Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Emergency! is an American action-adventure medical drama television series jointly produced by Mark VII Limited and Universal Television.Debuting on NBC as a midseason replacement on January 15, 1972, replacing two situation comedy series, The Partners and The Good Life, it ran for a total of 122 episodes until May 28, 1977, with six additional two-hour television films in 1978 and 1979.
Johnny Gage, the subject of practical jokes at Station 51, contemplates the best form of revenge. After a man working on a smokestack breaks his back, Gage and DeSoto rappel down to his aid. Despite his agony they are unable to give him painkilling drugs. After DeSoto explains how his pain is their guide to avoid further damage he is rescued.
In the same year it was thoroughly and completely restored by the museum, at a cost of approximately $30,000. Squad 51 is now residing with its co-star in Emergency!, Engine 51, which completed restoration in 2012. Squad 51 also made appearances in the hit TV show CHiPs at times including season 3 ep.17 "E.M.T.".
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Engine 51 is known for its time in the 1970s TV show Emergency!. Engine 51 is actually two very different fire engines. Both Engines 51 sit in the Los Angeles County Fire Museum right next to the famous Squad 51. The museum is building a new facility that will house the Squad 51 in Carson, California, where the show was filmed. [citation needed]
CBS defended the statement, saying that the tones' usage was a "dramatic portrayal", and that it was an "integral part of the storyline about a family's visceral reaction to a life-threatening emergency". The show's sound editors achieved the effect by downloading EAS tones from YouTube and modifying the volume of the tone.
The most famous exhibits include the featured vehicles of the fictional Fire Station 51, Squad 51, both engines designated Engine 51 and a 1969 Chevrolet ambulance from the 1970s television series, Emergency!.
The data shows New Yorkers reported spotting rats on 40 per cent of subway trips in the past month while each station has been ranked in terms of how ratty it is.