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RIP Ed Asner

I did not realize Georgia Engel actually shot more episodes of MTM (and predated) than Betty White did. Betty's at 45 with the living lead, followed by John Amos at 13 and Joyce Bulifant at 11.
 
I have a soft spot for the Lou Grant episode called "Nightside," where he fills in for the night editor for the first time. The episode also features a couple great character actors, Richard Erdman and David Paymer.

One of John Wayne's "Rio" films was on TV last night -- "Rio Bravo" or "Rio Lobo," can't recall which (same movie, different cast). Asner played a ruthless land-grabber who hired gunman Christopher George. In the end a cute young cowgirl shoots Ed just as he's about to plug the Duke.

Young Ed Asner also showed up in several "Untouchables" episodes.

One thing Lou Grant never really got right was that it was never really clear whether the Trib was an AM or PM paper (except for the title sequence which showed paperboys throwing papers on porches in the morning).
In many shows it appeared that Lou's city desk crew was working essentially 9-5 hours .
Of course, on the news staff of a daily paper, you NEVER work 9-5.
If it's an AM paper going to press about 1 am, you go in to work about 4-5 pm; if it's an afternoon paper going to press about noon, you go in something like 4 am (or more likely work bizarro world split shifts).
The "Nightside" episode showed some of that, but not nearly the whole thing.
 
One thing Lou Grant never really got right was that it was never really clear whether the Trib was an AM or PM paper (except for the title sequence which showed paperboys throwing papers on porches in the morning).
In many shows it appeared that Lou's city desk crew was working essentially 9-5 hours .
Of course, on the news staff of a daily paper, you NEVER work 9-5.
If it's an AM paper going to press about 1 am, you go in to work about 4-5 pm; if it's an afternoon paper going to press about noon, you go in something like 4 am (or more likely work bizarro world split shifts).
The "Nightside" episode showed some of that, but not nearly the whole thing.

Lots of people worked 9-5 and even 7-3 at my last stop, which admittedly came out of a merger between a larger afternoon paper and a smaller AM. GRANTed, things didn't really start hopping until after the 3:30 meeting -- a lot of the old holdovers from grandpa's lunchbucket paper never quite got that. On those occasions when I got called to fill in on dayside, those shifts seemed to drag on forever.
 
Hayward not only shook Coach Reeves for 40 bucks but he got to be copy boy at the Trib.

 
Before she rode the metro and had her breath taken away she wanted to get pregnant but Billie wasn't too keen with that idea.

 

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