Happy Monday, good people. Let’s get right to the music. Neil Young’s “Heart of Gold” was recorded in 1971 and released in 1972. It is, to date, Young’s only #1 single on the Billboard charts. Enjoy an excellent live performance, recorded for the BBC in ’71, below.
Seeing as how we’re pushing into late October let’s look at a slightly spooky spot. Click below to enjoy the ABC intro for the The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries. The show ran from January’77 to January ’79 and starred Shaun Cassidy and Parker Stevenson as the Hardy Boys and Pamela Sue Martin as Nancy Drew. Enjoy “An adventure into suspense!”
Wonderbug ran for 22 episodes as 15 minute segments during the first two seasons (’76-’78) of The Krofft Supershow. The car was a beat up old dune buggy (known as “Schlepcar”) which transformed into a shiny “Wonderbug” when its magic horn was used. Barry, C.C and Susan were the fun-lovin’ “youngsters” who drove around outwitting the bad guys.
Enjoy the tap-along intro (with a theme song co-written by The Osmonds) below.
Disneyland’s Space Mountain ride opened in 1977 and blew our little childhood minds. The opening was attended by numerous astronauts, including Sen. John Glenn and Alan Shepard, and helped Disneyland set an attendance record over the long Memorial Day weekend. The ride was, and still is, fast and fantastic. The lines, however, were incredibly long for years after launch. I could barely stand to wait in them but I did. Two hours wait for a two minute, 45 second trip.
Catch a Space Mountain TV spot from 1977 below.
If you’d like you can also grab a look at a Disneyland Thunder Mountain spot we posted a few days back.
In September of 1975 Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon was released. The film garnered excellent reviews and was based on a LIFE Magazine article describing a Brooklyn bank robbery in 1972. Al Pacino starred in the film as Sonny and John Cazale co-starred in the role of Sal. Dog Day Afternoon won the Academy Award for “Writing – Original Screenplay” for Frank Pierson.
Pacino and Cazale had appeared together a few years earlier in both The Godfather and The Godfather Part II. Sadly, John Cazale died (at age 42, from cancer) in 1978.
Happy Monday, lads & lasses. Open your ears and relax your minds – it’s time for a spot o’ Queen to get the week started with a kick! Hit the clicker below to witness Queen performing “Killer Queen” on European TV in 1974. “Killer Queen” appeared on the Sheer Heart Attack L.P and hit #12 on the US Billboard charts (their first top 20 showing) and #2 in the U.K.
*Note: The beginning of the song is clipped but the overall quality is decent, so we’ll take what we can get.*





