This one, with Uncle Milty in a dramatic role as a firebrand talk show host facing attempts against his life, was pretty interesting, and seems uncannily prescient considering the now well-entrenched modern era of TV political commentators. Was a crystal ball used for the part where an audience member stands up and complains about socialistic health care programs? Afraid to alienate either the right or left, I'm assuming, the character as written sprays his buckshot pretty widely, going after both welfare "sponges" and textbooks that gloss over injustices to minorities--though he accuses the writers of said textbooks of being communists (?). At one point the demi-demagogue even engages in a little gay-baiting, actually using the word "queer" on a guest. One has to wonder how Mr. Burr felt about that. Berle seems a little weak in his role, but he's given good support from episodic television mainstays Patricia Barry and George Murdock, and especially Julie Adams as the bitter, alcoholic spouse and Dane Clark as the show's bitter, alcoholic researcher. I won't spoil the ending, but it borrows a lot from a first season episode featuring Lee Grant as a hated gossip columnist.