"Dragnet 1967" The Big Amateur (TV Episode 1968) Poster

(TV Series)

(1968)

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8/10
The Perfect Cop
VetteRanger13 January 2023
Friday and Gannon embark on a case where a community wishes to give an award to a local officer, but the officer doesn't exist in the roles of LAPD. As they follow one lead after another, they hear story after story about the officer's honesty and helpfulness to the merchants in the neighborhood.

They have to suspect he's setting the business owners up for a big take at some point in the near future, but no real evidence exists to indicate that's about to happen. It's a frustrating and puzzling case for our favorite pair of detectives, as they wonder if they'll ever catch up with the guy and find out what's really happening.
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10/10
It's good to know that we have Gideon C. Dengle on our side!
planktonrules21 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of my favorite episodes of "Dragnet" and it always makes me smile when I watch it. The show begins with a group of business owners coming to the police headquarters and asking about Officer Gideon C. Dengle. Apparently they are from a business association and they want to give Officer Dengle an award for his outstanding service to the community. The problem is that he recently stopped coming to their part of L.A.--so apparently he must have be re-assigned. The police are baffled, as they have no idea who this "Officer Dengle" is and when they check their records, there is no Officer Dengle! So, it's up to Friday and Gannon to investigate and figure out why someone is posing as a cop! The odd thing, however, is that the more they check, the more they see that Dengle was like the perfect cop and, apparently, there was no attempt on his part to defraud anyone! He was just some nice kook who thought he was a policeman! But where is he and what is he up to now?! This is one of the lighter and more comedic episodes. Unlike many folks who pose as someone they are not, this guy is basically harmless and sweet. Excellent writing and a wonderful ending. See this one.
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6/10
Gideon C. Dengle, Paragon.
rmax30482325 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Things are going terribly wrong in Los Angeles. A man named Gideon C. Dengle is impersonating a police officer and is doing everything right. He has the enthusiasm of the Good Soldier Schweik but also is extremely competent. He goes about doing good. He even climbs a tree to rescue an old lady's cat. The community loves him and wants to give him a big shiny award.

But of course since he's not a member of the LAPD it's difficult to track him down. Friday and Gannon do their best and finally corner him after he has "quit" the police department and impersonates a battalion chief of the Fire Department.

He's arrested, processed for two misdemeanors, and put on probation.

I'd have made Dengle an honorary member of the LAPD, paid him a salary, and sent him out into the community again to continue his good deeds and improve the image of the LAPD.
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What was the REAL Officer Friendly like?
cynic2all29 June 2016
Wouldn't you like to know what was really behind all this? I mean what did Gideon Dengle really do; how did he make his living? Why was he not really a cop or firefighter? While "the story...is true," we know that means there has to be only a couple or so facts about a case file, and then the writers could come up with whatever they wanted. But if the real case even resembles this episode, it would seem that Dengle had applied, and perhaps had worked, as a police officer or firefighter, but for some reason he was not so employed then. Perhaps there is something he lacked that the ep doesn't touch...may eyesight, for one; law enforcement still does not hire applicants who must have glasses (I don't know about fire departments), but will allow officers to remain who later must have them. Then maybe he couldn't keep his mind on class when he was in school, so he never got a diploma or equivalency. Perhaps he was financially secure and just live a childhood dream, and the means to do it.

Anyway, I think there is more to it than he was just "some kind of nut" who wanted to play policeman. And maybe there was only one or 2 incidents, not all this high praise and helping kids get into the car and rescuing an old lady's cat. They just decided to pour it over with all that good will stuff.
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