Jump to content

Type keyword(s) to search

The Rockford Files - General Discussion


  • Reply
  • Start Topic

Recommended Posts

... can you imagine how crazy his wedding must have been?  You know, in a "Rockford Files episode" kind of way... I shudder to think what Angel's role was...)

 

I would have loved to see the camera panning through the wedding guests. One shady looking P.I. and con artist type after another (like in the funeral scenes in one or two episodes).

 

As to Jim and all the young beautiful women, and him with no money and living in the dumpiest trailer imaginable. I guess we were supposed suspend disbelief. After all, this was James Garner for Pete's sake!! And so getting any woman he wanted just by the force of his looks and personality was to be assumed!

Link to comment

OK, I've had to put my watching of the movies on hold for a bit because (a) I want to go in order, since they seem to be meant to be sequential and (b) I actually teared up when I saw Rocky's headstone.  Clearly I'm not ready.

 

I got through part of the one where Beth comes back, with her perm and her married name and her bestselling books.  (I'm sorry, but there was no way Gretchen Corbett was really straightening her hair all those years, right?)  Unfortunately the presence of Dyan Cannon is just a distraction from the Jim and Beth reunion. 

 

Sadly the movies do really suffer from a lack of the show's usual action; it's all walking and talking, understandable because everyone is old.  Also I miss the squealing tires, really I do.  The only cast member who seems to have most of the old spark is Stuart Margolin.  (Although James Luisi as Chapman is still pretty great.)  James Garner isn't "phoning it in" so much as he is not using his movie-star voice any more.  After the Rockford Files ended, he went in a more relaxed, naturalistic direction with his parts (and I think, became an even better actor), but a lot of the Rockford Files appeal was him running around, driving sharp and punching and getting punched.  There's a lack of energy to the movies overall (music, casting, direction) that doesn't do enough to compensate for that.

 

My understanding is that some of the movies were much better than others, so does anyone have any suggestions?

  • Love 1
Link to comment

As to Jim and all the young beautiful women, and him with no money and living in the dumpiest trailer imaginable. I guess we were supposed suspend disbelief. After all, this was James Garner for Pete's sake!! And so getting any woman he wanted just by the force of his looks and personality was to be assumed!

 

Keep in mind that the Rockford Files ended not too much before the infamous single woman study, which made a bunch of seriously dicey assumptions to draw the conclusion that women who were foolish enough to be unmarried at thirty had a better statistical likelihood of getting hit by lightning than they did of finding someone to marry. And that came after a few decades of cultural conservatives bemoaning the plague of independent women (particularly the ones who were taking "men's jobs").

 

It's a document of its time. Rockford was clean, reasonably intelligent, self-supporting and gorgeous. That was better than the women in their late twenties and early thirties he dated were supposed to expect.

Edited by Julia
Link to comment

I didn't get that vibe at all from the show (not sure if I misunderstood what you were saying, though).  It should also be pointed out that Jim wasn't the marrying kind :-) so maybe that's as "good" as those gals could do...  But no... I thought The Rockford Files always portrayed women as smart and independent - those were the sort of women Jim liked to date (and remain friends with, or date again  as the case may be...)  Especially, women were also shown as competent business owners (there was even a female used car showroom owner, very unusual).  If there was a social stigma on unmarried career women, The Rockford Files certainly didn't buy into it.

 

I always saw Jim as a character who had suffered a setback in life (going to prison) and who was not upwardly mobile, although he had his competency and good looks to make up for it.  Although he didn't care about living the high life himself, he "dated up."  He dated women who were educated and upwardly mobile (or just wealthy, or well-off scammers).  For him, women being older, more educated and more independent was "not a bug, but a feature."

 

One more thing: Jim seemed to also have warm friendships with several older women - never really explained in most cases.  There wasn't an ex-lover vibe for these either.  There was an episode near the end of the series (I think it was the "Battle Ax" one) where the chick of the week was an older woman, not a beautiful potential love interest but it was clear at the end of the episode that Jim had esteem for her.

 

In fact, there were very few women that Jim *didn't* like, but I can think of two who he didn't have much patience for - Sky the hippie, and LeeAnne the police groupie.  These were both women who weren't very honest with themselves and he didn't treat them with kid gloves.

Edited by Jipijapa
  • Love 1
Link to comment

Last episode of Rockford was 35 years ago today.  "Deadlock in Parma."  I still haven't been able to bring myself to actually watch it.

 

(Dammit, it's my obsession and I'll cry if I want to!)

 

Something about the Rockford episodes ... I have a hard time remembering the plots for more than about a year. So I don't fret about seeing the final episode. In year or two I'll rewatch the whole series again, and enjoy it almost as if new.

Link to comment

I'm rewatching Season 6 right now, so maybe I will.  Maybe.

 

Season 6 may have had its problems, but "Paradise Cove" was a great season premiere.  Christmas Eve gunfire!  Buried gold under the trailer!  And Mr. & Mrs. Polaroid, snarking and kissing!  

 

I weep that Garner and Hartley never had an actual TV series together. It would have been so awesome.

Link to comment

I weep that Garner and Hartley never had an actual TV series together. It would have been so awesome.

I suspect that it was the wishes of those two actors (Hartley most especially?) that kept such a thing from happening. There were enough assumptions from casual TV viewers at the time that they were married in real life, they wouldn't have wanted to make it worse.

 

But yes, it would have been awesome. 

Link to comment

"Paradise Cove" and "Nice Guys Finish Dead" (The Goodhues) are some of the best episodes of the whole series. Paradise Cove really got real about the way neighbors would take someone like Rockford -- I always wondered why he wasn't considered a problem. Horrible, ugly trailer, cheapening the neighborhood's appearance. Frequent gunfire around the trailer. Frequent suspicious guys lurking around the area because of Jim. Frequent fights. Kidnappings. Bombing of the trailer. Frequent visits by the police. Paradise Cove gets into that neighborhood reality - an interesting departure from previous seasons.

Edited by riverclown
Link to comment

The sad thing is that the real Paradise Cove is now super-exclusive, and in fact the locals even got in trouble recently for trying to strongarm ordinary citizens off the beach (which is against California state law; beachfront is all for all citizens to enjoy).  I understand it costs $40 to park in the parking lot where Rockford's trailer once was set up.  (though, the actual spot where it was, is now covered with sand and is part of an outdoor cafe).

Link to comment

Too bad about Paradise Cove. All this because Jim wreaked such havoc! Seriously, it is distressing to see what was once mostly a situation of great freedom and tolerance turn into something like that. But, right on the ocean like that, it was bound to happen.

Link to comment

Jim Rockford Warned Us About Google and Facebook Back in 1978

 

Discussion of "The House on Willis Avenue."

 

To me the most unique/prescient things about the episode were that 1) it proposed that private companies, not the government, would be at the forefront of data gathering on citizens; 2) the government would be interested in obtaining this information and 3) the required data servers - the ones in the desert - would be massive and possibly bad for the environment. 

 

The episode also showed Rockford using this computer system for his own investigative purposes, a wee premonition of normal modern-day Internet usage.  (And it also showed Richie Brockleman "Googling" Rockford!)

 

It would have been a much more conventional 70s line of thinking if it had been "the gubmint" that was doing the surveillance and data gathering.  Yet the episode didn't go that route, possibly because the show was never really paranoid about the power of the government (just disdainful of government bureaucracy).

Edited by Jipijapa
  • Love 2
Link to comment

 What was this show's fascination with Jersey jerks trying to make their bones with the mob?  There was that God awful episode set in Jersey that barely had Rockford in it.  And today there's another pair of Jersey boys (or are they supposed to be the same ones?   At least one of them is played by the same actor) who murder someone trying to make their bones with the mob and framing Rockford for it.  At least Jim's in this one, but with Matthew Blaisdale from Dynasty and Boss Hogg, making it equally surreal and God awful.

Link to comment

Which episode?

 

Jim had stashed the woman the mob goons were after at a horse ranch. Somehow the goons found the place, and Jim spooked the horses towards them to cover his&her escape.

 

But I can't recall the episode title or the name of the stunning actresss... HELP

Link to comment

The rest of the unreleased Rockford TV-movies will finally be coming out on DVD, both as a single edition, and bundled with a 34-DVD complete set of all seasons and all movies.

http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Rockford-Files-MovieCollectionVol2-and-CompleteCollection/20877

Just got the movie collection (and I'm almost done). It was good to see so many returning characters, but I was wondering about "Murders & Misdemeanors." Was Booker originally supposed to Gandolph Fitch? Was Isaac Hayes busy, or too expensive? Edited by revbfc
Link to comment

I got Netflix a couple of weeks ago. I love James Garner in every incarnation and I love Rockford. I watched this show on it's first run, have seen a few episodes here and there throughout the past 40 years. I started binge-watched about 4 days ago, I'm nearly finished with season 3. Yes, the plots are all the same, the fights, the car chases, the tire squeals, but through it all James Garner is the best. The regular supporting cast worked together so well, but some times the "chick of the week" was weak, the actresses were not that great, I realize that many of these women were just getting started and they weren't good and improved as time went on, but for some, they were never good, Stephanie Powers was one I was thinking of. Pretty big star, beautiful, not great actress. I'm also impressed by the lack of stick with boobs, they were beautiful young women, but little surgical alteration.

 

Editing to add that I have been watching for close to four days, it's an easy show to use as background while being on the internet, playing games, chatting on FB, I even have been going to sleep to it, then the next day, start back with whatever show I fell asleep to. Sometimes I pause, sometimes I just let it run.

 

And further, it's interesting how many social issues are addressed in this show that are bigger today: water shortages, corruption, greed, land grabs, oil rights, racism, bigotry. Women's equality was downplayed, but I remember the 70s quite well, it was the norm.

 

Season 6, love Tom Selleck as Lance White! The Hop-A-Long Cassidy Suite of the Gene Autry Motel! With Larry Manetti guest starring with Tom Selleck.

 

I keep editing because I'm still watching. Just watched the two parts, Black Mirror. I was glued. I never watch watch tv, I mostly listen while I do other things. But that was two of the best episodes. Just wow! Loved the relationship with Megan.

 

More, love how the scenery and streets in this show are so different than today. In the street chases, there are no cars on the road, not even the freeways. And the station that Dennis works in is so small especially in comparison to what shows like Major Crimes has. I guess it could be a substation, but it is so dated, the colors of the walls, the interrogations are done in someone's office instead of an interrogation room with the mirror. 

 

The writers did a great job with their dialogue on Rockford's cons, and Mr. Garner does a fantastic job with it, but when there was a story with "mob connections", the dialogue is so clunky and out of date even for the 70s. I didn't realize until I saw an episode with Coop that it was Bo Hopkins! Love Bo Hopkins as much as James Garner. It has been so many years, I just don't remember the shows, it's like a whole new show to me.

 

Season 6, the Gene Autry Suite at the Hop-A-Long Cassidy Hotel! Tom Selleck as Lance White - so perfect, funny and so gorgeous!

Edited by friendperidot
  • Love 1
Link to comment

"The House on Willis Avenue" aka "The Richie Brockelman Backdoor Pilot." ...

 

I understand the Richie Brockelman character had been in an unsold pilot previously to this episode and they gave it another go on the Rockford Files.  I actually really liked this character and loved seeing Jim have a partner who was actually competent, for a change.  And, again, this is an episode I have heard fans complaining about, and now that I've watched it, I wonder if this show was better than some of its fans deserved?  Because this was a pretty good two-parter.   Dennis Dugan was a very likable screen presence and, having Wikipedia'd him, I'm glad to see he went on to a nice career in directing.

 

This was another "socially relevant" episode that had a Point to Make about the legal system/these modern times... this time, surveillance.  But, in a twist for the 1970s, it wasn't about government surveillance - it was about data falling into the hands of private concerns.  RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES!  Er, today's headlines, that is.  How sad that 35 years later we still haven't gotten the message, and in fact, are contentedly living with these very same implications for our privacy and freedom.  Jim, where are you when we need you??  (Well, at least we have Person of Interest nowadays to address these questions... and precious little else on TV...)

 

One interesting thing about this episode was how very clear it was on just how many physical resources computer servers consume.  Jim and Richie investigate innocuous looking homes that are really storing huge generators and A/C equipment to run the servers.  This is an ongoing fact of life, yet nobody really cares about it today.  Everyone fixates on the miniaturization of personal computing, yet in reality, the Internet lives in giant, energy-hogging server complexes that destroy the environment (another point this episode made when they went down to the canyon complex).

 

Sigh, this show was really too good, and perhaps, unappreciated even by some of its own viewers...

 

 

Jim Rockford Warned Us About Google and Facebook Back in 1978

 

Discussion of "The House on Willis Avenue."

 

To me the most unique/prescient things about the episode were that 1) it proposed that private companies, not the government, would be at the forefront of data gathering on citizens; 2) the government would be interested in obtaining this information and 3) the required data servers - the ones in the desert - would be massive and possibly bad for the environment. 

 

The episode also showed Rockford using this computer system for his own investigative purposes, a wee premonition of normal modern-day Internet usage.  (And it also showed Richie Brockleman "Googling" Rockford!)

 

It would have been a much more conventional 70s line of thinking if it had been "the gubmint" that was doing the surveillance and data gathering.  Yet the episode didn't go that route, possibly because the show was never really paranoid about the power of the government (just disdainful of government bureaucracy).

While I can't remember if I saw it live or a summer rerun as a teen in 1978 but throughout the 80s when Rockford was in constant syndication the Richie Brockleman crossovers were the jewel in the entire Rockford Files run for me. And as the years passed this one holds up where the long con episode Never Send a Boy King to Do a Man's Job doesn't hold up as well.

Link to comment

On the topic from the previous page, about the repeated re-use of the same guest star in different roles:

 

A favorite website of mine, Classic TV, has an interview section with character actors who did a lot of TV. The interview with Robert Pine has some information on the subject, specifically the following:

The great thing about Quinn Martin, he had a lot of shows on the air and once you’d done something for him, you never had to go in and read.  Your agent’d call to say, “They have a part on so-and-so.  It’s worth this much.  Do you want to do it?”  And, you could work every year, not like today, where in a series like House, if you’ve done one House you [can’t] work that show again for the eight years it’s on.  Cannon, I’d do every year.  You could do one every year.

 

I did an NCIS the first year – they called and said, “Would you do us a favor?  A guy dropped out, it’s a very small part.”  I said sure, and because of that I’ve never been able to work that show again, and that’s been on a long time.

 

Edited by Rinaldo
  • Love 1
Link to comment

So, been binging out on the Rockford Files on Netflix lately.  I've been noticing a very cool 1950? Ford pick up hot rod in a number of the episodes, in street scenes and on location kind of stuff.  Must belong to cast or crew?  Can be seen a lot in the episode with the stewardess and the coin shop owner/hit man.  Has anybody else noticed or know anything about this?

  • Love 1
Link to comment

I bought the new blu ray set and have been watching it sequentially. Just finished "Only Rock 'n' Roll Will Never Die", which had never been a favorite, but I watched more closely and think it is one of the best. The writing is execellent, but I just always found the rock episodes rather cliche (the other was "Dwarf in a Helium Hat"). Keep Google close for this one - writer, David Chase, throws out one obscure or semi-obsure reference after another: Molly Pitcher, Irene Rich, Rondo Hutton, Cisco Kid, Heathcliff, John Donne, to name a few.

What I really like about it is that more than just about any other episode it has a highly relevant, interesting theme running through it: falling in love with someone you don't know isn't a good idea and should be avoided. As Jim says, it's a matter of giving a lot of power to someone you don't know. And he gives his friend, Eddie, the most right on, accurate, helpful advice you can give to someone as smitten with a stranger as Eddie: "this is going to sound a little weird, but Whitney is an idea in your own head." Perfect advice and should have been an "a-ha!!" moment for Eddie, but he just doesn't even think about it.

The ending continues the theme where Whitney says she tried things with several people, but they just weren't Tim Ritchie. Then she says she tried with Tim Ritchie, but, you guessed it --- it wasn't Tim Ritchie! As Rockford said -- he was just an idea inside her own head! Great writing by Chase.

  • Love 3
Link to comment
On 8/3/2017 at 0:27 PM, riverclown said:

I bought the new blu ray set and have been watching it sequentially. Just finished "Only Rock 'n' Roll Will Never Die", which had never been a favorite, but I watched more closely and think it is one of the best. The writing is execellent, but I just always found the rock episodes rather cliche (the other was "Dwarf in a Helium Hat"). Keep Google close for this one - writer, David Chase, throws out one obscure or semi-obsure reference after another: Molly Pitcher, Irene Rich, Rondo Hutton, Cisco Kid, Heathcliff, John Donne, to name a few.

What I really like about it is that more than just about any other episode it has a highly relevant, interesting theme running through it: falling in love with someone you don't know isn't a good idea and should be avoided. As Jim says, it's a matter of giving a lot of power to someone you don't know. And he gives his friend, Eddie, the most right on, accurate, helpful advice you can give to someone as smitten with a stranger as Eddie: "this is going to sound a little weird, but Whitney is an idea in your own head." Perfect advice and should have been an "a-ha!!" moment for Eddie, but he just doesn't even think about it.

The ending continues the theme where Whitney says she tried things with several people, but they just weren't Tim Ritchie. Then she says she tried with Tim Ritchie, but, you guessed it --- it wasn't Tim Ritchie! As Rockford said -- he was just an idea inside her own head! Great writing by Chase.

I just watched both episodes last night -- and had the same reaction:  a lot better than I remembered.  Dialogue was very good....particularly the exchanges you mentioned and those between Rockford and Tim Richie (the rock star).   I thought all of the actors were excellent...although the character George Loros played was annoying at times.  Then again, I suppose that was the intended result for Eddie's moping, etc.  Tim Richie was hardly perfect....but he certainly was being used by most of the people around him.  

 

I've found that quite a few of the episodes I thought were OK but not remarkable -- on rewatching, turned out to be top notch.

  • Love 2
Link to comment
(edited)

I've been watching the show for the first time by working my way through the box set of the whole series and am really enjoying it.

I think I caught both James Garner and Stuart Margolin breaking character for the first time today, and it seriously cracked me up.

It's in the beginning of "The No-Cut Contract" when Angel is trying to sell Jim on his Secretariat foal paternity scam (which I sincerely hate never got an episode of its own--can only imagine the shenanigans that would ensue.)

Anyway, when Rockford mockingly asks about when he comes in with a British accent and a riding crop, he smiles, and and then Angel smiles and looks down to avoid making eye contact with him when he responds.

It doesn't really make sense for either one of them to smile there, though, and both of their smiles look really genuine, so I think it's Garner genuinely trying his best not to laugh at the absurdity of the situation (or the mental image of himself with a British accent and a riding crop), which caused Margolin to break for just a second before they both recovered and carried on like nothing happened. Nicely played, boys. 

Edited by Zella
  • Like 1
  • Love 2
Link to comment

Season 4 ep. 21

Is without a doubt my favorite episode. It was so far ahead of its time. In todays world Jim would only be safe in Russia. (ie.Snowden)

  • Useful 1
Link to comment
(edited)
1 hour ago, P.J. said:

Season 4 ep. 21

Is without a doubt my favorite episode. It was so far ahead of its time. In todays world Jim would only be safe in Russia. (ie.Snowden)

I haven't gotten that far yet--still mid-way through season 4--but am looking forward to seeing that episode now. As of right now, my favorite is "Chicken Little is a Little Chicken," with "The Drought at Indianhead" a close second.  

Edited by Zella
  • Like 1
Link to comment

I got a notification about this thread today, I haven't seen this show in 4 or so years. It is definitely time for a re-watch. Is it on anywhere. I no longer have Netflix, I have COZI, but I haven't seen this one listed when I do remember to look at the schedule. I need to watch some Rockford!

  • Love 2
Link to comment
(edited)
3 minutes ago, friendperidot said:

I got a notification about this thread today, I haven't seen this show in 4 or so years. It is definitely time for a re-watch. Is it on anywhere. I no longer have Netflix, I have COZI, but I haven't seen this one listed when I do remember to look at the schedule. I need to watch some Rockford!

It's not on Netflix anymore. I haven't seen it on air anywhere where I live, but I've checked the DVDs out of my local library. We have them all. If your library doesn't, you might be able to request them through ILL. 

Edited by Zella
  • Love 1
Link to comment
On 7/19/2019 at 4:31 PM, icemiser69 said:

Probably due to ratings.    I don't get Cozi TV, but that type of thing where a show that is supposed to be on  a digital subchannel is replaced with something else has occurred before.  

ETA:  I am sure the show is still airing on Cozi TV.  Your local tv station (carrier) of that digital sub channel (Cozi TV) is preempting it with their own choice of programming.

When METV has commercials for their programming, they talk about series being carried over most of their stations.   That means the local station that carries METV might replace said programming.

It is a television station (carrier) issue, not a cable company issue.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_subchannel

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cozi_TV

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_over-the-air_television_networks

Heck, some of my digital subchannels have been dropped and the local tv station carrier of those channels picked up different subchannels instead.

A year or two ago, Hallmark Movies  and Mysteries (cable channel), aired Rockford for a couple of weeks and then suddenly dropped it.  Haven't seen it on the air since.

The show is still airing on Cozi TV, but just not our affiliate.

  • Love 1
Link to comment
On 7/19/2019 at 10:31 PM, Zella said:

It's not on Netflix anymore. I haven't seen it on air anywhere where I live

It's on Hulu, but the catch is, for some shows, you must be subscribed to Hulu Live TV to watch them. The Rockford Files is one of those shows.

  • Useful 3
Link to comment
On 9/9/2019 at 12:38 PM, Was-MArsenault said:

The Rockford Files is back on our Cozi TV affiliate!

And now, a year after your post, it's on the free portion of Peacock. So I may just watch some... 

  • Love 1
Link to comment

If Rockford was being done today he’d be taking his shirt off every episode and showing his abs. James Garner didn’t have to do that and he was still the best looking dude in the room. Heck! Even Dennis Becker was a great looking guy and was just a regular guy. LOL!!!

I watched this show every week when it originally aired and even then I knew how good of a show it was. It wasn’t the case where I got older and suddenly realized the quality of the show. Nope! I knew it then and I was only 10 when it first started airing in 1974. I loved Lance. He was hysterical. My Dad even said that Tom Selleck was going to be a star after seeing him as Lance. I think Selleck did 2 episodes. I remember thinking they should spin-off him off but I don’t think Lance would have been a sustainable character without Jim Rockford. I could be wrong though. 

  • Like 1
  • Love 2
Link to comment
On 5/11/2023 at 3:04 PM, Tom Holmberg said:

Finally got GetTV about a month ago, and really enjoying rewatching "Rockford Files".  Besides James Garner, I like seeing all those late 1970s character actors showing up.

 

It's great seeing those actors and thinking,  "They were so YOUNG back then!"

For me, its even more fun watching all the old cars that roamed the roads back in the 70's.

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
9 hours ago, TheLastKidPicked said:

 

It's great seeing those actors and thinking,  "They were so YOUNG back then!"

For me, its even more fun watching all the old cars that roamed the roads back in the 70's.

 

In addition to character actors in their prime and old-ass cars, there's this scene:

the-rockford-files-the-girl-in-the-bay-city-boys-club-jack-in-the-box.thumb.jpeg.cb0cbff0c9d7ea6f0f550a6947a71591.jpeg

Jim Rockford ordering Jack in the Box tacos is why The Rockford Files won the Emmy for Outstanding Drama Series.

  • Like 3
  • LOL 1
Link to comment
5 hours ago, MusubiMyHomie said:

In addition to character actors in their prime and old-ass cars, there's this scene:

the-rockford-files-the-girl-in-the-bay-city-boys-club-jack-in-the-box.thumb.jpeg.cb0cbff0c9d7ea6f0f550a6947a71591.jpeg

Jim Rockford ordering Jack in the Box tacos is why The Rockford Files won the Emmy for Outstanding Drama Series.

Being from Chicago, we can no longer get Jack in the Box tacos, but 7/11 makes a good copy.

14 hours ago, TheLastKidPicked said:

 

It's great seeing those actors and thinking,  "They were so YOUNG back then!"

For me, its even more fun watching all the old cars that roamed the roads back in the 70's.

 

It's interesting how many of the peripheral characters are given foreign cars.  Though the thugs usually are driving Ford LTDs or similar big four door sedans.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
6 hours ago, Tom Holmberg said:

It's interesting how many of the peripheral characters are given foreign cars.  Though the thugs usually are driving Ford LTDs or similar big four door sedans.

I still remember the day our Economics teacher told us to watch Charlie's Angels to look for a pattern.  Ford sponsored the show, and the bad guys drove Chevys.

 

  • Like 1
  • Useful 1
  • LOL 2
Link to comment
17 hours ago, TheLastKidPicked said:

I still remember the day our Economics teacher told us to watch Charlie's Angels to look for a pattern.  Ford sponsored the show, and the bad guys drove Chevys.

 

The other thing I noticed is that although Rockford's car was shot up, crashed, blown up, etc., the next week he was still driving it.  I guess he had a big body repair budget (probably why he had to live in a trailer).

  • LOL 1
Link to comment

Speaking of Jim's trailer, when you see it from the outside, where are the hook ups for electricity, water, and sewer? The outside is so beat up. The inside was nice enough.

They must have had quite the budget for cars. All the wrecks and explosions made for a fun show.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
5 hours ago, chessiegal said:

Speaking of Jim's trailer, when you see it from the outside, where are the hook ups for electricity, water, and sewer? The outside is so beat up. The inside was nice enough.

And it was always bigger on the inside than the outside. That could only mean one thing: Jim's trailer is a TARDIS.

But because this is Rockford we're talking about here, the TARDIS he wound up with can't go anywhere anymore.

Link to comment
(edited)
On 5/16/2023 at 12:37 PM, TheLastKidPicked said:

I still remember the day our Economics teacher told us to watch Charlie's Angels to look for a pattern.  Ford sponsored the show, and the bad guys drove Chevys.

 

The same thing happened in the first few years of the Hawaii 5-0 reboot after the pilot where Danno had a Mustang. HPD drove Chevys and our heroes a Camero and other GM products when an antagonistic Internal Affairs guy showed up he was in the cop car of that generation  the Ford Crown Victoria. I guess after the contract was up a character traded in his motorcycle for a vintage Mustang

 

On 5/16/2023 at 6:07 AM, Tom Holmberg said:

Being from Chicago, we can no longer get Jack in the Box tacos, but 7/11 makes a good copy.

I had no ideal that was a regional menu item.

 

On 10/24/2015 at 1:54 PM, friendperidot said:

More, love how the scenery and streets in this show are so different than today. In the street chases, there are no cars on the road, not even the freeways. And the station that Dennis works in is so small especially in comparison to what shows like Major Crimes has. I guess it could be a substation, but it is so dated, the colors of the walls, the interrogations are done in someone's office instead of an interrogation room with the mirror. 

The Closer/Major Crimes worked out of downtown LA in Parker Center and then the new police headquarters building when the real LAPD moved over. And they had a separate floor from the rest of Robbery Homicide Division instead of being in a small office space as part of them. Sometimes it seemed as if Sergeant Becker worked out of a local divisional detective squad under Lieutenant Chapman like Bosch was mostly in Hollywood Divisions homicide cramp squad room and at others, maybe after Dennis' promotion at what should have been downtown at Parker Center in the Robbery Homicide Division.

Back then that same two story police building exterior was being used for Starsky and Hutch, TJ Hooker and later the first seasons of Hunter along with many more shows.

Edited by Raja
Link to comment
9 hours ago, Raja said:

had no ideal that was a regional menu item.

We used to have Jack in the Box, but the disappeared in the late 1970s I believe.  I was watching Rockford yesterday and he went into a Jack in the Box drive-thru while being chased by thugs (and ordered a taco).

  • Love 1
Link to comment

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...