"The Bat's Kow Tow" begins with Batman determining the right pitch to break the glass container amplifying the drops of water, though he'll never get any awards for his singing (Joe Flynn again appears unbilled as Benton Belgoody). Speaking of singing, Chad and Jeremy launch into what had only recently become their final US hit, "Distant Shores," an Eastern flavored ballad composed by future Chicago producer James William Guercio, when Catwoman arrives and abruptly ends the performance by stealing their voices in midsong, demanding millions in ransom from the British government. Sir Sterling Habits (Maurice Dallimore, previously seen in the 1966 feature film, later in the Lord Ffogg three parter from season three) takes a call from Prime Minister Harold Wilson, the verdict on Chad and Jeremy: "millions for their records, not a cent for their voices!" (his butler is named Rhett!). Another famous talk show host, Steve Allen, is well cast as Allan Stevens (unbilled), who also loses his voice to the nefarious Catwoman, while the Batclimb cameo comes from Hawaiian entertainer Don Ho. The final showdown takes place at the posh salon of hair stylist Mr. Oceanbring, played by real life hair stylist Jay Sebring, sadly murdered by Charles Manson's acolytes in the same house where Sharon Tate met her untimely fate. Only Catwoman tries to get away, but with Batman in her sights finds herself confessing her love for him rather than trying to kill him, asking him out on a date when she gets released from prison! It's a human touch and not what one would expect but most welcome to see such tension between the seductive temptress and the clearly smitten Caped Crusader, Robin capping the exchange: "holy mush!" Having earlier heard two songs from Chad and Jeremy, the final scene has them performing a single from February 1966, "Teenage Failure," like "Manners Maketh Man" a Jeremy Clyde original, unsuccessful at the time, but preferable to Paul Simon's "Homeward Bound," which did became a hit for Simon and Garfunkel upon its January 1966 release.