It's St. Louis, 1954. Rookie
officer Walter O'Reilly emerges from his bedroom in his police uniform.
He asks his cousin, Wendell Micklejohn, how he looks. "Like a rookie, I
hope not," Walter says. "Hey, not bad for off-the-rack," he replies.
Walter and Wendell watch themselves
on TV. Clete Roberts is doing a follow-up series on those whom he interviewed
from MASH 4077th. After interviewing Hawkeye Pierce last week, he interviews
"former corporal, now rookie law officer Radar O'Reilly." "Walter, my name
is Walter," he tries to tell the interviewer on the television. After seeing
the beginning of the interview, they dash off to work.
A group of officers is already
gathered in a room to watch Walter's interview with Clete Roberts on a
black & white TV. Walter asks where Sergeant Sowell is; the television
is for emergency use only, so he's concerned about getting caught. Another
officer informs him that he's on the phone with the commissioner so he
won't hear them.
Contemplating suicide, Walter
had wandered into a local drug store and asked for "an overdose of sleeping
pills and a small bottle of aspirin" because "sleeping pills give him a
headache." Victoria, the clerk, gave him soup and cheered him up with a
song and a tap dance.
After watching the interview,
the crowd which had gathered on the street asks the pair for their autographs.
Suddenly, Walter realizes that his wallet, containing his picture of his
pals from M*A*S*H, has been stolen. He calls the station but Wendell tells
him that it doesn't sound good when an officer has his wallet stolen. Wendell
then realizes his own wallet has been stolen too. The officer at the station
tells them that there's a situation that needs their immediate attention:
two strippers at a theater are fighting.
Outside the two officers find
the same boy who was in the crowd when their wallets were stolen. They
chase him down and question him. After Wendell finds out that the boy has
no prior record, Wendell leaves and Walter persuades Elstin to come to
the drug store for a rootbeer float. While they drink, Elstin gives Walter
back his M*A*S*H picture. He explains that his mother and he have been
down on their luck since his father died in the Korean War. Walter decides
to let him go but tells Elstin to Teleplay by: Bob
Weiskopf, Bob Schiller, and Everett Greenbaum
Story by:
Bob Weiskopf, Bob Schiller, and Michael Zinberg
Directed by:
Bill Bixby
Produced by:
Michael Zinberg
At the police station, Walter shows that he can still read minds. The female
officer begins to ask him about a stolen vehicle report he filed. Before
she can finish her sentence, Walter tells her where each portion of the
report is located. "But you only give serial numbers for two..." she begins.
"It's a motorcyle, ma'am," Walter chimes in. "...tires. Oh," she finishes
with a smile.
Sergeant Sowell emerges from his office and chases the group out of the
room to go fight crime, sending Walter and Wendell to Fourth Street. While
patrolling the area, the pair watches the rest of the interview on a TV
in a shop window. During the interview Walter tells Clete how he lost the
farm due to failed crops and his new wife Cindy left him during the honeymoon.
On a stop in St. Louis, Walter's wife left him a letter in the hotel explaining
that she found another man.
At the theater Walter is given the job of getting the strippers' statements.
Caught between the two strippers, they push him back and forth. In the
mist of their fighting, he finds out that Dixie's dove Sweetheart is missing
and she suspects Bubbles of foul play. Using his extraordinary ears, Walter
hears the dove and uses a bird call to get him out of hiding.
meet
him at the store every Saturday. Walter wants to be sure that Elstin is
doing okay and staying out of trouble. The episode closes with Walter backing
up against the pinball machine as Victoria kisses him. "Jackpot!"
Cast:
Airdate:
7/17/1984