The Frank Burns/Trapper era was the greatest. I could care less about the B.J./Charles Emerson Winchester shows.
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Which MASH did you like most?
<input type="radio" name="option" value="1" />early
<input type="radio" name="option" value="2" />middle
<input type="radio" name="option" value="3" />later years
<input type="radio" name="option" value="4" />After Mash
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The Frank Burns/Trapper era was the greatest. I could care less about the B.J./Charles Emerson Winchester shows.
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Quote I'll always remember:
"Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Blake's plane was shot down over the Sea of Japan. It spun in. There were no survivors"
You'll shoot your eye out.
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What the scene where the lady smothers the kid to keep it from crying, maybe from the finale?
Hawkeye:
"This must be my Kim Lucky day!"
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Without a doubt my favorite show ever. When I come back to BSG to visit my parents, they will usually have it on FX or Hallmark. I remember one Thanksgiving they had an all day marathon. Barely got away from the TV to eat.
One of my alltime fav's. Comes on every night on Halmark at 11:00 and runs for 2 hours.
I don't really have a favorite era, I like Blake/Burns/Trapper and BJ/Winchester/Potter. One of the best characters on the whole show though is Colonel Flag.
Don't play dumb with me, you're not as good at it as I am -- Flagg
Nobody can get the truth out of me because even I don't know what it is. I keep myself in a constant state of utter confusion. -- Col. Flagg
it's the duty of every real American to be on the lookout for goldbricks, pinko's and fellow travelers. 'Course without the likes of Americans like you the jobs of Americans like me would be a lot more difficult. But don't get me wrong, Americans like me like difficult jobs. So don't get the idea you're doing the CIA any favors. We don't really need Americans like you, we don' need anybody. -- Flagg
Quiet, will you? The man is trying to be dull. Go ahead, Frank, dull away. -- Trapper
[COLOR="Lime"][SIZE="6"][FONT="Century Gothic"]CREAG AN TUIRC[/FONT][/SIZE][/COLOR]
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yeah that is where Hawkeye was put in the mental place with Sidney as his doctor
I was married by a judge. I should have asked for a jury.
"M*A*S*H "
An astounding 77 percent of all TV viewers on Feb. 28, 1983, had the set tuned to "Goodbye, Farewell and Amen," the final episode of one of TV's most beloved shows. The two-and-a-half hour finale did more tying up than a cowboy at a calf-roping competition, beginning with Hawkeye's (Alan Alda) trip to the mental hospital and going up through the bombing of the camp and Klinger's decision to stay in Korea. The final moment, with B.J. (Mike Farrell) and Hawkeye's final words and the "Goodbye" spelled out in stones, is still regarded as one of the most powerful moments in television drama. It was the greatest final impression one could make -- until that flavor of friendship was quickly replaced by the bitter aftertaste of "After M*A*S*H."
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Friedtaters (AKA Paco, AKA Agent 007), WHERE ARE YOU !!?
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Officially retired
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