On the morning of the 16th of September, an ambulance was summoned to pick up Dr. Camp who fell ill in the research department of the Cooper Electronics Corporation. He was the second person to collapse in the past 2 hours. At the hospital, the two scientists are diagnosed with appendicitis and ileitis. [1]
Hugh, the director, thinks it is just coincidence. Dr. Bascomb is not so sure. He believes their groundbreaking work on transistors might have been sabotaged. To prove this, he takes Hugh to “the computing machine.”
He types in the odds of appendicitis = 1 in 24, blocked intestine = 1 in 2,000,000, one year = 365, and two specialists in a department of four. The odds of the 2 men being stricken at the same time are calculated to be 55 billion to one — the same odds that the writers ever took a statistics course — there’s yer coincidence!
Hugh realizes both men got sick in the lab, and Barbara is in there now. They are concerned to find the woman on the floor without a scrub brush in her hand. She is diagnosed with a brain injury and is partially paralyzed. She must go into surgery immediately.
George asks the doctors how three people could have gotten so sick. There is no radiation in the lab, no poison, no Indian food. Dr. Stone goes to the lab with George and Hugh. They check the air, the chemicals, and the light frequencies. They get a call that the two sick men were in surgery, but it was discovered that their appendix and intestines were fine. Barbara is still in a coma, though.
They detect an electronic wave permeating the lab. They rig up a direction-finder and trace the signal to the hospital and a room where Dr. Schiller is running electronic experiments. They can’t figure the connection, though.
They hear a SHREIK, which unintentionally prompts the funniest moment in this series:
George: “What’s that?”
Dr. Schiller: (very unconcerned) “Oh, that’s a patient. The surgery preparation room is right above us.”
They go to the head nurse [3] and see that other patients went in for surgery for appendicitis, ileitis, and brain surgery at the same time each of the three people were stricken in the lab. Turns out Schiller’s equipment was reading the pain of the patients in the operating room above him. Somehow. And then transmitting the signal all over the city. Somehow. And the new super-sensitive transistors were picking it up across town. Somehow. And the transistor made the three people sick if they were standing near it. Somehow.
They decide to test the theory by looking at the oscilloscope in the lab while another patient goes in for surgery. The hospital lets them know when another poor sap is wheeled in. George tells Dr. Stone not to stand near the oscilloscope during the test. Oh, for the love of God, the oscilloscope isn’t causing the illness, the transistor is!!!
And, by the way, where is this butcher shop that induces such pain in the operating room that patients regularly scream and psychically broadcast their pain? Don’t they use anesthetics at this chop shop?
They watch the oscilloscope go crazy as the surgeon slices into the poor bastard. Dr. Stone says, “Do you realize what you’ve got here? A device to see pain visually!” Yeah, I’m looking at it, pal.
Barbara wakes up from her coma and doesn’t even complain about the guys calling her “Bobby” throughout the whole episode. George proposes to her now that she is no longer paralyzed from the waist down, despite there having been no suggestion of a relationship up to this point.
After last week’s gem, this was bound to be a let down. Still, they did surprise me a couple of times. First, they actually named the corporation where 2 employees nearly dropped dead, and Second, it was not Amazon. [2] The rigging of the direction-finder was cool (and did not rely on micro-changes in air density). Then the boyz took a little road trip with their new toy.
Better than the average SFT, but that is one low-ass bar.
Other Stuff:
- Title Analysis: The three people who were carried out of the lab had only the symptoms (or facsimiles) of their diagnosed ailments. I’m not clear on how that is better.
- Apologies to the fictional family of Dr. Hargrove who I rolled into Dr. Stone.
- [1] Inflamed or blocked intestine.
- [2] Would also have accepted: Foxconn.
- [3] The head nurse did not have much of a part. She is worth a mention though, because she played old Geena Davis in A League of their Own, and because of her IMDb picture.

Chester picks Miss Grecco up at the train station and brings her to the house. Sadly, this role is also poorly cast. I think she is supposed to be a beauty, but I’m just not seeing it. Arnold nervously tries to make small talk. While Miss Grecco rings his bell, Elizabeth rings her bell. After being introduced to Elizabeth, Miss Grecco goes to freshen up. This gives Elizabeth a chance to further berate Arnold for hiring a “chorus girl from the Folies Bergère.”
All of the furniture is covered with sheets. Ellen notices a portrait of Captain Michael Klaussen (1860-1902). Andrew is momentarily hypnotized by the picture. He snaps out of it and tells Ellen they have to rent this place!
Andrew grabs her — literally — he is kind of a grabby guy. [1] He wants to explore the rest of the house. As they are coming down the stairs, Andrew suddenly gets a stabbing pain in his leg. The next day, he is badly limping.
Andrew pushes Ellen around pretty violently, then begins strangling her. A knocked over lamp catches the picture on fire and Andrew runs to it. His hair is now thick and white like the Captain’s. Andrew screams and collapses. As the picture burns, he returns to normal.
Mrs. Gardner promises him they will have some cash soon. Then she smells gas. Mr. Mason seems strangely uninterested in this gas leak which could blow up his building, his job, and his collection of Hummel Figurines. She enters and finds her husband Ray on the floor. Their apartment is even shabbier than the Kramden’s down in 3B. At least the Kramden’s bed is in a bedroom; although, God knows I don’t want to think too much about what goes on in there. Mrs. Gardner opens the windows and turns off the stove. Ray wakes up.
They decide, for no good reason, to separate. Both feel like all eyes are on them. Because Ray doesn’t have 2 dimes for the train, it leaves without him. I guess that’s back when turnstile jumping was illegal. They meet up later at Grand Central Station.
They are about to leave for six weeks vacation, or holiday, or summering in Balmoral, or whatever the hell rich English people do. Actually, she is going to New York to see their grandchildren, and he is going to stay at “the club”. The chauffer thinks Mr. Foster always keeps his wife waiting just to make her crazy. The butler advises him to shut his gob, but that is good advice for most Brits given the condition of their teeth. [1] She is frantic, fearing she will miss her plane. Finally, Mr. Foster descends in their elevator. Told ya they were rich.
The next morning, Mr. Foster surprises his wife by actually being ready to leave early for the airport. As they are about to leave, he mentions that they will have to stop by their bank which is nowhere near them, kinda like an open
She runs back to the car and tells the driver she can’t wait for her husband. He can take an Uber to “the club”. They take off for the airport.
Who am I to criticize the great Roald Dahl?