"Route 66" Soda Pop and Paper Flags (TV Episode 1963) Poster

(TV Series)

(1963)

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3/10
Disappointing Episode
rmj14210 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This may well be the worst episode of this series that I've seen. It wasted a great cast on a silly plot.

Tod and Linc are passing through a small town when they stop to fill up with gas and hamburgers. Tod gets into a fracas defending The Tramp (played by Chester "Boston Blackie" Morris) who has been set upon by three teenage punks. When the cops arrive the kids try to lie their way out of it but a witness (after prompting by Honest Citizen played by Frank Overton) lays the blame where it belongs. Meanwhile Linc has an encounter with some kids one of whom (played very well by Tommy "Flipper" Norden)wants a ride in the Vette.

They decide to hang around town a while and take jobs at a rubber processing plant ran by the Honest Citizen. Tod works in the plant while Linc goes on the road as a salesman. In the most bizarre side plot, Linc is taken to a bar by Sleazy Businessman (played to weird perfection by a young Tom Bosley) who plans to use Linc as Stud Honey to attract the female flies.

The main plot, such as it is, has two of the kids come down with sleeping sickness. Immediately the town cop (played as both Good Cop and Bad Cop by Joe Campanella) rounds up all strangers which includes Tod, the tramp, and a truck driver played to annoying perfection by Bruce Glover.

The Town Doctor (played by a decidedly pre-Hawkeye Alan Alda) finds that The Bum has the sickness in his blood so naturally the Town Blowhard (ably played by the always effervescent Clifton James) and his gang wants to hang him or beat him up or something.

At the end we learn that the real culprit is a dog that was imported from Texas with the ticks attached that carry the sickness.

This is a very lame series entry. None of it makes much sense. The Tramp had no interaction with the kids (he certainly didn't bite them) so how could he have infected them? Given that its a disease spread by ticks, why would a human be suspected? Great cast, but a lousy story to end Season Three with.
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5/24/63 "Soda Pop and Paper Flags"
schappe11 January 2016
The third season ends with one of the better episodes. Chester Morris, who got his start in the silents and was still working in 60's TV forty years later, plays a hobo whom Tod befriends. Later, during epidemic of a rare illness previously found in Texas, where both the hobo and Todd have been, they become the leading suspects. (Linc is away trying to be a salesman in an irrelevant side story with Tom Bosley as a businessman who would rather party it up than get anything done.) Several children have become deathly ill.

Clifton James plays the leader of a gang that wants to take some kind of revenge on them. Morris sees this as an extension of how outsiders are treated in every town he's been in. Tod remembers being in a private school when he was a kid where an 'outsider' carried a disease that killed a friend. He and others harassed the kid so much he killed himself. Frank Overton plays the town's top businessman who intervenes to protect the outsiders, despite the fact that his son is one of the sick ones. Alan Alda plays a doctor, a decade before MASH.

Both this and the previous episodes cover the same territory: a small town suspicious of outsiders, gossip and jumping to conclusions. I like the plot of this one better and Morris is very good as the decent by cynical hobo. It's also one of Marty Milner's better performances.
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Patchwork Storyline
dougdoepke10 May 2016
The screenplay for this 60-minutes comes across like a patchwork with the seams showing. The real plot line doesn't kick in until the last half when a possible epidemic of sleeping sickness surfaces. The first half meanders around as the guys take jobs in a rubber factory, while Tod puts up with a sullen hobo (Morris) and Linc sells water bags. Unfortunately, there's no female eye candy, just a bunch of ugly guys. Then too, it took me awhile to recognize a young Alan Alda as the doctor, of all things. On the plus side are a few looks at the Missouri location neighborhoods, always a draw for viewers like me. All in all, however, there's little to recommend, except maybe for series favorite Frank Overton (4 episodes) as the company boss.
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