One of the great things about this show and any other show from the late 40s and 50s is to see future great stars and character actors before they were big.
The guy that was painting those cars so fast served 5 years in prison. After his release he started a car painting business. His name was Earl Schieb....
This series is a festival! An apology for the American automobile of the late 1950s! A real treat. 😘And the stories are always good, the dialogues fair or hard-hitting. THANKS 🥰
If I'm not mistaken, the man who played the ringleader of the car theft crew was also in those Clint Eastwood (Which Way) films, as a bumbling motorcycle gang member. Very good actor!
Clint Eastwood was definitely in another episode as a biker who had a gun pulled on him by a cafe owner. Can't remember the episode number. He was very low in the credits at the time..
Cars were not social gatherings or phone booths back then. You actually had to drive them and pay attention to the road. For those of you who are shocked by this I'm sure there's a support group out there somewhere for you.
Rodolfo Hoyos gets special billing in the credits here ... he had a long and successful career in films and TV. Isn't it AMAZING how Dan Mathews covers SO MUCH territory in California ? ( even though I think they were not ID'ing the location as more than " a western state in the U.S. " )
It was presented as a generic Highway Patrol in Anytown, USA, but was filmed almost entirely (if not entirely) within the Thirty Mile Zone, outside of which the production company (ZIV) would have been obligated to pay 'location fee' per diems to everyone on set. There are often very recognizable buildings, businesses, street signs and such visible that still exist in the Los Angeles area; particularly Hollywood, the San Fernando Valley, and (then) rural areas to the North and West.
Amazing how the duco paint technology of 1958 allowed one man to complete a total respray, inside and out, within a few hours, and without a spray booth.
The fellow with the flag and stop sign played the alien Andorian with the transmitter in his antenna in the Star Trek episode ' Journey to Babel'..the original series...
Kenny Savoy His name is William O' Connell. He was also in Every Which Way But Loose/Any Which Way You Can, High Plains Drifter, Outlaw Jose Wales, The Culpepper Cattle Company, and boatload of TV shows. He has a very distinctive face. This is the first episode of Highway Patrol that Ive seen that had a celebrity guest star that I recognize.
+Kenny Savoy Joe Flynn (Captain Binghamton McHale’s Navy), Robert Fuller, William Boyett (Mac Adam 12), Stuart Whitman, Ted Knight, Ed Nelson, and Robert Conrad are several others I remember in addition to those already mentioned.
there is an episode called, motorcycle a, with Clint Eastwood, but can't find it, there is another one called motorcycle b, that is around, but would like to see the Eastwood one
Great episode, when i was a kid the '58 Chevy's & Fords were all over the place. Everyday was a car show everywhere. The '58 Fords were essentially the '57 Fords with a facelift.
These are very entertaining shows, even after 60 years, but totally unrealistic even by the standards of the 1950s. For example, at 24:08, see "Dan Matthews" recklessly shoot his revolver in frighteningly-close proximity to the back of the Mexican cop. Such a maneuver must surely break any number of police protocols in the use of firearms, and would no doubt subject the officer to disciplinary action and perhaps even dismissal for endangering the life of a fellow cop. But, what the heck! Watching these characters at work is great fun. Broderick Crawford will forever be identified with the gruff, no-nonsense Dan Matthews.
Hollywood script writers do a horrible job of firearm safety. In fact, "Monkey see, monkey do" is no way to inspire safe handling of firearms. Some of the biggest stars can't properly control deadly weapons. Remember, these characters are actors!
No, not smog yet.The smog didn't start until the 60's were well on their way.It was cool air from the pacific. Notice also all the birds? Those are gone now along with everything else.
@@donhancock332 You are entirely wrong. Learn some actual history. Smog - called by that name, was a major political issue in Los Angeles of the 1940s and 50s. Use of backyard incinerators (visible in several HP episodes) was banned in October of 1957 in an effort to reduce smog. Where ever do you get your idiotic notions about "the birds" and "everything else"? Do you just make it up as you go along?
Yes it is! The bio of Crawford for the show is funny too..they had to do all the dialoque in the morning cause Crawford was getting too hamered in the afternoon..even with that they could not shoot scenes on paved roads in the afternoons as well...that is why there is so many scenes on rural roads...have a great day!
That's correct, he had so many DWI's he had his DL suspeneded most of the time. A lot of theose roads are PRIVATE roads, no dl requird, in many of the episodes he rides "Shotgun" I have seen him ride in the Back seat and get out on the left at least ONE to make it kinda look like he was driving. His Drinking buddy was Lon Chaney jr. they used to get drunk and go out to the studio;s and get "run off" for being drunk and bullying some of the people out there. Quite a handful they say Crawford was. BB
+Michael Hollier Yeah, Broderick Crawford loved the booze and food! I still love him in this! There's a movie called The Mob. He plays a cop infiltrating the New York dock corruption. Its good!
I always noticed that the driver always exited and entered the car on the passenger door side in most of the TV movies that were produced during this time and year, why is that?
Anybody can spray paint on a car but whoever taped off that chrome & glass was an artist.How to identify new paint??? You can smell it for 100 feet and there would be bugs embedded in the hood paint.
@socal rocks Damn right.....illegal is ILLEGAL....why don't you get that? Do you leave your doors open at night? Of course not!! Is it because you HATE the people outside or LOVE your people inside?? GET REAL!!! We want and NEED that wall...ASAP!!
That’s the dude who played in Clint Eastwoods movies. “Every Which Way But Loose” and “The Outlaw Josey Wales”. His name is William O’Connell. He and the lady partner are still alive as of May 2023 according to IMDB.
Hypnotic ...not necessarily, saw a lot of those old tanks , smushed like an aluminum can , or wrapped around a telephone pole like a tootsie roll , and the people torn to pieces , or crushed beyond recognition. They were bigger , more personality , but didn’t take a wreck as good as the cars of today. Plus most had no seatbelts, and lots of other safety features like today . But they sure looked good .
Behind the license! the plates folded down to reveal the gas cap! The gas tanks were located in the rear of the cars back then that's why there were so may fires occurring on rear-end accidents!
I'm not sure their word "by" at the end of a radio transmission was short for "good bye"....I think it was short for something else like "standing by for further instruction." Just a thought.....
Beautiful American cars designed with art and class in mind today are designed for cheap, cut corners to save fuel and to make the automaker more more and more money.
Gun Fight At The OK Corral with 7 shot six shooters and a smoke bomb shot gun...............Just when I think Ive seen Dan at his best...he gets better !
+John Steed The other other real joke (besides Crawford's well documented drinking problem) are those ridiculous 1950's era cars. Two tons of steel and built to look like outer space, extraterrestrial vehicles. With body panels and fenders that were nearly 3/16ths of an inch thick. Anyone one of them could crush a modern Japanese car of today. ... .It was an era that had gone plumb crazy. From fads to architecture. Same decade that introduced Richard Nixon to the world political stage. A time of excess. Excessive craziness that is.
Jorge Callico , you even seen a little kid get hit by one of those cars 🚘? Sometimes the kids would jump up without a scratch, LOL, the video game children of today can’t handle falling off a bicycle.
Before when he went into Mexico, he worked with a captain. This character is listed as a sergeant in the credits. Can't tell if it's the same actor. Good character though. Good use of tear gas. Lob it right in front the enclosed area and let it drift in.
Sweet sounding V-8’s in some of those cars. Kind of boring but best of all the “6” (00) shot revolvers. Nice radial engined aircraft taking off around 21:35 maybe Van Nuys lots of filming around (and on) that airport.
Yes, every two years YOU have holes in the exhaust so you need a new one and in the big cities you can't see the sun because of the smog... If that shit is heaven for you...
@@-oiiio-3993 Not really, the original exhaust on a new car lasted a little longer, up to five years. The spare parts from the retrofitter, even from Eberspächter, only lasted two to three years. That was definitely intentional, there was something in the sheet steel that promoted rapid wear. You could almost always be sure, driving flat out on the freeway and the exhaust was light gray on the inside from the lead content in the fuel and it was almost certainly leaking as well. One can hardly imagine today. I then bought a Mercedes-Benz 190E 2.0 Sportline with a regulated 3-way catalytic converter in 1991 as a new car and the original exhaust lasted eleven years. I always drive my new cars for a very long time, you can't save more money. In 2007, I had a total write-down accident with the Mercedes by rolling over after deer crossing a federal highway in West Germany at night and then replaced this vehicle with a new Volvo V70 D5, which I still own today. This diesel with soot filter still has the original exhaust completely installed, after more than 15 years. Something like that was completely unimaginable in the 70s and early 80s. When I was a kid in the mid-1970s, I watched my father replace various exhaust parts on our 1970 Ford Taunus. The work was repeated every two to three years. The crowning glory was exhaust gum, a type of rubber compound from a British manufacturer intended to permanently seal holes in the exhaust. This material was probably not suitable for West German traffic and West German driving speeds. After two days the crap was gone...
@@ULTRA_2112 _"Not really, the original exhaust on a new car lasted a little longer, up to five years. The spare parts from the retrofitter, even from Eberspächter, only lasted two to three years."_ Nonsense. I have owned a 1956 Ford Ranch Wagon, 1953 Oldsmobile 88, 1959 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe, Cadillacs of 1962, 1970, 1973... none of which ever needed a new exhaust system.
@@-oiiio-3993 No nonsense. I'm assuming that you didn't buy your vehicles built between 1953 and 1973 as new and therefore have no way of knowing how often the exhaust systems have already been replaced. Possibly even non-original exhaust systems made of stainless steel were installed. In addition, it might have dawned on you, since I mentioned several times in my text that I come from West Germany, i.e. the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG). So I am describing the situation in the Federal Republic of Germany in the 1970s and 1980s. Leaded petrol was still used here until the mid-1980s and our fuels had higher octane ratings, so the exhaust gases were also more aggressive for the exhaust systems. In Europe, significantly more powerful engines with significantly higher liter performance were used, which also often involved driving at high speeds on the autobahn. As an example, Mercedes-Benz models in Europe were generally more powerful than the same vehicles in the U.S. export version. To put it bluntly, you're comparing a lame thing like the Chevrolet Camaro from the '70s to the Porsche 911 of that era. Or grandpa's rocking box Cadillac DeVille from 1975 with a Mercedes-Benz 300SEL 6.3 or 450SEL 6.9 from this period. High-performance machines simply have different emissions characteristics than tractor engines... As I said, as a child I was present several times when the exhaust systems were replaced, which my father did himself in the 1970s.
Oh shut up, you swear everything was so on the up-and-up back then. Stop buying into so much 1950s television. It’s only good for amusement, not historical accuracy.
@David Soltai: "All those cars went to Cuba" ... and if you wish to see them once again, you simply need to watch the Ry Cooder/Wim Wenders documentary CUBA, THE OPEN AIR VINTAGE U.S. CAR MUSEUM a.k.a. BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB. The cars are still functioning whereas (not only) Cuban socialism never functioned for a single day in history. Only socialists and outright communists who are living in capitalist countries, though, keep hailing it (being covertly grateful that their abode is somewhere else). BTW Allegedly, this film is also about music (grin).
From The Washington Post, June 1990, "Estimates of the number of stolen U.S. cars that wind up in Mexico range as high as 20,000 a year, of which "hundreds" are said to be in the possession of the federal police."
You have to love during the shootout how the cops all group together in a nice fat target area. Apparently the phrase "spread out" wasn't invented until a few years later during the TV "Western" craze.
Dan really gets around California. Every time there's a crime anywhere in the state, he's right there!
Yeah, that's why he is so well compensated.
And like Uncle Jessie,Daisy and Cooter no matter how far awaythe crook is that's driving away from him he'll be right behind them in 5 minutes.
Regardless of your location, Matthews is only ever 15 minutes away.
One of the great things about this show and any other show from the late 40s and 50s is to see future great stars and character actors before they were big.
True!
The guy that was painting those cars so fast served 5 years in prison. After his release he started a car painting business. His name was Earl Schieb....
LOL ! any car $29.95 back then ! man those were the days !
OK, but how many hours of work did one have to put in back then to earn $29.95?
And how many does one have to put in nowadays to offset a paint job?
+mr1uponu 2
dynamite answer! Great stuff.
leave the windows down and he'll paint the interior for free
"Wish they'd stolen my car. It needs a new paint job!" - Dan Mathews always gets in the last word. LOL!
And today everyone is trying to get the attention. Created a monster, TV
Great show great cars best show on UA-cam.
So many good episodes.
“Mexico City, that would be the place, they’re looking for small cars down there.” There are no small cars on this entire program.
😂 “small cars” right.
They in mehico
There was a Triumph TR-3 in one of the episodes.
LOOK AT the separate bar on the steering wheel for the horn i love old cars
"Wish they'd of stolen my car. It needs a paint job!"
That paintjob comment at the end...Magnifique!
Dan, hide behind the 4 inch tree when the bad guys are shooting at you! Oh good it worked, 50 bullets shot, not a scratch on the cars or anybody else!
Yes, and in direct view of the bad guys.
This series is a festival! An apology for the American automobile of the late 1950s! A real treat.
😘And the stories are always good, the dialogues fair or hard-hitting. THANKS 🥰
Back then cars had style.
So did the women!
Back then cars had Steel.
And they were made out of steel not plastic.
Everything had style back then.
And women looked like women, men looked like men.
If I'm not mistaken, the man who played the ringleader of the car theft crew was also in those Clint Eastwood (Which Way) films, as a bumbling motorcycle gang member. Very good actor!
Clint Eastwood was definitely in another episode as a biker who had a gun pulled on him by a cafe owner. Can't remember the episode number. He was very low in the credits at the time..
His name is William O'Connell in many Clint Eastwood movies like high plains drifter
Oh the craftsmanship back in those days. Repainting 20 ft of chrome staring land yacht in 4 hours. Skilled thugs like that just don’t exist any more…😢
And THAT ladies and gentlemen is the original carjacking....1959
FORD FAIRLANE was new for 1958 , beauty way to go options, included, 4.000" bore x 3.500" stroke 300 H.P. 352 c.i. V-8.
The first Ford Fairlane came out in '55, so you're off by a few years-----> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Fairlane_(Americas)
Chrysler had better engineering and Virgil Exner.
We had a 64 Fairlane.
Were there cupholders...........?
Cars were not social gatherings or phone booths back then. You actually had to drive them and pay attention to the road. For those of you who are shocked by this I'm sure there's a support group out there somewhere for you.
Criminals are like obsessed gamblers - they never know when to stop!
" All I know about him was some SOB in a leather jacket, and ball cap yelling at the wife and me, then he stole the car."
Rodolfo Hoyos gets special billing in the credits here ... he had a long and successful career in films and TV. Isn't it AMAZING how Dan Mathews covers SO MUCH territory in California ? ( even though I think they were not ID'ing the location as more than " a western state in the U.S. " )
It was presented as a generic Highway Patrol in Anytown, USA, but was filmed almost entirely (if not entirely) within the Thirty Mile Zone, outside of which the production company (ZIV) would have been obligated to pay 'location fee' per diems to everyone on set.
There are often very recognizable buildings, businesses, street signs and such visible that still exist in the Los Angeles area; particularly Hollywood, the San Fernando Valley, and (then) rural areas to the North and West.
In real life that Mexican police chief would probably be getting his cut from the car thieves.
Not probably, definitely.
Wow a 1960 Chevy!! I learned to drive with my dad’s 1960 Chevy standard transmission. Back then you had to special order an automatic.
My '59 Impala had Powerglide, as did most.
Amazing how the duco paint technology of 1958 allowed one man to complete a total respray, inside and out, within a few hours, and without a spray booth.
Good episode for 50's car spotting. The 59 Dodge convertible being the best of the crop.
I’m a sucker for those cat eye taillights on that ‘59 Impala.
@@woodyw6891
It's a Bel-Air.
One of my favorite actors.......... William O'Connell
I love the Classic cars, they are so classic. I wish I could one or 2 home.
My fav is the Chev Impala (?) with the horizontal fins
@@patriot692
It's a '59 Bel-Air.
The fellow with the flag and stop sign played the alien Andorian with the transmitter in his antenna in the Star Trek episode ' Journey to Babel'..the original series...
Kenny Savoy His name is William O' Connell. He was also in Every Which Way But Loose/Any Which Way You Can, High Plains Drifter, Outlaw Jose Wales, The Culpepper Cattle Company, and boatload of TV shows. He has a very distinctive face. This is the first episode of Highway Patrol that Ive seen that had a celebrity guest star that I recognize.
Statimtek Keep watching. You'll see Clint Eastwood, Leonard Nimoy, and quite a few others.
+Kenny Savoy Joe Flynn (Captain Binghamton McHale’s Navy), Robert Fuller, William Boyett (Mac Adam 12), Stuart Whitman, Ted Knight, Ed Nelson, and Robert Conrad are several others I remember in addition to those already mentioned.
+1954SCOTTIE Right-o!!
there is an episode called, motorcycle a, with Clint Eastwood, but can't find it, there is another one called motorcycle b, that is around, but would like to see the Eastwood one
You can put approximately 4 medium sized 🚘 sedans in the area of a 1960 Imperial Lebanon!
Man I just love these old shows , I watched them as a kid , but where did they get those 35 round revolvers ?
Back then, that was the only kind in the prop room.....ha
From a 'Western' movie set?
High capacity cylinders....they are illegal today! 😉
Great episode, when i was a kid the '58 Chevy's & Fords were all over the place. Everyday was a car show everywhere. The '58 Fords were essentially the '57 Fords with a facelift.
As were the '59s.
These are very entertaining shows, even after 60 years, but totally unrealistic even by the standards of the 1950s. For example, at 24:08, see "Dan Matthews" recklessly shoot his revolver in frighteningly-close proximity to the back of the Mexican cop. Such a maneuver must surely break any number of police protocols in the use of firearms, and would no doubt subject the officer to disciplinary action and perhaps even dismissal for endangering the life of a fellow cop. But, what the heck! Watching these characters at work is great fun. Broderick Crawford will forever be identified with the gruff, no-nonsense Dan Matthews.
Dan had a bit too much of the "GLUG GLUG" that day
Hey, this was the ‘50s. They didn’t care about those things back then.
Hollywood script writers do a horrible job of firearm safety. In fact, "Monkey see, monkey do" is no way to inspire safe handling of firearms. Some of the biggest stars can't properly control deadly weapons. Remember, these characters are actors!
Great Episode 😄 Thank You For Sharing 😄
That's a snappy 59 Chevy!
I had a Roman Red '59 Impala Sport Coupe with 348 and 'factory air' back in the day.
Put Broderick Crawford on the border with his HP crew, and he will stop them cold! Book em' Danno!
I wish that they made cars like this still, however we entered the age of "planned obsolescence".
Filmed on Mulholland Dr. overlooking the San Fernando Valley. Sure was smoggy back then.
That was the famous Los Angeles smog .
No, not smog yet.The smog didn't start until the 60's were well on their way.It was cool air from the pacific. Notice also all the birds? Those are gone now along with everything else.
@@donhancock332 You are entirely wrong. Learn some actual history.
Smog - called by that name, was a major political issue in Los Angeles of the 1940s and 50s. Use of backyard incinerators (visible in several HP episodes) was banned in October of 1957 in an effort to reduce smog.
Where ever do you get your idiotic notions about "the birds" and "everything else"? Do you just make it up as you go along?
I see so many genuine WWII A2 Leather bomber jackets in these shows,,, they're still hanging in a wardrobe dept somewhere.
Great actor Rodolfo Hoyas in one of many roles and shows he played in!
16:07 Do you own the car? No my husband does..but I own my husband so I guess I own the car...lololol
+Michael Hollier you own a man? let's see Mrs. Hooper, a woman driving by herself?, all the way to Mexico City? classic comedy!
Yes it is! The bio of Crawford for the show is funny too..they had to do all the dialoque in the morning cause Crawford was getting too hamered in the afternoon..even with that they could not shoot scenes on paved roads in the afternoons as well...that is why there is so many scenes on rural roads...have a great day!
That's correct, he had so many DWI's he had his DL suspeneded most of the time. A lot of theose roads are PRIVATE roads, no dl requird, in many of the episodes he rides "Shotgun" I have seen him ride in the Back seat and get out on the left at least ONE to make it kinda look like he was driving.
His Drinking buddy was Lon Chaney jr. they used to get drunk and go out to the studio;s and get "run off" for being drunk and bullying some of the people out there. Quite a handful they say Crawford was. BB
+Michael Hollier Yeah, Broderick Crawford loved the booze and food! I still love him in this! There's a movie called The Mob. He plays a cop infiltrating the New York dock corruption. Its good!
I always noticed that the driver always exited and entered the car on the passenger door side in most of the TV movies that were produced during this time and year, why is that?
How come crooks always have the good looking women? Love the old cars.
+John A. 'cause they were more interesting...
No doubt you are correct.
Yep, Friday night bad boys with a good rap sheet preferred!
Check your glasses she was not attractive!
@@johnandrew1727 At least she looked and sounded like a woman. Today you can't be sure.
Anybody can spray paint on a car but whoever taped off that chrome & glass was an artist.How to identify new paint??? You can smell it for 100 feet and there would be bugs embedded in the hood paint.
1:12, 1959 Chevrolet, It’s the first episode on Highway Patrol to see a 1959 Chevrolet with the “Cat Eyes” Fins. .. …
The cars of the 50s will never be outdone for style ,class ,power and prestige when owned and paid for.Never to be matched.
At 4:13 the guy forgets to put the car in gear. (It's a 1959 Dodge with pushbuttons instead of a shift lever.)
Those guys X Earl Scheib painters. I'll paint any car for a 1995. Yes I remember those days.✋🏽👍🏽👌🏽🤘🏾🤙🏾🙋🏽♂️😊😎.
The 1950's sure had beautiful cars!.
Yes, definitely.
Yeah! but they were big and full of chrome and hard to take care of. Plus, they broke down regularly!
Gotta Love all these old cars in these shows!!!
Love the points on the back of those cars
How many bullets in those 6 shooters?
The door slamming is a nice touch
Back in the day, this guy was top-shelf of the Hispanic actors: 5:06
I remember him too....
@socal rocks Damn right.....illegal is ILLEGAL....why don't you get that? Do you leave your doors open at night? Of course not!!
Is it because you HATE the people outside or LOVE your people inside?? GET REAL!!! We want and NEED that wall...ASAP!!
He is a good actor.
She remembers how he looks but she can't describe him
Imagine Dan Matthews, Julio the Mexican Highway Patrol guy and Ben Shapiro having a conversation together. That would be one for the books.
Nobody would be understood
That’s the dude who played in Clint Eastwoods movies. “Every Which Way But Loose” and “The Outlaw Josey Wales”. His name is William O’Connell. He and the lady partner are still alive as of May 2023 according to IMDB.
How many rounds do those six shooters hold anyway?
Unlimited.
SIX!
As many as it takes
Hollywood sixty shooters.
At least 200 each.
When cars were tanks.
Hypnotic ...not necessarily, saw a lot of those old tanks , smushed like an aluminum can , or wrapped around a telephone pole like a tootsie roll , and the people torn to pieces , or crushed beyond recognition. They were bigger , more personality , but didn’t take a wreck as good as the cars of today. Plus most had no seatbelts, and lots of other safety features like today . But they sure looked good .
Behind the license! the plates folded down to reveal the gas cap! The gas tanks were located in the rear of the cars back then that's why there were so may fires occurring on rear-end accidents!
@@bernardbrown5336 The tanks were UNDERNEATH in the back....same as many today.
When cars drove like boats.
@@jan22150 Yeah, and crumpled like aluminum cans.
“Small cars” are popular down there!
Lol I caught that one too. You could line up ten smart cars along side of the rag top :) Peace
Early carjacking in 1959. 1959 Chevrolet Del Ray 2 door sedan either a 6 cylinder or a V-8 engine.
Del Ray's disappeared for the '59 line. We have here a Biscayne. Sounds like a V-8 to me at 1:31 and it can even spin the wheels!
The Mexican captain forgot to say "bye" at the end of his radio transmissions. Or, in his case, it would have been "adios."
Diez-cuatro
Yes, I was thinking he was the South of the border Dan Matthews.
I'm not sure their word "by" at the end of a radio transmission was short for "good bye"....I think it was short for something else like "standing by for further instruction." Just a thought.....
Deiase -Quatro
Beautiful American cars designed with art and class in mind today are designed for cheap, cut corners to save fuel and to make the automaker more more and more money.
BULLSHIT. Today's cars are more reliable and safer.
@@kenlucas7025 But ugly like hell and without any carisma, hate this rolling iPads, give me a classic every time!
In every episode, you'll notice "The whiney female voice of reason."
Gun Fight At The OK Corral with 7 shot six shooters and a smoke bomb shot gun...............Just when I think Ive seen Dan at his best...he gets better !
So I guess border violence is nothing new; well, give me the Broderick Crawford version anyday over the current one...
" We got your stolen car back, a little shot up however."
In real life, the mexican "state patrol" chief is driving one of those stolen cars.
+John Steed
The other other real joke (besides Crawford's well documented drinking problem) are those ridiculous 1950's era cars. Two tons of steel and built to look like outer space, extraterrestrial vehicles. With body panels and fenders that were nearly 3/16ths of an inch thick. Anyone one of them could crush a modern Japanese car of today. ... .It was an era that had gone plumb crazy. From fads to architecture. Same decade that introduced Richard Nixon to the world political stage. A time of excess. Excessive craziness that is.
+Jorge Callico I loved being a kid in the 5Os!
Otravez 39 Idiota.
Jorge Callico , you even seen a little kid get hit by one of those cars 🚘? Sometimes the kids would jump up without a scratch, LOL, the video game children of today can’t handle falling off a bicycle.
John Steed , LOL 😆
Before when he went into Mexico, he worked with a captain. This character is listed as a sergeant in the credits. Can't tell if it's the same actor. Good character though. Good use of tear gas. Lob it right in front the enclosed area and let it drift in.
"It's not gonna identify him... Now Think..7:42." Classic Dan line.... He could snap a corpse back into life with his direct approach......
Good old fashioned detective work👍🏻❤️
Nothing like a shootout with a stolen car ring. Go, Dan, go!
Hey, the crooks shot first!
This is a good series
Incredible and double incredible!.🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
My Mom had a '58 Ford station wagon. 3 speed on the column 6 cid.
6 Cubic Inches Displacement ! That's not a lot! I know you meant inline 6-cylinders and the 1958 was 223 CID and 145 Horse Power. Now all is fine.
My first car was a 1963 Impala wagon. 6cyl and 3 on the tree also. It was a beater and almost 10yrs old, but I loved that car.
DANG THEY GOT MORE BULLETS THAN THE COWBOYS!!
The Mexican cop had a Chrysler when Dan only has a Dodge!!
Sound like Dan need some WD-40 on that door lol
Euro 81 Saved.
Monday, November 6 - 2023.
Sweet sounding V-8’s in some of those cars. Kind of boring but best of all the “6” (00) shot revolvers. Nice radial engined aircraft taking off around 21:35 maybe Van Nuys lots of filming around (and on) that airport.
Heard the plane engine.... seems odd these guys never carry a rifle, shotgun...maybe a Thompson.
Cars without catalytic converters. It must be like heaven.
Yes, every two years YOU have holes in the exhaust so you need a new one and in the big cities you can't see the sun because of the smog...
If that shit is heaven for you...
@@ULTRA_2112 "Every two years..."?
Exaggerate much?
@@-oiiio-3993 Not really, the original exhaust on a new car lasted a little longer, up to five years.
The spare parts from the retrofitter, even from Eberspächter, only lasted two to three years.
That was definitely intentional, there was something in the sheet steel that promoted rapid wear.
You could almost always be sure, driving flat out on the freeway and the exhaust was light gray on the inside from the lead content in the fuel and it was almost certainly leaking as well.
One can hardly imagine today.
I then bought a Mercedes-Benz 190E 2.0 Sportline with a regulated 3-way catalytic converter in 1991 as a new car and the original exhaust lasted eleven years.
I always drive my new cars for a very long time, you can't save more money.
In 2007, I had a total write-down accident with the Mercedes by rolling over after deer crossing a federal highway in West Germany at night and then replaced this vehicle with a new Volvo V70 D5, which I still own today.
This diesel with soot filter still has the original exhaust completely installed, after more than 15 years.
Something like that was completely unimaginable in the 70s and early 80s.
When I was a kid in the mid-1970s, I watched my father replace various exhaust parts on our 1970 Ford Taunus.
The work was repeated every two to three years.
The crowning glory was exhaust gum, a type of rubber compound from a British manufacturer intended to permanently seal holes in the exhaust.
This material was probably not suitable for West German traffic and West German driving speeds.
After two days the crap was gone...
@@ULTRA_2112 _"Not really, the original exhaust on a new car lasted a little longer, up to five years. The spare parts from the retrofitter, even from Eberspächter, only lasted two to three years."_
Nonsense.
I have owned a 1956 Ford Ranch Wagon, 1953 Oldsmobile 88, 1959 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe, Cadillacs of 1962, 1970, 1973... none of which ever needed a new exhaust system.
@@-oiiio-3993
No nonsense.
I'm assuming that you didn't buy your vehicles built between 1953 and 1973 as new and therefore have no way of knowing how often the exhaust systems have already been replaced.
Possibly even non-original exhaust systems made of stainless steel were installed.
In addition, it might have dawned on you, since I mentioned several times in my text that I come from West Germany, i.e. the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG).
So I am describing the situation in the Federal Republic of Germany in the 1970s and 1980s.
Leaded petrol was still used here until the mid-1980s and our fuels had higher octane ratings, so the exhaust gases were also more aggressive for the exhaust systems.
In Europe, significantly more powerful engines with significantly higher liter performance were used, which also often involved driving at high speeds on the autobahn.
As an example, Mercedes-Benz models in Europe were generally more powerful than the same vehicles in the U.S. export version.
To put it bluntly, you're comparing a lame thing like the Chevrolet Camaro from the '70s to the Porsche 911 of that era.
Or grandpa's rocking box Cadillac DeVille from 1975 with a Mercedes-Benz 300SEL 6.3 or 450SEL 6.9 from this period.
High-performance machines simply have different emissions characteristics than tractor engines...
As I said, as a child I was present several times when the exhaust systems were replaced, which my father did himself in the 1970s.
The stop sign guy has appeared in a few Clint Eastwood movies!
Broderick Crawford what a great actor
Would never stop for this flag waving clown, but maybe back then he seemed official!
Need more 2150 in every town
If this really happened the capitano would have tossed into the garage a couple of surplus W.W. II U.S. grenades.
Amazing-- after all those shots no one was hit, and no one reloads?!
Reloading is for amateurs, pros never run out.
70 years later, we still need to build the wall.
What a shame they didn't build it before your family got here.
Speaking as someone who has lived on the border 66 years... NO we don't. You have been fed too many trumpocrite lies!
Were they using belt fed revolvers?
See....they should have "built the wall" many years ago!!
Matthews at 24:34 - and I wish they would have stolen my car, it needs a new paint job!
It's incredible they never need to reload! lol
22:59 good ol' M-79, always useful for evicting vermin
Wasn't the thief in the convertible the same guy in a motorcycle gang what Every Which Way but Loose and any which way you can
He must have been tight with Clint Eastwood. He was also the singing ferry boat operator in The Outlaw Josey Wales.
What I wouldn't give for a return to the days police could do their jobs without being accused of being criminals themselves, by the actual criminals.
All about bad AG's Judges and lawyers....all on the pay
@@harveymushman2219 They must be relieved of duty.
Oh shut up, you swear everything was so on the up-and-up back then. Stop buying into so much 1950s television. It’s only good for amusement, not historical accuracy.
@@wflyer7985 Are you always a jerk?
What makes you think that didn't happen then?
if car thieves want to lose their cars and sell them in mexico city, they should have entered mexico through arizona
The head of the Mexican highway patrol was named: Broderico Crawfordo or Danilo Montezuma.
Any holes in the upholstery??
@David Soltai: "All those cars went to Cuba"
... and if you wish to see them once again, you simply need to watch the Ry Cooder/Wim Wenders documentary CUBA, THE OPEN AIR VINTAGE U.S. CAR MUSEUM a.k.a. BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB. The cars are still functioning whereas (not only) Cuban socialism never functioned for a single day in history. Only socialists and outright communists who are living in capitalist countries, though, keep hailing it (being covertly grateful that their abode is somewhere else). BTW Allegedly, this film is also about music (grin).
Awesome film about Buena Vista Social Club!
Highway Patrol: Special 25 of 41.
Season 4. Episode 20. "Mexican Chase".
Gold Episode 21.
Bad Woman: Selette Cole.
Thursday - December 28 - 2022.
Give Dan a bottle of Tequila for his efforts in this one! Bueno give him a case 🤣😉😉
Did you notice they never sweat in the suits
All those cars went to Cuba
From The Washington Post, June 1990, "Estimates of the number of stolen U.S. cars that wind up in Mexico range as high as 20,000 a year, of which "hundreds" are said to be in the possession of the federal police."
Everyone in the Mexican hwy petroleum got a freshly painted new car!
You have to love during the shootout how the cops all group together in a nice fat target area. Apparently the phrase "spread out" wasn't invented until a few years later during the TV "Western" craze.
I’m pretty sure the phrase “Spread out” was invented by Moe of the 3 Stooges.
_The Three Stooges_ say, "What?"
ua-cam.com/video/MhWoTFUsHfc/v-deo.html