Before my time so I had to Google it.  From 
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061242/plotsummary

Coronet Blue" (1967)
Mike is running from some men when he falls into the harbour. He climbs out 
remembering only that he was running and the phrase 'coronet blue'. As the show 
continues from week to week, Mike tries to piece together clues as to his 
identity as individuals he refers to as Greybeards seem to be intent on killing 
him

"Coronet Blue" creator Larry Cohen, in his autobiography "The Radical 
Allegories of an Independent Filmmaker," explained the mystery behind the 
series' title/catch-phrase. "When the Brodkin Organization took over the 
series, they wanted to turn it into an anthology... so they played down the 
amnesia aspect until there was nothing about it at all in the show. It was just 
Frank Converse wandering from one story to the next with no connective format 
at all. Anyway, the show ended after seventeen weeks and nobody found out what 
'coronet blue' meant. The actual secret is that Converse was not really an 
American at all. He was a Russian who had been trained to appear like an 
American and was sent to the U.S. as a spy. He belonged to a spy unit called 
'Coronet Blue.' He decided to defect, so the Russians tried to kill him before 
he can give away the identities of the other Soviet agents. And nobody can 
really identify him because he doesn't exist as an American. Coronet Blue was 
actually an outgrowth of 'The Traitor' episode of "The Defenders" (1961)." 
However, anyone who has seen the show knows that the amnesia aspect was in fact 
NOT played down (one episode had Alden declining a golden opportunity to learn 
the truth about himself--or at least a good part of it--on moral grounds 
concerning the way the information became available to him). Other facts are 
that thirteen episodes were all that were filmed, and that from first air date 
to last is only fourteen weeks--fifteen potential weekly air dates if you 
include those at both ends, but only eleven of the episodes were aired; in any 
case, Cohen's "seventeen weeks," made in a BOOK wherein he presumably had 
plenty of time to check and be certain that he got such fundamental facts 
correct, is indefensible. All this calls the validity of the entirety of his 
statement into question.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jim 
O'Connell
Sent: Thursday, December 25, 2008 9:32 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: Loot


Not sure if anyone else on this group is enough of a TV junkie to appreciate 
this, but for Xmas I received a bootleg copy of the entire episode run of the 
TV series "Coronet Blue". It's a Christmas miracle!!



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