I used to watch these as a very little boy on re-runs after the show had been cancelled. It introduced me to Broderick Crawford. Later on when I saw him in "The Mob," and especially in "All the King's Men," I was truly amazed at how he could carry each and every scene. A great actor. RIP
No crowds no weirdos/Transdragqueens indoctrinating our children in school no chemtrails, when a man was a man and a woman a woman now it's hell on Earth and you're never supposed to talk the truth
Yes, I totally agree with you, Henry Horner, having been born in the late 1940s I remember watching these shows when they were new!!! I would like to order the DVDs of this show!
Those 4-door GM hardtops from 1959-60 were called "flat roofs"; the same nick name also applied to 1959-60 GM stations wagons. My father had a 4-door hardtop 1960 Bonneville with a flat roof...it had a 389 with a 4-barrel...my favorite car from my childhood.
He was still a sergeant usually the watch commander is a sergeant so it wasn’t a promotion it’s just a lateral. I was in law-enforcement and at one time watch sergeant as you called him watch commander.
@@mitchb2305 Only if you weren't there when those dinosaurs once roamed the earth. I was a kid in the 1960's when '59 Impala 4 dr. flattops like in this episode were everywhere .On the road & in driveways in every house. And I just took it for granted thinking they were always going to be around.
Yeah we took it for granted you don't realize you're living in great history will never see again how lucky we were that's funny we could be sitting in a pile of gold and not even notice it until too late
Here in the UK it is good to re-run some of these Highway Patrol TV shows I remember so well from my schooldays in the late 1950s. As big a star as Broderick Crawford was RIP, see him play a real nasty piece of work in "The Fastest Gun Alive", for me the real stars were those stylish big Yankee V8s. Great stuff.
Has anybody else noticed how few of breaks they had for commercials. That was when the viewer was the primary concern of the networks. Now days it's about the commercials.
What an incredible scene, though. It must have been stunning to watch back what happens to family cars back when these episodes were new, and not so many folks knew about crushers.
Great show & the cars love the '59 Impala 4 dr flattop , I remember seeing those everywhere daily. My 1st car was a '59 Impala 2dr Sport Coupe , my 2nd car was a '57 Bel Air 4dr hardtop. My 2 favorite years.
HP is sooo unintentionally cool. Those '59 Chevys were great. Just seeing one makes you think of doing things like putting bubble skirts on it or putting on a continental kit (you have to be from the fifties, folks)
At 13 years of age one night (@3 a.m.) I took my folks' '59 Chevy for a joy ride. Got away without getting caught. Let it roll down the driveway before starting it. Bought my first car, a '49 Ford, for $75 when I was 14---a year before I could get my drivers license. Worked various jobs, preferring working to sports, which I was lousy at. Hard worker though.
Couldn't better describe that car with the very distinctive cat eye tail lights? Funny. Anyway this series showed so many beautiful cars of the era it's great to watch! Not to mention the clothes, houses, furniture, telephones...just everything! Seeing the cars crushed is crushing!
Before plastics, gas powered vehicles were 100% recyclable! And they take 5x times less energy and natural resources to produce compared to an electric car. I really liked seeing the car crusher in this episode!
My only frustration with this show is that Mathews always magically picks the right spot out of dozens of possible places...for instance he picks the exact road to check out that the girl's using. And he magically finds the little cup thing that ID's the perp.
Probably more to do with the 30minute time frame to solve the crimes. This has always been the issue with broadcast tv fare of the day. Producers figured an audience would loose interest in cop shows that ran too long. On the other hand radio used to have 15 minute cliff hanger serials... Maybe radio audiences had a longer attention span?
Thankfully we were at least spared seeing a '59 Chevy get crushed. People who own brand new cars wouldn't need to knock over gas stations. And that trophy looked like it came from a JoHan plastic model car kit.
The producers of the show probably didn't want to blow another $2,800 to show the Chevy getting crushed. It reminds me of one Perry Mason episode in which you see a '63 Lincoln go out of control, followed by a hazy clip of some late '50s car going off a cliff and blowing up.
Great Stuff,containuity editing wasn't a big deal.One of the shows he shot out a tire,the closeup was an entirely different car. That 59 Chevy's headlights arrived two minutes before the tail lights.
Yeah, and the description never mentions the make or model. Hey, and that couple really had to scramble into their house like that? That wasn't suspicious or anything, was it?
I liked the way Dan Matthews look like in his raincoat! I'm an elderly widow who saw these shows when they were new, and NOW Brod. Crawford, who looked so old to me back then, looks young!!! LOL!!!
I am barely into the ginormous playlist for this show, watching the eps for the first time. I like this one. The criminal is a fool, but he and his girl (and especially his mechanic brother) are a little bit sympathetic. It makes it more interesting and suspenseful than when the crooks are downright evil. I do often wonder why the HP is involved in all these cases. It seems much more likely the job of the local cops or the sheriff's department.
I grew up in the '60's & '70's when the '59 Chevy's were very cheap & affordable, I saw a beautiful mint '59 2 dr Impala for sale for $800 in 1972. I wanted it but I was only 13 & no license or money. In 1977 my ma bought me a '59 2dr Impala for $1,600 she knew I wanted it. I was so happy it was in near mint condition I totaled the car i failed to yield the body shop estimate was $2000 not worth fixing in 1977. Cheaper to buy another one I bought another '59 in 1979 w/ my own cash from a college kid for $1,375. Back then the '59 Chevy's were not in demand yet. I could've bought a '59 Impala convertible in 1980 for $1,200 bucks but I passed it up because it needed some work. But now their desirable.
I was born in 1958 and this has some similarities, I would say my memory is better as we reach JFK Dallas and British Invasion era. I was watching forensic files and they keep mentioning technology that didn’t exist but some investigations on this show impress, like boys in the lab, ballistics, on the hit and run episode they looked at fender dirt and traced it to chicken farm, or broken headlight where one lab guy says they have not used this type of glass in 8 years. I felt bad in this episode for the brother, he got a raw deal. Yeh Ann is a looker, May she RIP. I love the old cars as well, 1959 Chevy Impala, love the 2 doors police interceptors too, would love to go back in time and grab a few dozen of the 2 door PI’ cars
Great to see "Mac" from Adam-12 again. Too bad these shows didn't use the same characters names more often. Would have been fun to see who gets it and who doesn't. Another "floater" screen, but still watchable.
ZIV shot their shows on the fly, making two a week, not one. Minimal rehearsals/retakes. I always like to see that stuff, like the guy spilling his hype kit and having to scrape it all together. Or bad street parking. But the **SUPREME DIRECTIVE** is that the **tires MUST equal** when the HP takes off.
I had a 59 electra flat top probably the same color as the 59 chevy here . My Buick ran as well ,and floated down the road , I wish I never sold it! It was just as smooth and fast as my 96 Cadillac Deville. If I had the money , I would have made the back doors suicide, and put a modern brake setup in it . The cars today have NO class, oh to be able to have that car back. But ,it,s in Sweden , all restored.
What a bleeping coincidence, that the gold trophy would be left hanging out of the car. No chance ; it was on the rear view mirror (inside). When its crushed it would be inside. Not hanging outside. A stupid excuse to solve the case w/o thinking. The girl was Elvis's love interest in Jailhouse Rock. They dated during the movie and a little after. So Elvis got a good taste of the little sweety. She was a beauty queen at 16. Last movie was Ocean's 11 in 1960, uncredited. Just died a couple of weeks ago at 82, in May 2019. Beautiful girl.
I always got a kick out of car descriptions being so vague. "Blue sedan," or at most, "black four-door sedan." Nothing like "59 two-tone blue Impalla."
@@parexc07 In the fifties and sixties GM 's Bill Mitchell vs. Chrysler's Virgil Exener for automotive styling. The Cadillac fins, the Chevy cat eyes, the optional roundtop and sail top roof designs, every car was made to order, not the jellybean junk of today.
0:57 "To law enforcement agencies, one of the most dangerous criminals is the unpredictable, armed beginner. Because he is always nervous, often frightened, his comparatively minor crimes often explode into crimes of major violence!" In 1958, there hadn't been a drive-by shooting since 1934 , these cops had it easy!
I think the man probably would have had better luck if he had just kept his car in the garage and simply waited until the roadblock was called off, and then freely drove his new Chevy out of town instead of sending over it to the crusher. But just think, if that woman hadn’t almost hit a woman pedestrian on the way to the auto wreckers his plan would not have been foiled but instead would have met with success. It’s amazing that Dan Mathews bothered to make a second trip to that location and then spotted that the little golden ornament inside that crushed block of steel which miraculously didn’t meet the same fate. I’ve gotta give him credit, as it seems that he’s a lot smarter than he looks!
Frank's brother could almost pass for James Coburn from the right angles. His voice isn't even that far off either, but he probably looks like a Coburn from about twenty years after that.
And yet the young man has a new Chevy, she had a new Fury, an incredible looking blonde, and a nice house and the older brother who works for a car compactor company, called him a loser.
I used to watch these as a very little boy on re-runs after the show had been cancelled. It introduced me to Broderick Crawford. Later on when I saw him in "The Mob," and especially in "All the King's Men," I was truly amazed at how he could carry each and every scene. A great actor. RIP
Nobody delivers a line of dialogue faster than Broderick Crawford.
i read he liked “Pep Pills “ legal Benzedrine .. he sure talks like he is buzzed 🤷🏼♂️
plus he's from Philly where everyone talks fast, like NYC & Jersey
At least, when he was sober !!! Lol !
Crawford acting is terrible.
@@BobChippewaagreed.. and many of that time were the same.. that's part of the charm
I love that scene where the '59 Chevy was too long to get the garage door down.
After going into the auto press and it will fit........
Is that a 59 Bel Air?
@@seamusburke1828 yes it is a 59.
except that at 8:39 it is down
@@seamusburke1828 Impala with a 348 big block.
Dan Matthews talked as fast as an auctioneer. Great stuff!!!
Yes, Dan Matthews was a rapid talker, but, you know, I could understand
every word he said, LOL!!! No joke!!!😀
His acting style was described as “studied rudeness”
Not quite as fast as an auctioneer. At least Mr. Broderick was intelligible.
What a beautiful car. That 1959 Chevy Hardtop. Those really were the days. Beautiful Cars. Beautiful ladies.
No crowds no weirdos/Transdragqueens indoctrinating our children in school no chemtrails, when a man was a man and a woman a woman now it's hell on Earth and you're never supposed to talk the truth
She was a hot mama. Big Dante takes big bite out of the azz of crime y’all
The 50s 60s and 70s they really knew how to make vehicles Henry Horner
Yes, I totally agree with you, Henry Horner, having been born in the late
1940s I remember watching these shows when they were new!!! I would like to order the DVDs of this show!
Those 4-door GM hardtops from 1959-60 were called "flat roofs"; the same nick name also applied to 1959-60 GM stations wagons. My father had a 4-door hardtop 1960 Bonneville with a flat roof...it had a 389 with a 4-barrel...my favorite car from my childhood.
Watched all these as a little kid. This was an awesome episode.
I'd kill to own a 59 Chevrolet.
"Sergeant Williams" later had a promotion and became watch commander for the precinct where Reed and Malloy worked on Adam-12!
But somehow, his name changed to "Sargeant Macdonald"! Malloy & Reed often called HIM: "Mac"!
Great car crushing action.
How did that plastic trophy cup survive the Crusher ?.
He was still a sergeant usually the watch commander is a sergeant so it wasn’t a promotion it’s just a lateral. I was in law-enforcement and at one time watch sergeant as you called him watch commander.
Takes me back to my days as a kid when I used to see all those stylish cars everyday.
Incredible that these stylish monstrosities were just "normal", just driven every day like we drive Camrys and Impalas now.
@@mitchb2305 Only if you weren't there when those dinosaurs once roamed the earth. I was a kid in the 1960's when '59 Impala 4 dr. flattops like in this episode were everywhere .On the road & in driveways in every house. And I just took it for granted thinking they were always going to be around.
@@winggullseagull1230 -- Nice!
Yeah we took it for granted you don't realize you're living in great history will never see again how lucky we were that's funny we could be sitting in a pile of gold and not even notice it until too late
@@mitchb2305 yeah we didn't even know how good we had it one of those cars right now and good give your Toyota away
Here in the UK it is good to re-run some of these Highway Patrol TV shows I remember so well from my schooldays in the late 1950s. As big a star as Broderick Crawford was RIP, see him play a real nasty piece of work in "The Fastest Gun Alive", for me the real stars were those stylish big Yankee V8s. Great stuff.
Has anybody else noticed how few of breaks they had for commercials. That was when the viewer was the primary concern of the networks. Now days it's about the commercials.
Made me want to cry seeing those cars meet their maker
What an incredible scene, though. It must have been stunning to watch back what happens to family cars back when these episodes were new, and not so many folks knew about crushers.
Great show & the cars love the '59 Impala 4 dr flattop , I remember seeing those everywhere daily. My 1st car was a '59 Impala 2dr Sport Coupe , my 2nd car was a '57 Bel Air 4dr hardtop. My 2 favorite years.
In '59 and '60, car makers were trying to 'out fin' each other
I just love this show, bloopers and all!
The killer sounded like Regis Philbin. I enjoyed this one. Thank you for uploading. 👍🏻
Is that your final answer?
HP is sooo unintentionally cool. Those '59 Chevys were great. Just seeing one makes you think of doing things like putting bubble skirts on it or putting on a continental kit (you have to be from the fifties, folks)
At 13 years of age one night (@3 a.m.) I took my folks' '59 Chevy for a joy ride. Got away without getting caught. Let it roll down the driveway before starting it. Bought my first car, a '49 Ford, for $75 when I was 14---a year before I could get my drivers license. Worked various jobs, preferring working to sports, which I was lousy at. Hard worker though.
Highway Patrol used a car crusher as a plot device years before one was used in the Bond movie Goldfinger. They were leading edge.
Couldn't better describe that car with the very distinctive cat eye tail lights? Funny.
Anyway this series showed so many beautiful cars of the era it's great to watch! Not to mention the clothes, houses, furniture, telephones...just everything!
Seeing the cars crushed is crushing!
The real crime was all those nice old cars that they crushed.
Theyd be worth a fortune now. Even as wrecks. Somebodyd pay to restore them.
But then Japan would have no steel for their Corollas and B210s
yes I agree
Actress Anne Neyland who played Gloria in this episode, recently died on April 24, 2019.
Beautiful young woman with a Friday night bad boy with a rap sheet a mile long. Same old story before she hits the wall!!!
Leslie van Houten's mom.
Gloria is magic. She would put any "Two and a Half Men" actress to shame.
Former Miss Texas. Was in Jailhouse Rock with Elvis
Just died 3 weeks ago
No she wouldnt
What are two and a half men? What does that mean? I'm from the 50's and 60's.
@@JohnPMitten Two and a half men is a show that is now cancelled.
Criminals were so much better dressed back in the day.
Yep nowadays, their pants droop into their socks.
Yeah, on TV shows. Women also did housework in heels and pearls, like June Cleaver and the others.
LOL awesome. allen sacharov
,
Tee Carr, axiomist.
Great humor.
Criminal r bum now as i call bum bum
@@mountainman5025 not anymore, now they wear them tighter than women.
The auto press is impressive.
Before plastics, gas powered vehicles were 100% recyclable! And they take 5x times less energy and natural resources to produce compared to an electric car. I really liked seeing the car crusher in this episode!
Gloria just died about 3 weeks ago. April of 19'
My only frustration with this show is that Mathews always magically picks the right spot out of dozens of possible places...for instance he picks the exact road to check out that the girl's using. And he magically finds the little cup thing that ID's the perp.
telephotousa & nobody dares say "what" to Matthews when he's giving orders at headquarters talking a 100mph.
Probably more to do with the 30minute time frame to solve the crimes. This has always been the issue with broadcast tv fare of the day. Producers figured an audience would loose interest in cop shows that ran too long.
On the other hand radio used to have 15 minute cliff hanger serials...
Maybe radio audiences had a longer attention span?
Keep in mind this case only took 26 minutes so there's another 10 or 12 hours left in the day for Mathews to pursue other crimes.
Thankfully we were at least spared seeing a '59 Chevy get crushed. People who own brand new cars wouldn't need to knock over gas stations. And that trophy looked like it came from a JoHan plastic model car kit.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jo-Han
I had a number of JoHan model cars as a youngster. Mine were fully assembled. Blast from the past!
The producers of the show probably didn't want to blow another $2,800 to show the Chevy getting crushed. It reminds me of one Perry Mason episode in which you see a '63 Lincoln go out of control, followed by a hazy clip of some late '50s car going off a cliff and blowing up.
Great Stuff,containuity editing wasn't a big deal.One of the shows he shot out a tire,the closeup was an entirely different car. That 59 Chevy's headlights arrived two minutes before the tail lights.
One of the few shows that featured all of the top 3 manufactures in the time! GM, FORD AND CHRYSLER 😏! Fun fact 🤔
On this show, the bad guys always drive brand new cars, and always blue 4 door sedans.
Yeah, and the description never mentions the make or model. Hey, and that couple really had to scramble into their house like that? That wasn't suspicious or anything, was it?
Yep - The bad guys never drive beaters, but some of the good guys do. What's the moral of that story?
The ladies also were super smart dressers.
I love Mathews trench coat.
Remember: leave your blood with the bedbugs,not on the highway
That old scrap yard is awesome .
Have no fear...garage door is magically closed now....
so.... in 1955, killing someone still meant something.... like consequences?
Electric chair
The killer is a Marlon Brando wannabe! "I coulda been a contender!"
Well, he wanted to be a big pop star but some guy with the unlikely name of Elvis Presley, beat him to it.
@@donkeyslayer4661 don't be cruel.
I too watched them as a kid in the 50s!
Man Dathews kicks ass!
Hes Ye does
I liked the way Dan Matthews look like in his raincoat! I'm an elderly widow who saw these shows when they were new, and NOW Brod. Crawford, who looked so old to me back then, looks young!!! LOL!!!
Sergeant MacDonald from "Adam-12"! (William Boyett)
I just said to the TV, "Where are Reed and Malloy?". ;-)
He had to start somewhere
Nice to see suburban homes haven’t changed all these years later (the old ones)
I am barely into the ginormous playlist for this show, watching the eps for the first time. I like this one. The criminal is a fool, but he and his girl (and especially his mechanic brother) are a little bit sympathetic. It makes it more interesting and suspenseful than when the crooks are downright evil.
I do often wonder why the HP is involved in all these cases. It seems much more likely the job of the local cops or the sheriff's department.
Not everyplace has local cops. In Pa State Police have authority everywhere else.
19:38 Never commit a crime in the center of the map and you'll be ok. 😆😆😆
I grew up in the '60's & '70's when the '59 Chevy's were very cheap & affordable,
I saw a beautiful mint '59 2 dr Impala for sale for $800 in 1972. I wanted it but I was only 13
& no license or money. In 1977 my ma bought me a '59 2dr Impala for $1,600 she knew I wanted it. I was so happy it was in near mint condition I totaled the car i failed to yield the body shop estimate was $2000 not worth fixing in 1977. Cheaper to buy another one I bought another '59 in 1979 w/ my own cash from a college kid for $1,375. Back then the '59 Chevy's were not in demand yet. I could've bought a '59 Impala convertible in 1980 for $1,200 bucks but I passed it up because it needed some work. But now their desirable.
Is it a contest to see who can talk the fastest between Crawford and his deputies? lol
Hey, the show is only 26 minutes long, gotta talk fast...lol
I was born in 1958 and this has some similarities, I would say my memory is better as we reach JFK Dallas and British Invasion era. I was watching forensic files and they keep mentioning technology that didn’t exist but some investigations on this show impress, like boys in the lab, ballistics, on the hit and run episode they looked at fender dirt and traced it to chicken farm, or broken headlight where one lab guy says they have not used this type of glass in 8 years. I felt bad in this episode for the brother, he got a raw deal. Yeh Ann is a looker, May she RIP. I love the old cars as well, 1959 Chevy Impala, love the 2 doors police interceptors too, would love to go back in time and grab a few dozen of the 2 door PI’ cars
Bad guys in this and Adam 12 complied with arresting officer’s directives.
I like her 36c' s
Great to see "Mac" from Adam-12 again. Too bad these shows didn't use the same characters names more often. Would have been fun to see who gets it and who doesn't. Another "floater" screen, but still watchable.
"give me those reports that you're not working on" - Dan
jajajaja
Good Shit!
5:07 It won't close because your dingbat girlfriend didn't pull the car in far enough.
ZIV shot their shows on the fly, making two a week, not one. Minimal rehearsals/retakes. I always like to see that stuff, like the guy spilling his hype kit and having to scrape it all together. Or bad street parking. But the **SUPREME DIRECTIVE** is that the **tires MUST equal** when the HP takes off.
My parents had a 59 Chevy Impala with a continental kit. It was a long car.
Great tv show .
These are great!! Book'em danno!
Just like Jack Lord. Or even Jack Webb?
I had a 59 electra flat top probably the same color as the 59 chevy here . My Buick ran as well ,and floated down the road , I wish I never sold it! It was just as smooth and fast as my 96 Cadillac Deville. If I had the money , I would have made the back doors suicide, and put a modern brake setup in it . The cars today have NO class, oh to be able to have that car back. But ,it,s in Sweden , all restored.
my mom had a 59 electra 225 4 door flat top in 1968, beautiful car, so comfy., kinda of a light bronze, dark tan color, loved it! can't find another.
@@rickyjakey2134 You probably know that it was called a 225 as it was 225 inches long.
Steal a hundred bucks and have to trash your car no profit there
Yep...those crooks were pretty smart.
"That´s not the way to run a business" as they say.
Imagine what the car in mint condition would be worth today,
An almost new one at that.
The neat thing about cars back then was they were 100% Recycable☺
What a bleeping coincidence, that the gold trophy would be left hanging out of the car. No chance ; it was on the rear view mirror (inside). When its crushed it would be inside. Not hanging outside. A stupid excuse to solve the case w/o thinking. The girl was Elvis's love interest in Jailhouse Rock. They dated during the movie and a little after. So Elvis got a good taste of the little sweety. She was a beauty queen at 16. Last movie was Ocean's 11 in 1960, uncredited. Just died a couple of weeks ago at 82, in May 2019. Beautiful girl.
loved this show growing up
Crook is telling his wife to Think Straight...Ok, what next, Einstein?
I always got a kick out of car descriptions being so vague. "Blue sedan," or at most, "black four-door sedan." Nothing like "59 two-tone blue Impalla."
Dan gave him the old haymaker to put an end to all the monkey business
I used to save the radios from those junk cars and repair them. They used tubes and vibrators in those radios back in the early 50s and 40s
Worth some bucks now on Ebay
They keep identifying the hold up car as a sedan , when it's obviously a 4 door hardtop
I assume youre kidding, right? Thats what a sedan is (but of course you know it).
We never called our hard tops sedans when we were kids
Mathews gets credit for a hat trick, three arrests. Go Dan, go!
Car crusher... just like in a James Bond movie
Those judo lessons paid off!
Incredible and double incredible!!🇺🇸🇮🇪
16:41 Gloria thinks, "Boy, could I go for a GPS now!" Wait about 50 years, honey!
Interesting. The person from the gas station is “Mr. Larkin.” That is the same name used for the store proprietor in the episode “the sniper.”
Second episode where I've heard "penny-ante" in the dialog. I like how a good part of the show is about the car crusher. Educational.
My uncle Ralph had a 59 grey Chevy 4 door , enjoyed riding in it.....
I'll take that batwing '59 Impala, please.
Fins were cool..the bigger-the better!!!!🎈🎈
Cats eyes
@@parexc07 In the fifties and sixties GM 's Bill Mitchell vs. Chrysler's Virgil Exener for automotive styling. The Cadillac fins, the Chevy cat eyes, the optional roundtop and sail top roof designs, every car was made to order, not the jellybean junk of today.
That TCF symbol floating in the lower right hand part of the video is very annoying.
Absolutely.
Makes ya feel like Eric Forman (that 70s show) talking to his parents, while high.
Buy the DVD. Like I did.
I just come here for the comments. It completes the experience!😁
Why is the fall guy always named Frank?
0:57
"To law enforcement agencies, one of the most dangerous criminals is
the unpredictable, armed beginner. Because he is always nervous, often
frightened, his comparatively minor crimes often explode into crimes of
major violence!"
In 1958, there hadn't been a drive-by shooting since 1934 , these cops had it easy!
Cracktaculus
$.25 a gal gas, wouldn't rob a gas station.
this show is like a car show with cops in it?some great cars captured in time here?
Good old days when A eye for an eye was the law
I think the man probably would have had better luck if he had just kept his car in the garage and simply waited until the roadblock was called off, and then freely drove his new Chevy out of town instead of sending over it to the crusher. But just think, if that woman hadn’t almost hit a woman pedestrian on the way to the auto wreckers his plan would not have been foiled but instead would have met with success.
It’s amazing that Dan Mathews bothered to make a second trip to that location and then spotted that the little golden ornament inside that crushed block of steel which miraculously didn’t meet the same fate. I’ve gotta give him credit, as it seems that he’s a lot smarter than he looks!
Frank's brother could almost pass for James Coburn from the right angles. His voice isn't even that far off either, but he probably looks like a Coburn from about twenty years after that.
He almost gives off a George Kennedy vibe.
How come BC never loses his hat............. Ten-4
Glue.
That was quite a maze of roadblocks that Gloria had to work her way though. A maze of one. hehehe This show has some silly stuff in it but I love it.
The guy playing the murderer is guilty of overacting. This may have been his only role as I don't remember ever seeing him again.
That is because Dan Got The guy the gas chamber
Did Joe have a big L on his forehead? I couldn't see...Ow! That's gotta hurt! Cool footage of the car crusher! Thanks Foxeema!
No one's mentioned the Plymouth Fury...until now!
And yet the young man has a new Chevy, she had a new Fury, an incredible looking blonde, and a nice house and the older brother who works for a car compactor company, called him a loser.
@ 24.00--Nice karate chop Dan.
o_O so wobbly... getting seasick watching this series.
Yet another good one. Thanks
When your brother wants you to help him get away with a crime, don't do it.
Anne Neyland was one of Elvis Presley's girlfriends.She was in Jailhouse rock.
That's an excellent piece of trivia Thanks!
Elvis screwed them all !!!!!
Crime doesn’t pay.....especially when Matthews shows up at the office.
Who robs a gas station wearing a suit and tie?
The guy that robbed me in the 70's did. He looked very respectable and I let my guard down.
Shutting the garage door at 2:50 lol
We need more Dan Mathews , he's able to communicate with the baddies using their own colorful language .
No crime scene tape at the gas station? And the roadblock. Only one cop? And cops don't give up their guns!
it would have to be a kodak 104 camera with 4 sided flash
STRANGE THING IS, YOU ACTUALLY START TO HOPE THEY GET AWAY WITH IT
Plymouth Fury, Christine anyone?
😉
And, who is Christine, what's her last name?
@@JohnPMitten ruclips.net/video/ypPnoGsLHcw/видео.html
The '59 Chevrolet Impala was my "Christine".
Christine was a ‘58 and that’s a ‘59 Savoy.
My tailfins are bigger than your tailfins.
Aren’t there any local police in any of those cities? Matthews thinks of everything!
they do their thinking at the local donut shop. 🍩