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1-50 of 221
- Two airmen are in trouble. There's only one parachute. Their wives explore their complex relationships as they wait to hear who has survived.
- A husband who is aggrieved over his wife's extreme jealousy concerning business meetings with women has to face his own feelings when the wife begins having similar meetings using money from her million to help close his business deal.
- Material Girls, Greta and Mike are frustrated when Loco (Barbara Eden) mistakes a millionaire named Abner J. Harcourt for his penniless male secretary and decides to date him anyway.
- Anthony's meeting with detective Dan Howell on a train, on which Howell is returning an escaped convict who wishes revenge on Howell, gives the convict an opportunity to free himself and run loose on the train.
- 1969–19731h7.4 (12)TV EpisodeFallon discovers an alienated young girl she rescues from auto accident is pregnant and the girl's remarried mother aggressively seeks an abortion despite the girl's insistence on keeping the baby.
- Model Adele Jordon breaks up with the model-agency's wealthiest perfume client, and he requests a new model who possesses all of the elements of beauty for their new campaign. Johnny Hanley, a promotion man, submits a composite photograph of the best features from all the models...and comes up with Marjorie Main. Well, maybe not, but anybody who can't guess the ending wasn't paying any attention to the plot premise set-up.
- Superdad (1973) re-edited for television presentation. Charlie McCready has big plans for his teenage daughter, Wendy: the right college, the right people, and Mr. Right. These plans do not include her current boyfriend, Bart. Oops.
- About Faces is an American game show.
- Episode: (1972)1969–19741h7.5 (19)TV Episode
- Daily daytime show featuring music by Bob Crosby's band and different singers.
- Kazan, a huge sled-dog in the wilds of Canada's Northwest, takes a liking to Louise Maitlin (Lois Maxwell), whose father, Maitlin (Roman Bohnen) is extremely cruel. He tries to have the dog killed but Kazan escapes, only to face many more perils from humans and animals.
- When a chamber in a mansion manifests a loud, eerie whistling, Carnacki is called to investigate. He makes an exceedingly thorough search of the room, but can find no explanation. He is still not convinced of the supernatural nature of the sound until he climbs a ladder outside and peers into the room through the window: the floor of the room itself is puckering like a pair of grotesque, blistered lips. He hears Tassoc, the mansion's owner, calling for help, and enters the room via the window.
- Episode: (1973)1969–19741h3.6 (23)TV Episode
- Susie who is contracted to write a magazine about her job is afflicted with writers' block so hires Tony to write the article for her but Tony's gag article which is derogatory toward Tommy, Vi and Sands is submitted in error.
- George Cooper, a successful bank executive, lives in an exclusive neighborhood with his dim-wit wife Liz. The neighbors for the first two seasons were the Cobbs, a snobbish family. They were replaced in the third season by the Shephards who were less snobbish. Reruns on the show were broadcast in 1957.
- Brothers Mike and Bob Brannigan are private detectives who work out of a resort in Phoenix, Arizona. Bob is a serious, down-to-earth professional, while Mike is more of a free spirit, always getting in trouble with women. Together the brothers investigate cases ranging from insurance fraud to murder.
- Sebastian, the rooster Prudence raised from a chick has finally learned to crow. Now if he would only learn to crow at sunrise instead of the middle of the night.
- Although three generations of Jud Canovas have distinguished themselves in service to their country, from Bull Run to World War I, the line of military Canovas seems to have ended when a daughter, Judy, is born instead of a fourth Jud. On the same night, lightning in the town square destroys the statue of Jud Canova I, and over the years, Judy's recurring mishaps delay Gramps Canova's efforts to restore it, until finally his nemesis, Col. Mayfield, convinces the town council to put a Mayfield hero on the empty pedestal. Despite the Mayfield-Canova feud, the grown-up Judy develops a crush on young Lt. Tom Mayfield, and when Tom says he needs to ask her about a hayride, she joyously assumes he wants to ask her for a date. Needing a dress for the occasion, Judy visits the town's only dress shop which is run by the sophisticated Doris Vail, who is Judy's rival for Tom's affection. When the unfashionable Judy chooses an outfit that is hanging in the shop's unfinished window display, Doris points out that it is a special outfit, only available from a woman down the street. After introducing herself to the woman, a WAC recruiting sergeant, Judy learns that the dress she admires is really a WAC uniform. Meanwhile, two men identifying themselves as Prentice and Redington of International Amalgamated arrive in town and want to hire Tom for a project. As a military officer on active duty, he rejects their offer, leaving them to report their failure to their boss, who then decides to handle the matter himself. As Judy is leaving the recruiting sergeant, Tom sees her and states how proud he is that she has joined up, and then asks if he can borrow her family's wagon to use for the hayride. Broken-hearted that she was not asked for a date, Judy decides to attend the hayride on her own, and that evening, she and Doris end up sitting on the wagon with Tom, who is oblivious to their rivalry. When Doris teases Judy about mistaking a WAC uniform for a chic dress, the embarrassed Judy explains that she was set straight by the recruiting sergeant, but enlisted after Tom expressed pride in her. In the morning, when Judy reports at the train station with the other new recruits, Doris is among them, having enlisted with the hopes of also winning Tom's approval. For the naive Judy, basic training is difficult, as Doris' incessant tricks often get her into trouble. During compass training, Doris alters the directions on Judy's instruction sheet, causing her to wander into an area where live ammunition is being used. Mistaken for one of the men, she is dragged through their maneuvers, and after shaking them off, is almost arrested for trespassing in a top secret area. Fortunately, Tom recognizes her, and tells her about the guided missile homing device they are testing. Later, when the women complete their training, both Judy and Doris ask to be assigned to Ordnance to be near Tom. Shortly after reporting for duty, they are confronted by a general who wants data about the missiles. However, when he says his name is Mayfield and describes the Canovas as "fine people," Judy is certain that he is a phony. Working with the bogus general are Prentice and Redington, and the three spies escape with the homing device for the secret missile, a black box. By chasing them in an Army jeep, Judy catches up and rides off with the black box, but meanwhile, the rocket has been launched as part of a demonstration for top Army officials, and the box is its target. Judy unwittingly toggles the switch on the box, causing the rocket to circle above, but when the spies get too close to her, toggles it back, letting the low-flying rocket scatter them. The chase continues on foot after Judy's jeep gets stuck. Using the box as a blunt object, she knocks out one of the men, and even disables the second spy. As she is wrestling with the third, Doris and Tom, both of whom are impressed, arrive with help. Later, for her service in apprehending the spies, Judy is awarded a medal during a hometown ceremony in which the statues of Jud Canova I and Major Mayfield are unveiled together in the town square. After the ceremony, Judy joins a parade of her fellow WACs, as they all march away.
- Broadhead becomes the latest victim of the gas. Quatermass tricks his way inside the plant with Ward and Fowler. Ward gets separated and strays into one of the food domes - then emerges covered in a burning synthetic food, and dies. Back at the rocked base, Pugh has discovered the origin of the objects - an asteroid on the dark side of the Earth.
- 1950–19587.3 (41)TV EpisodeGracie organizes a wedding for a woman in the Burns's living room.
- Dillon has been affected and now has a scar on his cheek. He is taken away to the plant by some zombie-like guards and Quatermass is unable to find out what has happened to him. He later visits Vincent Broadhead, an MP who has been probing the plant's activities, and joins him at an official inquiry, But several of the commission also bear scars.
- Uncle Joe is excited by a letter from Jeff and Nancy Anderson, who honeymooned at the hotel and are planning on returning soon for their tenth wedding anniversary. It gives Uncle Joe the idea to market the hotel as a second honeymoon haven for past honeymooning guests. The girls, who think it's a good idea, build upon it by suggesting they hold a gala reunion. They'll send out invitations with stamped return envelopes, so that all the invitees have to do is fill in the dates they will be staying on their RSVP. The plan doesn't work as every single couple to who they send invitations turn them down. The unfortunate recipients of the plan end up being the Andersons, who wanted a quiet second honeymoon, but receive Uncle Joe's constant attention as he wants to document every single second of their visit for his "Shady Rest Second Honeymoon" brochure. Uncle Joe's meddling has an unexpected second result which could put the kibosh on the whole second honeymoon haven idea.
- In this fictional film in which performers using their own name do fictional things with fictional people there is no one playing 'Self', but there is a record-company talent scout, Bill Haven, who is ordered by his boss, Teasdale, to deliver some new talent or lose his job, and since no talent that has talent wants to work for Teasdale, Bill has tough sledding. Bill's fiancée, Debbie Farmer, employed by another record company, tries to get Bill to join her department but macho-man Bill doesn't want to work with a woman boss, even if she is sweet on him. He decides to form his own record company and thinks that, first he should find some new talent and new kind of music, so his company will have something and somebody to record. He and his buddy, Pablo, go down to Cuba, just ahead of Castro's troops, and he discovers the dance team of Sylvia Lewis and Dante De Paul (their dancing should sell a lot of records if somebody ever invents DVDs), and their music is supplied by Perez Prado and his Cha-Cha-Cha Orchestra. Now, Bill has the talent that will sell millions of records for his new company but he has no money to build a company. What's a guy to do? Nothing, if he has a fiancée who will quit her job and raise the money for him.
- Liberace wanted his own show where he could control his presentation as he did with his club shows. This series was a smash hit.