If you look carefully, at 2:23 there's a quick view of the smoggy Los Angeles skyline as it appeared in the mid-50s. This is one of the enjoyable aspects of this show ---- it's use of authentic locations with a little or no "dress up" for the cameras, even showing actual businesses as a backdrop. Many modern-era movies and TV shows try to capture the sights and sounds of the 1950s, but Highway Patrol is the real deal. These images do not pander to nostalgia --- they show how things actually looked in those days ----- the cars, the roads, the businesses and homes, the way people looked, dressed and spoke. This stuff can't be faked. Oh, and look closely at those grand old cars used in the show ----- note that there's no attempt to dub in motor sounds. In HP, you can hear the gears shifting, the suspensions creaking, and the motors revving. These authentic sounds and images are what makes this show enjoyable, as well as the corny story lines that served as a vehicle for Broderick Crawford's tough guy character.
I looked at the "street view" on Google Earth, and found this location at the corner of Figueroa Terrace and Beaudry Street in North Los Angeles. It's fascinating to compare the scene in Highway Patrol to its modern appearance. There are only a scant few features from that time that remain today, aside from a few architectural details that have survived on the homes shown in the image. In the 1958 view, Los Angeles had virtually no skyline and the only really tall building was City Hall. This Highway Patrol episode was filmed just a few years before the huge building boom that transformed LA from a modest-size city to the megalopolis of today.
There is a wealth of B&W TV shows that have locations where modern versions could be used for very interesting comparisons...but not much on U2b to speak of. The few attempts I've seen are not very convincing...they could be any location. The smog actually gives more dimension to the scenes.
It is amazing the number of criminals they kill, and how little they seem to care about a dead bad guy. And those snubby .38 revolvers can't hit a barn door at 3 yards, but in this series they kill crims at 50 yards! Regards
“I’ve been in spots before but I wouldn’t give this one to a leopard.” Thanks Chief Dan; I’ll use that one on my next case. Don’t you love those old expressions? Love old series. 😎👍🏻
Another cracking episode. Dan Matthews bunging the cash strapped couple a few bucks/quid to get by at the end was a nice touch. The 1950s were a great time for schoolboy me. This show was a "must see" and drop everything as soon as that unmistakeable strident musical intro sounded. Precisely what it was designed to do.
I mute the intro sound because I've heard it one time too many and I'm only half way through the episodes. Drives me nuts. I suppose back then it was like "calling all little boys" to the television to watch Matthews solve another case.
“Another cracking episode”?! It was absolute shite. Bizarre in the extreme and totally detached from reality. I don’t mind anachronisms and other devices in order to push the story along, but this was incoherent rubbish.
@@AzarroFineArts Not at all! When people are in need I have seen food delivered, and jobs lined up. Long before I did my 36.5 years a local held up a store, He was trying to feed his 4 kids. The local PD swung into full response and took care of his family with food and helped him get a job. He lived 4 houses from me. Fast forward 25 years and the kid across the street ended up the Police Chief. Funny sometimes how good folks take care of good folks and other get what their hand calls for.
In addition to the street sign @ 2:39, using Google Earth Street View; @2:50 and again @13:27, looking uphill on Ganahl St. towards N. Hicks Ave. in the City Terrace section of LA. @3:08, scene shot at 854 Figueroa Ter. Background traffic is on N. Figueroa St. #839 Alpine St. @ corner of N. Figueroa visible in background and is still there. @ 3:29, dude comes out of Alley, 1119 Alpine St. is house on the left and is still there, his old house to the right of the alley is long gone. @7:36 & again @ 17:30, Alpine St. uphill a bit from the intersection of N. Beaudry St. @10:02, vehicle appears to be driving south along the old Chavez Ravine Rd./Lilac Ter. Street sign, although blurred, should read Paducah St. This area is now the intersection of Vin Scully Ave. & Stadium Way. @12:27, 1041 Alpine St., car then turns onto N. Beaudry St. @19:18, & ending scenes appear to be same alley as @3:29, his old house is visible at end of Alley on the left as they walk towards Alpine St. @19:47, Motel could have been at the corner of Sunset Blvd & Laveta Ter., some background hilltop buildings are a match. Most of scene would be looking east down Sunset Blvd (also @ 18:17). @21:27, Figueroa Ter. again.
He was living a lie, just a dunk useless fool they nick named 502 because he was busted drinking and driving so many times. He was just a hypocrite in real life and wouldn't care if he ran your whole family over and killed them.
Gritty real L.A. neighborhood locations unadorned just as it was on any given day in the mid 50s. Great time capsule. I was in elementary school during this period and those areas look nothing like that now. In some scenes in some of the episodes, you can still see the wash hanging out to dry behind some of the houses. Most people did not have home dryers still back then, and most people did not have central air either. You tried to beat the heat with a fan and lots of homemade lemonade and iced tea. And the cars! We had a black '46 Dodge until 1953 when my dad bought a new Ford Customliner. My dad was OK with driving a car for a few years, but his brother just had to have a brand new Desoto every year. We lived in a white frame Colonial style house with a huge front open porch with big white columns. Black cinder drive with garage separate from the house. The house still exists, but got moved to a different location. Absolutely love Highway Patrol and watched it regularly when it was a current running show from 1955 thru 1959. Love those lazy hazy crazy days of summer back then! Since then America has been allowed to slowly go to the dogs....We have lost out culture and identity to traitors, social engineers, and internationalists.
Loved it when one of the bad guys said" this is a small town, his wife should be easy to find" and having the LA city skyline appear a number of times.
@@flashstudiosguy Yeah they called him Five-O-two because he was such a useless drunk that couldn't even take a piss without someone holding him upright, so sad how they put that clown up there and people thought ol danny boi was such a good guy when he was a outright useless moron, only good for acting, which is synonymous with LIAR lol, wow what a man and such achievements. Plp are so screwed up,.
For those who might be interested, does the officer, Ken, look familiar?...for Tv buffs he should....that's William Boyett, who played MAC on another long running police program, ADAM-12
And yet he was going to shoot the fleeing suspect in the back as he was escaping. If he still had him in his sights he most certainly could have run him down. A slight plot problem here.
The funny thing about all these episodes is that the Highway Patrol seems to be the only police force in California. None of the county or city police forces ever get involved. Dan Matthews solves every kind a crime there is.
Thank God I’ve never been addicted to alcohol, 🚬 or drugs, but I am addicted to B/W movies from the 1940-1950s (especially film noir genre) and the HP TV series. Thanks for the upload!
The Cars. Massively soft suspension and long travel springs and dampers were the "must haves" in those big Yankee V8s back in those fabulous 1950s. Loved them. We have enthusiasts for them here in the UK and several own Patrol Cars just like the "Bluesmobile" in that great film "The Blues Brothers".Handling and more positive steering and braking took a long time to emerge. For my sins today, my UK Birmingham Built MG ZT260 Sedan / Saloon, has a 289 Mustang V8 under the bonnet/hood. It handles as all MGs should and does. Very well indeed. Such is progress. About 900 examples left the Birmingham factory back in the early 2000s. Love the noise of those big Yankee V8s like mine make when they come on song. You sometimes hear that distinctive V8 noise they make when they give the engines the beans in these Highway Patrol TV shows. Nowhere near NASCAR levels, those would be illegal but very impressive all the same.
Hi gals and guys. We old foggies got what it takes. Great program. Love it. When had regular tv stayed up til 4am to watch this of course I'm retired 😊❤
+Barney Fife Arizona and New Jersey are doing that now.Arizona for the border,and NJ for sports betting.An observation:States with Democratic Governors can sell drugs,but states with Republican Governors get hammered.
+John Texas Haaa Haa! Hilarious reply, John! But you were told by the doctors at the institute how important it was to stay on your meds. I see you've skipped a lot of doses. BTW, nice picture. And the last name Texas. What nationality is that?
@@Claudg2008 Well of course they support 501c3 creatures of the state, that too are in the same tax bondage lol. No they aren't tax collectors, but far worse, make tax collectors look pretty decent, even the bad ones..... Case in point 2 videos I recently produced ruclips.net/video/ZbgcDetGCrQ/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/-cbFRlzAoPM/видео.html I can show you just how reprobate foolmasons are, nothing free about it, bondmason would be another more appropriate word for the occult cult. Before you say something about 501c3 churches, they aren't churches, their head is the IRS since that is who they needed permission from to setup their business. If they had setup a Biblical CHURCH only person they should be asking for their blessing is Jesus Christ/God, not some man or government, that just proves they have another gawd they use Jesus' name in vain for. I know all well about the masons and their game you won't like bringing that up to me, they are children of the devil and I can prove it by their doctrines vs what the Bible teaches. I've got several videos doing just that on my channel a whole playlist worth, here ruclips.net/video/-cbFRlzAoPM/видео.html&list=PL_QW6HTJbuLZqYAfkDq6_S9zJ50Ny4w5M 37 videos worth as of today....
I really liked this episode, but that guy was a stooge for making a false confession. Moe, Larry, and Curly of "Three Stooges" fame would have been proud of him.
There are a few, but they don't make headlines. People are more often chastised for what they did wrong, rather than praised for those things they did right !
I've never seen a cop hand money to anyone in need in my life, I survived an attempted murder, now am on disability for life, the "victim witness fund" said I didn't qualify for their assistance, if I don't, who does? Where is this money going? It certainly isn't going to victims of crimes
ZIV the production company for this show was known for fast production and little regard for goofs. In one scene Dan and the Sargent are talking standing by their car and two little kids are running in the background across the street. No reshooting by the director.
As others here have said, the intersection of Figueora Terrace & Beaudry Ave is totally different. You can just barely see the tower on the left, and there are now many high rises in downtown L.A. Also, all the cute bungalos that you see on Beautdry as it meets Figueora are gone. It's a good thing that shows like this preserve them.
2:23 ... 938 N Beuadry Ave, LA. Still there in 2024. View from 2009 shows neighboring houses demolished and new ones under construction on other lots and at the intersection with Figueroa Tce.
This episode must have been filmed during one of BC's Driver's License suspensions. Notice he does NOT drive at all in this segment, it is shot on Public streets. Also it is shot in a high crime part of town too, notice the 6 foot chain link fences in the backyards and the "deferred Maintenance" of the neighborhood. BB
***** So?? Many scenes are shot out of sequence, sometimes MONTHS apart. Even if not, it is still true this problem plagued the Production of the Series. You know, i LIKED the guy as an Actor, I like watching the show, but this is just an interesting Historical Fact about the Man and the show. They filmed a LOT of PRIVATE roads because of this. Notice you see a lot of action on DIRT ROADS. These DIRT roads are very often PRIVATE no driver's License required. I have NEVER seen the Texas Highway Patrol on dirt roads in my life. It makes no difference where and where NOT he is seen driving, the guy for YEARS had problems with his Driver's License over DWI. And at the same time as he was giving those "safe driving tips". Kind of amusing to me. Did you know after the series was finally cancelled or not "renewed" he and his drinking Buddy Lon Chaney Jr. would get liquored up and go out to the studios and occasionally get in to harassing people on the property. They finally had to "sic" the Security People on them. As the Producer said, "Brod could be a handful". BB
Peter Hemming Yeah maybe. Here where I live there is a tremendous amount of "location shooting". In fact the FIRST movie or TV show shot in this area was "Bonnie and Clyde" with Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway. That was in the Fall of 1966, it was released in 1967, I was a Freshman in High School. But the PUBLIC ROADS they have to "lease them" from the municipality. Depending on which one THAT can be EXPENSIVE. So, they can SAVE a bundle anytime they can shoot on a private road. These episodes had to be shot on a budget of $25,000 or LESS, preferably LESS. So, big demand for Private road by ZIV productions. BB
When Rogers is running away from one of the two crooks right at the end, he shoots at him from no more than twenty feet away and yet completely misses him. I guess he must have been a pretty bad shot! Also, for a couple that is so broke that they don't have enough money to feed their baby and yet they have a pretty nice place to live that today would be quite expensive to rent is admittedly quite puzzling.
In the late 50s a decent house would be less than a hundred dollars a month. The house I grew up in cost my dad $80 a month. I remember that when years later the landlady raised the rent to $90 a month how upset he got! That same old Craftsman home probably rents for over 2K a month in 2023.
E.D. Bowen i thought of that.. maybe the maid ? lol not...i love the bsckground noises and im thinking it film on location not a studio very basic show i like he did the mom a solid w some cash, compassion . right or wrong i liked it....
There's Medicaid and Obamacare. You can also reach out to your friends, family, or neighbors. There are non profits as well. CA even offers free health services to illegals. It's also the mom and dad's obligation to have a plan for the baby they are bringing into the world.
If I EVER felt sorry, for a criminal I sure felt sorry for that man confessing to a crime he didn't do, just so his wife could get the reward money, for their SICK, starving baby. I was near tears when they arrested him. I was thinking had I been an officer working with them I would have taken up a collection, from all the officers, to give to his wife. And then, my man, Broderick Crawford reached in his pockets and gave her a couple $20, and she looked at it like it was more money than they ever had. I've never heard of anyone making a false confession for that purpose. I truly believe when the judge got wind of this that he had a heart, and expound the attempt breakin from his record. Sometimes the judge has to put his heart in it, and not just go by the ironclad law. And I think even God would be pleased. And I'll bet Dan Matthew put in a good word for him, in court, and did help him get a job. Shows like this is what gave cops a good name.
Rogers story made no sense at all, at least it almost did at the end, why admit to something he hadn’t done, keeping the window job quite and admitting he was part of the same gang?.
@@rollinsdet8229 Ah ha! That sounds like a possibility. Or maybe "How 'bout a twenty til next payday?" In any case, if your line wasn't what he said, it should've been - cool line! thanks
If you look carefully, at 2:23 there's a quick view of the smoggy Los Angeles skyline as it appeared in the mid-50s. This is one of the enjoyable aspects of this show ---- it's use of authentic locations with a little or no "dress up" for the cameras, even showing actual businesses as a backdrop. Many modern-era movies and TV shows try to capture the sights and sounds of the 1950s, but Highway Patrol is the real deal. These images do not pander to nostalgia --- they show how things actually looked in those days ----- the cars, the roads, the businesses and homes, the way people looked, dressed and spoke. This stuff can't be faked. Oh, and look closely at those grand old cars used in the show ----- note that there's no attempt to dub in motor sounds. In HP, you can hear the gears shifting, the suspensions creaking, and the motors revving. These authentic sounds and images are what makes this show enjoyable, as well as the corny story lines that served as a vehicle for Broderick Crawford's tough guy character.
see it all the time...
I looked at the "street view" on Google Earth, and found this location at the corner of Figueroa Terrace and Beaudry Street in North Los Angeles. It's fascinating to compare the scene in Highway Patrol to its modern appearance. There are only a scant few features from that time that remain today, aside from a few architectural details that have survived on the homes shown in the image. In the 1958 view, Los Angeles had virtually no skyline and the only really tall building was City Hall. This Highway Patrol episode was filmed just a few years before the huge building boom that transformed LA from a modest-size city to the megalopolis of today.
There is a wealth of B&W TV shows that have locations where modern versions could be used for very interesting comparisons...but not much on U2b to speak of. The few attempts I've seen are not very convincing...they could be any location. The smog actually gives more dimension to the scenes.
Yes, they even drove down 'Beaudry St' which runs parallel to the 'Harbor Fwy,' from 'Sunset' to '6th. St.'
@49jubilee Huh? You have no idea.
Never tire of them! Fun to see same actors playing various types of characters!
Perry Mason" did that frequently. Dabbs Greer played several characters. There were other actors and actresses that played several roles.🎈🎈
Dans .38 at work again!1 "he won't need an ambulance" is so 50's..lotsa hoofing up and down the streets.Great show,thanks
It is amazing the number of criminals they kill, and how little they seem to care about a dead bad guy. And those snubby .38 revolvers can't hit a barn door at 3 yards, but in this series they kill crims at 50 yards! Regards
Never realized a .38 snub nose is that accurate. But with Hollywood, call it artistic license.
Don’t even need to aim, just pull the trigger and ‘push’ it!
@@Lazarus0357 times were when a bad guy was a bad guy
“I’ve been in spots before but I wouldn’t give this one to a leopard.” Thanks Chief Dan; I’ll use that one on my next case. Don’t you love those old expressions? Love old series. 😎👍🏻
ha ha just brilliant script,loved it
I love those beautiful old cars. Also seeing women looking, acting and even dressing like ladies.
I loved that one!
Chief Dan!?!? Who the he'll are you talking about??
Underneath that gruff exterior, Matthews is a sweet heart of a guy.
And that's because he started drinking a couple of 3 hours after he got up everyday until he died
Another cracking episode. Dan Matthews bunging the cash strapped couple a few bucks/quid to get by at the end was a nice touch.
The 1950s were a great time for schoolboy me. This show was a "must see" and drop everything as soon as that unmistakeable strident musical intro sounded. Precisely what it was designed to do.
I mute the intro sound because I've heard it one time too many and I'm only half way through the episodes. Drives me nuts. I suppose back then it was like "calling all little boys" to the television to watch Matthews solve another case.
Yeah he shelled out some Jack, that be cool daddy o
@@conniewojahn6445 I hit the rt arrow key about 4 times🙂
“Another cracking episode”?! It was absolute shite. Bizarre in the extreme and totally detached from reality. I don’t mind anachronisms and other devices in order to push the story along, but this was incoherent rubbish.
Dan is a sweetheart. Helping a woman in need. Thank you for uploading.
that was unheard of
99
@@AzarroFineArts Not at all! When people are in need I have seen food delivered, and jobs lined up. Long before I did my 36.5 years a local held up a store, He was trying to feed his 4 kids. The local PD swung into full response and took care of his family with food
and helped him get a job. He lived 4 houses from me. Fast forward 25 years and the kid across the street ended up the Police Chief.
Funny sometimes how good folks take care of good folks and other get what their hand calls for.
He was just "acting" it wasn't real life, in real life he would have got her drunk and took advantage of her, good ol 502.
Actually, Crawford was a real good guy - in spite of the alcohol.
In addition to the street sign @ 2:39, using Google Earth Street View;
@2:50 and again @13:27, looking uphill on Ganahl St. towards N. Hicks Ave. in the City Terrace section of LA.
@3:08, scene shot at 854 Figueroa Ter. Background traffic is on N. Figueroa St. #839 Alpine St. @ corner of N. Figueroa visible in background and is still there.
@ 3:29, dude comes out of Alley, 1119 Alpine St. is house on the left and is still there, his old house to the right of the alley is long gone.
@7:36 & again @ 17:30, Alpine St. uphill a bit from the intersection of N. Beaudry St.
@10:02, vehicle appears to be driving south along the old Chavez Ravine Rd./Lilac Ter. Street sign, although blurred, should read Paducah St. This area is now the intersection of Vin Scully Ave. & Stadium Way.
@12:27, 1041 Alpine St., car then turns onto N. Beaudry St.
@19:18, & ending scenes appear to be same alley as @3:29, his old house is visible at end of Alley on the left as they walk towards Alpine St.
@19:47, Motel could have been at the corner of Sunset Blvd & Laveta Ter., some background hilltop buildings are a match. Most of scene would be looking east down Sunset Blvd (also @ 18:17).
@21:27, Figueroa Ter. again.
Bless Crawford's character for having a sense of justice and compassion.
He went back over to see the woman to help her out after he put her husband in the slammer
He was living a lie, just a dunk useless fool they nick named 502 because he was busted drinking and driving so many times. He was just a hypocrite in real life and wouldn't care if he ran your whole family over and killed them.
Gritty real L.A. neighborhood locations unadorned just as it was on any given day in the mid 50s. Great time capsule. I was in elementary school during this period and those areas look nothing like that now. In some scenes in some of the episodes, you can still see the wash hanging out to dry behind some of the houses. Most people did not have home dryers still back then, and most people did not have central air either. You tried to beat the heat with a fan and lots of homemade lemonade and iced tea. And the cars! We had a black '46 Dodge until 1953 when my dad bought a new Ford Customliner. My dad was OK with driving a car for a few years, but his brother just had to have a brand new Desoto every year. We lived in a white frame Colonial style house with a huge front open porch with big white columns. Black cinder drive with garage separate from the house. The house still exists, but got moved to a different location. Absolutely love Highway Patrol and watched it regularly when it was a current running show from 1955 thru 1959. Love those lazy hazy crazy days of summer back then! Since then America has been allowed to slowly go to the dogs....We have lost out culture and identity to traitors, social engineers, and internationalists.
Leave it to 'Crawford' to wear white socks with a suit!! LOL!!!!
I don’t think they are white just a light color. A lot in those days.
With brown stains on them for sure.
At 1610 My Mom had that same Picture of the Clipper Ship hanging in the Living Room.
Does SHE look familiar?
That must be a common one because we had the same one!
Dan Matthews, gruff exterior, heart of gold....
That was very nice of Matthews to give that woman his own money.
Throw all of the reality TV shows off the air.
Boy do you have that right....This was great television...
Love this show. Have become addicted.
He could not slide across the front seat in the police cars today. All the electronics in the way.
Love how Matthews solves crimes with lightning speed. He analyzes the window jimmy as amateur, and safe crack as expert, within 2 minutes time.
They have to have the case solved within 25 minutes.
Yup, that was what he was paid to do and the script writers made sure he did it.
And diagnosed the sick baby and ordered medical help.
Loved it when one of the bad guys said" this is a small town, his wife should be easy to find" and having the LA city skyline appear a number of times.
Yeah, that is a bit dumb, I bet they even went through the phonebook and tried every Rogers listed.
L.A was a small town- back in the 1700's!
That was Grenable, not LA (LOL).
I love these episodes, and I want to thank you for posting these for us.
2150 has a big heart.
Can never work if that's his callsign or his badge number..
Broderick Crawford was 1 of the great actors from the 50s
Shame he didn't stick to the traffic laws as much as Dan
@@flashstudiosguy Yeah they called him Five-O-two because he was such a useless drunk that couldn't even take a piss without someone holding him upright, so sad how they put that clown up there and people thought ol danny boi was such a good guy when he was a outright useless moron, only good for acting, which is synonymous with LIAR lol, wow what a man and such achievements. Plp are so screwed up,.
How do you roadblock all the roads leading in and out of LA ?
For those who might be interested, does the officer, Ken, look familiar?...for Tv buffs he should....that's William Boyett, who played MAC on another long running police program, ADAM-12
I knew he looked familiar thanks
And yet he was going to shoot the fleeing suspect in the back as he was escaping. If he still had him in his sights he most certainly could have run him down. A slight plot problem here.
Passed recently. RIP
He was type cast as a cop…had the perfect voice and demeanor
The funny thing about all these episodes is that the Highway Patrol seems to be the only police force in California. None of the county or city police forces ever get involved. Dan Matthews solves every kind a crime there is.
Thank God I’ve never been addicted to alcohol, 🚬 or drugs, but I am addicted to B/W movies from the 1940-1950s (especially film noir genre) and the HP TV series. Thanks for the upload!
The robbers kill a guard but pay for the newspaper.
Well they were honest crooks with class (smile)
Just noticed this myself. (Three years later).
They paid for a newspaper they didn't have to. There was nothing keeping them from just taking that paper.
So how long would that newspaper rack last in any neighborhood today?? Not only would the papers and money get stolen but the rack would be destroyed.
I watched this as a kid and still enjoy it today. Love the cars and scenery. Hey, "Leave your blood at the Red Cross, not on the highway"
At 18:25 when the bad guys were chasing Rogers they all should have went "WOOB,WOOB, WOOB, WOOB, WOOB!" like Curly from the 3 Stooges.
Dang it, I laughed pretty hard at this one. Good one!
The Cars.
Massively soft suspension and long travel springs and dampers were the "must haves" in those big Yankee V8s back in those fabulous 1950s. Loved them. We have enthusiasts for them here in the UK and several own Patrol Cars just like the "Bluesmobile" in that great film "The Blues Brothers".Handling and more positive steering and braking took a long time to emerge.
For my sins today, my UK Birmingham Built MG ZT260 Sedan / Saloon, has a 289 Mustang V8 under the bonnet/hood. It handles as all MGs should and does. Very well indeed. Such is progress. About 900 examples left the Birmingham factory back in the early 2000s.
Love the noise of those big Yankee V8s like mine make when they come on song. You sometimes hear that distinctive V8 noise they make when they give the engines the beans in these Highway Patrol TV shows. Nowhere near NASCAR levels, those would be illegal but very impressive all the same.
Hi gals and guys. We old foggies got what it takes. Great program. Love it. When had regular tv stayed up til 4am to watch this of course I'm retired 😊❤
Did anyone else notice the front steps of the house bending a little when Dan was going down them? LOL....
Love Broderick when he said..."I've been in spots before, but I wouldn't give this one to a leopard"...good one....🤠
'..enforce and preserve our state laws...' If they wanted to do that today, they have to fight the Federal Government.
+Barney Fife Arizona and New Jersey are doing that now.Arizona for the border,and NJ for sports betting.An observation:States with Democratic Governors can sell drugs,but states with Republican Governors get hammered.
+John Texas Haaa Haa! Hilarious reply, John! But you were told by the doctors at the institute how important it was to stay on your meds. I see you've skipped a lot of doses. BTW, nice picture. And the last name Texas. What nationality is that?
+Barney Fife Yeah they are just glorified tax collectors, many are freemasons.
@@PatrickBaptist Most freemasons support charities. They are not tax collectors, but the opposite.
@@Claudg2008 Well of course they support 501c3 creatures of the state, that too are in the same tax bondage lol. No they aren't tax collectors, but far worse, make tax collectors look pretty decent, even the bad ones.....
Case in point 2 videos I recently produced ruclips.net/video/ZbgcDetGCrQ/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/-cbFRlzAoPM/видео.html I can show you just how reprobate foolmasons are, nothing free about it, bondmason would be another more appropriate word for the occult cult. Before you say something about 501c3 churches, they aren't churches, their head is the IRS since that is who they needed permission from to setup their business. If they had setup a Biblical CHURCH only person they should be asking for their blessing is Jesus Christ/God, not some man or government, that just proves they have another gawd they use Jesus' name in vain for. I know all well about the masons and their game you won't like bringing that up to me, they are children of the devil and I can prove it by their doctrines vs what the Bible teaches. I've got several videos doing just that on my channel a whole playlist worth, here ruclips.net/video/-cbFRlzAoPM/видео.html&list=PL_QW6HTJbuLZqYAfkDq6_S9zJ50Ny4w5M 37 videos worth as of today....
great quality episode,loved the location shots
LAPD must have been short handed in the 50's.
GREAT Classic tv shows!
Oh ,when times were so much simpler..The cops kicked ass and the bad guys got there's
“I’ve been in spots before but I wouldn’t give this one to an ink well.”
What a dumba--! He could have just reported what he saw and probably collected the reward. No crime committed by him. No jail. No problem. 🙄
Good ole Dan. So kind at the end. 🙋♂️👏🇬🇧
I like watching this series to admire those beautiful classic women.
Thanks Foxeema!
Thanks for the show! I grew up watching this in the late '50s. Dan's hands on approach, the "fast" patrol cars,and that music!!
I really liked this episode, but that guy was a stooge for making a false confession. Moe, Larry, and Curly of "Three Stooges" fame would have been proud of him.
I thought so too. Instead of making a false confession, he should have told the cops everything he knew.
@@NotaVampyre111 And leave the murder weapon alone! He was lucky Dan can analyse a crime scene at a glance and deduce what went down perfectly!
It's a nice gesture that Dan gave some money to help them out at the end. Now these days, there is no arresting officer will give anyone any money.
Actually, sometimes they do give to those in need. I've seen it reported in the papers from time to time. Officers are human beings too, you know.
As the head of the Highway Patrol, Matthews is in a slightly higher pay grade. Slightly.
Bad guy robs and shoots -kills the guard, but pays for the daily news paper.
After pulling a job, last thing you want is to be picked up by a Cop for shoplifting a newspaper
Matthews doesn't sound happy about the idea of talking to reporters.
DAN GIVES HER A 20 “ this Ohta hold you over for a while”. Lol. About a nanosecond these days
Broderick is a God! I wish there were real cops like this!
There are a few, but they don't make headlines. People are more often chastised for what they did wrong, rather than praised for those things they did right !
Not in real life he wasn’t.
Sorry, there is only one God who made Heaven and Earth.
Dan looks like he is wearing loafers in this episode at 9.12 and the stairs appear to wobble too!
He hurt his ankle from what I read.
I've never seen a cop hand money to anyone in need in my life, I survived an attempted murder, now am on disability for life, the "victim witness fund" said I didn't qualify for their assistance, if I don't, who does? Where is this money going? It certainly isn't going to victims of crimes
So, the mother just walked out of the house and left the infant all by itself?
well Highway Patrol provided a baby sitter...lol
When Dan and the HP picked the husband the first time they also called a doctor, so maybe the baby was at the hospital ...?
ZIV the production company for this show was known for fast production and little regard for goofs. In one scene Dan and the Sargent are talking standing by their car and two little kids are running in the background across the street. No reshooting by the director.
Looked natural, I suppose
I wonder if they knew they were on a TV show?
As others here have said, the intersection of Figueora Terrace & Beaudry Ave is totally different. You can just barely see the tower on the left, and there are now many high rises in downtown L.A. Also, all the cute bungalos that you see on Beautdry as it meets Figueora are gone. It's a good thing that shows like this preserve them.
Husband witnessed everything uh he could have collected reward himself. Silly. But I love these shows
He may have seen it, but he didn't know who the two men were or where to find them.
I just posted the same thing. He saw everything.
"I've been in spots before but I wouldn't give this one to a leopard."
just great script
great performance. matthews is a fine example of a real policeman.
At 3:48 when the guy walked through the door he should have said "Lucy, I'm home!"
Ha! Ha! Dan says, "Ken, I've been in spots before but I wouldn't give this one to a leopard!"
Enjoyed this show
Dan was a true American...
That clipper ship picture makes the rounds in these low budget tv sets from the 1950s.
Yes I was asking about the car seen at the beginning of every episode. Thanks.
1954 Lincoln Capri
Season 4, Episode 11
False Confession (15 Dec. 1958)
Thanks
Check out that Dodge Coronet an that Plymouth Fury. With those Big Ass Fins on the back. Wow! When bumpers actually worked on a Car.
There was no Fury in this episode.
No really, old cars were not as safe as new ones.
2:23 ... 938 N Beuadry Ave, LA. Still there in 2024. View from 2009 shows neighboring houses demolished and new ones under construction on other lots and at the intersection with Figueroa Tce.
Euro 45 Saved.
Saturday, September 30 - 2023.
This episode must have been filmed during one of BC's Driver's License suspensions. Notice he does NOT drive at all in this segment, it is shot on Public streets. Also it is shot in a high crime part of town too, notice the 6 foot chain link fences in the backyards and the "deferred Maintenance" of the neighborhood. BB
Bob Burnitt He's behind the wheel at 13:13.
*****
So?? Many scenes are shot out of sequence, sometimes MONTHS apart. Even if not, it is still true this problem plagued the Production of the Series. You know, i LIKED the guy as an Actor, I like watching the show, but this is just an interesting Historical Fact about the Man and the show. They filmed a LOT of PRIVATE roads because of this. Notice you see a lot of action on DIRT ROADS. These DIRT roads are very often PRIVATE no driver's License required. I have NEVER seen the Texas Highway Patrol on dirt roads in my life.
It makes no difference where and where NOT he is seen driving, the guy for YEARS had problems with his Driver's License over DWI. And at the same time as he was giving those "safe driving tips". Kind of amusing to me. Did you know after the series was finally cancelled or not "renewed" he and his drinking Buddy Lon Chaney Jr. would get liquored up and go out to the studios and occasionally get in to harassing people on the property. They finally had to "sic" the Security People on them. As the Producer said, "Brod could be a handful". BB
+Barney Fife noooo if you watch carefully, he actually enters the car on the PASSENGER SIDE....someone else was driving
+Bob Burnitt That was probably a good part of town back then.
Peter Hemming Yeah maybe. Here where I live there is a tremendous amount of "location shooting". In fact the FIRST movie or TV show shot in this area was "Bonnie and Clyde" with Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway. That was in the Fall of 1966, it was released in 1967, I was a Freshman in High School. But the PUBLIC ROADS they have to "lease them" from the municipality. Depending on which one THAT can be EXPENSIVE. So, they can SAVE a bundle anytime they can shoot on a private road. These episodes had to be shot on a budget of $25,000 or LESS, preferably LESS. So, big demand for Private road by ZIV productions. BB
I still remember all the baloney over those huge tail fins on the 1957 Plymouths and other cars of the time.
Kids in school called it the ''fin mobile'.
When Rogers is running away from one of the two crooks right at the end, he shoots at him from no more than twenty feet away and yet completely misses him. I guess he must have been a pretty bad shot! Also, for a couple that is so broke that they don't have enough money to feed their baby and yet they have a pretty nice place to live that today would be quite expensive to rent is admittedly quite puzzling.
In the late 50s a decent house would be less than a hundred dollars a month. The house I grew up in cost my dad $80 a month. I remember that when years later the landlady raised the rent to $90 a month how upset he got! That same old Craftsman home probably rents for over 2K a month in 2023.
@@tralfazy Yes, rent was a lot cheaper back then that's for sure, and that couple may have already behind in their monthly rent.
Soooo...who is watching the very sick baby while Mama is chasing el loser?
E.D. Bowen i thought of that.. maybe the maid ? lol not...i love the bsckground noises and im thinking it film on location not a studio
very basic show
i like he did the mom a solid w some cash, compassion .
right or wrong i liked it....
Great episode !
A simpler time
Leave your blood at the RED CROSS or YOUR COMMUNITY BLOOD BANK, NOT on the HIGHWAY!
Why is Matthews wearing what look like slippers/house shoes?
California's Governor Gavin Newsome would have let all these criminals go
Wow.. Dan gives the woman 20 bucks back in 1958 my old man was making about 15 dollars a day with the railroad..
Back then, money was backed by gold and went a lot farther.
You would have to use a pickup to haul $20 worth of groceries back then.
One of my least liked episodes. No child should ever be sick or crippled due to inability to pay. The worst thing about the USA.
It was just a show. They never even had a baby.
There's Medicaid and Obamacare. You can also reach out to your friends, family, or neighbors. There are non profits as well. CA even offers free health services to illegals. It's also the mom and dad's obligation to have a plan for the baby they are bringing into the world.
Look; I've been in spots before, but I wouldn't give this one to a leopard."
We'll sneak behind the house. I like the show
If I EVER felt sorry, for a criminal I sure felt sorry for that man confessing to a crime he didn't do, just so his wife could get the reward money, for their SICK, starving baby. I was near tears when they arrested him. I was thinking had I been an officer working with them I would have taken up a collection, from all the officers, to give to his wife. And then, my man, Broderick Crawford reached in his pockets and gave her a couple $20, and she looked at it like it was more money than they ever had.
I've never heard of anyone making a false confession for that purpose.
I truly believe when the judge got wind of this that he had a heart, and expound the attempt breakin from his record. Sometimes the judge has to put his heart in it, and not just go by the ironclad law. And I think even God would be pleased. And I'll bet Dan Matthew put in a good word for him, in court, and did help him get a job. Shows like this is what gave cops a good name.
Thanks Robert for the information on the car.
23.05. ' I've been in spots before but I wouldn't give this one to a leopord '.
Nice stunt by Jim Rogers aka Douglas Henderson who was a regular on the Wild, Wild West: 15:11 The poor chap committed suicide in 1978.
He was Frank Sinatra's military boss in THE MANCHURIAN CANDIATE.
This is a solid episode.
That robber's hand healed awfully fast.
Rogers story made no sense at all, at least it almost did at the end, why admit to something he hadn’t done, keeping the window job quite and admitting he was part of the same gang?.
Great Show😄 Thank you For Sharing 😄
Confession? Why doesn't the iidiot give the description of the killers who shot the guard and collect tye reward?
@ 5:47 "Amend the bulletin to include a wounded man."
Maybe he should look for a job.
I have a bullet lodged in my hand...gee...it hurts!
It healed quickly, though.
great episode
Many attempts, but I still can't make out Matthew's final remark - even the auto-captioning didn't pick anything up. Anyone catch it?
@@rollinsdet8229 Ah ha! That sounds like a possibility. Or maybe "How 'bout a twenty til next payday?" In any case, if your line wasn't what he said, it should've been - cool line! thanks
I couldn't catch it, either.
Why didn't the guy just get a job???!!!
That was my big question - that premise was so unrealistic!
He did. Bounty Hunter
Harvest of Shame 1960
LOVE as the over voice talks about the "Hardened Criminals" the guy is PAYING for a newspaper out of a unit that the newspaper just slides out!
Before I watch this episode, is there a road block used at any time? 🚧
Boy, today big Dan couldn't run after crooks like that. He would step in so much human waste he have cow pies clear up to his knees!
At 15:00 when Rogers was running away he should have went "WOOB, WOOB,WOOB WOOB WOOB!" like Curly from the 3 Stooges.
He cant even see the window from their.an how come he didn't go over an ✔ it out for prints an stuff.
Crawfords an old sofy when it comes to kids even if they didn't show the baby.