106 5 lubbock texas

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Elmo's Music Magic is a children's educational series that features the popular Sesame Street character, Elmo, as he explores the world of music. This interactive show aims to teach children about various musical concepts while engaging them with songs, dance, and imaginative play. Through a combination of live-action segments and animated sequences, Elmo's Music Magic introduces young viewers to different musical genres, instruments, and concepts such as rhythm and melody. The show also emphasizes the importance of self-expression through music and encourages children to explore their own musical interests and talents. Elmo, along with his friends Big Bird, Abby Cadabby, and Cookie Monster, embarks on various musical adventures, meeting real-life musicians and learning about their instruments and styles of music. Children are exposed to a wide range of musical genres, from classical to jazz, folk to rock, and everything in between.


The next morning Ames finds Special Agent JB Fletcher outside and begs her to tell him what she’s found out but it’s not much. Whomever killed Richard wanted to make it look like the work of the curse. Inside Mark is on the phone trying to get a copy of his father’s will sent out. Ames asks him why he’s in such a rush for it but Mark tells Ames his father was a cold vindictive so and so which Seth takes offence to. Mark tells Seth he’s in no position to judge since he hadn’t spoken to his brother in over 30 years until the previous day. Ames asks Seth about it and Seth storms off. Classic Seth. JB finds him packing, and he tells her there’s no way he’s sticking around to be accused of murder. Ames wanders in to tell him that they’re running some prints found on some whiskey glasses and Seth tells him that one set belongs to him. Ames isn’t buying the reconciliation story Seth is putting out, but JB informs him he has it on the Highest Authority, making Ames think that Seth is a colleague of JB’s at the FBI/CIA/NSC/CWA etc etc. JB tells Ames she’s figured out how the door was locked – with the cunning use of a cigarette to stop latch from closing all the way.

While Seth and Alice s father duke it out over the last spinach puff JB introduces them to Vikram Singh, the real name of Not Jonathan Rhys-Davies, who works as a cultural attache at the Indian Embassy. Such a charming episode, and it all rides on the charms of those two old ladies if spinsters in trouble are not your thing, this episode will fly right by you.

Slaying she created the spell of the daanav

Children are exposed to a wide range of musical genres, from classical to jazz, folk to rock, and everything in between. The series incorporates catchy songs and interactive elements to keep children engaged and encourage them to sing and dance along. Each episode features a musical challenge or problem that Elmo and his friends must solve, showcasing problem-solving skills and teamwork.

Murder, She Wrote: Ranking the Best and Worst of Every Episode, Part 4!

Incidentally, here are the rankings by season, taking an average of the scores I assigned each episode. Surprising, right? Season 4 has the cream of the crop in terms of individual episodes, but the depth and range of the entire season is just slightly below Seasons 2 and 8; Season 8, particularly, benefits from Corymore’s renewed vigor in taking over the production, and has more solid scores (it’s median episode score is 23, higher than the 22 for Seasons 2 and 4, and the same as Season 5). Season 5 is the leader because it only has two episodes below 20 (to 3 for Season 4, 4 for Season 8, and 5 for Season 2).

Distributions:

The Top 20 Episodes: 7 from Season 4; 4 from Season 2; 3 from Season 1; 2 each from Seasons 5 and 8; 1 each from Seasons 3 and 7.

The Top 50 Episodes: 9 from Season 4; 8 from Season 2; 7 from Season 8; 6 from Season 5; 5 each from Seasons 1 and 7; 3 each from Seasons 6 and 10; 2 each from Seasons 3 and 12

Averages by Season: (note: two-part episodes had their totals doubled and episode counts increased by 1 for that season, which notably helped Season 12, where “Nan’s Ghost” was the best episode of the season)

Season 5: 22.55

Season 8: 22.36

Season 2: 22.23

Season 4: 21.95

Season 1: 20.87

Season 3: 20.71

Season 6: 20.00

Season 10: 19.95

Season 7: 19.68

Season 12: 19.08

Season 11: 19.00

Season 9: 18.82

And now, the excellent Episodes 51-100:

Title Guest Stars // Entertainment Value // Mystery = Final Score

  1. Season 5, Episode 13: Fire Burn, Cauldron Bubble (9 + 8 + 7 = 24)

This one lacks in true mystery, but compensates with a sideshow of characters: Roddy McDowall, Bill Maher, Brad Dourif, Christopher Stone, and Dee Wallace all vividly contribute to the debate over the witch who may be haunting Cabot Cove. The ending is a rewarding surprise for those paying close attention.

  1. Season 1, Episode 0: The Murder of Sherlock Holmes (8 + 7 + 8 = 23)

It’s the only episode in which we see Jessica get kissed like that, though others will try. It’s also, arguably, Lansbury’s best performance, as the writers have yet to really develop Jessica, which means she gets to act out the whirlwind situations Jessica is thrust into, including a very dramatic denouement that, in some ways, haunts her the rest of the series. The guests are pretty first rate—notably Brian Keith and Arthur Hill.

  1. Season 4, Episode 14: Curse of the Daanav (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

You should have figured out the killer right away. No matter: this one is a camp riot, as Kabir Bedi sets the tone three seconds into it with a laughable scream in awe of the titular, cursed jewel, and Jane Badler and Larry Linville do their best to camp it up as a bitchy heiress and a clueless cop. Richard Bradford and William Windom have a touching scene, as Seth reconciles with his estranged brother, just before he is murdered, but it feels way out of touch with this campy episode.

  1. Season 1, Episode 17: Footnote to Murder (7 + 9 + 7 = 23)

A dumb but wildly entertaining episodes features Jessica at a writer’s banquet dealing with a drunken poet, a slutty romance author, and a sleazebag who gets murdered by an umbrella. Robert Reed, Diana Muldaur, Pat Harrington, Morgan Brittany, and Talia Balsam are among the guest stars having a lot of fun.

  1. Season 11, Episode 13: Death n’ Denial (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Jess goes to Egypt on behalf of her museum, with a girl named Sally Otterbourne (a nod to Angela’s Golden Globe-winning performance as Salome Otterbourne in Death on the Nile). Theft of a valuable artifact is complicated by murder, with Lee Meriwether, a young Jeri Ryan, and James Read all lurking. A fun romp through Cairo ensures, replete with Jess eating a local specialty in order to obtain a valuable piece of evidence.

  1. Season 8, Episode 3: Unauthorized Obituary (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Another fabulous turn from Jessica Walter as a HBIC, this time as the creator of unauthorized biographies. Sam Behrens, Barbara Bain, Bradford Dillman, Cathy Podewell, and Andrea Thompson all convince us they’d have reason to kill her, and while the end is a bit predictable, the ride is quite fun.

  1. Season 6, Episode 11: Town Father (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Some nubile Wyomingite shows up and claims to be the longtime companion of dimwitted mayor Sam Booth (Richard Paul, finally being given a storyline after many appearances of comic relief). Said nubile creature gets herself murdered, and the beauty parlor is abuzz with possibilities. Ruth Roman is, as ever, a goddess, but the central mystery lacks some bite, since we spend so much time with our Cabot Cove friends that it leaves us only a few possible suspects (and the biggest name, naturally, turns out to be the culprit, in a clunky denouement that felt tacked on to the salacious episode).

  1. Season 8, Episode 6: Judge Not (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

It has similar New Orleans themes to the last time Olivia Cole was in an episode, but this one is much more engaging and surprising, with neat acting turns from Randy Brooks, William Atherton, Beah Richards, and the reliable Ms. Cole.

  1. Season 12, Episode 4: Big Easy Murder (8 + 8 +7 = 23)

I don’t even think they are bothering to hide that they are recycling scripts—not only is this a New Orleans episode dealing with politicians and voodoo, they recycle Olivia Cole and Robert Forster from previous New Orleans episodes, along with Elizabeth Ashley, Mitchell Ryan, Anne-Marie Johnson, and Brian McNamara. That ostensible complaint made, this one is fun—overheated, with great guest stars and lots of lurid twists.

  1. Season 2, Episode 12: Murder by Appointment Only (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Grady Fletcher is less annoying than usual in this one, which is not terribly inspired, but does a few fun things: killing off Jessica’s former student (Ann Dusenberry, with 80s clothes and hair) allows her to discover that this “gifted writer” is a high-priced call girl for Christine Belford (who is a real hoot as the madam), all the while Jayne Meadows (as a Mary Kay-like cosmetics guru), Robert Culp, Robert Desiderio, Millie Perkins, and Leigh McCloskey skulk around, and Herb Edelman investigates. Entertaining, with a mildly surprising ending.

  1. Season 5, Episode 8: Prediction: Murder (7 + 8 + 8 = 23)

Picking up where the previous episode left off, Jessica accompanies Dale Robertson back to his ranch, where his son is unhappily married to a spiritualist ditz under the spell of a charismatic psychic. Silly fun with Melody Anderson, Michael Parks, and David Birney.

  1. Season 8, Episode 1: Bite the Big Apple (7 + 8 + 8 = 23)

Jessica moves to New York, and gets immediately ensconced in a murder. There’s a nice surprise by the end, but this one is all about the mise en scene of Jess officially moving on from Cabot Cove.

  1. Season 12, Episode 22: What You Don’t Know Can Kill You (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Cari Shayne is excellent as Seth’s niece, in Cabot Cove for a spell, and in love with a young man who gets murdered, who may or may not be the father of Laurie Holden’s baby. The excellent cast includes Kathryn Morris, Anthony Michael Hall, Judson Mills, Jerry Hardin, and Bruce Kirby, and the episode springs multiple surprises on us, though the killer should not surprise you.

  1. Season 5, Episode 2: A Little Night Work (9 + 7 + 7 = 23)

The first Dennis Stanton episode is a terrific one, establishing his backstory and a romantic possibility with Jessica (naturally it goes nowhere, but there are real sparks between them as they do a glorious waltz at a charity event). A dead body and a missing necklace point to Dennis, but John Dye, Jamie Farr, Conrad Janis, Julie Parrish, and Leann Hunley feature into the mystery.

  1. Season 3, Episode 21: The Days Dwindle Down (8 + 7 + 8 = 23)

This is an episode to admire more than love; picking up the plot of the 1949 film Strange Bargain, Jessica investigates a murder on the suggestion of Martha Scott, using archival flashbacks from the film to unravel the case of a man who served three decades for a murder he didn’t commit. It’s compelling, and fun to see Harry Morgan, Gloria Stuart, and a zesty June Havoc.

  1. Season 4, Episode 17: A Very Good Year for Murder (9 + 7 + 7 = 23)

Jess is somehow an honored friend to some rich family whose football-playing son she once tutored. The Gambinis gather to celebrate Eli Wallach being very old, and murder ensues. The glittery cast (Bibi Besch, Kristian Alfonso, Grant Goodeve, John Saxon, young Billy Zane) takes a back seat to Wallach butting heads with Jess over the murder investigation, but it’s largely a good entertainment, if not a tough mystery.

  1. Season 9, Episode 20: Ship of Thieves (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Damn Netflix for not having this one available! The best Dennis Stanton episodes are with Jessica (they have terrific chemistry), and this one has Dennis as security chief on a cruise, with a curious captain (Jon Cypher), and all kinds of characters possibly up to no good (Michelle Johnson, Albie Selznick, Jane Withers, Michael Woods, and the glorious Lee Meriwether). Fabulous ending.

  1. Season 10, Episode 9: Murder At a Discount (8 + 7 + 8 = 23)

Points off for ripping off an earlier episode (at least in The Sins of Castle Cove, Sybil knew she what she was writing about), this one features George Segal as a mogul suing Jessica for libel for suggesting he killed his first wife (Jessica, naturally, has no idea why her latest book is an exact replica of the Novaro murder, nor is she ever challenged on that front). Her reaction, of course, is to investigate, which brings us to John Enos III, Sam Anderson, Elaine Joyce, Morgan Fairchild, and a very young Julianna Margulies. It’s a fun romp, even if you wonder if Jess is a plagiarist…

  1. Season 9, Episode 15: The Petrified Forest (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Jessica is dozy at a dinner party, but not before events unfurl that show how and why a colorful florist (Gary Beach) will be killed (suspects include Richard Herd, Penny Fuller, Taylor Nichols, and Sally Kellerman). Entertaining, mildly suspenseful, and a terrific twist ending.

  1. Season 8, Episode 13: Incident at Lot 7 (8 + 7 + 8 = 23)

The “Psycho” episode (using the Psycho house) features a so-strange-it’s-good? Performance from Paula Prentiss as an actress intending to pattern her performance on Jessica, and a great sense of atmosphere, thanks to that house. It’s not particularly inspired in plot or the rest of the guest acting, but there’s a clever denouement that helps redeem it.

  1. Season 12, Episode 10: Frozen Stiff (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Bill Smitrovich is a Ben-and Jerry’s style ice cream maker with some skeletons in his closet, and Jessica, there to collect a donation to her literacy fund, must investigate a murder. A fun episode with a killer who can actually act the reveal scene.

  1. Season 2, Episode 18: If a Body Meet a Body (8 + 7 + 8 = 23)

Carrie Snodgress’s husband is dead, and Audrey Landers, the mistress, is hopping mad—so mad that she knocks the coffin over, to reveal another body. And another murder will happen—and how does any of this involve Monte Markham, Anne Jeffreys, or Rex Smith? A pretty solid effort anchored by Ms. Snodgress, always compelling.

  1. Season 11, Episode 16: Flim Flam (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

A restored film leads to new mayhem at a movie studio that Jessica is hanging around, along with other gadflies Kim Darby, John Astin, Mike Connors, Cali Timmins, and Jim Caviezel (very young). This one has some nice energy and harkens back to early season episodes (both Darby and Astin are making their first appearances since Seasons 1 & 3, respectively).

  1. Season 9, Episode 16: Threshold of Fear (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Her agoraphobic neighbor needs to unlock the mysteries buried in her mind regarding a death in the family. Cynthia Nixon is excellent (among the many crappy, forgettable young actors who appear in the final few seasons, she is quite memorable for being among the few to be competent, let alone as strong as she is). Margot Kidder is a bit crazy as her shrink, and Dame Angie’s nephew, David, shows up yet again as a guest star, though David Soul gives an interesting guest spot. All in all, this one keeps your interest.

  1. Season 2, Episode 17: One Good Bid Deserves a Murder (9 + 8 + 6 = 23)

Some fake superstar actress is dead, and her diary is up for action. Somehow, Jessica ends up accused of murder, and Jerry Orbach’s Harry McGraw tries to help her out. Edward Mulhare, Vic Tayback, Hurd Hatfield, and Nancy Lee Grahn are classy; Karen Black is batshit crazy as, ironically enough, a psychiatrist. It’s very entertaining, if not terribly engaging as a mystery (we never know Evangeline, so why would we care about her life and this diary, which is ultimately a McGuffin to a surprise ending, anyhow).

  1. Season 5, Episode 18: Trevor Hudson’s Legacy (9 + 7 + 7 = 23)

A strange, nasty episode, in which Jessica feels no remorse for getting a kid killed that she recommended for a job, and in which neither of the killers (spoiler alert—there’s two) seem to feel any remorse, though the script seems to be directing us to that. The above-average cast includes Barrie Youngfellow, Robert Klein, Don Galloway, Steve Forrest (terrific, per usual), and the glorious Michael Learned.

  1. Season 3, Episode 5: Corned Beef & Carnage (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Genie Francis gets involved with murder, again, and Aunt Jess is there to clean it all up, quite tidily. The guest stars are strictly B-list (Susan Anton, Richard Kline, Bill Macy, David Ogden Stiers, Marcia Wallace), but this one is a fun romp (in spite of it, or because of it).

  1. Season 5, Episode 3: Penroy’s Vacation (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

This one is all on Teresa Wright and Joan Leslie as the doddering old ladies who seem to be murderous thieves—but it’s up to Jessica to prove things are not as they seem. Such a charming episode, and it all rides on the charms of those two old ladies—if spinsters in trouble are not your thing, this episode will fly right by you.

  1. Season 6, Episode 6: Dead Letter (8 + 8 + 7 = 23)

Susan Anspach is such a unique actress, with equally unique looks, that centering an episode around her, and the murder of her husband, is a hypnotic experience, even if the central mystery never lives up to Anspach’s nuanced performance as the merry widow.

  1. Season 11, Episode 19: School for Murder (7 + 8 + 8 = 23)

Apparently there’s been a school nearby all these years in Cabot Cove, and although she teaches full-time in NY, Jess has time to teach a class this upscale school, where, naturally, murder is about to break out. Robert Foxworth is the accused friend, and suspects include Roy Dotrice, Maryann Plunkett, Nic Surovy, and a gaggle of young kids including Trevor St. John and Ethan Embry. Predictable and yet not predictable enough to be annoyed with it, especially if you are watching in chronological order.

  1. Season 4, Episode 8: Steal Me a Story (8 + 7 + 7 = 22)

This is a variation on one we see multiple times—one of Jessica’s books gets appropriated for stage or screen, and mayhem ensues. This one fares better because of the excellent work of Bradford Dillman, Ken Swofford, and especially Fionnula Flanagan, who sells a hard role and makes us genuinely question her motives throughout the end

  1. Season 2, Episode 4: School for Scandal (8 + 7 + 7 = 22)

Jessica must figure the murder of a young stud servicing a romance novelist when suspicion falls on the novelist and her mother (Mary Kate McGeehan and Polly Bergen). You remember it being better than it is, mainly because Bergen is compelling, and you want more June Lockhart and Roddy McDowall (neither of whom is in enough of the episode), but this one doesn’t even pretend to give Jessica a reason to be sticking her nose in, and the killer is pretty obvious.

  1. Season 7, Episode 15: The Taxman Cometh (8 + 7 + 7 = 22)

A perfectly solid episode around Phyllis Newman, a well-respected baker who somehow is in trouble with the IRS, and now accused of murdering her ex-, thanks to Jessica’s arrival. She brings murder with her wherever she goes. There’s some mistaken identity shenanigans, and midway through the episode, you realize the killer could be anyone, which is always a good thing.

  1. Season 2, Episode 22: If the Frame Fits (7 + 8 + 7 = 22)

A strangely pleasurable episode, in which a cat burglar seems to have killed a real bitch (a miscast Anne Schedeen, with fabulous 80s hair and clothes). John de Lancie, Audrey Meadows, Gordon Jump, and Deborah Adair give it some fun, while Norman Lloyd classes up the joint.

  1. Season 6, Episode 22: The Sicilian Encounter (8 + 9 + 5 = 22)

It’s likely the most entertaining of the bookend episodes, as Michael Hagarty infiltrates a Sicilian crime family in order to assist an American widow (Deidre Hall) there to collect a family debt, while introducing them to her new fiancé (Ian Ogilvy, playing brother to his Athens character). Cariou, Ogilvy, and Hall have a lot of fun here, and their madcap adventure through Sicily, culminating in Geneva, is zesty, if pretty devoid of actual mystery.

  1. Season 5, Episode 21/22: Mirror, Mirror On the Wall (9 + 7 + 6 = 22)

Could have been the series finale if Lansbury had ended it with her five year contract expiring; as it stands, the two-parter feels wildly thrown together, with an ending that I doubt indicated the original, intended killer. Still, it stands up nicely because Jean Simmons rocks as the unstable mystery writer, Eudora McVeigh, who may or may not be trying to harm Jessica, and she’s ably assisted by Ken Howard, David Hedison, and Shelley Fabares, rocking 80s Monet jewelry. The subplot involving Jess and a potential relationship with Seth is less successful.

  1. Season 3, Episode 14: Murder in a Minor Key (8 + 6 + 8 = 22)

An early bookend episode, in which Jessica tells us about one of her new books, relies on the strong guest cast: George Grizzard, Karen Grassle, Scott Jacoby, Rene Auberjonois, Herb Edelman, Dinah Manoff, and Shaun Cassidy. It plods along in the middle, but the denouement is clever and ties it up quite nicely.

  1. Season 5, Episode 6: Wearing of the Green (7 + 8 + 7 = 22)

Jean Peters as a recluse obsessed with a tiara! Lucie Arnaz and Patty McCormack doing a riff on Cagney & Lacey! Erin Gray and Barbara Bosson doing bitchy battle over jewelry design (and John McMartin)! Terrifically entertaining if any of those punctuated sentences appeal to you, and substantially less so if you want an intricate mystery.

  1. Season 2, Episode 11: Murder Digs Deep (7 + 7 + 8 = 22)

Seth Hazlitt suddenly wants to be an archaeologist, and Connie Stevens, George Grizzard, David Groh, Robert Vaughn, and Randolph Mantooth have secrets to keep buried. It’s a silly and fun lark, with a particularly inspired set of performances from Grizzard and Stevens to keep Jessica on her toes.

  1. Season 3, Episode 15: The Bottom Line is Murder (7 + 8 + 7 = 22)

I like this one much more than the score indicates; it’s a campy lark, with obnoxious consumer reporter Kenneth Chambers being offed, and a zillion suspects available to Jessica, who is vaguely connected to the accused producer and his wife, the striking Judith Chapman. Barry Corbin is an obnoxious cop, Pat Klous is a clueless assistant, Adrienne Barbeau is all HBIC (bordering on see you next Tuesday), and George Takei does George Takei (that’s a compliment, I think). In other words, it’s a lot of fun (the interchange with Ms. Barbeau and Dame Angela is priceless), even if it makes little sense.

  1. Season 9, Episode 22: Love’s Deadly Desire (8 + 7 + 7 = 22)

A lot of the plot makes no sense in this one, but who cares? Carroll Baker! William Katt! Actual star quality in a delicious yarn about a rival romance novelist who needs Jessica’s help to sniff out who is trying to kill her! The twist ending is worth the patience of the bizarre details that, if you think of them, will make you realize much of this makes no sense.

  1. Season 3, Episode 9: Obituary for a Dead Anchor (7 + 7 + 8 = 22)

A strange episode in which things are not quite right: Kathleen Lloyd, Chad Everett, and Mark Stevens are reporters for a 20/20-style investigative program, but Chad is killed in Cabot Cove, after taking on Ms. Lloyd’s assignment to profile Jessica, and you’re never quite sure what is a red herring and what is a clue. We keep being told Chad Everett is the bulldog and Kathleen Lloyd is the kinder, gentler reporter, but Chad is much nicer to Jessica! Abby Dalton is hanging around as Chad’s wife, but is she a bona fide suspect, or did Abby need to get some work to renew her SAG health insurance? Ditto Robert Hogan, as Cabot Cove’s new doctor, who seems to have connections to the case—is he a suspect, or is he being positioned as a Claude Akins to the loveless Jess? Lots of questions, and all of them get answered in this tricky offering.

  1. Season 11, Episode 20: Another Killing In Cork (7 + 7 + 8 = 22)

If you don’t compare it to earlier episodes, and look past some of the bland acting (which the accents certainly make easier to stomach), you get a reasonably well-assembled mystery that keeps you guessing till the end, as Jessica investigates a murder in an Irish B & B.

  1. Season 8, Episode 18: Programmed for Murder (7 + 8 + 7 = 22)

More Cabot Cove reverie, as Seth might be guilty of malpractice in the death of a neighbor, and Jess is needed to prove a much more sinister plot is afoot. It’s a touch oversimplistic (Hunt Block, as a younger doctor in town, is saddled with some hideous dialogue), but nice to see Seth entrenched in the action.

  1. Season 10, Episode 19: Roadkill (8 + 7 + 7 = 22)

Jess is in Texas visiting a friend in the trucking business, and then there’s some thing involving NASA equipment going stolen, and Joanna Cassidy as a shady lady, along with Patrick Cassidy, Beth Grant, Melora Hardin, Whip Hubley, Gary Lockwood, and Earl Holliman in this unusually well cast late-series episode.

  1. Season 4, Episode 19: Just Another Fish Story (8 + 8 + 6 = 22)

It’s really not a good mystery, but it does minimize Grady, and features some fun guest stars (even if they have little to do) in Sonny Bono, Valerie Landsburg, Dick Gautier, Norman Fell, and Brenda Vaccaro, in one of her many notable MSW appearances.

  1. Season 12, Episode 2: A Quaking in Aspen (7 + 7 +8 = 22)

Is Leigh Taylor-Young, a famous interviewer, also a murderer? She can’t be, since she’s Jessica’s friend, so Jess and Wayne Rogers need to investigate Leslie Horan, Gerald McRaney, Scott Valentine, Elizabeth Gracen, and Thom Bierdz. There’s a nice mystery here, and lots of twists (some predictable, but not all).

  1. Season 8, Episode 7: Terminal Connection (8 + 7 + 7 = 22)

It’s a hard-to-watch episode, as Lois Nettleton plays a battered wife accused of killing her husband, and Jessica meets all these beautiful people (Doug Barr, Chad Everett, Steve Forrest, Kerrie Keane, Jameson Parker) with secrets hiding (of course). It is pretty good, but Nettleton is excellent, and that makes this less of a trifle than MSW can be.

  1. Season 3, Episode 17: Simon Says, Color Me Dead (8 + 7 + 7 = 22)

Foster Brooks is some local famous artist, never previously mentioned, who is dear friends with Jessica, of course. He gets himself killed, but not before we get a gander at a slew of people with no motive: frosty wife Diane Baker, snooty neighbors Ann Dusenberry and Dick Sargent, housekeeper Tess Harper. The B-plot, where Amos Tupper contemplates fatherhood, is howlingly, unintentionally funny, and the whole hour is thankfully entertaining, which is needed, since the central mystery is pretty easy to figure.

  1. Season 12, Episode 9: Deadly Bidding (8 + 8 + 6 = 22)

Another Wayne Rogers episode, in which he does the bidding of an unscrupulous fella by bidding on a stolen painting, which gets stolen. Yes, some of the acting is pallid, but Doug Hutchison, as the murder victim, is deliciously over-the-top, and Craig Richard Nelson and Melanie Smith are reliable as unscrupulous types.

A lot of the plot makes no sense in this one, but who cares? Carroll Baker! William Katt! Actual star quality in a delicious yarn about a rival romance novelist who needs Jessica’s help to sniff out who is trying to kill her! The twist ending is worth the patience of the bizarre details that, if you think of them, will make you realize much of this makes no sense.
106 5 lubbock texas

Elmo's Music Magic aims to foster a love for music in young children and encourages them to develop their own musical abilities. The show teaches children that music is a universal language that can bring people together and that everyone can find joy in making and sharing music. Overall, Elmo's Music Magic provides a fun and educational musical experience for young viewers. By introducing them to various musical concepts and genres, it inspires children to appreciate and explore the world of music while fostering creativity and self-expression..

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106 5 lubbock texas

106 5 lubbock texas