 'fire bug' looks familiar, it's because he was played by Robert Fuller.
'Laramie', Dr. Kelly Brackett in 'Emergency'! (and many others)
Oh, so he went from setting fires to working for the fire department. Maybe that's why the fire department was having so many calls... hee hee....
Season 4, Episode 38
Fire (1959)
I had a 58' Buick in 1969.That car didn't need safety equipment.I knocked a thick metal pole out of ground in a parking lot with it,but only put a huge hole in my bumper.
So when the arsonist got done sitting fires he became a doctor!
Robert Fuller must of started in the Laramie TV series about the time of this episode, as Laramie debuted in 1959 (same year as this HP episode).
They never say what state it's set in, but it's so obviously California...
Are you really that dumb?
God, the storylines and the dialogue are hilarious. Not a single scene in these episodes resemle real life.
Fun fact:…both William Boyett and Robert Fuller would later star in Jack Webb tv dramas….Adam 12 and Emergency!
Looks like a push-button transmission on that Dodge patrol car !
Our family had a 61 Plymouth Belvedere with push button aut transmition.
My Dad had a Dodge Lancer with push buttons.
Great car!
1959 Chevy Biscayne! Fast motor because it had the Cross Flags on the hood!
1958 Buick With The 3 Back Windows What A Classic Automobile ❤❤❤❤❤
Robert Fuller went from arsonist, to trail boss, to ER doctor. So, going in the right direction......
What we called in the 1970's "one sick puppy".
The arsonist is Robert Fuller who was the lead doctor on the 70’s TV show call Emergency. It’s kind of ironic seeing him here as an arsonist.
He failed the audition as an arsonist so they made him a fireman....
I was born in the mid-1950's. Remember lots of old cars and trucks from those days and lots of details, but for the life of me, I do not recall rearview mirrors sticking up from the dashboard. They always hung down from above.
How ironic he plays an arsonist and then goes on to star in "Emergency" a show about fire
Funny how Dan Matthew's is always actively involved in solving the cases. Cheif of police today won't leave their desk unless their is a press conference or golfing convention. I know there maybe some that actually do but not most.
Great episode 👏
Putting out that fire with one fire extinguisher and an old hessian sack! Amazing. They should join the Fire Brigade!
Yes a gas fire and the HP fighting it. Sure that's believable!
Looked like an Alabama Tow sack to me....which is a burlap tote sack pronounced Southern style.
Forget Carter and Patterson..this fire has "Shakes McDowell" written al over it....
The arsonist went on to medical school after prison and became a famous trauma surgeon/ER doctor at Rampart General Hospital I think?
Any mysterious fires at Rampart?.
"Like taking a stray dog by the ears is hiring any passerby" (Proverbs)
I thought it was "Like one who grabs a dog by the ears is a passerby who meddles in a quarrel not his own."
Firstly: I don't think it makes a difference if the dog is stray or not.
Secondly: There's a helluva difference between "hiring any passerby" than meddling in a quarrel going on between others. The funny thing about this, is that the book you are quoting from seemed to cite people who were hiring passerby people. Usually these "passerby" peeps would hangout in the marketplace and those - well at least vineyard owners - would come by and "hire" these people and have them work in there vineyards. It wouldn't have taken much for someone to set a vineyard alight.
Finally the USA - a country that seems to call itself "Christian" would really benefit from that proverb and one day, they are gonna get bit by one of those dogs they keep seizing by the ears.
Ever notice how "crunchy" the ground sounds when they walk or drive on it?! 😆
It was all post production sound effects.
Is that the doctor from the (future) show, Emergency ! Rampart !!! Sick bastard.
It's interesting how Dan is always a passenger in later shows as a result of racking up numerous DWI arrests after work. As a kid in the 50's I thought this show was great. After a 40+ year career in law enforcement I wish I had realized how easy it is to solve crimes with road blocks! 2150 you are 10-7.
@8:02
Notice the mike dangling up there.
Yeah! You got a good eye for detail. Mic in the frame.
Euro 51 Saved
Saturday, October 7 - 2023.
It's ironic (or coincidental) that Robert Fuller just 13 years later would be playing someone with the fire department. Here he's an arsonist. Sure like the white '56 Ford truck. Mine will look just like that in maybe a couple of years.
Hi Mark. Have you finished your Ford truck?
Very interesting show !
I think there were two. One with the buttons on the dash and one with the transmission buttons on the steering wheel.
George, you are right, there were two that I am aware of, or can recall. Mopar had the buttons on the dash, Edsel's were on the steering wheel hub.
@@danruble1894 I believe mopar was much more reliable. My father had a 57 fury with push button tranny. It was a beast.
At 8:02, a boom microphone enters frame near 12:00.
It does........sharp eye!!
$3 for half tank of gas
Boy this boy got it bad. Dan the fireman good thing Dan has skills no telling how long the fire department was going to take 🤔
so cool 4:46 you can see & hear Matthews engage the pushbutton torqueflite into reverse.
Robert Fuller ( arsonist ) would become the doctor on Emergency! in the mid-70s
Hot80s The sound of that Dodge cop car had that nice Mopar V8 rumble as he drove away. Chrysler cars had those great transmissions when GM & Ford were still running 2 speed "slushbox's"
+Hot80s That would be the second year that the pushbutton Torqueflite was available.
There's a great doowop song on UA-cam called Push Button Automobile by The Marathons.
He also starred in Wagon Train in the '60s.
bovnyccc operalover Fuller played in Laramie and Acted in Walker Texas Ranger.
Who needs gas to start a fire in straw? No boyscout.
the cruiser bucked up and down four times over the road bump
Unbreakable suspension.
I was disappointed we didn't get to see Shakes McDowell. Now _that's_ the name an arsonist would have! Still, a terrific episode of HP.
His real name is Buddy Lee.
That gas ⛽️ station attendant is a pretty cute guy, but it sure dates this film. I wonder how long it’s been since we’ve ever had anyone fill out gas ⛽️ tank and clean out windshield or air our tires up for us???!!!😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅And I love 💕 Dan’s splay footed walk. That man 👨 means business. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Go to Oregon and you can have it done today!! You cannot fill up your own tank in Oregon.
Ive said this before : Dan is a real nice, polite guy and he loves kids, but dont fuck with him. That guy just did and he discovered the other side of Dan. Poooowwww !!!! Ouuufff !!!
I seriously doubt they could have put out that fire with 10 gallons of gasoline on that hay!
This episode remindes me of a classic b-flick,, The Flaming Urge (1953) Harold Lloyd Jr., firebug characters are few and far between.
Looks like a kid in candy store when uncovers the Jerry cans in the barn
I thought the were gas cans....
The word we use today, "flammable" was used then as "inflammable." Interesting how language changes.
Inflamable can be traced to the middle ages and still in use. Flammable was first used in the 1850s but was strickly minor compared to inflameable.
During WWII it was found some people saw inflamable and since "in" in front of other English word mean non (such as in indisputable or industrutable) they saw inflamable and assume it meant non-flamable.
Safty enginners have been advocated dropping the word inflamable in favor of flammable since WWII, but both words are still in use today. I have seem a lot of tanks marked inflamable to this very day.
Inflammable and flammable have exactly the same meaning.
@@paulmentzer7658 I wish they would drop the "re" in research or the "in" in infamous since research does not mean searching again and infamous does not mean being an "average Joe". There are a few other wack-job words out there.
❤ Love the old cars 🚗 great gest stars alot make it big in moves and TV shows so young back then great acting BC was number 1 great 👍 in his movies 🎬 to remember clowns are funny at a circus on the hi way there deadly BC RIP still watching 2022
_Guest_ stars perhaps? _Alot_ is a town in India. _A lot_ is more than one of something. _Allot_ is to apportion something. You have to sort out _they're, there, their._
The line they had to cut out was when D. Matthews then extended his finger to the "supervisor" and said, "Now sniff my finger."
And then he added, "That's my ass wiping finger."
Seems like no matter how young, Or old, Or Rich,, Or poor,, Or honest, Or a crook,, Everyone has nice clothes,, And new cars,,
5:10 was at Reseda Bl and Parthenia st in Northridge CA.