Danny DeVito

Philadelphia TV

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia returned to FX this fall.

The show about four slackers who run a bar in the City of Brotherly Love derives its comedy from a zany, chaotic, and somewhat nonsensical base.

But it works. And it benefits from veteran actor Danny DeVito playing the father of two of the characters.

Before
Sunny rose on FX, Philadelphia served as the setting for other television shows, all of which were short-lived but of solid quality.

Angie aired on ABC in the late 1970’s. This sitcom features a post-Saturday Night Fever Donna Pescow in the title role as working class waitress Angie Falco.

Angie’s paramour was Dr. Brad Benson, member of an old-line, wealthy Philadelphia family. Robert Hays plays Brad.

And before she found fame as Raymond’s mother, Marie Barone, Doris Roberts played Angie’s mom, Theresa Falco.

Angie was a sweet sitcom with likable leads, but despite ABC’s build-up, it did not last more than a couple of seasons.

Neither did
The Tony Randall Show, another late 1970’s entry based in Philadelphia. Randall plays Judge Walter O. Franklin in this offering from MTM Productions. Like Mary Tyler Moore, The Tony Randall Show focuses on the home life and work life of its star’s character.

thirtysomething lasted four seasons, from 1987 to 1991. The show’s stories about Philadelphia yuppies in their thirties showed us the true depths of emotions during the time in our lives when we reach adulthood but yearn for our youth.

Shannon’s Deal stars Jamey Sheridan as Philadelphia lawyer Jack Shannon, a former big-time lawyer with a big-time gambling problem. After losing his job and his marriage, Shannon starts over as a solo practitioner.

While Shannon battles the District Attorney, he has a solid support system -- a secretary who works for him in exchange for legal services concerning her boyfriend, a fellow solo practitioner in his office building, and a daughter approaching her teenage years.

Shannon’s Deal was a 1989 pilot. It lasted less than a full season in 1990 on NBC.

The aptly named
Philly from Steven Bochco Productions lasted a single season -- 2001-2002.

Philly stars NYPD Blue alumnae Kim Delaney as attorney Kathleen Maguire, a woman trying to balance her work life with a personal life after the ending of her bad marriage to an Assistant District Attorney.

Badge of Honor

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Based on the novel of the same name by James Ellroy, the 1997 movie
L.A. Confidential boasts an outstanding cast.

Guy Pearce.

Russell Crowe.

Kevin Spacey.

Kim Basinger.

Danny DeVito.

James Cromwell.

David Straithairn.

But it also has a treat for fans of classic television.

In the setting of 1953, the popular television show of the day is
Badge of Honor, a direct nod to Dragnet.

Kevin Spacey's character of Detective Jack Vincennes is Technical Director on the show.

He's a friend of the show's star, Brett Chase. Television veteran Matt McCoy plays Chase. McCoy is probably most recognizable to
Seinfeld fans from his guest appearances as Lloyd Braun, childhood rival of George Costanza.

Vincennes clearly enjoys the aura of celebrity.

In an early scene, he's dancing with a girl who is enamored with Jack's glamourous nexus to Brett Chase and the world of television.

Indeed, Vincennes is a Hollywood detective.

Badge of Honor plays a highly significant role in the relationship between Pearce's novice Detective Edmund Exley and the veteran Detective Jack Vincennes.

When Exley has to figure a scheme to rat out certain cops, he convinces the higher-ups to use Vincennes'
Badge of Honor job as leverage against him so he'll testify against the bad apples in the department.

He knows Vincennes lives for the glory that the show gives him.

With the police department's threat of disallowing Vincennes' association with
Badge of Honor, Vincennes agrees to testify.

Vincennes counters, however, and tells Exley he simply testified against old-timers who were close to retirement anyway. He gets to keep his
Badge of Honor job. The bosses are satisfied.

Vincennes plays his Hollywood connections like Yitzhak Perlman plays the violin -- with sheer expertise.

He has an information-sharing arrangement with Sid Hudgens, a sleazy tabloid writer played by Danny DeVito.


Think Louie DePalma of
Taxi with a typewriter but with more cunning, deceitfulness, and an absolute lack of morals.

Vincennes gains fame with Hollywood busts of celebrities and Hudgens increases circulation with stories of the same.

Vincennes becomes embroiled in the investigation at the heart of
L.A. Confidential.

And later in the movie, we see that Jack Vincennes does a 180-degree turn with his own morals. He fatally pays for his conscience.

In
L.A. Confidential, we actually see a snippet of Badge of Honor, the show within a movie. And the famous phrase attributed to its real-life counterpart appears as a clear nod -- Just the facts.

The first incarnation of
Dragnet occurred in the same time frame as L.A. Confidential, 1951-1959.