Hi there and welcome to Ado's Blog. I am obsessed with nostalgia, especially 1960s & 1970s nostalgia and I enjoy nothing more than reflecting on days and times that have sadly long since gone! So join me, as I take a nostalgic gander down Memory Lane and celebrate all things past and occasional present, both good and bad! (All images used that are copyrighted are copyrighted to their respective publishers and are only used here for review purposes.)
Monday, 20 June 2011
Baseball Magazine
"Remembering the Big O"

Randall & Hopkirk (Deceased) - Episode Two: A Disturbing Case

Jeff's car is stolen and used in a robbery, whereby the perpetrators use hypnotic suggestion to rob wealthy upper class businessmen.
Concerned for Jeff's mental health after hearing him talking to himself (in reality, Marty), Jeannie's sister Jenny (Judith Arthy) places a hidden tape recorder in a drawer in his office to capture him doing it again. When they have a "one-sided" conversation on tape, Jenny and Jeannie arrange to send Jeff to a Dr. Conrad (David Bauer) at the Lambert Clinic Nursing Home.
Retaining Jeff against his will and filling him with illegal drugs, it happens that Conrad is the mastermind behind the robberies, in league with a criminal known as William Smith who enters each household and robs the customers as they are hypnotised by telephone.

Sunday, 19 June 2011
Elvis in court on assault charges (October 19th 1956)
On October 19th 1956 Elvis Presley, along with Edd Hopper and Aubrey Brown appeared in a Memphis Court on assault and battery charges. It was alleged that all three had had a fight the previous night when Elvis had pulled into a Station at Gayoso and Second for repairs and was swamped by fans. Edd Hopper the Station Manager demamded that Presley leave and an altercation then ensued.

Elvis, Hopper and Brown were all arrested for assault and battery and disorderly conduct. Charges against Elvis were later dismissed. Hopper and Brown both ended up having to pay fines!
Life Magazine - John Lindsay (1965)

One for sorrow, Two for joy! Remembering Magpie

Approximately 1000 episodes were made, each of a duration of 25 minutes.
Like Blue Peter, Magpie featured appeals for various causes and charities. Notably however, it asked for cash donations rather than stamps or secondhand goods, familiar on Blue Peter. The cash totaliser was a long strip of paper which ran out of the studio and along the adjacent corridor walls. The Mascot was a Magpie called Murgatroyd.
- One for sorrow
- Two for joy
- Three for a girl
- Four for a boy
- Five for silver
- Six for gold
- Seven for a story never to be told
- Eight for Heaven
- Nine for Hell
- Ten for the Devil himself
When we were Etching & Sketching

Etch-a-Sketch was originally invented in Paris by garage mechanic Arthur Granjean who called it 'L'Ecran Magique', (the Magic Screen). It had the great advantage of being a drawing toy which did not need loose parts or batteries. He took it to the International Toy Fair in Nuremberg in 1959. At first it aroused little interest but eventually The Ohio Art Company took it on and started to manufacture it. Originally made by hand, mass production began in July 1960, and with television advertising, sales soared.
Etch-a-Sketch works using a coating of aluminium powder and plastic beads on the reverse side of the screen. Knobs on the left and right of the screen allow you to scrape this coating up and down and from side to side using a pointed instrument known as a stylus, which is mounted on rails inside the toy. This creates the lines you can see where the coating has been temporarily removed. Shaking the toy restores the coating, ready for a new drawing.
Etch-a-Sketch is still made in exactly the same way today, the only things that have changed over time are the colours and sizes.
Classic Mags - Mirabelle (26th August 1967)

Randall & Hopkirk (Deceased) - Episode One: My Late Lamented Friend & Partner

Jeff Randall (Mike Pratt) is on a divorce case for a Fay Sorrensen (Anne Sharp), and presents her with many photographs of her husband in intimate situations with other women. Mrs. Sorrensen, who is apparently suffering from heart problems, plans to divorce her husband Mr. Sorensen (Frank Windsor), knowing that he won't be able to keep hold of his business assets in the steel company where he works, as her father founded the company and she is a major shareholder.
Knowing this, Mr. Sorrensen contacts a firm specialising on contract killings on the number 0676750. With Jeff away on business, Marty (Kenneth Cope) travels to the Sorrensen's the next day, with the intention of speaking to Mrs. Sorrensen's Solicitor with her present. However, before he can get to do so, Fay is electrocuted in her bath upstairs, by a cable threaded through a hole in the wall from a van outside masquerading as an electricity van, operated by Dave Carter.
Later, Marty speaks to four children on the street, who tell him about the cable leading up into the house - an activity seen from above by Mr. Sorrensen. Attempting to blame her death on her weak heart, Sorrensen then tries to cover his tracks by arranging to have Marty killed.
A beatnik known as Mr. Hendy hitches a ride with a local club singer known as Happy Lee, then, when she grows tired of his conversation and drops him off half-way, he tries to hitch another lift with Marty outside his house. As Marty turns down any offer of giving the beatnik a lift, Hendy becomes witness to Marty's murder as he is driven down by a black saloon car. The beatnik leaps into the vehicle and wrestles a gun out of the killer's hand, extorting £500 from him in order to keep quiet to the Police.
After attending Marty's funeral, Jeff tries to get some sleep, only to be woken at midnight by Marty calling him repeatedly on the telephone. After alternately believing it to be a hoax and his imagination, Jeff manages to sleep until he awakes in a trance at 4am under Marty's influence, and drives down to the cemetary to meet him. There Marty tells Jeff he was murdered, and urges him to continue investigating. Jeff does so, speaking to Sorrensen, Happy Lee and the Beatnik. Finally he tracks down the fake electrician and driver portrayed by actor Dave Carter and he is found murdered by carbon monoxide gas poisoning in his home at 2B Tower House, Fulham Road.

Valley of the Dinosaurs (1974)






| # | Title | Original airdate | Prod Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Forbidden Fruit" | 07/09/1974 | 78-1 |
| Maligue is attracted to a tree of sweet fruits and Greg takes a basketful of it, leading the beast to the caves and causing a chain of disasters. | |||
| 2 | "What Goes Up" | 14/09/1974 | 78-2 |
| 3 | "A Turned Turtle" | 21/09/1974 | 78-3 |
| 4 | "The Volcano" | 28/09/1974 | 78-4 |
| 5 | "Smoke Screen" | 05/10/1974 | 78-5 |
| 6 | "Pteranodon" | 12/10/1974 | 78-6 |
| 7 | "The Saber-Tooth Kids" | 19/10/1974 | 78-7 |
| 8 | "After Shock" | 26/10/1974 | 78-8 |
| 9 | "Top Cave, Please" | 02/11/1974 | 78-9 |
| 10 | "S.O.S." | 09/11/1974 | 78-10 |
| 11 | "Fire" | 16/11/1974 | 78-11 |
| 12 | "Rain Of Meteors" | 23/11/1974 | 78-12 |
| 13 | "To Fly a Kite" | 30/11/1974 | 78-13 |
| 14 | "Test Flight" | 07/12/1974 | 78-14 |
| 15 | "The Big Toothache" | 14/12/1974 | 78-15 |
| 16 | "Torch" | 21/12/1974 | 78-16 |