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Night Gallery (1969)
Night Gallery or Sixth Sense
The Man Who Died at Three and Nine
This is listed as episode s3, e28 of Night Gallery on another online TV episode guide of "Night Gallery."
Upon further research it was actually an episode of "Sixth Sense," s1,e5.
The common denominator is Rod Sterling.
This has confused me for quite some time when researching Night Gallery episodes. The last entry for the "Night Gallery" series also lists season 3 episode 50 as "The Sixth Sense," skipping all entries from episode 17 and jumping to 50.
Joseph Campanella was, as usual, quite excellent as Paul Crowley, a diplomat who sees visions of a beautiful woman drowning at the above mentioned "Three and Nine" clock times. He seeks the help of Dr. Rhodes but during his sessions he suddenly has an apparent change of consciousness and walks out.
I also believe that "Chandrika" is the woman in the water and can't find another reference to her to include here.
Quincy M.E.: Gentle Into That Good Night (1981)
Compare and Contrast
I'm reviewing the reviewers here.
To preface the content, I must disclose that I'm a 30 year critical care nurse and have almost, "seen it all." I'm also extremely critical of on-air medical mistakes. But remember, this is "theatre" with artistic license. I have also done 15 years of live performance theatre myself.
The fact that Quincy took over as a patient counselor is perfectly fine with me. Indeed in my critical care units I was the one, deemed the easiest to talk to, to tell the family and/or patient that they were going to die. I watched death on an almost daily basis. It was strangely comfortable to me.
But yes, there were too many times that I'd completely fall apart. Usually at home, but occasionally in the patients room or hallway.
I have wonderful and horrible stories.
I understand that the TV reviewers here have both sides to tell. And they are all correct.
Both sides.
Quincy M.E.: Jury Duty (1981)
Great episode
I may be slighted in my opinion due to my own medical background but in this episode, (as usual) Quincy was right. Dead right. I have to agree with the general premise of presentation of evidence, all evidence, being tantamount to reaching a fair outcome. And it ultimately happens here, as always.
CSI: NY: Down the Rabbit Hole (2007)
This is the first of a two parter
In "Down the Rabbit Hole," the killer gets away. You are left in substantial suspense and are expecting the usual, "They catch him in the end," episode but it doesn't play out that way.
I had to do some hunting but the follow up episode is "DOA For a Day."
I haven't seen it.
Penelope Keith's Hidden Villages (2014)
I don't hear the sound issues
I've watched episode 1 and 2 and I'm not hearing the issues with the background music being overwhelmingly too loud. Is this, by chance, happening on later seasons.?
Penelope Keith's Hidden Villages: North Wales, Cheshire and Staffordshire (2014)
The powerplant issue
When she visits the powerplant region and speaks to the two young men that work there, I see that there were actually two powerplants and one of them was decommissioned in 2015. Was this episode filmed before that or approximately the same time?
The Yorkshire Vet: Episode #7.2 (2018)
Very difficult surgery
The vets need to perform emergency surgery on a baby lamb with intestinal evisceration and it's quite a bit of labour to reinsert the bowels back into their proper position. Indeed, the lamb required a substantial effort to recover. This brought tears to the eyes.
Helicopter ER (2016)
Well done
A series about helicopter air rescues that take place out of Yorkshire England. The pilots and paramedics are excellent and so is the cinematography, not to mention the countryside views.
Walks with My Dog: Ben Fogle, Emma Kennedy & Helen Skelton (2017)
A great discovery.
Wonderful series featuring dogs and their owners that features the beautiful countryside of the UK, Ireland, and Scotland.
Thanks to Pluto TV and IMDB.
Night Gallery: Make Me Laugh/Clean Kills and Other Trophies (1971)
For A clean Kill
Wonderfully acted and draws you in. A millionaire's son is a recent college grad that stands to inherit millions if he will only bag a deer and follow his father's footsteps as a Great White Hunter. But good trophy head is hard to find.
The Twilight Zone: The Hunt (1962)
Has deep meaning for me.
I've loved this episode for 40 years.
Dogs have always been a huge part of my life.
I just lost both of my dogs back to back.
It shall remain a timeless memory that unfortunately happens again and again.
Quincy M.E.: The Hot Dog Murder (1977)
Syringe goof
It takes about 10cc of air injected into a vien to kill someone. That small amount in a handheld syringe won't do it. It's great theatre to show a doctor or nurse expelling the "deadly" air.
Quincy M.E.: A Good Smack in the Mouth (1977)
I was involved
Although I was involved in and treated elder abuse cases, back in the 70's there were no mandatory requirements for reporting any of it including child abuse.
This episode was a public service message and helped get the ball rolling.
The Wild Wild West: The Night of the Doomsday Formula (1968)
Error
When West and Gordon are in the train car, they are about to explode a small sample of the Doomsday explosive. West says 500 yards is enough to be safe but 500 yards is a quarter mile. It's unlikely that they'd be able to even see what they were doing, much less rig a simple string device to trigger it.