Monday, September 22, 2025

September 22, 1985: The 1st Farm Aid Concert

Left to right: Willie Nelson, Stan Lynch, 
Bob Dylan, Tom Petty and Mike Campbell

September 22, 1985, 40 years ago: The 1st Farm Aid concert is held at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, on the campus of the University of Illinois. The concert was organized by Willie Nelson, John Mellencamp and Neil Young, spurred on by Bob Dylan's comments at Live Aid earlier in that year that he hoped some of the money would help American farmers in danger of losing their farms through mortgage debt -- and, while he didn't mention him by name, other policies of President Ronald Reagan.

In addition to the preceding, performers included Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Kris Kristofferson, Glen Campbell, Billy Joel, B.B. King and Roy Orbison, and raised over $9 million for America's family farmers. That's a little under $27 million in today's money.

There have been Farm Aid concerts since, including in 2006 at the Tweeter Center in Camden, New Jersey (a hard city, but South Jersey still has lots of farms), 2007 on Randall's Island in New York, and a 30th Anniversary celebration in 2015 at Northerly Island in Chicago.

Earlier in 1985, Nelson, Cash, Jennings and Kristofferson had formed a country "supergroup" called The Highwaymen. In 1988, Dylan, Petty and Orbison joined with former Beatle George Harrison and Electric Light Orchestra leader Jeff Lynne to form The Traveling Wilburys. So the 1st Farm Aid concert had 100 percent of The Highwaymen and 60 percent of The Traveling Wilburys.

On November 2, the football team at the University of Iowa, like Illinois a Big Ten Conference school, went to Ohio State, and wore stickers on their helmets, reading "ANF," meaning "America Needs Farmers." Although Iowa lost the game, they still went on to win the Big Ten title, and have worn the stickers ever since.

September 22, 1985 was a Sunday. Actress Tatiana Maslany was born.

Sunday, September 21, 2025

Bernie Parent, 1945-2025

It's not a good time to be a hockey fan of my generation. We've lost 3 Hall of Fame goaltenders in 16 days: Ken Dryden, Eddie Giacomin, now Bernie Parent.

Bernard Marcel Parent was born on April 3, 1945 in Montreal, and grew up in nearby Rosemont, since absorbed by the city as an eastern neighborhood. As a Québécois, he grew up speaking French, and his difficulty with English led to some early teammates laughing at his expense.

He was the goaltender for the Niagara Falls Flyers team that won the Memorial Cup, the championship of Canadian "major junior hockey," in 1965. Despite the "Flyers" name, they were a farm team of the Boston Bruins, and they called him up at the start of the 1965-66 season. But, committed to Gerry Cheevers in goal, they left Parent unprotected in the 1967 Expansion Draft, in which he was claimed by one of the new teams, the Philadelphia Flyers.

He was the Flyers' main backup goalie in 1967-68, and their main starting goalie after that, until January 31, 1971. Looking for more offense, they engineered a 3-way deal, acquiring Rick MacLeish from the Bruins and Mike Walton from the Toronto Maple Leafs. Parent went to the Leafs, where his hero, former Montreal Canadiens goalie Jacques Plante, was playing out the string, and taught him a lot.

Without a contract with the Leafs for the 1972–73 season, Parent signed a large one with the Miami Screaming Eagles of the new World Hockey Association, making him the 1st NHL player to jump to the new league. The Eagles did not materialize as planned, so Parent signed with the Philadelphia Blazers. After leaving the team over a contract dispute during the 1973 WHA playoffs, he sought a return to the NHL, but, knowing how nasty Leafs owner Harold Ballard could be, especially to a "rebel," did not want to go back to Toronto. They traded Parent's NHL rights back to the Flyers for Doug Favell and a 1st-round pick in that Summer's amateur draft.

Team owner Ed Snider, general manager Keith Allen, and head coach Fred Shero were building a championship team, built around their young Captain, Bobby Clarke. But Parent would be the key as the Flyers became the 1st of the '67 expansion teams to win the Stanley Cup, winning them back-to-back in 1974 and 1975.
Bobby Clarke (left) and Bernie Parent,
after the 1st Cup win, May 19, 1974

Upon winning that 1st Cup, with a 2-1 win over the Bruins in Game 6 on May 19, 1974, together, Parent and Clarke carried the Cup around the ice -- as best they could, with fans at The Spectrum having stormed the ice. The occasion is immortalized in a statue outside the Flyers' arena, recently renamed the Xfinity Mobile Arena.
Parent and Clarke posing with the statue

Each time, 1974 and 1975, Parent was named the winner of the Vezina Trophy as the NHL's best goalie, and the winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy as the Most Valuable Player of the Playoffs. Parent, Bobby Orr, Wayne Gretzky, Mario Lemieux, Patrick Roy and Sidney Crosby are the only players to have won the Smythe twice. (Roy won it 3 times.) He was also named to the All-Star Game both seasons, the 3rd and 4th of his 5th appearances.

It can be argued that Parent is the key figure in Flyers' history -- because they haven't won the Cup in 50 years. The effect began in the 1975-76 season, when, in their bid for a 3rd straight Cup -- their slogan was "Hat Trick in '76 -- he was limited to 11 games after surgery for a neck injury. The Flyers got back to the Finals, but were swept by the Canadiens in 4 straight.

On February 17, 1979, Parent suffered a career-ending eye injury in a game against the New York Rangers. An errant stick entered the right eye hole of his mask, causing permanent damage to his vision. He retired at age 34, an age considered to be "still in athletic prime" for goaltenders. This incident, as well as the ending of Gerry Desjardins' career when a puck struck his eye in 1977, led many NHL goalies to switch from fibreglass facemasks toward the cage and helmet style.

On October 11, 1979, the Flyers retired his Number 1. He was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1984. In 1998, The Hockey News listed him at Number 63 on their list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players, 9th among goalies, behind Terry Sawchuk, Jacques Plante, Glenn Hall, Patrick Roy, Ken Dryden, Bill Durnan, George Hainsworth and Turk Broda. Had he the benefit of a full career, he could have been ranked higher.

And the Flyers would also have been better. With Pete Peeters in goal, they reached the Stanley Cup Finals in 1980. With Pelle Lindbergh, they reached the Finals in 1985, but, early the next season, Lindbergh drove drunk, crashed his car, and died. With Ron Hextall, they made the Finals in 1987 and 1997. With Brian Boucher, the made the Finals in 2010. They lost every time, going 0-6 in Finals since 1975.

The early end to his career drove him to drink, and he eventually joined Alcoholics Anonymous. The Flyers appointed him goaltender coach and later a club "ambassador." On December 31, 2011, as a prelude to the next day's 2012 NHL Winter Classic at Citizens Bank Park, he played in the Alumni Game, at age 66, stopping 5 shots and allowing no goals in 5 minutes. In 2017, he was named to the NHL's 100th Anniversary 100 Greatest Players.
At first, he lived in the Philadelphia suburb of Cherry Hill, Camden County, New Jersey, then moved down the Shore to Wildwood Crest, Cape May County, where he had a house and a yacht he named The French Connection. He died today, September 21, 2025, in Wildwood Crest, at the age of 80. He was survived by his wife, Gini, his son Jacques (named for Plante), and his daughter Carol.

September 21, 1955: Rocky Marciano vs. Archie Moore

September 21, 1955, 70 years ago: Rocky Marciano defends the Heavyweight Championship of the World against the reigning Light Heavyweight Champion, Archie Moore. The fight turns out to be worthy of both men.

Marciano was born as Rocco Francis Marchegiano on September 1, 1923, in Brockton, Massachusetts, outside Boston, had become champion 3 years earlier, on September 23, 1952, at Municipal (later John F. Kennedy) Stadium in Philadelphia, knocking out Jersey Joe Walcott in the 13th round after surviving a 1st-round knockdown himself. He came into this fight with a career record of 48-0, with 42 knockouts. He won a rematch with Walcott, knocking him out in the 1st round. He knocked out Roland La Starza, then won 2 decisions against former Champion Ezzard Charles. His last fight before this one was a technical knockout of Don Cockell.

Like a lot of great fighters, he won some fights he probably should have lost, finding some inner reserve of courage that allowed him to overcome an opponent who looked better for most of the night. His 2nd fight with Charles was an example: In the 6th round, Charles split Marciano's nose at the nostril. Charles quickly realized what he'd done, and pounded away at the nose.

Between the 7th and 8th rounds, Marciano's trainer, Charley Goldman, told him he couldn't stop the bleeding. Ruby Goldstein, one of boxing's top referees, told them that if the bleeding weren't stopped at the end of the 8th, he would call the fight off and award Charles the win. Marciano knocked Charles out in that round.

Like later boxer Sonny Liston, and baseball pitchers Satchel Paige and Dizzy Dean, Moore's origins are in dispute. His birth name is not: Archibald Lee Wright. He always insisted that he was born on December 16, 1916 in Collinsville, Illinois, outside St. Louis. His mother, Lorena Wright, who would have known, said it was December 13, 1913 in Benoit, Mississippi, in the Delta. Some people came to believe he was even older than that. Wikipedia accepts the 1913 date as correct, so I'm going to go with that.

At any rate, he and his mother were abandoned by his father, Thomas Wright, so Lorena sent him to live with an aunt and uncle in St. Louis, Cleveland and Willie Pearl Moore. He took their name because, in his words, "It was less questions to be Moore."

"The Old Mongoose" grew up in St. Louis, and and learned to box while serving in the New Deal's Civilian Conservation Corps. He was undefeated in his 1st 17 professional fights. In 1943, at 29, he won the California State Middleweight Championship. His career record was 54-5-5: He had already fought professionally 64 times. In 1947, he won the State's Light Heavyweight title. He was now 87-13-7.

Finally, on December 17, 1952, right after his 39th (or 36th) birthday, he went into the St. Louis Arena, and defeated Joey Maxim in a unanimous decision, to win the Light Heavyweight Championship of the World. This made him one of the oldest first-time champions in any weight class, but, of course, no record could be authenticated. His record was now 134-19-8. Six months later, he won a rematch with Maxim -- having fought 6 times in between. Six months after that, having won 2 fights in Argentina, he fought Maxim a 3rd time, and won again.

On June 22, 1955, at the Polo Grounds in New York, he defended the title against Carl "Bobo" Olson, then the Middleweight Champion of the World. This should have been a good fight. It wasn't: Moore, presumably 41, took Olson, 26, out in the 3rd round. It was now clear that Moore, at 149-19-8, should have a shot at Marciano. Like Marciano's 2 fights with Charles, the fight with Moore would be at Yankee Stadium. It was originally scheduled for September 20, while the Yankees were on the road, but, due to concerns over Hurricane Ione, it was postponed for one night. Marciano was 32 years old, while Moore was 41, or maybe 38.

Watching Rocky on film led Archie to believe that he would be vulnerable to a left hook. When the fight began, Archie learned that, due to the angle of Rocky's defensive crouch, he could hit Rocky with a hook only if he placed himself in position to be hit back. And in the 2nd round, it was a right hand, rather than a left, that knocked Rocky down, only the 2nd knockdown of his career, after Walcott had done it. But, as Walcott found out 12 rounds later, that was not a good sign.

Rocky got up at the count of 2. But referee Harry Kessler gave him a standing 8-count -- probably a good idea, but, under the rules of the time, not mandatory in championship fights. Archie admitted in his memoir that he went "blind and stupid with rage," going for the knockout.

And that was his mistake. Rocky pounded away, knocking Archie down 4 times. Archie stubbornly kept getting back up. Finally, in the 9th round, Rocky floored Archie for a 5th time, and he couldn't get up. Rocky Marciano was 49-0.
Speculation grew as to who Marciano would fight next, to go for 50-0. The answer turned out to be no one: On April 27, 1956, he announced his retirement from boxing. And, unlike so many other champions, he stayed retired: He never fought again.

In 1961, he hosted The Main Event, a syndicated TV show, where he would interview a celebrity, and then show a famous fight, sometimes one of his own. He was killed in a plane crash on August 31, 1969, a day short of his 46th birthday.

Moore kept fighting, and, in 1956, got a shot at filling the vacancy in the Heavyweight Championship caused by Marciano's retirement. But he lost to Olympic Champion Floyd Patterson, and that would be his last shot at the Heavyweight title.

In 1962, approaching what may have been his 49th birthday, and still officially the Light Heavyweight Champion of the World, he fought a non-title bout against 20-year-old Olympic Champion Cassius Clay, and was knocked out in the 4th round. He fought once more, won, and retired with a record of 186-23-10. That's one hundred eighty-six wins, twenty-three losses and 10 draws.

Like many boxers, he became an actor. Like many boxers, he became a boxing trainer. He was in George Foreman's corner in Zaire in 1974 when Foreman fought the man who nearly ended his own career in 1962, now, of course, known as Muhammad Ali.

Archie Moore died on December 9, 1998. He was just short of turning 85. Or 82. A year later, the Associated Press named him the greatest light heavyweight boxer of all time.

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Yankees Gotta Keep Going

After a rough 12-game stretch, the Yankees could look forward to a comparatively easy last 13 games of the regular-season, right?

Well, on Tuesday night, they opened a 3-game series against the Minnesota Twins at Target Field in Minneapolis, and calling it a disaster would be too kind. Carlos Rodón pitched well for 6 innings, but in the 7th, Luke Weaver -- Was it really that long ago that we thought he was going to be the new closer? -- allowed double, double, sacrifice bunt, walk, walk, double. Camilo Doval came in, and allowed an RBI single, before getting a double play. That was 5 runs on only 1 out, before that double play.

Meanwhile, Simeon Woods Richardson allowed just 2 hits in 6 innings, striking out 11. All told, the Yankees got just 2 hits and 5 walks, striking out 14 times. No Yankee even reached 3rd base. Twins 7, Yankees 0. An embarrassing loss -- and the Toronto Blue Jays won, pushing the Yankees a further game back in the standings.

The Wednesday game started out great. The Yankees scored 2 runs in the 1st inning, 4 in the 2nd, 3 in the 3rd, 1 in the 4th. They didn't score in the 5th, but it looked like that wouldn't be necessary. That linescore of 24310? That is not a ZIP Code currently in use, but, if it were, it would be in Atkins, in the panhandle of southwest Virginia. Trent Grisham hit a home run, and Ben Rice went 3-for-4 with an RBI.

Cam Schlittler took a 10-1 lead into the bottom of the 5th, the inning a starting pitch must complete to be eligible to be declared the winning pitcher -- and he couldn't finish it. Fernando Cruz had to get the last out in the 5th inning.

Did Aaron Boone leave Cruz in to pitch the 6th? No, he brought Ryan Yarbrough in, and he got smeared, allowing 4 runs while getting only 1 out. David Bednar allowed a home run to Trevor Larnach in the bottom of the 9th, to pull the Twins to within 10-9. Losing this game would have been the embarrassment of the season. Fortunately, Bednar closed it out from there, for the save. Mark Leiter Jr. was credited as the winning pitcher.

The Twins over the last 5 innings were 34001. That's also not a ZIP Code currently in use. If it were, it would be in southwestern Florida, near Fort Myers.

Even last night's game got too close for comfort, for a while. Luis Gil was fine for 4 innings, and 2 home runs by Grisham were part of a 7-2 lead to which Gil was staked. But he couldn't get out of the 5th, and Cruz had to bail him out. He, Devin Williams, Weaver and Doval cruised from there, allowing no runs and only 2 his, no walks over the last 4 innings. The Yankees extended their lead late, including a home run by Cody Bellinger.

Yankees 10, Twins 5. The Yankees took 2 out of 3, on the road, from a bad team.

*

With 10 regular-season games to play, the Yankees are 85-67, 4 games behind the Blue Jays in the American League Eastern Division. They still hold the 4th seed, and thus home-field advantage for the 1st round, in the AL Playoffs.

The rest of the way, they've got 4 games in Baltimore against the awful Orioles, 3 at home to the even worse Chicago White Sox, and 3 at home against the Orioles. It's going to take a lot to overtake the Jays and win the Division, including some slip-ups by the Jays themselves. The Wild Card, particularly the 4th seed, seems much more likely.

Gotta keep going, though.

September 18, 1965: "Get Smart" Premieres & U.S. TV Goes to Color

Don Adams as Max (left) and Barbara Feldon as 99

September 18, 1965, 60 years ago: Get Smart premieres on NBC. It was a parody of the James Bond spy films. The pilot episode was in black & white, but all the other episodes were in color. The 1965-66 season was the one in which most American prime-time TV shows switched to color, if they hadn't already.

The show was created by Mel Brooks, already well-known for his comedy routine "The 2,000-Year-Old Man" with Carl Reiner, and as, along with Reiner, a writer for Sid Caesar's Your Show of Shows; and Buck Henry, then known as a writer for the American version of the British satire show That Was the Week That Was.

Henry said that Daniel Melnick of the TV production company Talent Associates asked him to create a show about a bumbling secret agent, citing, "The two biggest things in the entertainment world today are James Bond and Inspector Clouseau," Britain's fictional secret agent and the inept French cop of the Pink Panther movies, respectively. I guess Melnick had forgotten about The Beatles, meaning we could have gotten a spy with a Beatle haircut and/or a band. (We finally got that in 1997: Austin Powers.)

Don Adams played Maxwell Smart, who worked in Washington, D.C. for the American intelligence agency CONTROL, as their Agent 86. He reported to the Chief of CONTROL, played by Ed Platt. The Chief's full name was never revealed, but a court case forced him to reveal his first name: Thaddeus.

Max was often partnered with Agent 99, played by Barbara Feldon. Despite the fact that Max and 99 got married in Season 4 and became the parents of twins in Season 5, he never called her anything but "99." At one point, she used the name Susan Hilton, but explained to Max that it wasn't her real name.

Max was Agent 86. That number may have matched his IQ. Fortunately, he survived many cases because he was just plain lucky. Once, he tried to defuse a bomb that could have destroyed D.C., and in the process, his tie got caught in the mechanism, stopping it. 99 said, "Max, that was close!" Max said, "You don't know how close, 99: I was thinking of wearing my bow tie today!"

Like the Bond films, Get Smart became famous for its gadgets. Unlike the Bond films, the gadgets on Get Smart were intentionally funny. The most notable was the shoe-phone, which could ring at inopportune times, and draw strange looks from bystanders. Retroactively, it's become known as "the original Smart phone." Then there was the Cone of Silence: Whenever it was lowered in the Chief's office, over the heads of Max and the Chief, they couldn't hear each other, but anybody on the outside of it could hear them.

This was during the Cold War, including the Vietnam War, but CONTROL's main opponent wasn't the Soviet Union, or the People's Republic of China: It was KAOS, a private terrorist group, beholden to no nation. As with CONTROL, the letters in KAOS didn't stand for anything -- or, if they did, it was never revealed onscreen. The name was a joke: An operative was said to be "an agent of chaos."

And it was a running gag, and even once commented on by a KAOS agent, that, even though Americans were used to the Russians as the current enemy, most KAOS agents spoke with a German accent, as if they were the old enemies, the Nazis.

As with the name "KAOS," this was no accident: Most of the show's creative minds were Jewish: Mel Brooks was born Melvin Kaminsky, Buck Henry was Henry Zuckerman, the executive producer was Leonard Stern (who used his real name), the show's main composer was Irving Szathmary (brother of comedian William Szathmary, a.k.a. Bill Dana, a.k.a. José Jiménez), one of the main directors was Bruce Bilson (his real name, grandfather of actress Rachel Bilson), one of the main writers was James Komack (real name, later the co-creator of Chico and the Man and Barney Miller), one of the main producers was Arne Sultan (real name), and Adams was Donald Yarmy. Not Jewish: Gary Nelson, who directed the most episodes of the show.

In the 1st 2 seasons, the opening sequence showed Max driving a red 1965 Sunbeam Tiger convertible up to a building, getting out, walking through the front door, running down the stairs, and then walking through a series of steel doors that closed loudly behind him, until he got to a phone booth, the most famous phone booth in the history of American television. (But 2nd in the world behind Doctor Who's TARDIS.) Max dialed 3 numbers (push-button phones had been introduced in 1962, but most phone booths still had rotary dials), hung up, and then fell through a trap door, presumably reaching CONTROL headquarters underground.

For the 3rd and 4th seasons, Max drove up to a different building, and in a different car: Volkswagen had become a sponsor of the show, so his new car was a light blue Volkswagen Karmann Ghia, also a convertible.

For the show's 5th season, 1969-70, it moved to CBS. The opening was slightly reworked, with opening shots of the U.S. Capitol Building, the White House, and the Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials, to hammer home the point that the home base for CONTROL was Washington. And with a change in network came a change in sponsors: General Motors, through their Buick brand, sponsored, so Max's new car was a 1969 Buick Opel GT, a sports car but not a convertible. The theme song also had a slightly different arrangement.

The show is best remembered for Max's catchphrases. Whenever he screwed up, he would say, "Sorry about that, Chief!" (Or to whoever he'd wronged: "Sorry about that, 99!") When he didn't quite get something done, he held his fingers a little bit apart and said, "Missed it by that much!" He might say to someone, "Don't tell me... " and be told that exact thing, and follow it with, "I asked you not to tell me!"

When seeing an unnecessarily large KAOS gimmick, he would say, "That's the second-biggest (whatever it was) I've ever seen!" When an unusual tactic was used, by either side, Max would say, "Of course: The old (whatever it was) trick!" Given a particularly dangerous assignment, the Chief would say, "Max, you're going to be facing danger, risking your life at every turn." Max would respond, "And... loving it!"

The most-quoted is usually the "Would you believe... " routine. Example:

Max, smiling: "You'd better surrender! This building has been surrounded by 40 CONTROL agents!"
KAOS agent: "I find that very hard to believe."
Max, his smile shrinking: "Would you believe, 30?"
KAOS agent: "No."
Max: "How about one boy scout?"
KAOS agent: "No."
Max: "Girl scout?"

Aside from the regulars, Adams, Feldon and Platt, the supporting characters often included:

* Agent Larabee (Robert Karvelas), the Chief's assistant, dumb enough to make Max look, well, smart.

* Agent 13 (David Ketchum), who always seemed to be undercover in tight places where a full-grown man shouldn't have been able to fit, like lockers, trash cans, washing machines, and so on.

* Dr. Steele (Ellen Weston), a CONTROL scientist whose brilliance -- this was the 1960s, so she was lucky that this was even mentioned -- was overlooked, as she often went undercover as a go-go dancer, a stripper, a cocktail waitress, etc.

* Ludwig Von Siegfried (Bernie Kopell), a high official within KAOS, although his title varies.

* Starker (King Moody, and the name was always pronounced with the German accent, "Shtarker"), a dumb KAOS agent, but, apparently, Siegfried's right-hand man -- "Max," to Siegfried's "Chief." (As best as I can remember, there was no regular female agent that was KAOS' answer to 99.)

* Hymie the Robot (Dick Gautier), a humanoid robot built by KAOS, but convinced by Max to defect to CONTROL on his first mission. Like the children's book character Amelia Bedelia, he tended to take things literally: On that first mission, Max needed to hurry, so he said, "Shake a leg, Hymie," and Hymie shook his left leg.

Inspired by the 1966 Batman series being turned into a successful film, Talent Associates became one of several production companies that considered turning their sitcoms into feature-length films. But after the film based on The MunstersMunster Go Home, flopped, the others changed tactics. Most such ideas were scrapped entirely, but since A Man Called Smart had already been filmed, it was turned into a 3-part episode of the series, to close Season 2, on April 8, 15 and 22, 1967.

The show's last episode aired on May 15, 1970. Like many other shows, it became even more popular in reruns. Adams was typecast, and never got out of Max's shadow. In the 1970s, he became a regular panelist on game shows. In the 1980s, he voiced the title character in the cartoon Inspector Gadget, who had Hymie the Robot's skills, but a brain no better than Max's; and, like Max, needed feminine support (in that case, his niece, Penny).

Another cartoon, The Plastic Man Comedy-Adventure Show, gave the titular stretchy superhero Max's catchphrases, and even a boss known only as "The Chief" (although, in this case, a woman.) In this continuity, Plastic Man's girlfriend, and eventually wife and the mother of "Baby Plas," was named Penny, which may have led to the name of Inspector Gadget's nice.

Plastic Man was voiced by Michael Bell, who also voiced Wonder Twin Jan and his monkey Gleek, supervillains Lex Luthor and the Riddler, and others on Super Friends. He would go on to voice Space Ace on Space Stars, Bruce Banner (but not the Hulk) on the cartoon version of The Incredible Hulk, Doctor Octopus on Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, good guy Duke and bad guy Major Bludd on G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero, Cyclops on X-Men: Pryde of the X-Men, and Batman on Tiny Toon Adventures.

Don Adams made 5 guest appearances on The Love Boat. In one, his character was shot, but wouldn't go to see the ship's doctor, Adam Bricker. He didn't trust Bricker. Bricker was played by Bernie Kopell, formerly Siegfried.

On March 19, 1974, Ed Platt died at the age of 58. His son later said that it was a suicide, the result of untreated depression.

In 1980, Universal Pictures produced The Nude Bomb, in which a KAOS agent has a bomb which, when detonated, destroys all fabric within its range. He plans to detonate enough of them to destroy all clothing outside the dome that protects his hideout, which includes a factory that will produce new clothes, of his own designs. The idea is that he wants to corner the fashion market: Everyone will have to buy his clothes, much like everyone would have to buy gold from Auric Goldfinger if his plot in the James Bond film Goldfinger had succeeded.

Pretty much the only thing this film kept from Get Smart was the basic concept. Adams again played Max, but he and Karvelas as Larabee were the only returning actors. Dana Elcar played the Chief. There was a female agent, but it wasn't 99: It was Agent 36, played by Pamela Hensley, a.k.a. the villainous Princess Ardala from Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. There was no mention of what happened to 99. There was an Agent 13, but he was now played by Joey Forman. And Sylvia Kristel, the Dutch actress best known for the Emmanuelle porn films, played Agent 34. Even CONTROL was renamed, as PITS, but at least they said what this stood for: Provisional Intelligence Tactical Service.

The Nude Bomb, well, bombed at the box office. It was recut for television, with the title The Return of Maxwell Smart -- apparently, as with the 1960s police drama The Naked City, you could have the word "Naked" in the title of a TV show, but not the word "Nude" -- and aired on NBC.

In 1989, ABC aired Get Smart, Again! It was a true reunion movie, with Gary Nelson directing and Leonard Stern writing. Aside from Platt, to whose memory the film was dedicated, pretty much everybody was back. KAOS had returned after a corporate takeover (providing another inspiration for the Austin Powers films), with Siegfried (Kopell) and Starker (Moody) running it for the new owners, threatening the world with a weather machine.

So the U.S. Intelligence Agency, a (fictional) successor to CONTROL, calls in Max, who had been transferred to the State Department in 1974, and gives him permission to reactivate any former CONTROL agents he wants. So he gets the old gang back together. Feldon was back: 99 had written a memoir titled Out of CONTROL, but the inside joke was kept up: Her real name on the book cover was obscured. Gautier was back: Hymie had been employed as a crash test dummy. Karvelas was back as Larabee.

The new head of KAOS turns out to be Nicholas Demente, 99's publisher (played by Harold Gould), who intends not only to extort the money but also to create weather that will keep people eternally indoors and interfere with television reception, forcing millions of Americans to entertain themselves by buying Demente's books and publications. In other words, a variation on the Nude Bomb plot, but also inside joke, at the expense of the TV industry itself.

The TV-movie got good ratings, so Fox tried a continuation series. But it took until 1995 to get the new Get Smart on the air. Counting ABC's 1989 TV-movie, this made Get Smart the 1st TV franchise to appear on all 4 major networks.

Max was now the Chief of a revived CONTROL. 99 -- whose real name is still not revealed, after 30 years -- has been elected to Congress. (Hey, if Maude Findlay from Maude and Carol Seaver from Growing Pains could get elected to Congress, why not America's favorite former lady spy?)

Remember the twins? They hadn't been mentioned since the original series was canceled. In this series, Andy Dick (now better known for his substance abuse and the awful behavior it's caused) played their son, Zach Smart, the new Agent 86. He has his own counterpart to Agent 99, Agent 66, played by Elaine Hendrix. Ketchum returned as 13, and Kopell returned as Siegfried.

But the Cold War was over, and the War On Terror hadn't yet begun. There was no audience for Max and his adventures. Only 7 episodes aired, from January 8 to February 19, 1995. The writers didn't mention Zach's twin sister, but the plan, if there had been a 2nd season, was to have introduced her as... a defector and the new head of KAOS! Of course: The old Evil Twin trick! (Albeit fraternal and of the opposite gender.)

In 2008, a film version of Get Smart was released, setting the story in the present day. Steve Carell played Max, Anne Hathaway played 99, Alan Arkin played the Chief, David Koechner played Larabee, Bill Murray played Agent 13, Patrick Warburton played Hymie, Terence Stamp ("Kneel before Zod!") played Siegfried, Ken Davitian played Starker, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson played Max's hero Agent 23 (who turns out to be a double agent for KAOS), and James Caan played the President (a fictional one, not real-life current President George W. Bush).

With the War On Terror making such a plot relatable again, the film was successful, but a planned Get Smart 2 got stuck in "development hell," and was abandoned.

As I said, Ed Platt died in 1974. Irving Szathmary died in 1983, Robert Karvelas in 1991, James Komack in 1997, King Moody in 2001, Don Adams in 2005, Leonard Stern in 2011, Dick Gautier in 2017, Buck Henry in 2020, Gary Nelson in 2022, and David Ketchum last month. As of September 18, 2025, Barbara Feldon, Ellen Weston, Bernie Kopell, Bruce Bilson and Mel Brooks are still alive.

September 18, 1965 was a Saturday. This was also the day the sitcom I Dream of Jeannie premiered on NBC.

* This new season, NBC also premiered Run for Your Life on September 13, Please Don't Eat the Daisies and the much-mocked My Mother the Car on September 14, I Spy on September 15, the Western Laredo and the sitcom Mona McCluskey on September 16, Hank and a TV version of Mister Roberts on September 17, The Wackiest Ship in the Army on September 19, and, outlasting all other shows debuting in the 1965-66 season, the soap opera Days of Our Lives on November 8.

* ABC premiered the Westerns The Legend of Jesse James and A Man Called Shenandoah on September 13, the comedy western F Troop on September 14, the Western The Big Valley and the modern comedy Gidget on September 15, The Long, Hot Summer on September 16, the spy series Honey West and a TV version of Tammy on September 17, The F.B.I. on September 19, and The Dating Game on December 20.

* CBS premiered Green Acres and Lost in Space on September 15, Hogan's Heroes and The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour on September 17, and The Loner and The Trials of O'Brien on September 18.

And there were lots of new cartoons premiering. The Atom Ant/Secret Squirrel Show debuted on NBC on September 9. Sinbad Jr. and his Magic Belt debuted in syndication on September 11. The Beatles, essentially based on their films A Hard Day's Night and Help!, debuted on September 25, and ran 2 years, by which point they had far surpassed their "Loveable Mop Tops" phase.

October 2 saw the debuts of The New 3 Stooges in syndication; and, all on NBC, The Hillbilly Bears, Precious Pupp, Squiddly Diddly and Winsome WitchMilton the Monster debuted on ABC on October 9.

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

September 16, 1950: The Cleveland Browns Announce Their Presence

Marion Motley carrying the ball -- painted white,
to be more visible in a night game. This did not catch on.

September 16, 1950, 75 years ago: The National Football League features a season-opening game between their defending Champions and those of a newly-defunct rival league.

The game was played at the 105,000-seat Municipal Stadium in South Philadelphia. Usually playing their home games at Shibe Park in North Philadelphia, the Philadelphia Eagles had played home games at Municipal Stadium from 1936 to 1939, and select games thereafter.
Municipal Stadium, by this point named John F. Kennedy Stadium.
Just to the north was The Spectrum; to the north of that, Veterans Stadium.

This game was, as soccer fans would call it, a "Charity Shield" or "Super Cup" game: The 2-time defending NFL Champion Eagles vs. the Cleveland Browns, 4-time titlists in the All-America Football Conference. The Browns were 47-4-3 over the AAFC's 4-season history; the Eagles, 22-3-1 over the last 2 years, thanks to a 5-2 alignment that was the 1st defensive unit to have a memorable nickname: Before San Diego, Detroit and Los Angeles had lines that became known as the Fearsome Foursome, Philly had the Suicide Seven.

Some people then called it "The Game of the Century," and some now think of as an unofficial "first Super Bowl." Such a name is ironic, since it took the Eagles until 2018 to win an NFL Championship in the Super Bowl era, and, through the 2024 season, the Browns haven't even been to a Super Bowl yet.

Playing on a Saturday night -- making it, sort of, not just "the 1st Super Bowl" but "the 1st Monday Night Football game" -- in front of 71,237 fans, still the largest crowd ever to watch a professional football game in Pennsylvania (and nearly double the capacity of Shibe Park, which really limited the Eagles' attendance), the Browns put on a show.

Paul Brown, having mastered his craft at every level below the NFL -- at Massillon High School outside Cleveland, at Ohio State University where he won the 1942 National Championship, and with the Browns in the AAFC -- was the greatest offensive mind the game of football had yet seen. With Otto Graham as his quarterback, passing to Dante Lavelli, Mac Speedie and Dub Jones, and with the acceptance of black players like fullback Marion Motley and guard Bill Willis, he had won those 4 AAFC titles.
Paul Brown

(The Browns were named for Paul Brown. The story that Brown, or the original owner, Arthur B. McBride, wanted to name the team the Cleveland Brown Bombers in honor of Joe Louis, then the Heavyweight Champion of the World, is a myth. McBride had run a fan contest to determine the name, and the winner was "Cleveland Panthers," who played from 1919 to 1933, including in the 1st American Football League in 1926, but Paul Brown called them a failed team that he wanted no part of. So, over Brown's objection, McBride named them the Browns.)

And that Saturday night in South Philly, Brown let his team put on a show. The Eagles took an early lead on a field goal by Cliff Patton. But Graham threw freely, and the Browns scored the next 4 touchdowns: A 59-yard pass from Graham to Jones, a 26-yard pass from Graham to Lavelli, a 13-yard pass from Graham to Speedie (that was his real name: He was born Mac Curtis Speedie), and a 1-yard run by Graham.

It was 7-3 Browns at the end of the 1st quarter, 14-3 Browns at the half, 21-3 Browns after 3 quarters, and 28-3 Browns before Bill Mackrides threw a touchdown pass to Pete Pihos to get the Eagles into double figures. Late in the game, Rex Bumgardner ran for a touchdown, making the final score Browns 35, Eagles 10. To borrow a line from Bull Durham, a movie from another sport, the Browns had announced their presence with authority.

The Eagles actually had more 1st downs, 24-23; more rushing yards, 148-141; and fewer penalties, 3 for 45 yards to the Browns' 12 for 98 yards. And there were plenty of turnovers on both sides: 5 for Philadelphia, 4 for Cleveland.

But Graham completed 21 of 38 passes for 346 yards, a display that NFL fans, even with Sid Luckman of the Chicago Bears and Sammy Baugh of the Washington Redskins still active, simply weren't used to. It forced the Eagles into the air: Between them, Mackrides and Tommy Thompson attempted 32 passes, but only completed 11.
Until 1951, the Browns wore white helmets,
and Otto Graham wore Number 60. After that,
he switched to 14, and the Browns have worn
orange helmets ever since.

The performance stunned football fans all over the nation. Eagle coach Earle "Greasy" Neale was contemptuous of the aerial assault, calling the Browns "a basketball team." When the teams met again on December 3 at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, Brown told Graham not to throw a single pass, just to make a point, and he didn't. And the Browns didn't score a single offensive touchdown. They didn't need to: Warren Lahr intercepted a Thompson pass, and returned it 30 yards for a touchdown, while Lou Groza added 2 field goals, and the Browns won, 13-7. Brown had a great defense, too.

The Eagles never recovered, going 6-6, and didn't reach the NFL Championship Game again for 10 years. The Browns won the NFL title that year, and appeared in 7 title games in 8 years, winning 3: 1950, 1954 and 1955. Brown and 8 of his 1950 Browns would be elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame: Graham, Motley, Groza, Lavelli, Speedie, Willis, end Len Ford and center Frank Gatski.

Paul Brown would be fired by new team owner Art Modell after the 1962 season. Cleveland fans treated this as the 1st time Modell aggrieved them, and it would be far from the last, or the worst. In 1968, Brown founded a team in the American Football League, the Cincinnati Bengals. He tried to remake the team in the old Browns' image, using the same colors and the same offense. They even had the same initials, although there had been a previous team with the Cincinnati Bengals name, which played in the 2nd (1936-37) and 3rd (1940-41) leagues with the AFL name.

Don McCafferty (1970 NFL Champion Colts) coached under him at Ohio State. Among his coaches with the Browns were Weeb Ewbank (1958 and '59 NFL Champion Baltimore Colts, 1968 World Champion New York Jets), Blanton Collier (his replacement as Brown coach, 1964 NFL Champions), Lou Saban (1964 and '65 AFL Champion Buffalo Bills) and Don Shula (1968 NFL Champion Colts, 1972 and '73 NFL Champion Miami Dolphins). Among his coaches with the Bengals were Bill Walsh and Sam Wyche (who, among their other achievements, opposed each other in Super Bowl XXIII in 1989).

Take it to the next level, and his "3rd generation" coaches include Red Miller (1977 AFC Champion Denver Broncos), Howard Schenllenberger (1983 NCAA Champion Miami), Dick MacPherson (undefeated season with Syracuse in 1987), George Seifert (1990 and '94 NFL Champion San Francisco 49ers), Paul Holmgren (1996 NFL Champion Green Bay Packers, 2005 AFC Champion Seattle Seahawks), Marty Schottenheimer (4 AFC Championship Games, although he lost them all), Tony Dungy (2006 NFL Champion Indianapolis Colts), Doug Pederson (2017 NFL Champion Philadelphia Eagles) and Andy Reid (2019, '22 and '23 NFL Champion Kansas City Chiefs).

Through Schottenheimer, his "coaching tree" also includes Bill Cowher (2005 NFL Champion Pittsburgh Steelers), Lovie Smith (2006 NFC Champion Chicago Bears), Mike Tomlin and Ken Whisehunt (who, among their other achievements, opposed each other in Super Bowl XLIII in 2009), Mike McCarthy (2010 NFL Champion Packers), Gary Kubiak (2015 NFL Champion Broncos) and Bruce Arians (2020 NFL Champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers). So Brown's NFL legacy spans that much: 1950 to 2023, including 24 of the 1st 59 Super Bowls, and 27 of the last 75 NFL Championships.

The Browns won the 1964 NFL Championship under Collier, reached the NFL Championship Game in 1968 and '69, and reached the AFC Championship Game in 1986, '87 and '89. After the 1995 season, Modell moved them, and they became the Baltimore Ravens. Cleveland was granted a replacement team, and the new Browns began in 1999. They have mostly struggled since. As have the Bengals, although they have won AFC Championships in 1981, 1988 and 2021.

Paul Brown died in 1991. When the Bengals moved into a new stadium for the 2000 season, it was named Paul Brown Stadium. It held that name until Paul's son, Mike Brown, often ridiculed as one of the NFL's cheapest owners (hence, their struggles), finally took his father's name off the stadium and sold the naming rights: In 2022, it became Paycor Stadium.

Speaking of stadiums: The Eagles moved to the University of Pennsylvania's Franklin Field in 1958, then returned to the South Philadelphia sports complex in Veterans Stadium in 1971, replacing that with Lincoln Financial Field in 2003. They won the NFL Championship in 1960, the NFC Championship in 1980 and 2004, and finally won a Super Bowl in the 2017 season.

In 1964, Philadelphia Municipal Stadium was renamed John F. Kennedy Stadium. On August 16, 1966, the Beatles played there. On July 13, 1985, it hosted the American end of Live Aid. But that show exposed to the world that it already falling apart. The Rolling Stones, who had packed the place on their 1981 Tattoo You tour, chose the considerably smaller Vet for Steel Wheels in 1989. It was demolished in 1992, and the new arena opened on the site in 1996.

Monday, September 15, 2025

Eddie Giacomin, 1939-2025

Fans of hockey's New York Rangers are a nasty bunch. They'll say you suck even if you're not on the team they're playing tonight. They'll even turn on each other.

On November 2, 1975, they cheered on the opposing goalie. It was Eddie Giacomin.

Edward Giacomin (no middle name) was born on June 6, 1939 in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. Like his older brother Rollie, he was a goaltender. A professional team was interested in Rollie, but he couldn't get out of his other job to take the tryout, so he suggested Eddie.

With only 6 teams in the NHL at the time, and most of the goalies then --  Jacques Plante in Montreal, Johnny Bower in Toronto, Terry Sawchuk in Detroit, Glenn Hall in Chicago, Eddie Johnston in Boston and Lorne "Gump" Worsley in New York -- playing pretty much every game, big-league jobs were hard to come by. Bower was emblematic of this: Despite starring in the minor leagues with the Cleveland Barons and, as Giacomin later would, with the Providence Reds, he didn't become an NHL starter until he was 34 years old, except for 1953-54 with the Rangers. Prior to becoming the Leafs' starter in 1959, he had played just 77 NHL games, all but 70 in that 1 season.

The Rangers acquired Giacomin from Providence, and he made his NHL debut on October 24, 1965, a 4-3 loss to the Montreal Canadiens at the old Madison Square Garden. He led all NHL goalies in games and minutes played in the seasons of 1966-67, 1967-68 (the year the Rangers, and the NBA's Knicks moved from the old Garden to the new one), 1968-69 and 1969-70. In 1970-71, he made his 5th straight All-Star Game, and won the Vezina Trophy as the NHL's top goaltender.

During that year's Stanley Cup Quarterfinals, Bobby Hull of the Chicago Black Hawks was unable to stop after Giacomin saved one of his shots, and his skate blade sliced right through Giacomin's glove. Giacomin left the ice, got the hand stitched up, got back in the game, and played the rest of the way. Ranger fans loved him for such determination, and would chant, "Ed-die! Ed-die! Ed-die!" when he made a save.

With Giacomin in goal, Brad Park and Rod Seiling on defense, and the "Goal-A-Game Line" or "GAG Line" of left wing Vic Hadfield, center Jean Ratelle and right wing Rod Gilbert, the Rangers reached the Stanley Cup Semifinals in 1971, losing to the Canadiens; the Finals in 1972, losing to the Boston Bruins; and the Semifinals in 1973, losing to the Black Hawks. (That season, he played in his 6th and last All-Star Game.) That was as close as the team would get to the Stanley Cup between their 7-game Finals loss in 1950 and finally winning the Cup in 1994.

By the start of the 1975-76 season, the Rangers' 50th Anniversary season, age and injuries were catching up with them. Giacomin was 36, and while plenty of goalies have played at a high level past that age, he'd also been hurt, and wasn't as effective. Ranger management went into rebuilding mode.

The Rangers went into rebuilding mode, acquiring Dunc Wilson and John Davidson, and promoting Doug Soetaert from their minor-league system. This left Giacomin and his 35-year-old backup, Gilles Villemure, as odd men out. Before the season began, they traded Villemure to the Black Hawks. And then, on October 29, they put Giacomin on waivers. On October 31, he was claimed by the Red Wings. Davidson was promoted to starting goalie.

According to legend, the Rangers' next game was against those very Red Wings. It's not true: On November 1, they played the Canadiens in Montreal, and lost, 4-0. But the next game, their 1st home game after the waiver claim, on November 2, was at The Garden against the Wings, and Davidson and Giacomin were the opposing starting goalies.
Wearing not the white jersey that NHL teams usually wore for home games at the time, but the red of Detroit, Ranger fans gave him a long standing ovation and chanted his name. It was a message to Ranger management: "You shouldn't have done that, and we are angry." They booed their own team when they took shots or scored on Giacomin, and chanted his name throughout the match. The Wings won, 6-4, and Ranger fans cheered at the end.

Just 9 days after The Giacomin Game, they would trade Brad Park, Jean Ratelle and Joe Zanussi to the Bruins for Phil Esposito and Carol Vadnais. The Rangers would miss the Playoffs in 1976 and '77, before bouncing back in '78 and reaching the Finals in '79.

Giacomin played 3 seasons in Detroit, before falling victim to another youth movement. He retired on January 17, 1978, with a career record of 289-208-97, a 2.82 goals against average, and 54 shutouts. Sensing a public-relations coup, the New York Islanders hired him as a broadcaster, and he was one of their announcers for their epic Stanley Cup Semifinal series against the Rangers in 1979. He became an assistant coach with the Isles before going back to Detroit and serving in the same role with the Wings, establishing his permanent home in suburban Birmingham, Michigan.

He was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1987. With new management coming in, the Rangers made peace with Eddie, hired him as a coach, and retired his Number 1 in 1989. In 2009, in their book 100 Ranger Greats, authors Adam Raider, Russ Cohen and John Halligan ranked him the 6th-greatest player in team history, behind Brian Leetch, Rod Gilbert, Mike Richter, Mark Messier and Jean Ratelle.
Eddie Giacomin died yesterday, September 14, 2025, at the age of 86, at his home in Birmingham, Michigan.