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SUPERMAN!! MYTHBUSTERS!! GOLDEN AGE OF TELEVISION!! SARAH SILVERMAN!! SOPRANOS Blu!! HercVault!!

I am – Hercules!!

Superman: The Complete Animated Series is not only the best of the many animated series featuring the Man of Steel, I deem it better than any live-actor TV series about the character. At $36.99 for all 54 episodes, it averages out to less than $9.25 per season.

For $34.99, The Golden Age of Television: Criterion Collection provides kinescopes of eight live productions: * “Marty” (1953) Written by Paddy Chayefsky (“The Americanization of Emily,” “The Hospital,” “Network,” “Altered States”) for NBC’s “Goodyear Television Playhouse.” A homely Bronx butcher contemplates a romance with a schoolteacher against the advice of his friends and live-in mother. With Rod Steiger (“On The Waterfront,” “The Pawnbroker,” “In The Heat of the Night”) and Nancy Marchand (“Lou Grant,” “The Sopranos”). * “Patterns” (1955) Written by Rod Serling (“Twilight Zone,” “Planet of the Apes”) for ABC’s “United States Steel Hour.” A young exec thinks he sees his future in a bullied, aging middle-manager. With Richard Kiley (“Blackboard Jungle”), Ed Begley (“12 Angry Men,” “Inherit The Wind”) and Everett Sloane (“Citizen Kane”). * “No Time for Sergeants” (1955) Adapted by novelist/playwright Ira Levin (“Rosemary’s Baby,” “The Stepford Wives,” “Deathtrap”) from the novel by Mac Hyman for ABC’s “United States Steel Hour.” A country boy finds himself contending with more worldly superiors after he’s drafted into the Army Air Corps during World War II. Andy Griffith (“The Andy Griffith Show”) made his first television appearance here opposite Harry Clark (“The Phil Silvers Show”). * “A Wind from the South” (1955) Written by James Costigan (“The Hunger,” “Mr. North”) for CBS’ “United States Steel Hour.” An Irish country innkeeper falls for a troubled tourist. With Julie Harris (“East of Eden,” “The Haunting”), Donald Woods (“Tammy”) and Merv Griffin. * “Requiem for a Heavyweight” (1956) Written by Serling for CBS’ “Playhouse 90.” A slow-witted fighter tries to figure out what to do with himself after his boxing career ends. With Jack Palance (“Shane,” “The Professionals,” “City Slickers”), Keenan Wynn (“Dr. Strangelove,” “Herbie Rides Again”) and Ed Wynn (“Mary Poppins”). * “Bang the Drum Slowly” (1956) Adapted by Arnold Schulman (“Goodbye, Columbus,” “A Chorus Line,” “Tucker: A Man and His Dream”) from the novel by Mark Harris for CBS’ “United States Steel Hour.” A star pitcher in the major leagues tries to help his terminally ill bumpkin catcher get through one last season. With Paul Newman (“Exodus,” “Road To Perdition”), Albert Salmi (“Daniel Boone,” “Petrocelli”) and George Peppard (“Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” “Banacek,” “The A-Team”). * “The Comedian” (1957) Written by Serling for CBS’ “Playhouse 90.” An ill-behaved TV star makes life hell for his brother, wife and writer. With Mickey Rooney (“Boys Town,” “Night at the Museum”), Mel Torme (“Land of No Return”), Kim Hunter (“A Steetcar Named Desire,” “Planet of the Apes”) and Edmund O'Brien (“White Heat,” “The Wild Bunch”). “Days of Wine and Roses” (1958) Written by J.P. Miller (“Helter Skelter”) for CBS’ “Playhouse 90.” An ad exec and a secretary fall in love with each other and too much cheap liquor. With Cliff Robertson (“Gidget,” “Charly,” “Spider-Man”) and Piper Laurie (“The Hustler,” “Carrie,” “Twin Peaks”). Extras include: * Commentaries by directors John Frankenheimer, Delbert Mann, Ralph Nelson, and Daniel Petrie. * Interviews with Frankenheimer, Griffith, Harris, Hunter, Kiley, Laurie, Marchand, Palance, Robertson, Rooney, Steiger, Torme and Carol Serling. * A booklet featuring an essay and liner notes on each program by Paley Center curator Ron Simon.

In 1965 you could you sell a laughtrack sitcom to CBS depicting Nazis as harmless nincompoops! Extras on Hogan's Heroes: The Complete Series: * An alternate, extended version of the series’ original pilot (33:30) It’s in black and white, and it’s introduced by CBS sitcom stars Fred MacMurray (“My Three Sons”) and Bob Denver and Alan Hale (in costume from “Gilligan’s Island”). * A clip from CBS’ 1965 fall preview show “Seven Wonderful Nights” (5:33) Essentially a very lengthy promo utilizing a big hunk of the show’s pilot. * Audio of star Bob Crane’s band playing the theme from the show (2:36). Crane plays the drums. * Mad Magazine parody “Hokum’s Heroes.” It eventually devolves into a spinoff called “Hochman’s Heroes,” an even more popular show about a bunch of fun-loving Jews awaiting execution at Buchenwald! * Richard Dawson Remembers The Early Days (15:11) Learn the half-American Dawson, now 77 and looking a lot like Merv Griffin, auditioned for the role of Hogan. Learn Dawson did a Liverpool accent in the original pilot but looped the lines with a Cockney accent following a conversation with a displeased CBS exec. Learn Dawson’s sons loved “Hogan’s Heroes” when they were kids. Learn Dawson was a big Jack Benny fan. * Richard Dawson Remembers The Cast (16:25) Learn Werner Klemperer’s father Otto was a famous orchestra conductor. Learn Larry Hovis became Dawson’s best friend. Learn Robert Clary (birth name: Robert Max Widerman) was interned by the Nazis at Dachau. Learn the actors who played Klink, Schultz and Burkhalter were, like Clary, Jews. 1992’s “Auto Focus,” in which Dawson was portrayed by Scottish “American Dreams” regular Micahel Rodgers, goes undiscussed. * Richard Dawson Remembers Fond Memories (13:02) Learn John Banner liked to sleep a lot between shots. Learn that the entire cast bought a racehorse together. Learn Dawson’s favorite episode was the one with the chimp dressed as LeBeau. * A conversation with series co-creator Albert S. Ruddy (11:55). Learn the first draft of the “Hogan’s Heroes” pilot was set in a white-collar American prison where the prisoners were in charge, but no advertiser wanted to sponsor a sitcom about prison. Learn that Ruddy and his friends created the show with zero writing experience. Learn William S. Paley told his CBS underlings that he found the idea of portraying Nazis as comic characters “totally reprehensible.” Learn that following “Hogan’s” success, Ruddy was invited to a meeting with Robert Evans and Peter Bart at Paramount, where he pitched his 15-page treatment for 1974’s “The Longest Yard” and his idea for “Little Fauss and Big Halsy,” and walked away with a three-picture deal. Learn the writers of “Stalag 17” sued CBS over “Hogan’s” while Ruddy was in New York producing “The Godfather.” * Alternative season-one episode from Germany, in German with English subtitles (25:29) with an introduction (4:29) by Ruddy. Ruddy explains that no German broadcasters wanted to buy the show despite its popularity in other foreign markets until somebody decided to give the show a new German dialogue that sometimes departed dramatically from the original English-language script. The reworked show, which joked about such contemporary matters as the Berlin Wall, became a big hit in the fatherland. * “Hollywood Palace” clip featuring the cast (4:50). Series owner Bing Crosby does the introduction. Schultz and Klink chase the five main POWs to Hollywood and make topical jokes involving hippies and “F-Troop.” * Black and white Footage of the 1968 “outstanding supporting actor in a comedy series” Emmy victory for Werner Klemperer (1:28) Klemperer does not thank Don Knotts for leaving “The Andy Griffith Show.” Receiving the ’68 award, presented by Steve Allen, Klemperer thanks the show’s five writers by name. * Color footage of the 1969 “outstanding supporting actor” (I guess the categories for comedy and drama were combined that year?) Emmy victory for Werner Klemperer (1:50) Klemperer’s competition here was Greg Morris (for “Mission: Impossible”) and Leonard Nimoy (for “Star Trek”). Receiving the ’69 award, presented by Goldie Hawn and Knotts, Klemperer thanks producer-director Edward Feldman and all his castmates by name. Interestingly, the Emmys were apparently held that year simultaneously in venues in Los Angeles (where Hawn and Knotts were presenting) and New York (where Klemperer accepted).

Herc’s Popular Pricing Pantry

TV Sets On Sale All Day!! $8.99 The Mary Tyler Moore Show $12.49 Boston Legal $12.49 The Simpsons $12.49 The X-Files $13.99 The Venture Bros. $14.99 Gilmore Girls $14.99 Smallville $14.99 Studio 60 $14.99 Supernatural $15.99 Big Bang Theory $17.99 The West Wing $19.99 Chuck $19.99 How I Met Your Mother $19.99 24 $25.99 Looney Tunes Golden Collection $43.99 Monty Python: The Complete Series $124.99 Twilight Zone: The Complete Series $214.99 Star Trek TNG: The Complete Series Loads More!!

Every season of “Friends” just fell to $14.99 each!!

An extra-filled “definitive edition” season of the “Twilight Zone” sold two weeks ago for $69.99. At the moment they can be had for $35.99 each!! These went for more than $100/season not too long ago.

Eleven months ago a season of “Seinfeld” sold for $38.99. Last month it sold for $27.99. Perhaps to commemorate the reunion on “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” all seasons of “Seinfeld” are momentarily $14.99 each!!

Last month the first season of “The Larry Sanders Show,” one of the two funniest live-action sitcoms ever forged, was $25.49. It’s momentarily at its lowest price ever: $16.99!!



TV-on-Disc Calendar

Last Week Andy Barker, P.I.: The Complete Series Ben 10 Alien Force Vol. 5 Drawn Together: The Complete Series Elvis Costello: Spectacle 1.x Elvis Costello: Spectacle 1.x (Blu-ray) Farscape 1.x Farscape 2.x Farscape 3.x Farscape 4.x Farscape: The Complete Series It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia: A Very Sunny Christmas It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia: A Very Sunny Christmas (Blu-ray) The Little Couple 1.x Monk: Best Of Patton 360 1.x Rome: The Complete Series Rome: The Complete Series (Blu-ray) Scrubs 8.x (Blu-ray) 7th Heaven 9.x Smurfs Vol. 3 Smurfs Vol. 1-3 The Sopranos: The Complete Series Spectacular Spider-Man Vol. 5 7th Heaven 9.x 7th Heaven: 9-Season Pack Star Trek (2009) Star Trek (2009): Two-Disc Star Trek (2009) (Blu-ray) Star Trek Limited Edition Replica Gift Set Star Trek: Best Of Vol. 2 Star Trek The Next Generation: Best Of Vol. 2 Wagon Train 1.x
This Week

Alfred Hitchcock Presents 4.x

Beverly Hills 90210 8.x

Beverly Hills 90210 8-Season Pack

Daniel Boone: The Best of Mingo

Daniel Boone: Fess' Favorites

The Golden Age of Television: Criterion Collection

Hogan's Heroes: The Complete Series

The Jerry Lewis Show Collection

Laredo: The Complete Series

Law & Order: Criminal Intent 4.x

Life On Mars (UK) 2.x

Melrose Place 5.x Vol. 2

Melrose Place 5-Season Pack

Russia's War: The Complete Miniseries

Sopranos 1.x (Blu-ray)

The Spike Jones Show: Best Of Stories From The Vaults 2.x Stories From The Vaults 2.x (Blu-ray)

Superman: The Complete Animated Series Three Sheets 4.x
Next Week

Better Off Ted 1.x The Donna Reed Show 3.x Interpol Investigates 1.x Mental 1.x

Mystery Science Theater 3000 XVI Pale Force: The Complete Series

Saturday Night Live 5.x
December 8 Dhani Tackles the Globe 1.x Friday: The Complete Animated Series The Fugitive 3.x Vol. 2 Get Smart 5.x The Judy Garland Show Collection Lost 5.x Lost 5.x (Blu-ray)

Lost: The Complete Fifth Season Dharma Initiation Kit Lost: The Complete Fifth Season Dharma Initiation Kit (Blu-ray) Lost 1.x-5.x Lost 1.x-5.x (Blu-ray) McLeod's Daughters: The Pilot Perry Mason 4.x Vol. 2 Perry Mason: Four Season Pack Rescue Me 5.x Vol. 2 SpongeBob SquarePants 6.x Vol. 1
December 15 Cake Boss Criss Angel Mindfreak: The Complete Series Ice Road Truckers 3.x

The Paper Chase 2.x Robot Chicken 4.x The Sherlock Holmes Collection The Sherlock Holmes Collection

Star Trek 3.x (Blu-ray)

Star Trek: The Complete Series (Blu-ray) The Tudors 3.x
December 22 Family Guy Presents: Something Something Something Darkside Family Guy Presents: Something Something Something Darkside (Blu-ray) Family Guy Star Wars Parody Two-Pack Kyle XY 3.x The Secret Life of An American Teenage 3.x Taxi 5.x

Taxi: The Complete Series
December 29 Glee Vol. 1 Time Warp 2.x United States of Tara 1.x Whale Wars 2.x
January 5

Battlestar Galactica 1.x (Blu-ray) Big Love 3.x Brava Italia Burn Notice 1.x/2.x Chuck 2.x Chuck 2.x (Blu-ray) Doctor Who: The Keys of Marinus Doctor Who: Twin Dilemma Iron Man: Armored Adventures Vol. 2 Kendra 1.x
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