1980's

Return of Television Legends

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

In the 1986 song
Modern Woman, Billy Joel sings, And after 1986, what else could be new?

Nothing if you consider the return of two television legends to the small screen

Their television personas were extraordinarily familiar to us.

Andy Griffith appeared as Atlanta-based attorney Ben Matlock in
Matlock. The show aired on NBC from 1986 to 1992 and then switched to ABC where it aired from 1992 to 1995.

Matlock was a Harvard-educated but folksy defense attorney who had strong friendships with his staff and opposing counsel.

In the spring of 1986, Griffith reprised his hallmark role of Sheriff Andy Taylor in the NBC tv-movie
Return To Mayberry. Its tremendous success, nostalgic appeal, and safe familiarity undoubtedly influenced NBC and Griffith to find a new but familiar television vehicle for him.

Simply, Matlock is Perry Mason by way of Sheriff Andy Taylor.

Former
Andy Griffith Show co-stars Aneta Corsaut and Don Knotts made guest appearances on Matlock.

Unfortunately, Lucille Ball did not fare so well in the Fall of 1986.

She returned to television with the sitcom
Life with Lucy on ABC. Co-starring with Ball was her familiar foil, Gale Gordon. He played her in-law. On the show, the daughter of Ball’s character was married to the son of Gordon’s character.

Life With Lucy only lasted a couple of months.

Aaron Spelling produced
Life with Lucy with Douglas Cramer and E. Duke Vincent. The sitcom starring an aging but appealing legend contrasted with Spelling’s shows based in adventure, glitz, and glamour. Vega$. Charlie’s Angels. Hotel. The Love Boat. Hart to Hart.

During the mid-1980’s, nostalgia abounded. In the 1985 box office blockbuster
Back to the Future, the story recaptured a slice of life in 1955, complete with fashion, music, and popular culture indicators.

Return to Mayberry recalled a simpler time when a transistor radio was the groundbreaking technology achievement for teenagers compared to the 1980’s Sony Walkman or today’s iPod.

Life with Lucy brought back the biggest comedienne of the 20th century in a pre-TGIF family sitcom.

Lucy was a grandmother in the show, not the young or middle-aged housewife or mother we remembered fondly from decades past. Was the show a mistake? Were the physical antics of a 75 year-old woman frightening rather than entertaining for the audience?

Maybe. Maybe not.

But there’s nothing wrong with bringing back a legend to recapture previous glory. The failure of
Life With Lucy doesn’t make Ms. Ball’s work on the program any less significant compared to her other work on more popular shows.

She was, indeed, the same Lucy. She gave 1000 percent for her fellow castmates and the audience.

As Peter Allen once sang,
Quiet please. There’s a lady on the stage. She may not be the latest rage. But she’s singing. And she means it.

Saturday Night Live and TV Icons

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Saturday Night Live has been and continues to be a launching pad for actors to break into the movies.

Chevy Chase and
Foul Play.

John Belushi and
Animal House.

Eddie Murphy and 48 Hours.

Mike Myers and Wayne’s World.

Tina Fey and Mean Girls.

But
Saturday Night Live is also the launching pad for television icons beyond Saturday nights in Studio 8H in Rockefeller Center.

In 1993,
SNL creator and executive producer Lorne Michaels took over NBC’s Late Night franchise after David Letterman bolted for CBS. Michaels tapped Conan O’Brien to succeed Letterman. O’Brien was a writer on Saturday Night Live in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s. He hosted Late Night for sixteen years, from 1993 to 2009.

Again, Michaels need to find a
Late Night host. He went to the ultimately likable Jimmy Fallon, an SNL icon who had the keystone role of a Weekend Update co-anchor with Tina Fey.

Fey created and stars in the comedy
30 Rock airing Thursday nights on NBC. Michaels’ company Broadway Video produces 30 Rock.

30 Rock, a multiple Emmy Award winner, concerns the behind-the-scenes antics of the staff at TGS or The Girlie Show, an NBC comedy-variety show, like Saturday Night Live. Fey plays Liz Lemon, the head writer. Alec Baldwin, a longtime guest host of SNL, also stars on 30 Rock. He plays NBC executive Jack Donaghy. Donaghy retools TGS by bringing in Tracy Jordan, played by Tracy Morgan in a thinly veiled depiction of his bombastic, hilarious, and affable public persona.

Another former
Weekend Update anchor has a Thursday night comedy on NBC. From the team that brought you The Office, you now have Parks and Recreation starring Amy Poehler as Leslie Knope, a dedicated public servant in the fictional Pawnee, Indiana. Though idealistic about Pawnee’s Parks and Recreation Department, she encounters apathy, bureaucracy, and ignorance among her staff, the town, and other public servants.

Jimmy Smits

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Prime time soap operas dominated the 1980’s. In the 2000’s, not so much, except for the teenage version of the genre on the CW television network.

Jimmy Smits was part of an effort to reignite the genre with
Cane, a short-lived offering on CBS in 2007. Cane revolved around a Cuban-American family and its power, wealth, and dynasty stemming from its rum and sugar business interests.

This is the third consecutive decade where Jimmy Smits has been a focal point of a prime time television series.

In the 1980’s, he played Victor Sifuentes on
L.A. Law. Sifuentes worked in the Public Defender’s office before Michael Kuzak recruited him to the private law firm sector.

While Victor began as the ‘cleanup’ attorney for McKenzie Brackman, Chaney & Kuzak, handling the firm’s pro bono cases and other matters that burdened the firm’s workload, he ventured into other legal territories.

In the episode Victor Sifuentes confronted legendary attorney August Redding, played by legendary actor Ralph Bellamy. Victor’s client sues Redding for legal malpractice. In the episode’s climactic scene, Victor puts Redding on the witness stand. He reveals Redding’s deep loss of memory when the aging lawyer cannot remember Victor’s name.

Victor confronted another legendary attorney in Hamilton Schuyler, a dwarf attorney who specializes in products liability cases.

Nominated for an Emmy Award for Best Actor six times during his
L.A. Law tenure, Smits won once.

In the 1990’s, Smits took over the lead position in
NYPD Blue after the sudden departure of David Caruso. Smits’ Bobby Simone character is suave, sophisticated, and strong. With quiet confidence, he gains the respect of his partner, Andy Sipowicz. He also wins the love of fellow detective Diane Russell.

NYPD Blue eased out Bobby Simone in a story arc centering on a terrific heart problem. In the episode where Bobby dies, the last scene shows him flatlining and then we see the Executive Producer credits in black against a white background. It’s a direct contrast to the usual format -- white lettering against a black background.

Smits returns as Bobby Simone in an episode near the show’s end. Andy has a waking dream where he talks to Bobby.

Smits also hosted the retrospective that aired near the end of the show’s successful twelve-year run.

Smits did not win an Emmy Award for his work on
NYPD Blue, though he received five nominations.

In the 2000’s, Smits appeared on
The West Wing as Matthew Santos, a three-term congressman from Texas and former Mayor of Houston who wants to be the Democratic Party’s nominee for president.

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Joshua Lyman convinces Santos that he has a legitimate shot at the presidency. Initially an also-ran candidate, Santos slowly gains recognition during the primaries. The Democratic National Convention occurs with the delegates still unsure of a nominee. Santos gives an inspiring speech concerning the voters’ freedom to choose a nominee without the pressure of power brokers making the decision for them.

The speech inspires many delegates to vote for Santos. He also gets a little help from President Bartlet who convinces an influential New York delegate to cast the Empire State’s delegate votes for Santos.

Santos’ choice for the VP nominee slot -- Leo McGarry, President Bartlet’s Chief of Staff.

In a narrow election, Santos beats a veteran politician, Senator Arnold Vinick from Santa Paula, California.

Jimmy Smits’ contributions to television have been significant, enjoyable, and challenging. Making a name for himself while part of an ensemble on
L.A. Law. Taking over a lead position on a hit show from an actor who made a notorious exit from success on NYPD Blue. Joining a team that’s played together for several years while adding to the chemistry of the cast on The West Wing.

Bringing interest, enthusiasm, and novelty is a difficult challenge for any actor. Smits met the challenge directly.

By the way, Jimmy Smits also deserves a place in television trivia history. Smits plays Eddie Rivera, the partner of Detective Sonny Crockett in the pilot of
Miami Vice. Rivera died in a car bomb explosion triggered by Crockett’s nemesis.

America

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

God bless America.

Take a look at a program schedule from the last few years.

Patriotic fever apparently strikes television executives.

America’s Next Top Model.

America’s Most Wanted.

American Chopper.

American Masters.

American Hot Rod.

America’s Next Producer.

American Justice.

America’s Got Talent.

American Experience.

American Inventor.

American Idol.

American Dad.

What accounts for these allusions to the red, white, and blue in television program titles that we might expect during an anniversary year, like a bicentennial?

First, size matters.

America is a pretty big, powerful, and awesome place. With a version of the word
America in the title, the program naturally targets a mass audience -- all of us.

Second, success matters.

American Idol is popular, so subsequent offerings borrow from the name as well as the format

Models meet
American Idol = America’s Next Top Model.

Inventors meet
American Idol = American Inventor.

Third, pride matters.

America gives the audience a sense of pride -- the show could not take place anywhere but America.

For example,
American Chopper is a series about the prototypical American success story of a family business -- Orange County Choppers. But success does not come easy for this upstate New York business focused on making one-of-a-kind motorcycles. It is a result of hard work, dedication, and passion.

Paul Teutul started Orange County Choppers in his basement because of his passion for building motorcycles. The business ballooned into a marketing, licensing, and television juggernaut.

Although
Made in the U.S.A. fever seems to be contagious given the numerous America-based titles, we’ve actually seen the use of America throughout television history.

American Gladiators.

Good Morning, America.

America’s Funniest Home Videos.

American Dream
was a short-lived series in the early 1980’s centering on a family’s move back to the city from their quiet home in suburbia.

American Dreamer took an opposite premise. This early 1990’s sitcom stars Robert Urich as a widower who trades in his globetrotting journalism work for a quiet life in Wisconsin with his family and a job as a newspaper columnist.

Amerika was a 1987 miniseries on ABC that depicted life ten years after a Soviet takeover. Robert Urich also starred in this offering along with Kris Kristofferson.

Americathon was a 1979 tv-movie showing what the country would be like in 1998 -- America is bankrupt, the president is a skirt chaser, and the oil supply is facing depletion. Were the writers prescient or was the plot line simply a coincidence?

The title comes from a telethon to save America.

American Bandstand starred eternally youthful Dick Clark from the 1950’s to the 1980’s. Clark capitalized on the American Bandstand brand and library with American Dreams. This NBC show enjoyed a three-season run -- 2002-2005. It showed us life in the 1960’s through the Pryor family, specifically Meg Pryor. Meg was an All-American teenage girl in Philadelphia who faced the trials and tribulations of growing up as she fulfilled her dream of being an American Bandstand dancer.

Finally,
Love, American Style used an anthology format and featured guest stars in love stories that were varied, funny, and somewhat realistic.

Coincidentally, except for
American Dreams and American Dreamer, many of the shows mentioned appeared on ABC -- American Broadcasting Company.

The Legacy of Soupy Sales

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

When Soupy Sales died last week on October 22nd, his obituaries focused on his hallmark -- throwing a pie in someone’s face on his television show.

But the legacy of Soupy Sales is not the elevation of pie throwing to a comedic art form.

The legacy of Soupy Sales can be summed up in one word -- work.

Although best remembered as the host of a baby boomer children’s television show bearing his name, Soupy Sales also enjoyed fixture status on the syndicated version of
What’s My Line?

He appeared on other game shows in addition to guest starring on popular television shows --
The Beverly Hillbillies, Route 66, Love, American Style, Burke’s Law, The Love Boat, Wings.

He gave radio a shot in the 1980’s with a stint on WNBC-AM in New York City.

And he served as host of the mid-1970’s Saturday morning children’s game show
Junior Almost Anything Goes -- a spinoff of the mid-1970’s prime time game show Almost Anything Goes.

Soupy Sales. More than just a pie in the face.

The Taking of Pelham 123

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

The remake of
The Taking of Pelham 123 opened in theaters this past summer. The film stars three actors who got their big breaks on the small screen.

Denzel Washington.

In
Pelham, Washington plays Walter Garber, a New York City civil servant who becomes the link of communication to hostage takers on a subway train.

Washington was part of the terrific ensemble cast of
St. Elsewhere. In this 1980’s NBC drama set in a Boston hospital, Washington plays the Yale-educated Dr. Phillip Chandler.

His breakthrough movie was
Glory, a 1989 film set during the Civil War. Washington earned on Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.

John Travolta.

In
Pelham, Travolta plays Ryder, the leader of the hostage takers.

Travolta exploded onto America’s consciousness as dim-witted, girl-crazy, and self-involved high school student Vinnie Barbarino in
Welcome Back, Kotter.

Kotter premiered in 1975. In the space of three years, Travolta’s career became hotter than a supernova. On the silver screen, he starred in 1977’s Saturday Night Fever and 1978’s Grease.

For the most part, notoriety subsided during the 1980’s. Travolta signaled his comeback in Quentin Tarantino’s
Pulp Fiction in 1994.

James Gandolfini.

In
Pelham, Gandolfini plays the Mayor of New York City. If managed properly, the hostage crisis can be good for the politics business. Or very bad.

After highly significant roles on Broadway and supporting roles in films, Gandolfini got the role for which he will forever be identified.

Henry Winkler has Fonzie.

Alan Alda has Hawkeye.

And James Gandolfini has Tony Soprano, the main character in
The Sopranos.

Gandolfini’s emotions as the New Jersey mafia don range from the tender to the explosive. He reveals a touching side when talking about or interacting with animals, like his racehorse, Pie-Oh-My.

There is a flip side. Disloyalty, betrayal, and disrespect trigger rage, violence, and an underlying fear of a weakened position in the Soprano mob family.

In 1973, Morton Freedgood wrote the novel
The Taking of Pelham 123 under the pseudonym John Godey.

A year later, the story hit the big screen for the first time with Walter Matthau as Garber, Robert Shaw as Ryder, and Lee Wallace as the mayor.

The film accurately captures the aura of violence, fear, and despair surrounding New York City in the 1970’s. Riots. Crime. Financial turmoil. They all contributed to the pressure.

The feeling permeates the film. Walter Matthau’s Garber is in the middle -- a civil servant trying to do his job. On this particular day, it is an ordinary job under extraordinary circumstances. Matthau perfectly fits the role of the rumpled Garber.

The ending of this version of
Pelham is an excellent example of a setup and payoff. Something occurs early in the story that recurs at the end.

Hector Elizondo and Earl Hindman play two of the hostage takers. Elizondo later starred in
Chicago Hope and played supporting roles in a deep roster of films that include The Flamingo Kid, The Princess Diaries, and Pretty Woman.

Hindman’s face is not recognizable from his signature role -- Wilson, the neighbor on
Home Improvement. The running gag on the show was the hiding of Wilson’s face behind the backyard fence and other objects.

Jerry Stiller plays a policeman working with Matthau. Maybe the hostage crisis was a source of sorts for Frank Costanza’s anger.

Three Blind Mice

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

In the 1980’s, America’s three television networks changed hands.

ABC to Capital Cities.

NBC to General Electric.

CBS to Loews.

Ken Auletta’s 1991 book
Three Blind Mice: How the TV Networks Lost Their Way chronicles the takeovers, trials and travails of the players involved.

In a ratings game dominated by numbers, the 1980’s saw the rise of the Video Cassette Recorder and the increased attention paid to demographics.

Auletta goes through a tremendously detailed approach to bring the reader the thoughts, strategies, and fears of the media moguls in television’s executive suites.

In the chapter
NBC: Tartikoff In His Sandbox, 1987, Auletta writes about a favorite son of the television industry -- NBC Entertainment President Brandon Tartikoff. Auletta zeroes in on the programming wunderkind’s observations of the obstacles for network television.

Nor was Tartikoff sure that with the explosion of buyers -- from cable, Fox, and first-run syndication, among others -- there was sufficient talent to stock a twenty-two hour prime-time schedule. Tartikoff knew that success in network television often came when a producer believed passionately in a project -- be it Norman Lear with All in the Family, James Brooks with The Mary Tyler Moore Show, or Steven Bochco with Hill Street Blues. But Tartikoff also knew the network television production system was a sausage factory.

In addition, the Big Three also faced the VCR, an affordable device by the mid-1980’s that allowed viewers to tape shows off the air and watch them at their leisure. No longer viewers tied to air times.

If viewers could shift the viewing times of their favorite shows, they would probably fast forward through the commercials. Consequently, advertisers become unhappy. Networks become worrisome about the prospect of ad dollars decreasing or disappearing.

In a world where viewers are no longer captive, advertisements can lose their impact.

The Big Three faced another challenge in the upstart FOX network. In its nascent days in the mid-1980’s, FOX did not have seven nights of programming each week. It did not have a network news division. And it did not have recognizable stars, save for one.

Its first programming attempt was
The Late Show starring Joan Rivers in November 1986 followed by Sunday night programming in Spring 1987.

But it did have sister companies in other areas of media. A movie studio. A publishing house. Newspapers.

This synergy was attractive. And great ideas have to start somewhere. With the edgy sitcom
Married With Children, the innovative cartoon show The Simpsons, and the funny sketch comedy program The Tracey Ullman Show, FOX began to make pinpricks in the armor of the Big Three. Their invulnerability proved to be a fallacy in the 1990’s when FOX attracted the highly valuable younger demographic of teenagers and twentysomethings with nighttime soap operas -- Beverly Hills 92010 and Melrose Place.

In the chapter
ABC: More Sancho Panza Than Machiavelli, September to December, 1986, Auletta summarizes the impact of FOX chieftain Rupert Murdoch’s initial foray into network television.

The future also belonged, some feared, to Rupert Murdoch’s scheme to make Fox a fourth network by acquiring stations in six of the top ten markets, lining up affiliated stations, and setting up a programming department, just as the three networks did.

Auletta delves deeply beneath the surface to get to the heart of the matter for television networks. Really, it is the heart of the matter for business. Money.

Auletta frequently writes about the costs of contracts and programming. He shows that programs may be part creativity, part talent, and part instinct. But it is part dollars and cents, too.

Crime Story

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

In the 1980’s, an NBC show about cops had it all.

A new look.

Story arcs that existed over several episodes.

And the elevation of lesser known actors into household name status.

Hill Street Blues? No.

Miami Vice? No.

Crime Story.

Michael Mann’s production of a Chicago cop and his mobster prey only lasted two seasons from 1986-1988.

But it was a terrific two years.

Set in the early 1960’s,
Crime Story followed the exploits of Chicago Police Department Lt. Mike Torello and his squad at MCU or Major Crimes Unit. Their mission is to take down mobster Ray Luca.

When Luca moves his base of operations to Las Vegas, Torello and team follows, only to trade in their Chicago police badges to work for the feds.

At the end of the first season, Ray Luca and his addlebrained sidekick, Paulie Taglia, escape to the desert where they find themselves in the middle of nuclear testing. Because they survive, the federal government gives them immunity from prosecution and increases the difficulty of Torello’s job.

The medical information learned from their survival is simply invaluable during the Cold War and immunity from prosecution is the government’s compensation.

Crime Story was created by Gustave Reininger and Chuck Adamson. It starred Dennis Farina as Mike Torello. In a perfect example of art imitating life, Adamson and Farina worked for the Chicago Police Department before their show business careers. John Santucci played Paulie Taglia. Santucci was a thief in Chicago in his previous career. Adamson and Farina knew Santucci from their Chicago days. They arrested him!

Anthony Denison played Ray Luca. He went to the other side of law enforcement during a brief stint on
Wiseguy when he replaced Ken Wahl. Denison played a former FBI agent drawn back into the fight against crime.

A reading of the list of guest stars on
Crime Story is impressive.

Kevin Spacey. David Caruso. Julia Roberts. Ving Rhames. Gary Sinise. David Hyde-Pierce. Billy Zane. Laura San Giacomo. Dennis Haysbert.

Regular and recurring actors on
Crime Story will also be familiar.

Before he was Corky’s dad on
Life Goes On, Bill Smitrovich was Detective Danny Krycheck.

Before he was a single dad looking for a chance at true love on
Once and Again, Billy Campbell was Detective Joey Indelli.

And before he sold out sports arenas, comedian Andrew Dice Clay was Max Goldman, a savvy partner of Ray Luca.

Del Shannon’s
Runaway was the show’s theme song. It set the tone perfectly for the series. An upbeat tune balanced by somber words.

Crime Story paid great attention to style, setting, and detail. It captured the viewer. In Chicago, Torello and his squad often regrouped at a bar called the Orbit Room, a nod to the fascination inspired by the Space Age of the 1960’s.

In one episode, Torello and the guys talk about the Chicago Bears. He says that Ditka is the best player on the team. It was essentially a wink to the viewer. Mike Ditka played for the Bears in the 1960’s and coached the team during the mid-1980’s, the period of the show’s broadcast history.

Cars with fins. Suits with thin ties. Men with hats. All details of another era. But
Crime Story recaptured them in an old-fashioned good guy vs. bad guy story line.

Crime Story ended with a cliffhanger. The principal characters airborne in a pilotless plane. Maybe one day, a tv-movie will tie up loose ends. And we will find out the ultimate destiny of Torello and Luca. Until then, you can create your own Crime Story ending.

Elvis

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Elvis.

More than thirty years have passed since he went to rock and roll heaven in 1977.

And just the mere mention of his name opens a lockbox of tremendous memories.

His movements.

His movies.

His portrayals.

Elvis Presley moved on stage like no other performer before him, swiveling his hips to the delight of teenage girls, the jealousy of their boyfriends, and the fright of their parents.

Elvis’ movies may have been formulaic.

Sing a few songs. Charm a few girls. Win the heart of the female lead.

But he surrounded himself with veteran actors who shouldered the load. In lesser hands, the movies would have been unwatchable instead of simply enjoyable.

Angela Lansbury in
Blue Hawaii.

Gary Merrill and James Gregory in
Clambake.

Gale Gordon and William Schallert in
Speedway.

Portrayals of Elvis on television also add to the King’s legacy by interpreting, explaining, and depicting certain aspects of his life.

Okay. So you may not remember some of them. But they deserve a second look, if for no other reason than a sense of completion in looking at Elvis’ career.

We’ve all seen the black and white footage of Elvis dancing and singing
Jailhouse Rock in the 1957 movie of the same name, a precursor to the dance videos that would appear during the early days of MTV twenty-five years later.

But did you see
Elvis and the Colonel, a 1993 tv-movie starring Rob Youngblood as Elvis and Beau Bridges as Colonel Tom Parker, the manager and mastermind behind a highly significant part of Elvis' career?

How about
Elvis and the Beauty Queen, a 1981 tv-movie starring Stephanie Zimbalist as the King's girlfriend, Linda Thompson, and Don Johnson as Elvis? Zimbalist and Johnson made terrific contributions to NBC's revival as a television network powerhouse in the 1980's. She starred in Remington Steele and he made pastels fashionable in Miami Vice.

In 1988
, Dale Midkiff portrayed Elvis in Elvis and Me, a four-hour miniseries told from wife Priscilla Presley's point of view. It was based on the book of the same name that Priscilla wrote with Sandra Harmon.

In 2005, Jonathan Rhys-Meyers played Elvis in another four-hour miniseries simply titled Elvis.

Michael St. Gerard filled the shoes of a young Elvis when he played the aspiring King of Rock and Roll on the cusp of breaking into the record business.
Elvis was an ABC television series that showed the rarely explored early years of Elvis Presley. The show had a brief run in 1990.

St. Gerard's portrayal was not limited to the small screen, however. He played Elvis in a non-speaking role in the 1988 Jerry Lee Lewis biopic
Great Balls of Fire.

But the one that started it all was a two-and-a-half tv-movie that aired on February 11, 1979, just two-and-a-half years after the King's death. Kurt Russell starred in
Elvis, a highly anticipated tv-movie. Produced by Dick Clark Productions, Elvis captured the imagination of fans still reeling from the King's death on August 16, 1977. John Carpenter directed Elvis. Coincidentally, Elvis' character in the movie Change of Habit was named John Carpenter.

Kurt Russell actually appeared in one of Elvis' movies. In
It Happened at the World's Fair, he kicks Elvis in the shins. But the connection between the two men do not end there. In the movie 3000 Miles to Graceland, Kurt Russell plays an Elvis impersonator.

Finally, the 1980's revival of
The Twilight Zone gave a twist on Elvis' life, legacy, and allure. In the episode The Once and Future King, an Elvis fanatic and impersonator named Gary has an agent named Sandra. She tells him that she met Elvis during one of his Las Vegas stints when she was 18. After avoiding an accident, Gary somehow travels back in time and meets Elvis in 1954 Memphis. The meeting happens right before Elvis is supposed to record That's All Right, Mama, also known as That's All Right, his initial record.

Elvis believes that Gary is really Jesse Aron Presley or a reincarnation of him. Jesse was Elvis' twin brother who died at birth. When Gary tells Elvis about
That's All Right, Mama and the massive success awaiting him, Elvis is simply not interested. He thinks the music that Gary plays is the devil's music. When argument between Gary and Elvis escalates to a violent level, Elvis dies in the fight.

There's only one way out for Gary. Become Elvis. Gary buries him and assumes his identity.

Confession time occurs at the end of the episode set some time during the early 1970's in Las Vegas. Elvis is talking to a groupie. He reveals that he tried to perform the songs and acting roles as closely as he could remember from the original Elvis.

The groupie is Sandra, Gary's agent in his previous life.

The meeting takes place just as she described earlier with Elvis talking for hours and showing signs of paranoia. Only this time, she met with Gary.

Or was it really Elvis?

George Clooney

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

For the first time in fifteen years,
ER will not be a part of the NBC Thursday night lineup.

When the show aired its last episode in April of 2009, it left a legacy of excellence that network television will be hard pressed to match.

When the show aired its first episode in September of 1994, it nicely filled the 10:00 pm cleanup hitter spot in Thursday night prime time with sheer dominance.
ER steamrolled every program that competed.

And a familiar face found his breakout role.

Not yet a star, but on his way.

In the late 1980's and early 1990's, George Clooney's steady work makes his breakout role of pediatrician Doug Ross on
ER seem inevitable in retrospect.

He had a nice run as Falconer, a cop and love interest of Sela Ward's character on
Sisters -- Teddy.

He was part of the ensemble cast on the short-lived CBS detective show
Bodies of Evidence with Lee Horsley of Matt Houston fame.

And in early episodes of
Roseanne, he played Booker Brooks, the boss of Roseanne and Jackie.

When we first meet George Clooney as Dr. Doug Ross in the pilot of
ER, the setting is Saint Patrick's Day 1994 in Chicago.

And he is drunk with a shift starting in a few hours.

Dr. Mark Greene, Chief Resident and Doug's friend, treats Doug with an IV to sober him.

Beyond a drinking problem, Doug Ross is a womanizer.

He cheats on his girlfriend, Nurse Carol Hathaway, played by Julianna Marguiles.

She attempts suicide in the pilot with a drug overdose. Unclear is the motive, though the fractured relationship with Doug could be a contender.

Also debuting on NBC in September of 1994,
Friends immediately captured the hearts and minds of America.

Three commonalities exist between the two shows.

First, a cross-promotion of sorts took place that inaugural year with George Clooney and co-star Noah Wyle guest starring on an episode of
Friends as New York City hospital doctors.

Second, besides airing on NBC,
Friends and ER had another production factor in common. Warner Brothers produced both shows.

And third, both shows featured a character with similar names. Dr. Mark Greene's daughter was Rachel Greene. She was a recurring character on
ER while Jennifer Aniston starred on Friends as Rachel Green.

In 1999, Doug Ross leaves County General in Chicago for Seattle, not knowing that Carol is pregnant by him with twin girls.

The real-life reason was George Clooney's pursuit of a full-time film career after starring in films including
One Fine Day and Batman and Robin.

Carol later realizes that Doug is her soul mate and she leaves for Seattle to be with him.

In this pivotal episode, George Clooney makes a cameo at the end, welcoming Carol.

Warner Brothers kept the guest appearance a secret, so NBC was unable to promote it.

Clooney shot the cameo appearance on location in Massachusetts where he was shooting
The Perfect Storm.

Clooney and Marguiles reprised their
ER roles in an episode towards the end of the series. Still happily married, they were unwittingly involved in the donation of a kidney that went to a former colleague -- Dr. John Carter, played by Noah Wyle.

Michael Jackson

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

In the 1980's, three revolutions took place in the entertainment industry.

Steven Bochco and Michael Kozoll changed a major production techniques of television drama with their show
Hill Street Blues. They favored story arcs instead of self-contained episodes. Producers continued that technique with Hall of Fame television dramas -- St. Elsewhere, L.A. Law, thirtysomething, ER, The Shield, The Sopranos, and Rescue Me.

Television networks went the conglomerate route. Loews, GE, and Capital Cities took over Network Row as they incorporated CBS, NBC, and ABC respectively into their massive corporate families. Gone were the days of network chiefs like William Paley, David Sarnoff, and Leonard Goldenson being synonymous with the networks they founded.

And Michael Jackson, for all intents and purposes, made the marriage of music and television complete with his numerous music video plays on MTV. Before he danced on a car and made a mockery of court proceedings concerning child molestation allegations, before he underwent massive plastic surgery that drastically altered his appearance, and before his deep money troubles, Michael Jackson had it all -- fame, money, adoration of fans.

Jackson's 1982 album
Thriller gave him terrific fodder for music videos. He defined the genre by creating visual stories to match the songs. He set the bar higher for bands and singers who wanted rotation on MTV. And he formed the center for USA For Africa's We Are the World in 1985 by singing the first chorus. Forty-five singers comprised an inspirational unit to sing this song that raised money for Ethiopian famine sufferers, but Michael Jackson was arguably a keystone to the song's success.

It all happened back in the day described eloquently by Bowling For Soup in its song
1985: Way before Nirvana, there was U2 and Blondie and music still on MTV.

Cesar Romero

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Heath Ledger's chilling, sinister, and violent portrayal of the Joker in 2008's
The Dark Knight earned him a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor -- Motion Picture and a posthumous Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

Ledger continued the standard of excellence in portraying the character.

Jack Nicholson owned the role in 1989's
Batman.

And Cesar Romero owned it in the 1960's camp version of the Batman franchise on ABC's
Batman.

With his maniacal laugh, wide smile, and refusal to shave his mustache, Cesar Romero lit up the screen when he was the Special Guest Villain. White makeup somewhat covered up the mustache, but we could still see it. It added to the character's bizarre qualities.

But Cesar Romero did much more than embody the Joker, the character with the most guest appearances on
Batman.

He was a serious dramatic actor with credits forming a terrific body of work, including the movie
The Thin Man. He plays a villain opposite William Powell.

And he plays Duke Santos, a highly significant role in the 1960 Rat Pack movie
Ocean's 11.

Santos is the fianc
é of the mother of Jimmy Foster, played by Peter Lawford.

Santos is also a reformed gangster who figures out that Foster and his buddies pulled a New Year's Eve heist on five Las Vegas casinos. He becomes a thorn in their side as he pledges to the casino owners that he will get the money returned, provided he gets a percentage.

Besides
Batman, Romero guest starred on several iconic television programs.

In an episode from the 1960's spy series
The Man From U.N.C.L.E., he plays the head of U.N.C.L.E.'s rival spy agency T.H.R.U.S.H.

He played Gilberto, Chico's absentee father, in the
Chico and the Man episode Chico's Padre.

He also guest starred on The Golden Girls, Charlie's Angels, Fantasy Island, Magnum p.i., The Love Boat, and Ironside.

In addition, Romero had recurring roles on
Alias Smith and Jones and in Disney's Medfield College starring Kurt Russell.

He also played Peter Stavros for a few seasons of the 1980's CBS nighttime soap opera
Falcon Crest.

But for baby boomers who saw the original 1960's television show
Batman in its initial run and the Generation Xers who saw it in reruns, Romero's defining role is the Dark Knight's greatest villain -- the Joker.