"The Andy Griffith Show" Andy and the Woman Speeder (TV Episode 1961) Poster

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9/10
One of the more unusual episodes
corazontvc28 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Loved this show, and this is one of my all-time favorite episodes. But then I have so many. A sophisticated journalist or someone involved in print of some sort, is speeding through Mayberry just as Floyd, Opie, Barney and Sheriff Andy Taylor are putting their fishing stuff away in the trunk. She is manipulative and tries to get the possibility of a ticket dismissed. Andy hands her a ticket anyway. Since this was before the days of E-pay and being able to mail your payment in, the part which she objects to, and sets her off, is being told to appear next week to pay the ticket. She accuses the Sheriff of running a small town speed trap, and asks to speak to the Justice of the Peace. Back at the station, to her surprise, it's Andy. She refuses to back down, saying she is being railroaded, which just lands her into more hot water. She is told that she can see the Mayor's Court, but that will have to be tomorrow. Until then, she will have to sit in jail. To Andy and Barney's surprise, she chooses jail. She then brilliantly sets about to manipulate everyone around Andy, especially the witnesses. At the trial, the witnesses refuse to comply, and the case is dismissed. She is about to leave, and sees the pain she's caused the circle around Andy, and purposely speeds off. She gets caught, and pays a fine of ten dollars, plus, feeling guilty, she voluntarily pays a fine of twenty five dollars.

This is a very interesting episode because usually no one is portrayed as getting the better of Sheriff Andy Taylor. Here, it happened. The acting is top notch, especially from the guest star, Jean Hagen as the female speeder, the turns are intriguing and a bit cringe inducing.

Look, it's very clear that the female speeder was originally in the wrong. There are also things that make no sense. The female speeder is right to be incredulous when she finds that the one who is citing her, is also judging her (Andy being both the arresting officer and Justice of the Peace). It makes no sense that her fine at the end is the same as it was in the beginning (ten dollars both times). Now, when you get a second offense within typically six months, the fine goes up. And if Andy is the Justice of the Peace as well, why did she have to wait a whole week to pay during a formal court appearance, she could've paid the original ten dollar fine directly to Andy. Although this show did have many moral lessons, it seems a bit silly to analyze it too much. This is not really a show for deep philosophical thought. And nothing wrong with that, just turn off your mind and enjoy.
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10/10
Character Study
MichaelMartinDeSapio22 September 2015
This little character study has long been one of my favorite TAGS episodes. There's a nice blend of the serious and the comic, and the acting from all concerned is first-rate. The sexual tension between the character played by Jean Hagen (Lina Lamont from SINGIN' IN THE RAIN) and Andy is most interesting, and is of a more subtle kind than we find in "The Manicurist" or "Prisoner of Love." I found myself wondering whether the two of them were playing a flirtatious game the whole time.

One of the previous reviewers described the actions of the townsfolk as uncharacteristic. Well, given these gentlemen's susceptibility elsewhere to the fair sex (witness "The Manicurist"), I'd say their behavior was perfectly credible. And as for Floyd and Barney turning against Andy - well, the speeding ticket IS rather trivial, after all. On the other hand, Andy IS the upholder of the law, and his concern over the speeding issue is tied to his concern for the safety of Mayberry's citizens - in contrast to Barney, who would haul someone into jail for a trivial infraction merely out of a need to lord it over someone.

I disagree with the reviewer who said that TAGS isn't a show for "deep philosophical thought" and urged us to "turn off your mind and enjoy." Not only is TAGS capable of being profound when it wants to be (especially compared with other comic offerings of the '60's) but this episode is a prime example of it. There is much here about the open road, about men and women and the "eternal chase," and (as mentioned) about willfulness, wiles, and manipulation. A real character study, in other words.

Besides all of which, I'm surprised no one has mentioned the classic bit in which Hagen, while in jail, attempts to sweet-talk Barney by saying he reminds her of Frank Sinatra. And the concluding segment, in which Barney actually imitates Ol' Blue Eyes. Speaking for myself, Barney always looked more like Fred Astaire, but that's a discussion for another day.
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The US Supreme Ct Agreed with the "Woman Speeder's" take on the Mayberry "Fool-Proof System".
derbycityusa16 August 2013
The majority of people who watched Andy and Barney every week for years during prime time and then later on during reruns, never believed that what was being depicted on the show (the sheriff also being the Justice of the Peace who was legally allowed to try the same people he had either cited or arrested on minor criminal charges i.e. usually crimes that carried no more then a maximum penalty of 30 - 90 days in jail), was actually taking place during the time that the show ran. As a matter of fact, it only stopped during the 1970's, when the US Supreme Court basically ruled in a manner that was pretty much stated to Andy by the "Woman Speeder". But, when she told Andy what she thought of Mayberry's "Fool Proof System", it resulted in Andy determining that she had "insulted the dignity of his robe", but based on the circumstances that transpired around her and others being cited, arrested and then also tried and convicted by the same representative of the government during the process from start to finish, it also resulted in the United States of America's highest court pretty much stating the same thing she did, which is basically this: Common sense alone tells you that anytime a person who accuses another person of a crime is allowed to determine rather you are guilty or innocent of those charges is, at a minimum a clear and concise appearance of impropriety, and that goes for Sheriff Andy Taylor of Mayberry as well! CASE DISMISSED!
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6/10
Selfishness Rewarded
Hitchcoc28 November 2019
The woman in title is able to manipulate the small town approach to law, and rightfully so. The fact that she was guilty never enters in. She makes a mockery of the entire process, making demands that are untenable. This thing just left a bad taste in my mouth. The punishment for her crime was basically nothing.
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6/10
Decent story
vitoscotti7 March 2022
Pushy Andy piles on the fines like there's no tomorrow. The story has a nice flow. The dirt road speeder created a dust storm but her car and herself are spotlessly clean. Andy makes Ms Crowley (Jean Hagen) go way out of her way to the courthouse instead of offering to accept fine payment at the scene. A slightly above average episode. No real big laughs.
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5/10
Really, Barney ?
bbcds24 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
As some of the others have mentioned, this episode is not really one we needed. It is out of line with most every other episode with the way everyone treats Andy. Floyd, we can understand because, well, he is Floyd. Next is Opie. Again, he is a child but he willfully sided against his paw when he never did before or after. Then we get to Barney, the strictest by-the-book lawman ever. But what does he do? He stabs Andy in the back. Lastly, Aunt Bee saw this lady's scheme and did nothing. I mean, how the heck do you go on with the Sheriff's Dept or even be friends after this betrayal?
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5/10
This one didn't set well with me....
planktonrules12 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
While I am a huge fan of "The Andy Griffith Show" (at least the episodes with Barney), I didn't like this episode very much--mostly because it did something that the show usually did not do--it made the characters unlikable as well as two-faced. Normally, the townspeople have a lot of affection and decentness towards each other--here, however, the message is confusing and a bit unsavory.

The show begins with a cocky but pretty lady (Jean Hagan) speeding. She is clearly guilty and instead of accepting her punishment, seems to think she's above the law. And, in the interval between her arrest and the trial, she manipulates and twists the men of the town until the witnesses (other than Andy) recant and she's able to walk on the charges. As I said above, the townspeople behaved very uncharacteristically here and it also seemed dumb because it was just a speeding violation! As a result, despite the ending, the show seemed very weak and didn't fit well into the series. A rare early klunker.
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