Jeannie, My Guru
- Episode aired Dec 30, 1968
- 25m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
196
YOUR RATING
Tony must hide the boyfriend of General Schaeffer's daughter since the General hates hippies.Tony must hide the boyfriend of General Schaeffer's daughter since the General hates hippies.Tony must hide the boyfriend of General Schaeffer's daughter since the General hates hippies.
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Did you know
- TriviaIntroduces Vinton Hayworth as General Schaeffer. In Season 5 he would replace Barton MacLane, who played General Peterson since the first season. MacLane died at age 66 on January 1, 1969, two days after this episode was broadcast.
- GoofsThe shot of Tony pulling into his driveway after he picks up the hippie girl uses old footage of the 1966 Pontiac GTO from prior seasons. The car in the rest of the show (and this season) is a 1968 Pontiac Bonneville.
- Quotes
Major Anthony Nelson: Well, I'll never understand women. And that goes double for teenagers!
Featured review
The Lewis and Clarke Expedition
"Jeannie, My Guru" was a significant episode, primarily because it introduced Vinton Hayworth as General Winfield Schaeffer, cast because Barton MacLane had been ailing, and died just two days following this very broadcast (with three final episodes yet to be aired). This no-nonsense martinet isn't as much fun as General Peterson, and his teenage daughter Suzie (Hilary Thompson) is a typical hippie of the day, making this one of the most dated entries (she never made a repeat appearance). Like the older generation usually did, her father disapproves of her long haired boyfriend Harold (Michael Margotta), who stays at Major Nelson's house because Suzie knows Jeannie's secret. Of even greater interest is the rare appearance of The Lewis and Clarke Expedition, a short-lived band that recorded one LP for Colgems Records, headed by Travis Lewis and Boomer Clarke, actually Michael Martin Murphey and Owens Castleman, Texas friends of The Monkees' Michael Nesmith, composers of the very popular Monkees recording "What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round?" (Murphey enjoyed a huge solo success in 1975 with "Wildfire"). The song they perform is titled "Bring on the Sundown," a wild psychedelic number, particularly obscure since it wasn't featured on their lone album, issued over 13 months earlier in Nov 1967.
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- kevinolzak
- Dec 21, 2013
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