Set in Los Angeles and starring
Jack Webb as
Sgt. Joe Friday, the 1960s TV incarnation of crime drama
Dragnet was known for its stories allegedly based on actual incidents culled from police archives. The show often took itself so seriously, you couldn't help but laugh.

I've always been amused by the propaganda campaigns designed to scare kids away from illegal drugs, probably because of the glorious absurdity on display when adults try to make a dire and humorless lecture palatable to teens through their clumsy interpretation of youth 'hipness'.
So when I first stumbled upon this
Dragnet episode
(1969, Season 3, Episode 11, Narcotics DR-16) that revolves around a group of teenagers who've been recruited to fashion their own hip anti-drug campaign aimed at their peers, I was already at full attention. But the show is elevated to BEST.EPISODE.EVER. status when it takes an unexpected detour to the Disney studios in Burbank.
The fun starts immediately when some no good punk kid is taken into custody after staggering around a rooftop swatting invisible snakes with a TV aerial. What could cause a kid to act like that?

A quick search of his pockets reveals the cause... LSD, now in convenient pill form!

The incident gives
Sgt. Joe Friday (
Jack Webb) and
Officer Bill Gannon (
Harry Morgan) an opportunity to ponder the horrible state of today's youth.
Gannon: "Where's the kick in going out of your head?"
Friday: "You see them in juvenile... 8 and 9-year old glue sniffers, 10-year old acid freaks."
A local concerned citizen, Mr. Squire, invites the pair to sit in on a new project he's cooked up,
SmarTeens, a student-led anti-drug group whose mission, as one of its members puts it, is to "make it the
in thing
not to do dope...by making anyone who tried pot or pills feel stupid, instead of like some big shot on campus."

After some initial suspicion, the kids eventually open up and start brainstorming ideas for posters, slogans and jingles, among them:
S.O.S. - Stamp Out Stupidity
Keep Off the Grass
Any Moron Can Smoke Pot, and Most Morons Do

So far so good, but things take a turn for the awesome when Joe Friday announces he's going to take the kids' poster ideas to his friend, Disney animator
Al Bertino. "I've known Al Bertino for a long time... he's a top artist out at Walt Disney's," says Friday.
Next stop, Walt Disney Studios, Burbank!

Friday and Gannon arrive at Al Bertino's studio. "Welcome to Bertinoland. Tell me how this little Italian boy can help you stamp out dope addiction."

Now Al Bertino's face is not as widely known as some of Walt's
nine old men, so it's no surprise that I didn't immediately recognize that this "animator"...

...was actually being portrayed by an actor!

That's okay, this
Thomas Bellin guy can draw too... kind of. Here's a few rough drafts for posters he turns out in just a few seconds.

Here's my favorite... Don't "Meth" Around. It's funny cause its true.

Friday seems to approve.

Not sure what Bill Gannon thinks, but is that concept art for
Disney's Mineral King ski-lodge project I see tacked up on the wall behind him?

A few days later,
SmarTeens reconvenes to evaluate several of Al's roughs... including this one that has been cleverly placed by the clock where every student is sure to see it.




Here's a selection of final posters.





I'm assuming
Al Bertino really did do some artwork for an anti-drug organization called
SmarTeens in the late 60s, but I haven't found any evidence of it beyond this fictionalized account. This episode of
Dragnet is available for streaming on
Netflix.