1985

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.

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.