Gannon and Friday visit a self-described guru who advocates mind-expansion through drugs. Brother William is suspected of giving or selling LSD to minors. The detectives debate their ideas o... Read allGannon and Friday visit a self-described guru who advocates mind-expansion through drugs. Brother William is suspected of giving or selling LSD to minors. The detectives debate their ideas of drug use with the suspect.Gannon and Friday visit a self-described guru who advocates mind-expansion through drugs. Brother William is suspected of giving or selling LSD to minors. The detectives debate their ideas of drug use with the suspect.
George Fenneman
- Main Title Announcer
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
John Stephenson
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
Dragnet 1967: Season 2, Episode 18 The Big Prophet (11 Jan. 1968) I thought this did a pretty darn good job depicting effects of mind altering drugs versus the mindset of those who push them. I've been cleaning up after them for decades in my world. The argument that it was boring is so shallow. It was only a half hour! Taking a break from the nonsense on most shows, especially now, to ground oneself in the realities that have spoiled so much for so long is no great sacrifice. How can you call it fictionalized planktonrules? Most everything else you had to say was inspired. I just wish you hadn't cheapened it with your boring fiction declaration. The message was excellent then as it still is now and it needs repeating any way possible until gullible souls allow it to penetrate.
Amazing amount of dialog in the 22 minute show. With Webb, even Morgan's character finally getting a chance to give uninterrupted speech, this episode is unique if one considers how heavy the script weighed in - literally. Liam Sullivan's "Timothy Leary" like character preaches back to the usual one-sided diatribe from Webb, stating that the young he is promoting will take over and abolish your laws, your lifestyles. Liam Sullivan's character quite prophetic - could be a script from today's far-left movement.
I give this ten stars as a time capsule for what >50 crowd must have believed about the sixties. While the script focuses on drugs, the show essentially indicts the entire counterculture. However, thanks to that force of gravity known as reality, the program betrays its pro-establishment stance when you think through what's actually going on. Let me get this straight: the guru is a world celebrity who's making filthy lucre from his records, books and speeches, but sells penny ante drugs to the local school kids. The guru has an advanced education, but gets caught in the simplest logical errors made by Friday and Gannon. Finally, would beat cops and a Timothy Leary character waste twenty-three minutes arguing about LSD? Doubtful.
1968 debate. Police VS. Timothy Leary. Topic: Drugs.
One of the most boring episodes with the pros and cons of drug use from both sides.
But in 1968,compared to today, they didn't know all about LSD and the effects. So I can see why they would have a debate episode back then.
I would think that the police had better things to do. I don't believe this is what the captain wanted from them when they visited the dealer. A debate lasting almost a half hour with zero results. Once they were invited inside, they didn't have a warrant but, if anything illegal was in plain sight...they could make an arrest. But that never happened.
The end of the show, cops break the law by littering.
You could have a drinking game with this show.... Spot anything orange, your friends have to do a shot.
One of the most boring episodes with the pros and cons of drug use from both sides.
But in 1968,compared to today, they didn't know all about LSD and the effects. So I can see why they would have a debate episode back then.
I would think that the police had better things to do. I don't believe this is what the captain wanted from them when they visited the dealer. A debate lasting almost a half hour with zero results. Once they were invited inside, they didn't have a warrant but, if anything illegal was in plain sight...they could make an arrest. But that never happened.
The end of the show, cops break the law by littering.
You could have a drinking game with this show.... Spot anything orange, your friends have to do a shot.
This was my personal favorite of the entire series. The LAPD's Dynamic Duo engages in an episode-long debate with a Timothy Leary knockoff (beautifully played by Star Trek vet Liam Sullivan, surrounded by great 60s drug props) about the pros and cons of drugs and the laws that deal with them. What makes this episode unusual was that both sides score points ("No law that tells me what to do with my body on my land is a good law!") and Gannon actually scores several of them himself instead of playing his usual Tontoesque role. David Vowell's scripts were always among the best of the lot, but he outdoes himself with this one. Check it out.
Did you know
- TriviaAbout 15 minutes in, the prophet (Liam Sullivan) speaks the words: "I am the new way to go; I am the way of the future". Those became the first lyrics in the song "After the Flesh" by My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult for The Crow (1994) soundtrack.
- GoofsAs Gannon and Friday are leaving the location after talking to the suspect, Gannon is carrying a flyer in his hand advertising what the suspect is offering to those who are interested and sharing some of his teachings. As the two officers stop at the curb and converse briefly, Gannon wads up the flyer and tosses it into the gutter. The flyer is seen landing in a small stream of water and floating away. Friday says nothing to him as they head to the car. This would be unusual behavior for two seasoned officers, especially detectives, since this is obviously blatant and intentional littering, by someone sworn to uphold the law, even though it would be a misdemeanor.
Details
- Runtime
- 30m
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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