Ok, I don't care for Lesli but he does make it interesting. then he says to nosey "will you get me a loudspeaker please, I think there's a couple in the corner that can't hear us." that was GREAT!!
"patricketienne2579," no family ? -- ULTRA-shapely wife Sandy, waitressing at the wharf diner, blind, younger brother Chris (Gary Haynes) whom Allison was such a willing, caring person to have around; then in her absence Sandy performs yeoman's duty looking after her brother-in-law. Remember, Chris is significant -- significant with a capital "S" -- in the Ann Howard (Susan Oliver) storyline. Viewers -- and Dr. Rossi -- had little sympathy for Lee while he was terrorizing Ann. Lee Webber and Joe Chernak -- 'birds of a feather' i.e., 'good riddance.' I don't' recall seeing a graveside burial for Lee as we did with Adrienne's farewell to life-on-earth, but that doesn't equate to neither Sandy or Chris being 'curious.' BTW, what a good actor Stephen Oliver is..
@@retha1875 Even so. People tended to be more reticent about those things back then. At least my people were. Never admitting they were sick, chronic denial. Even to the point of telling you there is nothing wrong with you. When you were doctoring.
@@retha1875 No, patient's conditions, medical charts being confidential was very much a significant 'rule' back then. Would you have refuted the original Comment if it pertained to a fictionalization of the practice of law, another noble profession with its hard and fast rules, as portrayed in a 1966 "Perry Mason" episode? Of course not. "rhondabitler2461"'s Comment was valid. The good Dr. Rossi is not infallible. He and Miss Choate certainly 'followed by the rules' when they summarily dismissed Betty, then training as a nurses' assistant at Doctors Hospital, for sneaking a peak at Stella Chernak's file; done as a favor for Steven.
+Billy Hurley Hi Bill, The quality of the audio is something I honestly couldn't improve upon: all the episodes I uploaded from the originating DVDs had varying quality in both video & audio. Yes, some were muffled or low in volume. There was nothing I could do, since that's the way they were. I was a bit annoyed when I came upon the odd episode like this. I'd be blasting my TV's volume during the occasional episode. LOL Most episodes are in very good shape, though. If they ever released the ENTIRE series on DVD, I'm certain they would remaster the entire lot as to give us consistent quality all the way through.
@@soapsnthings4182 With 500+ episodes you've meticulously prepared for the UA-cam universe [and "Peyton Place" faithful] surely you're tired of presenting explanations. Explanations we acknowledge; apologies NOT -- because we know it's not your doing. Here you sound rather 'forgiving' and 'understanding' for what you were working with, i.e., "varying quality," "muffled," "low in volume," to which I'll counter the individuals who allowed these subpar offerings to go out without the most basic necessity -- playing back their recordings to ensure they match as closely as possible the initial, professional elements achieved by the recording artists and sound engineers at 20th Century Fox Studios and the playback technicians at ABC practiced, from 1964 - 1969. Then subsequently the film labs in Hollywood striking 16 mm prints -- off the 35 mm negative -- for "Peyton Place"'s afterlife in syndication. I shudder to think cable channel Romance Classics received their copies for transmission, for air, in this poor quality. Perhaps it was amateur quality equipment making the copies off the cablecasts becoming inferior OR amateur individuals at the controls of state-of-the-art equipment who ruined their assignment(s), I'll close with again thanking "soapsnthings4182" then adding they / she / he / are Rhodes Scholars proportionately in comparison to the continuation school rejects who 'dropped the ball' at various stages along the line with "Peyton Place." [I think Andy Sipowicz (Dennis Franz) of "NYPD Blue" -- known for his putdowns -- would say upon reading that, "Oh, I like; spot on; well done."]
Coming from 'the other side of the tracks' Lee thought he'd hit 'life's jackpot' being Mr. Peyton's assistant -- more than just a chauffeur his employer specified -- yet from Martin Peyton's twisted, evil mind it was entirely a ruse.
democolor42 More to come. :-) I won't say who, but yet another MAJOR character leaves the show on the next episode. Actually, it might make you happy (although I wasn't).
Eddie, Dan Duryea, is an awesome actor and a gorgeous man. if you haven't seen him in 40's or 50's film noir, you are missing it!!
True!
He always played creeps but Wikipedia says he was one of the nicest men who ever lived!
@@ginagray603 And that made him beautiful because even though his character is a con artist he’s very likable.
@@catherineerwin8269 Yes, I love him!
Well, Rodney can breathe a sigh of relief now that Lee is dead. No more brawls on the garage floor.
Ok, I don't care for Lesli but he does make it interesting. then he says to nosey "will you get me a loudspeaker please, I think there's a couple in the corner that can't hear us." that was GREAT!!
So funny!
A remote control TV in 1968. Wow! Doctor's Hospital had some money.
In 1963 we got a new TV set with a remote control.
Leslie Harrington - Father of the Year (in an alternate universe)
... and Lee Webber has no family who are curious about his murder? Strange world.
"patricketienne2579," no family ? -- ULTRA-shapely wife Sandy, waitressing at the wharf diner, blind, younger brother Chris (Gary Haynes) whom Allison was such a willing, caring person to have around; then in her absence Sandy performs yeoman's duty looking after her brother-in-law. Remember, Chris is significant -- significant with a capital "S" -- in the Ann Howard (Susan Oliver) storyline. Viewers -- and Dr. Rossi -- had little sympathy for Lee while he was terrorizing Ann.
Lee Webber and Joe Chernak -- 'birds of a feather' i.e., 'good riddance.'
I don't' recall seeing a graveside burial for Lee as we did with Adrienne's farewell to life-on-earth, but that doesn't equate to neither Sandy or Chris being 'curious.'
BTW, what a good actor Stephen Oliver is..
Absurd all these murders
There’s a series in England called Midsomer Murders, I think. Small village - people plotting and killing each other ever episode!
Rossi shouldn't be telling Elliot about Martin's medical problem.
Not the same rules back then.
@@retha1875 Even so. People tended to be more reticent about those things back then. At least my people were. Never admitting they were sick, chronic denial. Even to the point of telling you there is nothing wrong with you. When you were doctoring.
@@retha1875 No, patient's conditions, medical charts being confidential was very much a significant 'rule' back then. Would you have refuted the original Comment if it pertained to a fictionalization of the practice of law, another noble profession with its hard and fast rules, as portrayed in a 1966 "Perry Mason" episode? Of course not.
"rhondabitler2461"'s Comment was valid. The good Dr. Rossi is not infallible. He and Miss Choate certainly 'followed by the rules' when they summarily dismissed Betty, then training as a nurses' assistant at Doctors Hospital, for sneaking a peak at Stella Chernak's file; done as a favor for Steven.
Why Why Why Rodney. Why don't you mind your own business!! He's a bit of a gossip. He likes to know every body's business
Yes, Rod is nosy, but in this case, his father shot Lee Webber. It's only natural he'd want to know what happened.
Hard to hear again.
+Billy Hurley
Hi Bill,
The quality of the audio is something I honestly couldn't improve upon: all the episodes I uploaded from the originating DVDs had varying quality in both video & audio. Yes, some were muffled or low in volume. There was nothing I could do, since that's the way they were.
I was a bit annoyed when I came upon the odd episode like this. I'd be blasting my TV's volume during the occasional episode. LOL
Most episodes are in very good shape, though.
If they ever released the ENTIRE series on DVD, I'm certain they would remaster the entire lot as to give us consistent quality all the way through.
@@soapsnthings4182 I use a blue tooth speaker.
@@soapsnthings4182 We are all grateful for everything you have done for us to enjoy watching the series! Thank you.
@@soapsnthings4182 With 500+ episodes you've meticulously prepared for the UA-cam universe [and "Peyton Place" faithful] surely you're tired of presenting explanations. Explanations we acknowledge; apologies NOT -- because we know it's not your doing.
Here you sound rather 'forgiving' and 'understanding' for what you were working with, i.e., "varying quality," "muffled," "low in volume," to which I'll counter the individuals who allowed these subpar offerings to go out without the most basic necessity -- playing back their recordings to ensure they match as closely as possible the initial, professional elements achieved by the recording artists and sound engineers at 20th Century Fox Studios and the playback technicians at ABC practiced, from 1964 - 1969. Then subsequently the film labs in Hollywood striking 16 mm prints -- off the 35 mm negative -- for "Peyton Place"'s afterlife in syndication.
I shudder to think cable channel Romance Classics received their copies for transmission, for air, in this poor quality. Perhaps it was amateur quality equipment making the copies off the cablecasts becoming inferior OR amateur individuals at the controls of state-of-the-art equipment who ruined their assignment(s),
I'll close with again thanking "soapsnthings4182" then adding they / she / he / are Rhodes Scholars proportionately in comparison to the continuation school rejects who 'dropped the ball' at various stages along the line with "Peyton Place." [I think Andy Sipowicz (Dennis Franz) of "NYPD Blue" -- known for his putdowns -- would say upon reading that, "Oh, I like; spot on; well done."]
Got rid of one stranger and now another so soon
That's the Soap Opera Biz.:-)It seems one new cast member shows up almost immediately after an old cast member leaves.
Mr Martin was playing along with Lee Weber!
Coming from 'the other side of the tracks' Lee thought he'd hit 'life's jackpot' being Mr. Peyton's assistant -- more than just a chauffeur his employer specified -- yet from Martin Peyton's twisted, evil mind it was entirely a ruse.
How can be trust Rodney? who wanted to turn him in over the chandler and gun incident
OVER :(
democolor42 More to come. :-)
I won't say who, but yet another MAJOR character leaves the show on the next episode. Actually, it might make you happy (although I wasn't).
:)
democolor42 I was only able to upload a couple more episodes tonight, instead of how many I usually do. It's been a busy night around here!
We are grateful for everything you do!!!!!!!!!!
democolor42
Ditto !