I Dream Of Jeannie 4x23 Around The World In 80 Blinks -

The episode also serves as a wonderful time capsule of late-1960s television—a world where a U.S. astronaut could jaunt to Paris between commercial breaks, where international travel still seemed glamorous and exotic, and where a loving, magical wife could solve (and create) all your problems with a single blink.

★★★★☆ (4/5) – A dizzyingly fun, laugh-out-loud episode that proves magic and pride make for a combustible, entertaining mix. Don’t blink, or you’ll miss the punchline. Streaming Availability: I Dream of Jeannie is available on various platforms including Amazon Prime Video and Pluto TV. “Around the World in 80 Blinks” is part of Season 4, Episode 23. I Dream of Jeannie 4x23 Around the World in 80 Blinks

Original Air Date: February 21, 1969 Director: Hal Cooper Writer: James S. Henerson The episode also serves as a wonderful time

The problem? Tony’s pride won’t let him win the bet by magical means. He insists on waiting for a commercial flight back to Florida, effectively forfeiting his lead. This leads to a wonderfully absurd confrontation in a Parisian square, where Jeannie, in a fit of frustration, blinks a flock of pigeons into formation to spell out “TONY IS A STUBBORN GOAT” in the sky. (The visual gag, simple by today’s standards, is pure 1960s sitcom gold.) Don’t blink, or you’ll miss the punchline

By the time I Dream of Jeannie reached its fourth season, the formula was as comfortable as an old slipper. NASA astronaut Captain Tony Nelson (Larry Hagman) would get into a bind, his beautiful, 2,000-year-old genie Jeannie (Barbara Eden) would try to help with magic, and chaos would ensue before a tidy, laugh-tracked resolution. But every so often, the show took its fantastical premise for a joyride. Season 4’s “Around the World in 80 Blinks” is one such episode—a globe-trotting, logic-defying, and thoroughly delightful farce that showcases the series at its most inventive. The episode opens not in Cocoa Beach, Florida, but in the pressure-cooker environment of NASA’s astronaut training facility. Tony’s long-time rival, the pompous and arrogant Colonel Buzz (a pitch-perfect cameo by character actor Don Marshall), is goading him. The subject? The newly developed multi-directional telemetry scanner (or some equally technobabble device—the show wisely never lingers on the science). Buzz boasts that he can recalibrate the scanner on a global scale faster than Tony can.