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  1. #1

    Default Dragnet

    Was watching an old episode, they are all old, on Netflix and they had the old L&M cigarette commercial in it... was pretty funny to see the old cig commercials.

  2. #2

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Trivia Question: (no googlin' =)
    What does L&M stand for (besides Law and (m)Order on Dragnet)?

    And--for bonus points--what were the original and alternative meanings of LSMFT? =)

  3. #3

    Default Re: Dragnet

    wasn't the MFT Mighty Fine Tasting? Can't remember the L&M but think it was the tobacco company

  4. #4

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Ligett and Myers, Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco

  5. Default Re: Dragnet

    Quote Originally Posted by Roadhawg View Post
    the tobacco company
    Correct!

    I've used that brand a few times from Walmart. It was once competitive cheap rivaling Carnival, but Walmart quickly raised the prices. However, the competitive prices can be found inside the gas station at select Walmart stores.

  6. #6

    Default Re: Dragnet

    We have a winner!!! =)

    I love the way that Det. Cho--on The Mentalist--plays his part just like Jack Webb.

    (Hilarity for an 8 year old, back around 1960: "lsmft": "loose strap means floppy tit" . . .)

  7. #7

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Trivia Question #2 (no Googling):
    What was the number on the badge that filled the screen each week on Dragnet?

    Trivia Question #3 (ditto):
    At the end of the show, a couple of hands always appeared. One of them held a hammer and one of them held some sort of giant stamp. After a couple of blows with the hammer what impression did the stamp leave?

  8. #8
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Quote Originally Posted by RadicalModerate View Post
    Trivia Question #2 (no Googling):
    What was the number on the badge that filled the screen each week
    on Dragnet?
    714.
    Quote Originally Posted by RadicalModerate View Post
    Trivia Question #3 (ditto):
    At the end of the show, a couple of hands always appeared. One of
    them held a hammer and one of them held some sort of giant stamp.
    After a couple of blows with the hammer what impression did the
    stamp leave?
    It was Jack Webb's hands and Mark IV.

  9. Default Re: Dragnet

    Quote Originally Posted by Prunepicker View Post
    714.

    It was Jack Webb's hands and Mark IV.
    Did anybody here see Jack Webb's 1959 movie called "-30-" the other night? TCM showed it along with The D.I....I had never seen -30- (a newspaper film -30- means "the end") and I was really glad to have had a chance to see it. It was presumed lost for quite some time, they then found a print with the quality considered only "fair" in the eighties, and now a print with a "pristine" grade has been found, remastered and is available from the Warner Archive. Amazon is also finally carrying Warner Archive DVD-R "Burn on Demand" titles. I've ordered mine.


  10. #10
    Prunepicker Guest

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Quote Originally Posted by MikeOKC View Post
    Did anybody here see Jack Webb's 1959 movie called "-30-" the other
    night? TCM showed it along with The D.I.
    Would have liked to have seen it. I don't own a TV.

  11. #11

    Default Re: Dragnet

    714

    vii

    I've watched a lot of Dragnet

  12. #12

    Default Re: Dragnet

    I guess so . . . =)

    Think of all the subliminal advertising that 711 missed out on . . .

    Trivia Question:
    Aside from the fact that the program wasn't about fishing, what is "ironic" about the title "Dragnet"?

  13. #13

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Joe Friday wore a dress?

  14. #14

    Default Re: Dragnet

    That beats my answer . . . (lol)

    A "dragnet" is a large, coordinated, police effort designed to round up all of "the usual suspects" and bring them to justice--or at least in for questioning. On the show, I seem to recall that it was always just Sgt. Joe Friday (Jack Webb) and his sidekicks (Ben Alexander and, later, Harry Morgan) going around knocking on doors and asking confused old ladies in print dresses and various semi-baffled citizens about one relatively minor crime or another. Certainly not a "dragnet" . . . at least not "technically".

    Perhaps a graph by HWTJ would clarify and prove this point. =)

  15. #15

    Default Re: Dragnet

    I was watching the 1st season and I thought I heard Fridays partner call him lieutenant. I'll have to watch it again because I always thought he was a Sarge.

    I was right

    During the 1958–1959 season Friday was promoted to lieutenant. However, when the show returned in 1967 he was back to the sergeant rank without any on-screen explanation. (Webb later explained that in reality the lieutenant rank was more of a supervisory position and involved less investigatory time in the field, which would change the structure of the show.)

  16. #16

    Default Re: Dragnet

    He was a lieutenant, but got busted down to sergeant for showing up at roll call in that dress you mentioned.
    They were a lot less tolerant of diversity back in those days.

    Two of my favorite films are set around that era:
    Mullholland Falls
    L.A. Confidential

    One of the films in my Top Ten--Chinatown--was set just a a few years before Dragnet.
    I think Sgt. Friday was just a patrolman at the time.

  17. #17

    Default Re: Dragnet

    I need to get off my Netflix habit... watched a Dragnet episode during lunch and it was one where kids go straight from pot to heroine... Joe Friday should have been in Reefer Madness *lol*

  18. #18

    Default Re: Dragnet

    I think it would have been really cool if Joe Friday could have made a cameo appearance in Season 1 of "The Wire" . . . "This is The City . . . Baltimore, Maryland . . . and I'm here to make sure that the line dividing black and white remains intact . . . The right and wrong line . . . not the other line . . ."

  19. #19

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Here's another Dragnet trivia question: The '67 series spawned two spinoff series.

    Can anyone guess the titles?

  20. #20

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Was one of them Adam-12?

    (i would really like to say that the other
    was "Railroad Crossing Guards--Instead of Train Horns"
    but i would probably be wrong about that too.)

  21. #21

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Adam 12 is what I was going to say too. Adams Family? LOL

  22. #22

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Adam 12 is one. Any clues for the other?

  23. Default Re: Dragnet

    Webb's two biggest hit shows after 'Dragnet' were 'Adam-12' and 'Emergency'. Though, my favorite was 'Hec Ramsey' (which I have all 11 episodes!).

  24. #24

    Default Re: Dragnet

    Quote Originally Posted by MikeOKC View Post
    Webb's two biggest hit shows after 'Dragnet' were 'Adam-12' and 'Emergency'.
    DING DING DING DING DING!!! We have a winner!! Emergency! was actually a spinoff of Adam-12, which was a spinoff of the 67-70 version of Dragnet.

    There was also a Saturday morning animated version of Emergency!, called "Emergency + 4"

  25. Default Re: Dragnet

    Jack Webb's greatest achivement, in my opinion, was the vastly underrated 'Pete Kelly's Blues' movie from 1955. The signature Mark VII Limited hammer ending was used in that movie as well. There was a sort-lived TV series of PKB as well, but I've never seen an episode available to watch, though I'd love to see them.

    Here's the original long-trailer for Pete Kelly's Blues...really a great movie...


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