This cat and mouse chase was a good one. The elderly couple's '56 Ford F100 is a gem and I remember them sounding that way when they were not so old. Most have been butchered or restomodded now which is sad. The police cars ('56 Olds and Mercury) are just great. Love the old diners long before chain restaurants put many of them out of business (some still exist) Actress Gail Kobe (the office girl) would embark on a long career. This is one of her early roles.
Yes this is I indeed a classic right down to those old jalopes .Riding down those CALIFORNIA dirt roads and back roads, the desert towns with their districts dinners. Yes those days were one of a kind just like the show they don't make tv like this anymore. Thank goodness for TH-cam and DVDS !!!!!
Did you catch that first diner owner saying the married couple were driving a brand new half ton truck. It looked like a 1955 fat body step over Ford. Gee it was sweet. I sure would love to own it even now.
The reasons vary,. But in those days and until the mid 80s , criminals of any kind were not let out of jail. For a long time. Even first offenders ! No free money back then. You either worked or starved or steal. If you steal anything, and get caught, it's the end . Woman whose children are killers didn't run society back then... Hence- jail & prison wasn't like the Hilton (like today).
Wow. You never saw this show before. I remember as a little kid watching it on TV in maybe 1961 or 1962. I didn’t understand it then. All I remember is the beginning title sequence. I’m working on understanding the rest of the show now in 2024.
Great episode. 'How could he be a labourer? He is as pale as a ghost' No flies on Dan. Watching from Ireland. I saw some episodes back in the fifties. We had no tv service back then, but it was possible to receive British tv, if you lived near the coast or Northern Ireland and of course if you had a tv, lol.
Love these old shows. Mother wouldn't let us kids watch television, so I didn't grow up with this show or others. She thought television was lousy entertainment sneaking its way into people's lives when they should be doing other things. If you're bored, she's say, "Go read a book. or "hang up your clothes." Other people leave comments about how they watched this show when they were kids, which is really nice.
@@philhayes8008 "Significant as the business of Sego Murakami, a locally prominent judo master who founded the nursery in 1948 after returning from Manzanar."
This is one of my favorite episodes of this great show...The best thing about these old shows are the great old character actors that keep popping up...examples in this episode are Gail Kobe (the secretary) and Jack Reitzen (the foreman Grundy)...of course Broderick "10-4" Crawford is the glue that kept this show great, one of the greatest of all syndicated shows...
I'm also a fan of both the show itself, and those cars that always draw my eyes. When I was a kid my mother bought a 1959 Buick Electra 225. It was a convertible; - a giant black land-yacht with the biggest slanted space-age fins that would have made The Jetsons drool with envy.
William Turner NO power steering at all...the wipers worked by Air provided by a really small air pump. the heaters worked good... but you WILL run out of Gas at a quarter tank...the guage was never fixed on several model years! I've had a few!..
@@carvinlambert6899 Right. I restored a 1959 F100 custom cab, original v8, 4speed. Sold it because I was used to power steering and brakes. Just too hard to drive around.
I don't know what it is, but I can understand Broderick Crawford easily when he talks at such a rapid speed! I ALWAYS could understand what he was saying when I was a little girl watching those wonderful programs with my parents and siblings!!!❤
hey gang amongst crew of HIGHWAY PATROL was a very young QUINN MARTIN and writer GENE RODDENBERRY not to mention a ton of guest stars that will go on to big stardom MONSEUR STUART WHITMAN, CLINT EASTWOOD, GUY WILLIAMS etc. cool days very undeveloped look of southern California that is 10-4 out!
Wonder where this was shot? Wood crates. Look at the houses. Early 1950's construction. Love that Olds. My Uncle Frank had a 1955 and 1956. Prick Boss had it coming.
Sam & Ella meet Irv at the Cabin Cafe, 20852 Devonshire, Chatsworth, CA. Now occupied by a Burger King & Shell station. It was also in the episodes "Revenge" and "Narcotics."
I was going to reply north end SF Valley. We had sheep herds, olive groves, orange groves and horses back then. Where Taft High is today, it was a sheep crossing over Ventura Blvd.
On the Internet it says Broderick Crawford was born in December of 1911! Since this show first premiered in 1955. and unless it first came on probably before his birthday that year, he was only 43 approaching his 44th birthday!
Makes sense. Booking and setting up outside location shots is much more complicated than doing studio sound stage setups. If they know a location that is good, convenient, inexpensive and happy to host them, then why not use it as much as possible?
At first i thought the audio was dubbed at high speed. But realized thats how Broderick really spoke. Reminds me of the guy who did the micro machines commercials
+Vladislov Kyzinski Nothing to do with the camera work, but a digital fault on this TH-cam upload, with the image squeezing; stretching and tilting all over the place. Most of the episodes on this TH-cam channel have the same fault.
Oh yes, Desmond...Murder, robbery, assault, finds two jobs, day laborer and then fry cook, and has a lunch date with a pretty girl before being shot....all in a day's work. No doubt it would be hard to keep up with him. BTW, this is one of my favorite episodes.
They worst thing is..the Olds doesn't have Spinners of the hub caps..well, at least the secretary has a continental kit on her '54 ford, The rear isn't lowered though. (You have to be a 50's guy to understand..)
^^^@Phillip Miller .. That's bullshit one does not have to be a 50's person at all to know different makes and models of classic American cars, as long as one understands how they came off the assembly line and the original state them cars came in Ha!!! :P] .v ..
In regards to Andrew's statement. Times are a lot different now than they were in the 1950s. You could stop and help just about anyone or anyone stop and help you if you needed it. But today you can't trust anybody hardly unless you know them very well. It's sad to say. But that's the way times have gotten. You can't hardly trust anyone. Sad but true!
I didn't for many years as only got half hour for meal with 2 10 minute breaks. But I got bothered with calls during my lunch. But I got paid well but was on call on weekends.
most comments miss the point of Highway Patrol the episodes are no less than an true slice of American history:Eisenhower years low budgets ensured authenticity; no sets no special effects; we can see what highways, banks, homes, supermarkets etc really used to look like it was a touch of genius to get an Oscar winner like Broderick Crawford as star other police shows had forgettable second raters like Jack Webb or Roger Smith half-hour format and little-known scriptwriters contributed to uncomplicated plots and down-to-earth emotional context
+Charles Kinbote I love the prices, the sign in the cafe donuts 60cts. a dozen 1 will cost you a dollar in Dunkin donuts. And the same cafe when the old couple paid there tab is was 90 cents for breakfast for two!
I agree about being able to see the highways, stores, etc. It's like having a time machine to get the whole Route 66-ish vibe. I disagree that Jack Webb was a second rater, however...I liked his delivery as much as I do Crawford's here.
I get a kick out of the posted prices in stores & restaurants Donuts 2 for .15 cents .60 a dozen. So low but people didn't make much, $1.50 an hr., if there were lucky.
DAMN! Just when i was about to have faith in him, that he could have had a job, girl and went the straight and narrow! SHEESH! Now he's gonna make a good girl bad.
Remember. They did not have to compete with chain stores. They had local customers. There really were corner stores and small cafes back in the day. Part of the fabric of our lives
My late father and his brothers, my uncles, also wore ties and suits with the fedoras, so did my mother's brothers, and it was a common thing back in the 1950s! I was born in the late 1940s on up till now, and that's normally how MEN dressed in those days, especially in church on Sundays!😊
Growing up in the 70s my parents used alot of these lines like, Simmer down you two damn things on my younger brother and I. This one too... if you two things get "picked up" by the cops, dont call us to come get ya. haha
If I did not know better, I'd say this female is the same one who starred with Clint Eastwood in Pale Rider. Her voice and mannerisms are the same as that the woman in that role.
Take me back to those days! Such simple times with no electronics or social media.
Yes I would like to go back to that time we were poor but we had morals,fun,true friends, and penny candy
Bless you Mike post
This cat and mouse chase was a good one. The elderly couple's '56 Ford F100 is a gem and I remember them sounding that way when they were not so old. Most have been butchered or restomodded now which is sad. The police cars ('56 Olds and Mercury) are just great.
Love the old diners long before chain restaurants put many of them out of business (some still exist)
Actress Gail Kobe (the office girl) would embark on a long career. This is one of her early roles.
Never tire of Broderick. He was so amazing
and my mom couldn't stand him. she hated when I would watch highway patrol reruns, lol
Man he could rattle off his dialogue with rapid fire accuracy!
Yes this is I indeed a classic right down to those old jalopes .Riding down those CALIFORNIA dirt roads and back roads, the desert towns with their districts dinners. Yes those days were one of a kind just like the show they don't make tv like this anymore. Thank goodness for TH-cam and DVDS !!!!!
-- I grew up in this area - 1950's. Was beautiful back then ... 🌞👌
You can say that again!!
For people who were not black let's keep it real
I watch for the cars as much as the story.
Me to Man 😂 THANKS
And the pointed bras
I saw all these as a kid, ( haven't recognized one yet . Dang near 45 or 50 years ago. Great stuff for intertainment. 😊
Excellent show from the 50s!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
A show that our family never missed
So enjoyable especially depicting the time, the people the towns the innocence!
Did you catch that first diner owner saying the married couple were driving a brand new half ton truck. It looked like a 1955 fat body step over Ford. Gee it was sweet. I sure would love to own it even now.
People back then used to be so trusting of others. Wish we still were like this.
Why, so you can be taken advantage of ?
You'll need a Time Machine!!!
ME TOO i just got scammed by someone i thought was a friend
Most folks back then knew difference between rite & rong even if didn't always do the rite thing.
The reasons vary,. But in those days and until the mid 80s , criminals of any kind were not let out of jail. For a long time. Even first offenders ! No free money back then. You either worked or starved or steal. If you steal anything, and get caught, it's the end . Woman whose children are killers didn't run society back then... Hence- jail & prison wasn't like the Hilton (like today).
Yes I agree it is a great show I never saw this before till now but it beats the garbage put out by Hollywood today!
At least more realistic
Yup but I do like some of what they put on no resident alien is on so is there goes the neighborhood good
Wow. You never saw this show before. I remember as a little kid watching it on TV in maybe 1961 or 1962. I didn’t understand it then. All I remember is the beginning title sequence. I’m working on understanding the rest of the show now in 2024.
👍👍👍👍👍
Great episode. 'How could he be a labourer? He is as pale as a ghost' No flies on Dan. Watching from Ireland. I saw some episodes back in the fifties. We had no tv service back then, but it was possible to receive British tv, if you lived near the coast or Northern Ireland and of course if you had a tv, lol.
Wow he just hit the man in the head n rob him great job but his luck will end soon
Especially lack of color picture helps to focus on the idea , plot, who's right and who's wrong.
A Day Labourer Sporting a Bow tie...
I don't think so! Good Call, Dan M. RIP!!
@@wilneal8015
Gee, that’s swell.
So the other guy the real killer dressed in the apron, clean shaven looked like a day labourer.. lol
So glad that the highway patrol is duly authorized.
The late Gail Kobe as Susan looked an amazingly beautiful lady, if only I was older then, sadly it’s 1956 and I had only just been born.
The young secretary, Gail Kobe, played in several Twilight Zone episodes.
I love the theme song because it sounds like a military march song
Love these old shows. Mother wouldn't let us kids watch television, so I didn't grow up with this show or others. She thought television was lousy entertainment sneaking its way into people's lives when they should be doing other things. If you're bored, she's say, "Go read a book. or "hang up your clothes." Other people leave comments about how they watched this show when they were kids, which is really nice.
Wise Mother. Read a book is good advice. Especially an old book.
The diner is right across from the Sega Nursery at Laurel and Burbank in North Hollywood. Still there in June 2021.
Meant the Sego Nursery is still there. Diner's location is now a Tommy's Hamburger.
@@philhayes8008 Really?
@@philhayes8008 "Significant as the business of Sego Murakami, a locally prominent judo master who founded the nursery in 1948 after returning from Manzanar."
What a wonderful series!
This is one of my favorite episodes of this great show...The best thing about these old shows are the great old character actors that keep popping up...examples in this episode are Gail Kobe (the secretary) and Jack Reitzen (the foreman Grundy)...of course Broderick "10-4" Crawford is the glue that kept this show great, one of the greatest of all syndicated shows...
and those old 57 buicks they were lead sleds my grampa had one solid ass car. sonomatic wonderbar radios
yes ,I like them all , love all the cars , back when cars were cars , they are beautiful
I'm also a fan of both the show itself, and those cars that always draw my eyes. When I was a kid my mother bought a 1959 Buick Electra 225. It was a convertible; - a giant black land-yacht with the biggest slanted space-age fins that would have made The Jetsons drool with envy.
yep the wonderbar radio for sure
Remember the episode where then nice clean cut guy was robbing the small stores.????????
"Yeah, He seemed like such a nice guy" LOL CLASSIC!
Mathew Ole He never disappoints, yep HP the best show, forget Dragnet , Dan was the man!
The constant perspective changes in Dragnet give me headache anyway.
I thoroughly enjoyed both Dragnet and Highway Patrol! But I must say that Broderick Crawford as Dan Matthews was FANTASTIC!!!
@@jayonnaj18 👍
The timing was better than Dragnet,and the characters didn't waste time explaining themselves like Dragnet did every 5 minutes.
For sure, Hughe, Dan was the Man, and I watched these great programs when I was still in elementary school! Just adored Broderick Crawford!!!
If I go back in time, I'm bringing that Ford pickup with me when I come back to the present.
If it ain't too much trouble, Bring that woman's convertible, Back on a trailer for me,, Thanks ahead of time, Or should that be behind time,,
Nothing like these old shows !
I like that Ford truck
William Turner
NO power steering at all...the wipers worked by Air provided by a really small air pump. the heaters worked good... but you WILL run out of Gas at a quarter tank...the guage was never fixed on several model years! I've had a few!..
^^^@William Turner .. Yeah that, pick-up truck sure caught my eye tew, and the Ford convertible that Susan was driving .. .
@@carvinlambert6899 .. Who cares about that shit, that's why anything can be modified these day's Ha!!! :P] .v ..
@@carvinlambert6899 Right. I restored a 1959 F100 custom cab, original v8, 4speed. Sold it because I was used to power steering and brakes. Just too hard to drive around.
Boy could Brod Crawford speak fast. I've never heard anyone that could come close!
Reminds me of my aunt Mabel
Ben Shapiro.
Fedex guy
Ted Dammit They had 99.9% pure methamphetamine back in those days without it been altered according to Walter White🤣
The micro machine toy car commercials guy
I especially like the old classic cars, except he's in an Oldsmobile instead of his '56
Buick Century!
That actress who played Susan the secretary appeared in a lot of shows in the 60's. Many westerns.
Fine show.Thanks.
Great episode.
I like listening to the squeaky car doors. Even when new, they were not all that good.
I like to hear him talk real fast on high speed.
Get the Chipmunks ,play them instead while looking and smoking the herb at the same time 😛😵
WatDaMattaForYou I thought he was on speed methamphetamine LOL
He drives a Rocket 88 Oldsmobile so he has to talk fast to keep up.
I always watch HP at half speed.
I don't know what it is, but I can understand Broderick Crawford easily when he talks at such a rapid speed! I ALWAYS could understand what he was saying when I was a little girl watching those wonderful programs with my parents and siblings!!!❤
great episode
Gail Kobe did a lot of TV in her day. She just passed in 2013. She was very pretty.
"This girl will take care of you."
This girl is a guy.
Pretty obviously a guy in drag. Huge male cranium, lantern jaw, brow ridge. We didn't know back then.
kind of 'silly lookin' lol
Ebony potn
Good episode. Thank you for uploading.
hey gang amongst crew of HIGHWAY PATROL was a very young QUINN MARTIN and writer GENE RODDENBERRY not to mention a ton of guest stars that will go on to big stardom MONSEUR STUART WHITMAN, CLINT EASTWOOD, GUY WILLIAMS etc. cool days very undeveloped look of southern California that is 10-4 out!
Daniel Young a
"Everything he needs- a car, money and a girlfriend."
writing genius at its peak.
US petty dream.
There's a song by the Nighthawks: A Pretty Girl, a Cadillac, and Some Money. . . . .
A full tank of gas, Half a pack of cigarettes, And they were wearing sunglasses, Hit it,,,
I love it! that old coot says"Now take that young feller Matthews! Dan doesn't look a day UNDER 5O, 55!
😄😄😄
But leave the blood at The Red Cross not on the highway! Classic line from Matthews....
I want one of.those.highway .patrol cars . their. Huge and look fun to drive.
Born in 1911 so he was in his 40's
@@AustinRogers1 48 to be exact.
Broderick Crawford has that distinct style of talking....very fast.
And with authority. He was the boss, and no mistake.
Grundy could also be Jackie Gleason's stunt double..
I thought so as well!!!
"Just simmer down and answer a few questions." "You'll never regret being farmer. The earth between you fingers."
Wish I had that Ford pickup.
Sure wish I had that Ford convertible today 😜
*I agree, that white Ford Pickup was nice too. I bet some of those old cars are still on the road. They would make great HotRods( :)*
^^^@ThreePhaseHigh .. Me tew .. .
It was a 1950 My parents had a 1950 coupe
You, me and a lot of other guys.
@@Mynamesalexa Not 1950. A 1954 Ford Crestline Sunliner convertible with a continental kit
Dan is such a smooth talker.(ls)
Wonder where this was shot? Wood crates. Look at the houses. Early 1950's construction. Love that Olds. My Uncle Frank had a 1955 and 1956. Prick Boss had it coming.
Sam & Ella meet Irv at the Cabin Cafe, 20852 Devonshire, Chatsworth, CA. Now occupied by a Burger King & Shell station. It was also in the episodes "Revenge" and "Narcotics."
I was going to reply north end SF Valley. We had sheep herds, olive groves, orange groves and horses back then. Where Taft High is today, it was a sheep crossing over Ventura Blvd.
"OKAY JOHNSON TAKE HIM! NEXT YEAR YOUR NAME WILL BE SGT. KEN WILLIAMS!"
That Ford pick up truck was nice.
PISTOL.WHIPS the boss, then takes the secratary to lunch? , .all.on his first day on the job,
@@johnbockelie3899 I know right! 😁
Caught that too. Many continuity issues in those days.
On the Internet it says Broderick Crawford was born in December of 1911! Since this show first premiered in 1955. and unless it first came on probably before his birthday that year, he was only 43 approaching his 44th birthday!
96 cents for breakfast for 2 people'. A good deal even back in those days
30 cents for a hamburger at a grill.
@@rolandvanags5141 as compared to
$20 today... fry's, an extra $5 bux, and
a 10 min. wait!! Sad...
@@rolandvanags5141 in the 60s i remember 55 cents for a burger. gas was 26 cents a gallon.
A dozen 'do-nuts' for 60 cents.
Matthews sounds like an old time football coach when talking to his patrolmen..we gotta go go go...fight fight fight
If you watch these very long you will see the same places over and over
Makes sense. Booking and setting up outside location shots is much more complicated than doing studio sound stage setups. If they know a location that is good, convenient, inexpensive and happy to host them, then why not use it as much as possible?
At first i thought the audio was dubbed at high speed. But realized thats how Broderick really spoke. Reminds me of the guy who did the micro machines commercials
Dan is. Amped in amphedimenes
He was directed to talk fast in order to fit the show in the thirty minute format.
Sam and Ella? Sounds like food poisoning.
Susan , come with me , we"'ll be a modern Bonnie and Clyde,
It isn't the car that kills, it's the driver , so watch what your doing. See.you next week,
@@johnbockelie3899 Sometimes it is food poisoning that kills them, like Sam and Ella.
Like that song from South Pacific: Sam and Janet Evening.
Good old days
Mr.Grundy quite the snappy dresser with the custom pantaloons on.
For sure, so many people around the country are jealous...lol
Pantaloons...too funny.
Insider trivia has it that Brod Crawford would down a quart of beer between takes on the set.
***** Unsteady camera at 22:00 on the girl in the cafe.
+Vladislov Kyzinski Nothing to do with the camera work, but a digital fault on this TH-cam upload, with the image squeezing; stretching and tilting all over the place. Most of the episodes on this TH-cam channel have the same fault.
+darrenburnfan I think they are FUN!
+darrenburnfan Not just this channel. Some episodes of Gunsmoke are the same way. You look at it long enough, you'll get seasick.
This is so funny! I thought at times he seemed a little tipsy! Maybe that's why he would talk really fast lol. love this show.
-Murder?
Yeah, sure, I know ; HE SEEMED LIKE SUCH A NICE GUY!
Excellent.
Have you ever seen that fella before?
No except in 1975 when he played Quint in that movie called Jaws i had never seen him before LOL
Oh yes, Desmond...Murder, robbery, assault, finds two jobs, day laborer and then fry cook, and has a lunch date with a pretty girl before being shot....all in a day's work. No doubt it would be hard to keep up with him. BTW, this is one of my favorite episodes.
John A.
Great show! Lovin it
Dan makes it look so easy
Love the old cars,especially the Buick v8, all 130 hp!
That snappy Ford convertible looks good
It was used in about 7 or 8 episodes. Weathered but that wouldn't discourage me.
Back in the day where a two door car was an option.
'Sam and Ella '. Nice from a restaurant.
They worst thing is..the Olds doesn't have Spinners of the hub caps..well, at least the secretary has a continental kit on her '54 ford, The rear isn't lowered though. (You have to be a 50's guy to understand..)
52 ford
^^^@Phillip Miller .. That's bullshit one does not have to be a 50's person at all to know different makes and models of classic American cars, as long as one understands how they came off the assembly line and the original state them cars came in Ha!!! :P] .v ..
Definitely a different world then.
I use to watch this show when I was a kid! My how time flys
Nice, ...he gets to ride in a '56 Olds 88 in this one. Police should be so lucky
It's a '54 Olds.
@@gregoryroscow5846 it's a 55 or 56. just like the Buicks, those two years look very much alike.
google it a 56
Final answer: 1956 Oldsmobile 88.
In regards to Andrew's statement. Times are a lot different now than they were in the 1950s. You could stop and help just about anyone or anyone stop and help you if you needed it. But today you can't trust anybody hardly unless you know them very well. It's sad to say. But that's the way times have gotten. You can't hardly trust anyone. Sad but true!
Or in some cases if you try and help someone and something goes wrong then you might get sued.
2150 always gets his man i like the way he throws his bullets
Fictional references to Medford Rd intersections are used a few times in this series.
OK, Williams, one hour for lunch. Tell me, does anyone in the US still get a whole HOUR for lunch (especially laborers)?
HHAhAH! YEAH! OK! one hour. THOSE were the days. They made SURe you got the hour. NOW a days it's 20 mins.
Yep I do
not me.
I didn't for many years as only got half hour for meal with 2 10 minute breaks. But I got bothered with calls during my lunch. But I got paid well but was on call on weekends.
@Johnny Draco They take 2 hours for lunch, except for "illegals" who, may be, are granted 15 mins.
John Williams is played by a very young Robert Shaw who played Quint in the movie Jaws.
Good one. See ya at another one
I love those old Mercurys. Had one as a teen. Must have taken 100 lbs of chrome off the bumpers and grill to "streamline " looks.
I've always wondered where all those episodes were filmed. Being from southern California, some areas look like they are from the San Fernando area.
Dan Matthews: rapid firer of orders and master of quips
A wholesome breakfast for 96 cents unbelievable
Diners near Philadelphia often had breakfast, two eggs, home fries, toast and coffee for 99¢, in 1980, long after the fifties.
Dan, the man, with the magical plan...don't think they'll be another one like him.
Does anyone get the joke? One of the couple's names were Sam and Ella. Salmonella.
Oh, that's corney. Just like Kellog's corn flakes.
Today In Hollywood Anything Goes
most comments miss the point of Highway Patrol
the episodes are no less than an true slice of American history:Eisenhower years
low budgets ensured authenticity; no sets no special effects; we can see what highways, banks, homes, supermarkets etc really used to look like
it was a touch of genius to get an Oscar winner like Broderick Crawford as star
other police shows had forgettable second raters like Jack Webb or Roger Smith
half-hour format and little-known scriptwriters contributed to uncomplicated plots and down-to-earth emotional context
+Charles Kinbote I love the prices, the sign in the cafe donuts 60cts. a dozen 1 will cost you a dollar in Dunkin donuts. And the same cafe when the old couple paid there tab is was 90 cents for breakfast for two!
+4thstooge according to my inflation calculator 60cents in 1955 works out to $5.30 today
so at $12 a dozen I suggest you find a new donut place :)
+Charles Kinbote Still a bargain! The Dunkin Donut shops actually charge about $.92 for one. A box of a dozen is far less.
I agree about being able to see the highways, stores, etc. It's like having a time machine to get the whole Route 66-ish vibe. I disagree that Jack Webb was a second rater, however...I liked his delivery as much as I do Crawford's here.
I get a kick out of the posted prices in stores & restaurants Donuts 2 for .15 cents .60 a dozen. So low but people didn't make much, $1.50 an hr., if there were lucky.
"It isn't the gun that kills, it's the shooter"...
Yep, same goes for knives, rope, scarves, and poison:)
@@misskim2058 ......Good one, mam.
Accelerator Magazine: Thanks;)
...it’s the bullets.
But he hit him with the gun 😂,,,,the good looking bastard,
One of my favorite episodes. 21:46 Ted Bundy of the time.
DAMN! Just when i was about to have faith in him, that he could have had a job, girl and went the straight and narrow! SHEESH! Now he's gonna make a good girl bad.
How did a small coffee shop like that stay in business?
they probably made $8,76 cent a day.
Paying low wages
hired illegals
Remember. They did not have to compete with chain stores. They had local customers. There really were corner stores and small cafes back in the day. Part of the fabric of our lives
2 full breakfast. 96 cents
I've had trust issues and when my car was stolen a week ago my trust issues have gotten worst
"Look out for who you hire", says Dan.
For 12 bucks a day you can't be too picky.
How can you know someone is a psychopath ?
Pat O'Malley, cafe owner in the first cafe scene, was a big star. Came out of retirement.
Remember when he and shirley booth had a short lived series
Not J. Pat O'Malley, I presume. Excellent series!
Most of the small time criminals seem to wear ties and sports coats if not entire suits and fedoras in these episodes even in the farmlands.
LOL!
My late father and his brothers, my uncles, also wore ties and suits with the fedoras, so did my mother's brothers, and it was a common thing back in the 1950s! I was born in the late 1940s on up till now, and that's normally how MEN dressed in those days, especially in church on Sundays!😊
Growing up in the 70s my parents used alot of these lines like, Simmer down you two damn things on my younger brother and I. This one too... if you two things get "picked up" by the cops, dont call us to come get ya. haha
LMAO!!!! Grumpy calls somebody "SILLY" looking????????
Sam and Ella. Salmon Ella. Salmonella.
"Well I declare, what makes you think he's in these parts, Mr. Matthews?"
does a belly shot kill so quick?
If I did not know better, I'd say this female is the same one who starred with Clint Eastwood in Pale Rider. Her voice and mannerisms are the same as that the woman in that role.
I used to make $16 per day on an 8 hour work day!
Those were the days...
The shitty days.
The very shitty days
The greatest of police dramas in California.
The narrator makes this show.
Very interesting video !