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When I was nine, our family moved to the suburbs of Chicago. All of our 
extended family was in the Detroit area. This meant frequent travel back and 
forth from Chicago to Detroit. Usually when we traveled, it was on a Friday 
night after school has let out. This usually meant getting into Detroit right 
around 11:00. At the time, WJBK (which was the CBS affiliate at the time) would 
always show Mash at 11:30. This fed into a tradition: we would look forward to 
getting to my paternal grandparent's house and ordering Little Caesar's and 
watching Mash when we'd get there, exhausted. This lead me to kinda fall for 
the show: both my dad and grandpa loved the show, and the show's writing got to 
me, especially when it came to Hawkeye (a guy who was generally smarter than 
everyone else).

Over the years, I fell in love with one particular episode. It focused around a 
weekly poker game that took place in The Swamp, and the events that transpired 
during one of those poker games. Because the series was having budget issues at 
this time, Loretta Swit didn't appear, but quite a few guest regulars did: 
Captain Pak, Sidney Friedman, and the first appearance of Colonel Flagg (who 
was named Halloran in this episode). Additionally there was one patient 
(Private Carter) that snaps when Frank Burns pushes him once too often.

I remembered the episode vividly when I was younger because of a line that was 
omitted in the syndication version: after Carter takes Burns hostage at gun 
point, Friedman tries to talk to him. He refers to Burns as "a good man: a 
terrific doctor and a great human being." The syndicated cuts the next two 
lines: Henry Blake runs up to Hawkeye and says "Maybe we should get Father 
Mulcahy" (another no show in the episode). Hawkeye replies, "Yeah: he can give 
the truth the last rites." In the syndicated episode, the laugh-track bled past 
the cut point. I was thrilled when it came out on DVD and I could watch the 
full scene again.

The episode hit my sweet spot for a couple reasons: the idea of a poker night; 
the connection between guys (which I never experienced when I was growing up); 
and the back and forth between the players during the game. For someone with no 
friends and no male role model, it seemed like an ideal of what could be.

The patient was played by John Ritter. When he died, I remember thinking there 
were just enough people who had already died that it became a tontine in my 
mind: who would be the last actor from that episode to remain alive?

The actors in that episode:
Alan Alda
Wayne Rogers
McLean Stevenson
Larry Linville
Gary Burghoff
Pat Morita (Sam Pak)
Allan Arbus (Sidney Freedman)
Edward Winter (Captain Halloran)
Jamie Farr
Jerry Fujikawa (Whiplash Wang)
John Ritter
Gwen Farrell (Nurse Wilson)
Tom Dever (Lieutenant Rogers)

Fujikawa died in 1983. Stevenson in 1996. Linville in 2000. Winter in 2001.  
Ritter in 2003. Morita in 2005. And it's remained static until today.

Allan Arbus, who played Sidney Freedman, died aged 95. As his character said 
twice in the series (in "OR" and as his final line in "Goodbye, Farewell, And 
Amen"): "Ladies and gentlemen, take my advice: pull down your pants and slide 
on the ice."

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/24/arts/television/allan-arbus-mash-actor-dies-at-95.html?_r=0

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