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Dan Adams (COronado 9)

Created by Lawrence Kimble

Big, beefy Rod Cameron as P.I. Dan Adams takes a stroll past the iconic Hotel del Coronado.

Rugged and still studly Rod Cameron played DAN ADAMS, a retired naval intelligence officer turned soft spoken San Diego private eye in COronado 9, a short-lived syndicated show from 1960.

The title of the show came from Dan Adams’ street address on Coronado Island, the affluent San Diego suburb that was Dan’s stomping grounds, and the home of many of the rich and powerful who made up his client base, with the opening credits zooming past a few panning shots of the Island before zooming in on a rock on the ground with the numeral 9 superimposed on it, serving as a marker for Adams’ home (if he had an actual office, we never saw it). It was no doubt chosen as the title of the show in hopes of latching on to the popularity of, oh, say, 77 Sunset Strip?

But by all accounts, it was a far grittier show than what Warner Bros. was pumping out. Cameron was no pretty boy, for one thing — he was a big, beefy guy who looked like he’d taken more than a few punches in his life, but could definitely hit back — and he worked alone. Meanwhile, the cases themselves were tougher and harder (and more action-packed) than anything Stu, Jeff and Kookie were dealing with. The episode titles sounded like stories pulled from the old pulps: “I Came for the Funeral,” “Three’s a Shroud” and “The Groom Came D.O.A.”  could have lifted from Dime Detective, Black Mask or new kid on the block Manhunt. Another plus was that Adams got around, venturing not just to New Orleans, San Francisco and Hawaii but also to Mexico, Algiers and even Communist Cuba.

We’re not talking a long lost classic or anything here, but the show was good enough to warrant another look.

COronado 9 was the third syndicated show the 6’4″ ruggedly handsome Cameron starred in, following City Detective and State Trooper, although his chief claim to fame was the long list of westerns he played in during the forties and fifties. Born and raised in Alberta, Canada, he decided to pursue acting when his dreams of becoming a Mountie were dashed.

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Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

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