This was such an awesome series. Buddy was already well into senior citizenship, and still worked his ass off! It had a subtle magic, not quite as much as Rockford, but damn close!
Great mystery ... After the death, what's the next step? Or: how does Barnaby solve this one?! * In another comment, there was a question about a character having: - Agoraphobia - fear of open spaces; or - Vertigo - fear of falling, or fear of heights (not sure; maybe it relates to both sets of fear) So, I looked it up, and found: - In 1943, Jean-Paul Sartre described vertigo as “anguish to the extent that I am afraid not of falling over the precipice, but of throwing myself over” (Sartre, 1943: Being and Nithingness). - Some argue that the "fear of heights ...[is] a vertical spatial phobia,".
Thank Gawd I got to be a 70s kid! It was Paradise!
This was such an awesome series. Buddy was already well into senior citizenship, and still worked his ass off! It had a subtle magic, not quite as much as Rockford, but damn close!
The stocky guy with the mustache ate 25 pecan truffles
Agoraphobia is fear of open spaces surely, I thought vertigo would fit better😊
Great mystery ... After the death, what's the next step? Or: how does Barnaby solve this one?!
*
In another comment, there was a question about a character having:
- Agoraphobia - fear of open spaces; or
- Vertigo - fear of falling, or fear of heights (not sure; maybe it relates to both sets of fear)
So, I looked it up, and found:
- In 1943, Jean-Paul Sartre described vertigo as “anguish to the extent that I am afraid not of falling over the precipice, but of throwing myself over” (Sartre, 1943: Being and Nithingness).
- Some argue that the "fear of heights ...[is] a vertical spatial phobia,".
Absurd. Wearing dark glasses at night. Even more so in a room.