Endora pops in dust in time to witness a very harried, busy and quite usual morning for Samantha. Endora points out to Samantha that, if Darrin had some ambition that things would be a lot easier for her. Samantha informs Endora that she is quite content with Darrin and with her mode of living. Endora decides to cast a spell on Darrin which will give him more push and ambition. At the office, Larry Tate is surprised when Darrin consents to taking over the Braddock account -- one which Larry has been after a very busy Darrin to take over for months. When Larry asks Darrin to join he and Mr. Braddock for lunch, Darrin has Larry called away from the table on a phony telephone call. When alone, he makes quite clear to Braddock that most of the good work being done on the account is due to Darrin's efforts, not Larry's. Later, Mr. Braddock requests that Darrin handle the account. watch
Endora pops in dust in time to witness a very harried, busy and quite usual morning for Samantha. Endora points out to Samantha that, if Darrin had some ambition that things would be a lot easier for her. Samantha informs Endora that she is quite content with Darrin and with her mode of living. Endora decides to cast a spell on Darrin which will give him more push and ambition. At the office, Larry Tate is surprised when Darrin consents to taking over the Braddock account -- one which Larry has been after a very busy Darrin to take over for months. When Larry asks Darrin to join he and Mr. Braddock for lunch, Darrin has Larry called away from the table on a phony telephone call. When alone, he makes quite clear to Braddock that most of the good work being done on the account is due to Darrin's efforts, not Larry's. Later, Mr. Braddock requests that Darrin handle the account. watch
Architect Wilbur Post (Alan Young, The Time Machine) and his wife Carol (Connie Hines) move into a beautiful new home complete with a barn in the backyard. When Wilbur takes a look in his new barn, he finds that the former owner left his horse behind. This horse is no ordinary horse . . . he can talk, but only to Wilbur, which leads to all sorts of misadventures for Wilbur and his trouble-making sidekick Mister Ed. Premiering in 1960, Mister Ed became the first syndicated series ever to be picked up by a network when CBS adopted the show in 1961 for the remainder of its five-year run. The program won a Golden Globe Award as Best TV Show in 1963. You never heard of a talking horse? Well, check out the famous Mister Ed. watch