Adam-12 (season 1)

Adam-12 (season 1)
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes 26
Release
Original network NBC
Original release September 21, 1968 (1968-09-21) – April 5, 1969 (1969-04-05)

This is a list of episodes from the first season of Adam-12.

Broadcast history

The season originally aired Saturday at 7:30-8:00 pm (EST).

DVD release

The DVD was released by Universal Studios Home Entertainment.

Episodes

Like its companion series Dragnet a disclaimer at the end of episodes remarks this was story was based on true incidents and names were changed to protect the innocent.

No. in
series
No. in
season
Title Directed by Written by Original air date
11"Log 1: The Impossible Mission"Jack WebbJohn RandolphSeptember 21, 1968 (1968-09-21)
Three weeks earlier, Officer Pete Malloy's (Martin Milner) beat partner was shot and killed during an attempt to arrest an armed robber. Malloy is deeply saddened to a point where he plans to retire. On what is to be his last day on the police force, he is assigned to take rookie Officer Jim Reed (Kent McCord) out for his first night on the force. Reed shows tremendous potential on the job but, like all rookies, still has much to learn. With encouragement from Lieutenant Moore, Malloy agrees to help mold Reed and guide him through his probationary period.
22"Log 141: The Color TV Bandit"Phil RawlinsRichard Neil MorganSeptember 28, 1968 (1968-09-28)
Malloy and Reed track down a burglar whose specialty is stealing color TV sets. They also encounter a drug-addicted mother who uses her children to help her in maintaining her habit.
33"Log 11: It's Just a Little Dent, Isn't It?"Hollingsworth MorsePreston WoodOctober 5, 1968 (1968-10-05)
Reed accidentally dents the police car while at the gas pump and worries about the consequences he could face.
44"Log 131: Reed, the Dicks Have Their Job and We Have Ours"Hollingsworth Morse
Phil Rawlins
Preston WoodOctober 12, 1968 (1968-10-12)
Reed learns about how important his job is and why detectives are called to investigate homicides when he and Malloy are called to a fatal shooting.
55"Log 91: You're Not the First Guy's Had the Problem"Alan CroslandPreston WoodOctober 19, 1968 (1968-10-19)
Officer Stenzler, Reed's best friend from the police academy is critically wounded during an armed robbery call. Malloy, who just went through the same experience weeks earlier with the officer he was training, helps him focus. By all accounts, Reed does a good job of putting Stenzler's condition in the back of his mind as the officers deal with a drunk driver and bicycle burglars. In the end, Malloy and Reed learn that Stenzler died of his injuries.
66"Log 161: And You Want Me to Get Married!"Phil RawlinsPreston WoodOctober 26, 1968 (1968-10-26)
By now, Malloy and Reed are becoming off-duty friends, and after an evening of socializing at the Reeds, Malloy's girlfriend Donna wants to take their relationship to the next level. However, calls during the next day on the force namely, a domestic dispute has Malloy holding his ground that he is satisfied being a bachelor.
77"Log 71: I Feel Like a Fool, Malloy"Alan CroslandRobert I. HoltNovember 2, 1968 (1968-11-02)
In an episode where Reed learns to keep his wits under control, the officers deal with a loud noise complaint where an elderly woman refuses to answer, much less acknowledge, a teen-aged girl's desperate pleas for help after the woman learns she was at a house where loud party music is being played, and it leads to a tragic drowning of a 4-year-old girl in a backyard swimming pool.
88"Log 72: El Presidente"Phil RawlinsRobert H. ForwardNovember 9, 1968 (1968-11-09)
Reed goes to Malloy for advice on calculating the cost of a new baby, and in between handle a variety of calls. The most exciting call of the day is a psychopath who is shooting at others in the neighborhood.
99"Log 101: Someone Stole My Lawn"Hollingsworth MorseTom DunphyNovember 16, 1968 (1968-11-16)
Reed is put on a low-carb diet by his wife, Jean. Meanwhile, the episode title is inspired by a resident who complains that landscapers literally stole his lawn.
1010"Log 132: Producer"Phil RawlinsRichard Neil MorganNovember 30, 1968 (1968-11-30)
As officers Reed and Malloy track down a prowler and deal with a young boy who somehow got his head stuck in a fence, Reed tries to pawn off his dog's litter of puppies to fellow members of the precinct.
1111"Log 111: The Boa Constrictor"Hollingsworth MorsePreston WoodDecember 7, 1968 (1968-12-07)
A young woman got bitten by a boa constrictor... the one stuffed in the trunk of her car, a 1958 Ford convertible. The only clues Malloy and Reed have to go on is the one that the ditzy blonde blurts out: the large snake kept in the trunk of her car. Reed and Malloy have to keep their wits when stopping every car matching the description, but it will be happening upon a garage burglary that provides the biggest clue.
1212"Log 61: The Runaway"Phil RawlinsNoel NosseckDecember 14, 1968 (1968-12-14)
Reed gets excited when he is asked to help out on his first big drug bust, but it turns out to have a disappointing ending through no fault of his own. Meanwhile, Malloy and Reed help out with a teen-aged girl who ran away from home and is staying with a single man twice her age.
1313"Log 122: Christmas – The Yellow Dump Truck"Hollingsworth MorsePreston WoodDecember 21, 1968 (1968-12-21)
Community service-based episodes would be a hallmark of Adam-12 holiday episodes throughout the series run, and the first sees Reed learn about the importance of performing charity work when he and Malloy distribute Christmas care boxes to families in need. Bob Hastings guest stars in a husband-wife dispute that gets out of control
1414"Log 81: The Long Walk"Phil RawlinsRobert C. DennisJanuary 4, 1969 (1969-01-04)
In an episode demonstrating the importance of "police presence," Reed also learns about how important backing up his partner is when he and Malloy respond to a silent alarm and wind up in shootout with three armed suspects.
1515"Log 36: Jimmy Eisley's Dealing Smack"Hollingsworth MorsePreston WoodJanuary 11, 1969 (1969-01-11)
In between trying to find a suitable headlining performer for the department party, Malloy and Reed break up a narcotics ring when they raid the apartment of a dope pusher. Reed, chairman of the party's entertainment committee, finally finds his performer when he serves a subpoena on a country music entertainer who is a witness in a tax case.
1616"Log 62: Grand Theft Horse?"Hollingsworth MorseRichard Neil MorganJanuary 18, 1969 (1969-01-18)
A homesick Texan is the prime suspect in a horse rustling case, and a robber makes fake calls to distract the police.
1717"Log 33: It All Happened So Fast"Bruce KesslerPreston WoodFebruary 1, 1969 (1969-02-01)
For the first time in his career, Reed shoots and kills someone, a 16-year-old sniper, in self-defense. Lieutenant Moore then tries to determine whether it was a justified shooting in this behind-the-scenes look at internal investigations into deadly-force incidents.
1818"Log 112: You Blew It"Hollingsworth MorseMichael DonovanFebruary 8, 1969 (1969-02-08)
Malloy is the one who blows it when he and Reed leave a traffic violation stop to respond to a man-with-a-knife disturbance before the NCIC wants-and-warrants check is completed. It is only later, after Lieutenant Moore yells at them, that they learn that the traffic violator was wanted for armed robbery and the car that he was driving was stolen, leading the two officers to find a way to capture their man.
1919"Log 51: A Jumper – Code Two"Harry MorganRichard Neil MorganFebruary 15, 1969 (1969-02-15)
For the second time in two weeks, Malloy blows it this time, when he tries a dangerous solution to capturing a suicide jumper at an apartment building. Earlier, Malloy and Reed are called to help an elderly woman (at her insistence) adjust her TV antenna.
2020"Log 73: I'm Still a Cop"Phil RawlinsHarold Jack BloomFebruary 22, 1969 (1969-02-22)
Malloy is studying for his master's degree in criminal justice, but unrest at the college becomes the least of his worries when several of his students, who are planning an anti-war protest, learn the occupation of their fellow student.
2121"Log 102: We Can't Just Walk Away from It"Hollingsworth MorseMichael DonovanMarch 1, 1969 (1969-03-01)
Malloy and Reed race against time to stop a drugged-out 17-year-old from killing himself, and must convince the distraught mother and overbearing father to help them save their son from making a mistake.
2222"Log 152: A Dead Cop Can't Help Anyone"Hollingsworth MorseMichael DonovanMarch 8, 1969 (1969-03-08)
An impressionable Reed is taken by the "cowboy cop" antics of fellow Officer Ed Wells (Gary Crosby, in what will be a recurring role), a wise guy who takes unnecessary risks to handle suspects. Wells endangers his life and others with his tactics, until his recklessness nearly catches up with him when he is shot in the shoulder by a psychopathic sniper. Because of Wells foolishness Reed is also almost shot; Malloy and Reed are forced to rescue Wells and mastermind a way to end the standoff peacefully. Barry Williams of The Brady Bunch guest stars.
2323"Log 12: He – He Was Trying to Kill Me"Hollingsworth MorseRobert I. HoltMarch 15, 1969 (1969-03-15)
Reed and Malloy respond to a case of child neglect and abuse when a 6-year-old girl is home alone in her apartment caring for her baby sister, who is later found lying on blankets in the bathtub. And both parents; the mother a wannabe model, and the father a drifter are unable to provide for their children. The role of the Department of Social Services takes center stage.
2424"Log 172: Boy... the Things You Do for the Job"Hollingsworth MorseMichael DonovanMarch 22, 1969 (1969-03-22)
In this lighthearted, well-written episode, A beautiful young woman (Anna Capri) becomes literally obsessed with Malloy after he pulls her over for a traffic violation.
2525"Log 92: Tell Him He Pushed Back a Little Too Hard"Phil RawlinsPreston WoodMarch 29, 1969 (1969-03-29)
Malloy and Reed respond numerous times to a dispute between two neighbors, who continually argue over the motorboat they jointly own-which despite the officers best efforts comes to a tragic conclusion. Dick Sargent guest stars as a murder suspect.
2626"Log 22: ...So This Little Guy Goes into This Bar, and..."Phil RawlinsPreston WoodApril 5, 1969 (1969-04-05)
Reed's joke about a shaggy dog falls flat when he tries retelling the joke, which he first heard from Officer Ed Wells, to his fellow cops.
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