511:) George is Lennie's best friend, longtime partner, and sarcastic steadying force. He was in every episode. He is a tall black man, prone to roll his eyes and shake his head at Lennie and his antics, and even less is known about him. He was in Korea, and while he has no fear of heights, he often does seem to have a fear of Lennie's driving. He notices things that go right over his partner's head, and he is the one that keeps Lennie, and sometimes Higgenbottem, from making complete fools of themselves. He doesn't seem to have a very large affinity for Higgenbottem, in fact in the pilot episode when Higgenbottom was reading the report on what the two partners had messed up, and was continually adding in pieces to the sentence that were charging the two with worse crimes, George offered to 'make a suggestion that might help the situation.' -- "Ask Higgenbottem to
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537:. He really does like Lennie and George in spite of his many sarcastic statements. A good example of his sarcasm: Higgenbottem, whom he is friends with, bursts into the room exclaiming that they have a "code 64," Lennie tells him to take it to the animal shelter because that's a lost dog. "No, that's a code 65." Higgenbottem said. "Oh, of course," Lennie answered, "I was confusing it with a code 63--" "Which is someone being assaulted," corrected Higginbottem, as Captain Andrews exclaimed, looking pointedly at Lennie, "And we may have one in this room at any moment!"
492:. He has a likelihood to forget things that no other sane detective would forget, including his pants. He is not married and we do see him inside his apartment on one or two occasions. It appears to be very neat with every personal item in its own place. He isn't too intelligent and is prone to get everyone in a room confused in his attempts to carry on an intelligent conversation. He tends to dislike the desk Sergeant Higgenbottem, who in turn doesn't seem to like Lennie. The two will argue about anything, such as how "It's
547:) The sycophantic desk Sergeant Higgenbottom is a small man who loves any chance to grate on Lennie's nerves and enjoys arguing with Lennie as well, only tolerates George but still looks for chances to annoy him too, and who does whatever Captain Andrews asks, and generally sides with him. Lennie has a habit of starting a sentence off with "Well, at least there's one good thing that came out of this..." after he's done something stupid. Higgenbottem always answers the same way, saying eagerly, "You're leaving the force?"
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the driveway takes it back to down to 14." To which
Higgenbottem will reply, "No, I'm counting both your cars and that car because whether you found it or not it was originally stolen and I'm also counting the Rolls-Royce so that makes 16." And then Lennie will continue to argue that he had forgotten the Rolls-Royce and that made it 15 again, and so they would go on until Captain Andrews put a stop to it. The two seem to rather enjoy these comical arguments, in fact. Lennie was in every episode.
40:
567:, played Freddie Butler, who was in seven episodes. He is always chronically confessing to other people's crimes, and consistently manages to drive Lennie, George, and Higgenbottem and Captain Andrews crazy. When he appears, Lennie usually exclaims, "Just what I can't stand right now, Freddie Butler!"
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true that I locked George in the closet, so when I said it was true, I was referring to how it wasn't true that that was true" or how "They stole 13 cars in the last two weeks and that makes 14 if you count our car, but then they stole our other car which would make it 15 but then the car we found in
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eschewed a traditional opening title sequence. The opening credits were merely interspersed during the first few minutes, akin to the technique that has become quite commonplace today. The theme music, which accompanied the closing credits and occasionally popped up during the program itself, was
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NBC had exceptionally high hopes for the series after it performed well with test audiences. However, it failed to find a large enough audience because it aired
Saturday nights at 8:00pm—right up against the highest-rated show on television, CBS's
612:, which was a hit and ran six seasons.) Fifteen episodes of the show had aired by January; five more would be "burned off" in the summer of 1972. The show ranked 66th out of 78 shows that season with an average 12.5 rating.
488:. Details on his life and family are very sparse. He has mentioned on one or two occasions that he has acrophobia, and the fear of heights, and he was never in Korea, according to his statement in the pilot episode,
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Lennie and George get off to a shaky start on their assignment to capture a bank robber by damaging their unmarked police car, entering the wrong apartment and wearing the wrong clothes.
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Unlike many other sitcoms of the 1960s and 70s, there is no family seen in the show. There are not many characters altogether.
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has never been officially released on home video, but several websites offer low-quality bootleg DVDs of the series.
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478:) Det. Sgt. Lennie Crooke is a slightly inept police detective, a bit similar to Adams' previous character on
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from its schedule. (The move worked out for the network, as they were replaced with the medical drama
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at the last minute.) After their
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1311:
The
Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows (1946 - Present)
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that aired on
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This article is about comedy series. For the book, see
64:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
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124:Learn how and when to remove this message
425:The pilot featured guest appearances by
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1373:1971 American television series debuts
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921:"Take My Wife, Please"
751:"Waterloo at Napoleon"
651:"Here Comes the Fuzz"
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857:"To Catch a Crooke"
457:Mission: Impossible
331:Don/Lee Productions
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56:Please help
51:verification
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1408:NBC sitcoms
1272:Jerry Mayer
1145:Earl Barret
1114:Gary Nelson
1083:Gary Nelson
1016:"New Faces"
860:Gary Nelson
797:Teleplay by
785:Gary Nelson
757:Burt Styler
754:Gary Nelson
690:Gary Nelson
655:Gary Nelson
637:Directed by
431:Art Metrano
427:Joey Forman
303:Arne Sultan
294:Arne Sultan
277:of episodes
213:Gary Nelson
197:Directed by
184:Earl Barret
1367:Categories
1296:References
1279:1972-09-08
1248:1972-08-25
1217:1972-08-11
1186:1972-08-04
1155:1972-07-28
1124:1972-01-08
1093:1971-12-25
1062:1971-12-18
1055:Milt Rosen
1029:1971-12-11
998:1971-12-04
991:Ed Simmons
967:1971-11-27
960:Ed Simmons
936:1971-11-13
903:1971-11-06
870:1971-10-30
863:Ed Simmons
839:1971-10-23
806:1971-10-16
764:1971-10-09
733:1971-10-02
700:1971-09-25
669:1971-09-18
640:Written by
609:Emergency!
529:played in
464:Characters
372:1972-09-08
362:1971-09-18
285:Production
266:of seasons
192:Ed Simmons
181:Written by
84:newspapers
1179:Ben Starr
1019:Don Adams
988:Don Adams
957:Don Adams
791: :
660:Don Adams
571:Reception
564:Get Smart
531:Get Smart
481:Get Smart
476:Don Adams
404:Don Adams
300:Producers
233:Composers
223:Don Adams
201:Don Adams
156:Don Adams
114:June 2017
789:Story by
622:Episodes
588:against
527:Ed Platt
398:Synopsis
219:Starring
1277: (
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535:CONTROL
370: (
366: –
360: (
355:Release
345:Network
323:26 min.
258:English
98:scholar
1317:
433:, and
388:sitcom
175:Sitcom
100:
93:
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71:
634:Title
171:Genre
105:JSTOR
91:books
1358:IMDb
1315:ISBN
406:and
158:and
77:news
1356:at
630:No.
561:on
543:: (
521:: (
507:: (
494:not
474:: (
392:NBC
349:NBC
275:No.
264:No.
162:in
60:by
27:or
1369::
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