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Dragnet 1967
S3.E1
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IMDbPro

Public Affairs: DR-07

  • Episode aired Sep 19, 1968
  • TV-G
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
185
YOUR RATING
Anthony Eisley in Dragnet 1967 (1967)
CrimeDramaMystery

A television show asks the question - who needs the police? Friday and Gannon are invited to sit on the panel to defend the police department from others that think the police are not needed... Read allA television show asks the question - who needs the police? Friday and Gannon are invited to sit on the panel to defend the police department from others that think the police are not needed.A television show asks the question - who needs the police? Friday and Gannon are invited to sit on the panel to defend the police department from others that think the police are not needed.

  • Director
    • Jack Webb
  • Writers
    • Burt Prelutsky
    • Jack Webb
  • Stars
    • Jack Webb
    • Harry Morgan
    • Anthony Eisley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    185
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Webb
    • Writers
      • Burt Prelutsky
      • Jack Webb
    • Stars
      • Jack Webb
      • Harry Morgan
      • Anthony Eisley
    • 8User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos23

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    Top cast15

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    Jack Webb
    Jack Webb
    • Sergeant Joe Friday
    Harry Morgan
    Harry Morgan
    • Officer Bill Gannon
    Anthony Eisley
    Anthony Eisley
    • Chuck Bligh
    Stacy Harris
    Stacy Harris
    • Tom Higgins
    Howard Hesseman
    Howard Hesseman
    • Jesse Chaplin
    • (as Don Sturdy)
    Dick Anthony Williams
    Dick Anthony Williams
    • Mondo Mabamba
    • (as Dick Williams)
    Dennis McCarthy
    Dennis McCarthy
    • Sgt. Dan Cooke
    Don Ross
    Don Ross
    • Monty Warren
    Charles Brewer
    • Charles Varco
    Sidney Clute
    Sidney Clute
    • Harry Wilson
    Lou Wagner
    Lou Wagner
    • John Dietz
    Penny Gaston
    • Diane Newcombe
    Speedy Zapata
    • Jay Herrera
    Chuck Bowman
    Chuck Bowman
    • Announcer
    Edwin Rochelle
    Edwin Rochelle
    • Stagehand
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jack Webb
    • Writers
      • Burt Prelutsky
      • Jack Webb
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    7.3185
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    Featured reviews

    8WillisRohrback

    Jack Webb's Corrupting Influence

    I listen to a lot of Old Time Radio and watch a lot of Old Time TV, so one thing that's interesting to me is the roles played on Dragnet by Stacy Harris and Anthony Eisley. On radio, Stacy Harris was stalwart FBI agent Jim Taylor on the program "This Is Your FBI"—brave, determined, incorruptible and fearless. On TV, Anthony Eisley was Tracy Steele, hero private detective on the show "Hawaiian Eye", yet on Dragnet they always played bad guys or, at the least, heels.

    In this one, I think the only show on which both were featured, they were were more heel than bad guy—Eisley, as a smarmy pinko TV host and Harris a smarmy pinko college professor.

    I remember seeing this episode when I was a kid and thinking it was funny then, and I still think it's funny. Biggest laugh, when Mondo Mabamba calls Joe Friday "Mr. Charlie". I wonder if this was real ghetto slang or if the writers made it up for the show. That line about the police being "Just like them Nazzies only you don't dress as sharp" has been in my personal joke insult arsenal for 40 years, especially since I have a lot of police in my family. I also loved the housewife who came up to the stand to say she supported the police and thought they were doing a great job. I liked her angry reaction when she was hooted down by the biased audience.

    I agree with most viewers that in the 3rd season of this version of Dragnet there was a little too much of the Public Affairs stuff, but this was probably the most amusing of that type of program. Especially telling was the portrayal of a particularly odious type of white lefty who preens and postures and parades around with his concern about "blacks and Mexicans and minorities" as a way of claiming a higher moral character than the rest of his fellow whities. Call it an early version of the Ken Burns disease.
    UNOhwen

    Here comes the fuzz...

    Jack - and Bill - are on a public affairs show. They're their to do LAPD PR against 'Doctor Johhny Fever' AKA Howard Hesseman, and another debater.

    The real fun is when the floor is opened up to the audience.

    Then, we get the whole gamut; from the 'angry guy' who warns his gun - to use against an 'invading army,' Lou 'J5 on LOST IN SPACE' Wagner, as 'Johnny Dietz, the kid who wants to smoke some grass, and drop acid, to my favourite; 'Mondo Mbamba' who's there to tell 'honky's' what they can put all that bull about democracy.'

    I'm writing this the day after it was announced Harry Morgan - Ofcr Bill Gannon passed away - marking the end of our link to this wonderful(ly) wacky show.

    I love this episode, it's one of the standouts in my mind.

    In honour of Bill, Joe, and the rest of the Dragnet gang R.I.P., and thanks for the memories
    10shaunabphillips

    Excellent

    Joe is asked to come to a show with the title "The Fuzz: Who Needs Them" "Johnny Fever" is a hippie on the "We don't need them" side. Friday & Gannon are defending the police. Joe, in his typical manner, burns the butt of the opposition with his biting one-liners. He is brilliant as he takes on race relations, police brutality, and even the Vietnam war. Police officers have a job that isn't easy. Just like we nurses, the police make decisions that are life or death. He makes a lot of intellectual points. I don't think this is a pointless episode. I think all of our citizens could benefit from what Joe Friday and Bill Gannon have to say on this subject. (And what IDIOTS the uninformed look like)
    1jbacks3

    Imagine Joe Friday on the Morton Downey Show...

    Dragnet fans tend to avoid 2 types of shows: 1) the ones when Gannon invites Joe home and 2) Joe working daywatch out of Public Affairs. This, the latter, allows Jack Webb to go off on his personal (and now, to be polite, quaint) right wing attack agendas. To his credit he makes no bones about where he stands on drugs, hippies and even here gets a plug in for the Vietnam War, normally a topic he steadfastly avoided. In this episode he conjures up a hippie version of 'Our Gang' that features every caricature of 1960's counter-culture Webb despised: the liberal college professor (in the form of Mark VII regular Stacy Harris--- Webb's best friend in his perosnal life), the black militant, the hippie stoner journalist (hey that's WKRP's Howard Hessman! He must've left Webb unimpressed since he never made any encore appearances). Webb's favorite weirdo teenager Mickey Sholdar is on hand to voice his support for marijuana. This now plays like a bad SNL skit. "It was Wednesday, August 4th... we were working daywatch out of Robbery Division..." except the boys get pulled for public affairs duty in order to appear on a TV show called "Speak Your Mind"... hosted by an emcee who wears judge's robes replete with a peace medallion and love beads (for the uninformed, think Mardi Gras accessories). Gasp in awe over the threads, about the police being continually referred to as "the fuzz" and consider the fact that this show was produced around the same time as the 1968 Democratic Convention riots in Chicago and shortly after both the MLK and RFK assassinations. One interesting vignette: there is a right wing anti-gun registration loudmouth audience member; Webb's retort flies directly in the face of the current NRA platform (to be fair, he could be just as tough on police corruption and police procedural violations as vile unwashed hippie scum). Weird yet dull episode... really only of interest to anyone trying to understand the no-gray area mind of Jack Webb.
    2planktonrules

    Ugghh!

    While I love "Dragnet" and think it's a true classic, every so often they made an episode that just made me shudder with horror. "Public Affairs-DR-07" is clearly one of them. Instead of seeing Friday and Gannon stopping crimes or doing some investigating, here they are doing an on-air debate with a bunch of jerks--a battle of the hippies versus squares. And the problems are many with this bizarre show. It is so very, very talky. In addition, the people all seem like caricatures--not real people. On one side, they have the egg-head professor, hippie (Howard Hesseman) and obnoxious host and on the other, the two officers. And the audience is almost like one you'd see on "The Jerry Springer Show" or the old "Morton Downey Show". There are the gun enthusiasts, the angry Black Panther-like guy with an afro and a dashiki, the Mexican as well as the screaming idiots. It makes no sense why anyone would go on such a show that is so incredibly one-sided and stupid. Overall, a good episode to skip...or just to pretend never occurred in the first place. Yuck.

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    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Joe Friday and Bill Gannon arrive at the TV station and the makeup guy looks them over, Bill mentions to Joe that he's 45 years old. The character he played may have been only 45, but Harry Morgan was 53 years old at the time.
    • Goofs
      At one point, Bligh calls Friday and Gannon detectives. They aren't detectives. They are plain clothes officers. If they were detectives, their titles would be Detective Sgt. Friday and Detective Gannon, instead of Sgt. Friday and Officer Gannon.
    • Quotes

      Mondo Mabamba: Answer me this. Let one of you blue cats catch it and you all get excited. You really drop everything to go after a cop killer, don't you?

      Sergeant Joe Friday: You bet we do, but not just because he killed a friend of ours. Now you figure it. If a man shoots down an armed officer, do you think he'd hesitate to shoot down an unarmed citizen?

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 19, 1968 (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Mark VII Ltd.
      • Dragnet Productions
      • Universal Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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