"Murder, She Wrote" Programmed for Murder (TV Episode 1992) Poster

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7/10
Physicians, Heal Thy Computer System
WeatherViolet9 October 2009
This episode marks one of the last appearances, and final television role, of Tony Fields, whose brief acting career in film and television had tragically ended with his untimely passing.

Eve Simpson (Julie Adams) makes a brief appearance at Cabot Cove Clinic, to consult with Doctor Jonas Beckwith (Hunt Block) about her chronic allergies, which he attributes to a reaction to printers' ink. Afterwards, Doctor Seth Hazlitt (William Windom) encounters the two in the hallway, Seth asking if Eve's undiagnosable allergies persist.

Doctor Jonas Beckwith seems to have a way of treating patients with successful results, under modernized scientific and computerized research techniques whereas Seth relies upon methods of the past, tried and true. For this primary reason, Seth objects to Jonas' planning to establish a practice in Cabot Cove, his anger further fueled by Jonas' treating Sheriff Mort Metzger (Ron Masak) for a throat infection.

Jessica Fletcher (Angela Lansbury) assures Seth and Jonas that there is plenty of room in Cabot Cove for two physicians to practice, and such a notion would benefit Seth, by affording him less pressure to treat everyone in the community as its sole medic. After all, Jessica, herself, has now entered the computer age, and after adopting word processing applications in favor of her typewriter over at her apartment in New York City, she now forgoes the old for the new back in Cabot Cove.

Even though word processing has been helping to curtail the amount of time (from her typewriter years) which Jessica spends producing a manuscript, she does require technical advice and assistance during those times in which she is unable to retrieve her documents.

So, Jessica enlists the assistance of the one individual in Cabot Cove with computer savvy, Harriet Simmons Wooster (Judith Chapman), who informs Jessica that she plans to sell her computer programming enterprise, Alphadot, to an outfit in Boston, Computiac Inc., when she and her brother meet with a representative the next day.

Harriet's husband, Allan Wooster (Will Lyman), operates Wooster Landscape Nursery from their residence, and each expresses the desire to free Harriet of her enterprise over concerns for her health and their marriage.

The outfit in Boston is operated by John Halsey (Boyd Gaines), who receives increasing pressure from Rudy Ortega (Tony Fields), who represents investors, to make a shrewd deal with Harriet and her brother, upon their meeting at Hill House Inn.

Harriet's brother, Doug Simmons (Alex Hyde-White), then arrives along with his companion, Gretchen Price (Judith Hoag), to whose very presence Harriet objects.

That very day, when a patient is rushed to the clinic, Doctor Jonas Beckwith performs emergency surgery, but loses the patient to a faulty blood transfusion, to which Seth would not have recommended. Because Seth had misdiagnosed the condition in the first place, tempers flare concerning his archaic medical methods.

Jessica faults neither doctor, nor the clinician, Laura Garrison (Stacy Ray), who had labeled the blood and has now lost her position because of the mix-up. Rather than to subscribe to conflicting theories as to which medic stands at fault, Jessica decides that the victim has been "Programmed for Murder." Clinic Nurse (Amy Moessinger) and Deputy Andy Broom (Louis Herthum) round out the cast of this mystery centering around conflicting reports from the medical center.

Extra points for the not-unusually fine performances by Judith Chapman, in her third of three "MSW" appearances, Hunt Block, also in his third of three "MSW" appearances, and Alex Hyde-White, in his second of two "MSW" appearances.
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8/10
Doctors if you please
bkoganbing21 January 2019
This MSW story finds Angela Lansbury back in Cabot Cove and concerned about friend Judith Chapman's health. She's got good reason to be concerned when she winds up dead. Dr. Hunt Block of the Cabot Cove clinic and William Windom are at odds professionally as to the cause. And unless these two start cooperating we'll not get a solution.

Just the fact that her oldest and dearest friend Dr. Hazlitt is involved will guarantee JB Fletcher's participation in the case. Of course it is solved.

But I really liked this episode because those who did it planned it over a long period of time and it is one of the cleverest murder schemes I've ever seen or read.
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8/10
Doctor in Trouble.
Sleepin_Dragon4 November 2023
Jessica calls on the help of a computer programmer Harriet Worcester after some of her work disappears, it isn't long before Harriet dies, it seems on the surface to have been a mistake by Seth, Jessica isn't convinced.

Programmed for Murder is a very good episode, it's far from the typical format, for a period we're not even sure if it's murder or not, it was cleverly done.

There is a definite clue that you can spot, one they definitely labour.

We e definitely had episodes where Jessica's integrity is called into question, it made a nice change to see Seth's good character dragged through the mud.

Doctor Jonas Beckwith made for a worthwhile addition, a strong character, one wonders how Cabot Cove, with its incredibly high mortality rate could survive with just Seth.

I don't like technology either.

8/10.
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10/10
Surprising ending, some humor, combine for excellent show
FlushingCaps22 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Cabot Cove has a new doctor, Jonas Beckwith, who is much more comfortable following his computer in diagnosing his patients, and seems to get good results-but one of Seth's longtime patients, Harriet Wooster, just as she is about to sell her computer programming company, with the help of her lawyer-brother, suddenly has a medical emergency and is rushed to the hospital where Dr. Beckwith is unable to save her.

It seems there was something the doctor could not control that really caused her death...but Dr. Hazlitt believes it was still his fault for not properly realizing the minor discomfort he was treating her for was more serious.

A fair portion of this episode dealt with the two doctors realizing that both of their methods had merit and that working together they could each learn from the other. The humorous part of this one largely dealt with Sheriff Metzger getting a quick prescription from the new doctor for his coughing-without asking for it-and trying to hide that fact from his friend Seth, as Mort did not want to appear disloyal.

Jessica seems to be the only one around who thinks there has been a murder, and we can figure out much of what she's up to, but not all of it, as she checks on numerous facts, including a few phone calls to Bangor and more.

There were several possible suspects to consider, which always helps. Occasionally, there seems to be only about two possible suspects and that takes away from the fun in viewers trying to guess the killer.

The Reveal was most definitely one I did not expect. This one had the planning of most of Columbo's murder cases-which almost always led to more interesting episodes there and on any murder mystery than the ones where two people quarrel and one shoves or slugs the other and accidentally kills the person, but then goes to lengths to hide their involvement, figuring the police will not believe it was self defense, or a total accident.

Combining a good, realistic serious point about doctoring practices, some humor, and a well-above-average murder plan lets me give this one a 10.
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9/10
Programmed for Murder
TheLittleSongbird26 October 2017
Have always been quite fond of 'Murder She Wrote'. It is a fun and relaxing watch that makes you think as you try to unwind in the evening. If one wants more complex, twisty mysteries with lots of tension and suspense 'Murder She Wrote' may not be for you, but if you want something light-hearted and entertaining but still provide good mysteries 'Murder She Wrote' fits the bill just fine.

"Programmed for Murder" is the best Season 8 episode since "The Monte Carlo Murders" and while not quite one of the very best 'Murder She Wrote' episodes it's in the top half of Season 8. My only complaint is the dialogue for Hunt Block, Block does do very well considering but some of what he is given is over-simplistic and beneath him. The rest of the writing elsewhere is thought-provoking and has the right balance of light-heart and taking it seriously and going overboard on either.

The mystery is an intriguing one that is very easy to engage with. The twists keep coming and the ending is (as with a lot of Season 8 episodes) is very clever, surprising and plausible. The murder is one of the cleverest of the show too.

Angela Lansbury is terrific as always as are William Windom (a charming curmudgeon but this is another episode, after "Curse of the Danaav", where he gets to show more depth to usual, one feels and roots for Seth here) and Ron Masak. Block, Judith Chapman, Alex Hyde-White and Will Nyman are solid in their supporting roles. Julie Adams' appearance is brief but her Eve is as humorous and classy as always.

Production values are slick and stylish as ever. The music has energy and has presence but also not making the mistake of over-scoring, while it is hard to forget or resist the theme tune.

Overall, great episode. 9/10 Bethany Cox
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8/10
M. Night Shyamalan would be proud of the ending
safenoe20 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I never expected the ending. I thought the interloper doctor was the culprit but not to be. All credit to the writer who came up with the twist! I sometimes wish Murder, She Wrote was rebooted, and it was supposed to be rebooted with Octavia Spencer. But I understand Angela Lansbury objected for reasons we can only speculate if you know what I mean. Anyway, we still have the original Murder, She Wrote series so that's okay.
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8/10
Doctor vs doctor
rgxdzrybr10 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Enough humor but also a murder that weaves into the medical profession and the different approaches to treating patients .

Seth is prominently featured in this one but it becomes personal when a patient and friend dies . He's not only irritated with the new younger doctor ( Hunt Block) but begins to question his own approach and feels responsible. Naturally Jessica gets involved. Seth is cleared by the autopsy but it's Jessica that solves the murder in one of the most clever murder plots .

While Seth is a little stubborn about new approaches he's not wrong about listening to and knowing the patient better and understanding.
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7/10
Doctor, Doctor
feindlicheubernahme20 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Holy cow! That was the meanest, nastiest murder I've yet to see in MSW, and carried out on the sweetest, most sympathetic victim I can remember.

From the very first scene in Jessica's house, I had a bad feeling about Harriet's feeling bad. For once, I was actually praying for a drunk, violent, cheating jerk to show up so he could be the one to be killed. But, alas, 'twas not to be, and we lost dear, innocent Harry before we even knew her.

To be fair, though, the last time Judith Shipman's appeared on MSW, she was the killer, so I guess it's only fair for her to now be the victim. Having said that, Kate Mulgrew's been on twice now, and both times she's been the killer. Kate, you naughty girl, if you don't stop murdering people right now, you'll never get that starship captain's licence you keep talking about.

This episode has left me plagued by some even more inconsequential musings:

Where exactly does Seth work? I swear I've seen him working in what appears to be his own home, but other times he's working in the hospital. Could he have the time to do both? What a guy!

Where is this hospital? I had previously assumed that it was in a nearby big city, but Doctor Beckwith says something along the lines of that he doesn't want to get into competition with the town's only doctor. So is it, in fact, in Cabot Cove? But surely a town with about 3,500 inhabitants, which I've read is Cabot Cove's population, wouldn't have its own hospital, would it?

How can Seth have been the only doctor in a town with a population of 3,500?

I knew the sheriff was dumb as a bag of rocks, as the Americans say ("thick as pigsh*t" is the quaint UK version) but could even he possibly be stupid enough to not remember his allergy to a particular medication, even when specifically asked? How's he still alive? How does he not forget to breathe?

Hunt Block. Seriously?

Seven stars to light our 'Arry's way to that great software company in the sky.
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8/10
Was expecting William Conrad as a KGB agent
jgrant1-626-8534221 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Nope., this is the one where Jessica hasn't read her Agatha Christie. As she seems to be a Christie character, this is a serious mistake. Thallium poisoning was covered in Christie's The Pale Horse. It doesn't kill instantly, but acts slowly causing neurological symptoms and hair loss. Yet somehow, Jessica is sure it drops the young ballerina instantly. A really bad clue.
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6/10
Is Dr. Hazlitt a quack or is there more to this case?
planktonrules22 February 2023
Dr. Hazlitt (William Windom) has been treating a young lady for minor stomach problems. So imagine his surprise when out of the blue she dies...of a perforated ulcer. At first, it's assumed that Hazlitt screwed up...but he insists that her health wasn't that bad and he cannot explain her death. Not surprisingly, Jessica gets involved in the case and discovers that there's MUCH more to the case...and Hazlitt isn't necessarily to blame. But who is? And, what really happened?

This is a decent episode...as are nearly all the Cabot Cove episodes. But it's also relatively unremarkable as well. Well worth seeing, as are all the shows (even the sucky ones).
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5/10
Rather pedestrian
coltras3520 May 2022
A computer programmer's death may mean a malpractice suit for Seth, but Jessica suspects murder. A rather pedestrian episode, but that's not a bad thing as even ordinary episodes hold some interest. There's an interesting contrast between Seth's traditional medical ethics and the hospital doctor. They sort of clash until the end.
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