L.A. Law

Hill Street Blues

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Hill Street Blues began NBC’s tradition of quality drama in the Thursday night 10:00pm time slot. That tradition ended in 2009 when The Jay Leno Show took over 10:00pm time slot. Now The Marriage Ref owns the time slot.

Airing from 1981 to 1987,
Hill Street Blues changed television.

The bad guys didn’t always get caught by the end of the hour.

The good guys weren’t always angels.

And story lines could last for multiple episodes, maybe even a season.

At the heart of
Hill Street Blues was Captain Frank Furillo, a recovering alcoholic who guided the Hill Street precinct with compassion, toughness, and experience. He was trusted by his officers, detectives, and the gangs. Jesus Martinez, leader of the Diablos, often called him ‘Frankie’ out of affection, respect, and teasing. In later years, Jesus became a paralegal.

If Frank Furillo was the Hill Street precinct’s heart, Sergeant Phil Esterhaus was its soul. Played by Michael Conrad with a textbook definition of being avuncular, Esterhaus led off each episode in the middle of the morning Roll Call with the phrase
Let’s be careful out there. Conrad died in 1983. Robert Prosky replaced him at the Roll Call as Sergeant Stan Jablonski with the less watchful and more bombastic Let’s do it to them before they do it to us.

Veronica Hamel played the sensitive, skilled, and sexy Joyce Davenport of the Public Defender’s office. The advocate shared a bed with Captain Furillo and later married him.

Despite the urban chaos surrounding them, the officers and detectives never stopped in their mission to clean up the streets.

And creators Steven Bochco and Michael Kozoll set a standard for television producing. Multiple story arcs, scenes involving walking and talking, and three dimensional characters are hallmarks seen in
St. Elsewhere, L.A. Law, thirtysomething, ER, The West Wing, and Friday Night Lights, to name a few.

The Last Great Ride

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Brandon Tartikoff saw the best of times and the worst of times during his reign as NBC’s uberprogrammer.

The best of times --
Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, Night Court, Cheers, The Cosby Show, St. Elsewhere, Family Ties, Miami Vice, Crime Story, Hunter, Late Night with David Letterman.

The worst of times --
Manimal, Misfits of Science, Supertrain, Lewis & Clark, Hull High, Pink Lady, Gavilan, Nightingales, The Nutt House, Partners in Crime.

Tartikoff was a rare television executive in that the general public knew his name. He was a guest host on
Saturday Night Live. He appeared as himself in an episode of Night Court.

Tartikoff passed away in 1997. Fortunately, he recorded his life story in his 1992 autobiography,
The Last Great Ride with Charles Leerhsen.

Tartikoff explains the television business as if he was talking to you informally at the kitchen table, the corner bar, or the airport terminal. And he’s fiercely honest about the realities of ratings, missed opportunities, and severe pressure in television’s executive suites.

The Last Great Ride unveils terrific television stories through the eyes of a baby boomer who possessed extraordinary passion, talent, and drive.

Tartikoff tells the details of how NBC cast Michael J. Fox instead of Matthew Broderick for the role of Alex P. Keaton in
Family Ties, how William Devane lost the role of Sam Malone during his audition for Cheers, and how The Cosby Show helped rebuild NBC.

We also learn the turning points in Tartikoff’s career and personal life, including his battle with Hodgkins Disease. Ultimately, he lost the battle. But his constant strive to win under pressure in his personal life matched the same desire in his professional life.

Consequently, NBC’s peacock rose like a phoenix with newfound success in the 1980’s.

Indeed, when Brandon Tartikoff was at the helm, NBC’s shows, stations, and viewers enjoyed a great ride.

Thursday Nights at 10pm

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Now that
The Jay Leno Show is in the 10 pm time slot on NBC, a look back at Thursday nights at 10 on the Peacock Network reveals an amazing consistency of quality for nearly thirty years.

Hill Street Blues debuted in 1981 and changed the production of television drama.

Story lines became story arcs and lasted several episodes.

Moving cameras shifted seamlessly from one set of characters having a conversation to another set of characters. Gone were standard cuts.

And sometimes the good guys lost.

Hill Street Blues focused on the gritty, tough, and somewhat chaotic life in an unnamed metropolitan precinct, specifically, an area known as ‘The Hill.’ However, early visual evidence indicates Chicago and early dialogue indicates New York City.

Created by Steven Bochco and Michael Kozoll,
Hill Street Blues ended its run in 1987.

Just a year prior,
L.A. Law premiered in the Friday at 10 pm time slot following Miami Vice. Steven Bochco teamed with Terry Louise Fisher to create this show about yuppie lawyers in Los Angeles.

When
Hill Street Blues ended, L.A. Law took its Thursday at 10 pm time slot and enjoyed a successful tenure until its end in 1994. Eight years of serious legal issues, comical legal issues, and everyday legal issues.

ER continued the tradition of quality drama. It captivated the audience immediately upon its debut in September 1994. And it secured the NBC Must See TV Thursday night programming block.

Revived from an old movie script by Michael Crichton, the
ER pilot showed life in a Chicago emergency room on Saint Patrick’s Day.

Casts changed. Characters died. Quality continued.

For fifteen years.

An astounding record for a television show.

Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, and ER won several Emmy awards, broke ground in the issues they covered and how they covered them, and captured our hearts.

For twenty-eight years, from 1981 to 2009

From Captain Frank Furillo’s leadership to Sergeant Phil Esterhaus’ avuncular delivery at Roll Call.

From Arnie Becker’s sleazy tactics as McKenzie Brackman’s family law attorney to Arnie Becker’s heart of gold in acting like a big brother at times to mentally retarded office worker Benny.

From Mark Greene’s quiet determination to practice emergency medicine in the face of massive bureaucracy, office politics, and budget concerns to John Carter’s slow emergence from clueless intern to confident ER chief.

And hey, one more thing -- Let’s be careful out there.

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.

The Ultimate TV Network

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

If I created the ultimate television network, the prime time program lineup would probably look like this:

On Sunday, I would start with the legends.
I Love Lucy at 8:00pm followed by The Jack Benny Program at 8:30pm.

The pairing makes sense since Lucille Ball and Jack Benny were not only show business icons, but also neighbors in real life. They lived next door to each other on North Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills.

Then, we turn to the rural heavyweights.
The Andy Griffith Show at 9:00pm and The Beverly Hillbillies at 9:30pm.

Sunday nights should be nice and easy, after all. And what's nicer and easier than our friends in Mayberry and the hillbilly transplants to the land of Rodeo Drive?

At 10:00pm,
The Sopranos.

On Monday nights, I would pair
The Dick Van Dyke Show and Mary Tyler Moore in the 8 o'clock hour, followed by M*A*S*H and Murphy Brown in the 9 o'clock hour.

At 10:00pm,
St. Elsewhere.

Tuesday nights would start with family comedy.
The Cosby Show and Family Ties 8:00pm and 8:30pm respectively.

Everybody Loves Raymond at 9:00pm and Two and a Half Men at 9:30pm.

At 10:00pm,
Law & Order.

Wednesday nights would start with sophistication.

Frasier at 8:00pm and The Odd Couple at 8:30pm. I'm sure Felix Unger would have enjoyed talking wine, opera, and art with the Crane brothers.

The 9 o'clock hour would consist of
You'll Never Get Rich starring Phil Silvers as Sergeant Bilko and The Twilight Zone.

At 10:00pm,
Hill Street Blues.

Of course, Thursday nights would truly be Must See TV with
Cheers, Taxi, Seinfeld, and Friends followed by ER at 10:00pm.

Friday night would be another family-friendly night, starting with
The Brady Bunch at 8:00pm and The Wonder Years at 8:30pm.

At 9:00pm,
Friday Night Lights, a depiction of a west Texas town obsessed with high school football.

At 10:00pm,
The Wire.

Saturday night begins with cartoons.

The Simpsons at 8:00pm and King of the Hill at 8:30pm.

The Honeymooners at 9:00pm and Curb Your Enthusiasm at 9:30pm.

At 10:00pm,
Homicide: Life on the Street, an undervalued, underrated, and underwatched program during its tenure on NBC in the 1990's.

Reasonable minds can differ.

Should
Happy Days be in the lineup instead of The Brady Bunch?

What about
L.A. Law, thirtysomething, Scrubs, or All in the Family?

What's the standard for making the linuep?

All good questions.

For now, it's merely instinctive.

Programs can be replaced.

Or I can start another network.

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.

Major League

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

This year marks the 20th anniversary of a movie with a classic early set up and climactic payoff, romance in the B-storyline incorporated into the main plot, and an underdog theme against a baseball backdrop.

Major League.

In this 1989 movie, Charlie Sheen plays Cleveland Indians pitcher Rick 'Wild Thing' Vaughn, his nickname stemming from his wild pitching. Corrective lenses easily solve this problem.

Sheen later parlayed his movie stardom for small screen success. He took over the lead position in
Spin City after Michael J. Fox left the show. Sheen now stars in Two and a Half Men, the successor to the crown of CBS' Monday night comedy lineup previously worn by Everybody Loves Raymond.

Corbin Bernsen plays cocky, skilled, and fast-talking third baseman Roger Dorn. His performance in
Major League coincided with the height of his success in L.A. Law where he played cocky, skilled, and fast-talking matrimonial attorney Arnie Becker.

Tom Berenger plays veteran catcher Jake Taylor. Berenger's television work is plentiful.

In guest appearances on
Cheers, Berenger plays plumber Don Santry, the man who finally wins the love of Rebecca Howe, played by Kirstie Alley.

Berenger plays real-life icons Teddy Roosevelt and Paul 'Bear' Bryant respectively in the tv-movies
Rough Riders and The Junction Boys.

In
October Road, Berenger plays the Commander, a.k.a. the father of lead character Nick Garrett.

Berenger made another noteworthy contribution to prime time. Sort of.

In
The Big Chill, Berenger plays Sam Weber, the star of the action-packed television show, J.T. Lancer.

James Gammon plays Indians manager Lou Brown. He also plays Nick Bridges, father of Don Johnson's title character in
Nash Bridges.

Dennis Haysbert captures attention as Pedro Cerrano, a voodoo-friendly power slugger. A little more than a decade after
Major League, he captured attention on a weekly basis as presidential candidate and then President David Palmer on 24.

Bob Uecker provides comic relief as Indians radio announcer Harry Doyle, a boozy play-by-play man who does his best to shade the Indians' pathetic playing at the beginning of the movie with not so accurate descriptions.

Uecker graced the small screen in the 1980's ABC Friday night sitcom
Mr. Belvedere, based on the 1947 novel Belvedere by Gwen Davenport.

Major League will inspire you to root for the home team, infuse you with faith even if the odds are against success, and encourage you to keep moving forward even when something goes awry no matter how valiant the effort.

SNL & Partridge Family

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Since 1975,
Saturday Night Live has poked fun at popular culture.

A sketch from 1992 stands out.

Susan Dey was enjoying a second wave of television success as A.D.A. Grace Van Owen on
L.A. Law when she hosted SNL on February 8, 1992.

Dey’s first stint in the spotlight occurred in the early 1970’s as feminist keyboard player Laurie Partridge on ABC’s
The Partridge Family.

For the boys, Dey was a sex symbol.

For the girls, she was a voice of independence.

The Partridge Family filled the years between Woodstock and disco with a bubble-gum sound.

And it was this sound at the heart of the
Saturday Night Live sketch pitting two popular culture icons against each other.

The sketch opens with a familiar clip from the show’s theme: a cartoon of partridges walking to the sound of
The Partridge Family theme song, C’mon Get Happy. The audience erupts in applause and shouts, responding to an immediate connection with the fictional singing family from San Pueblo, California.

We see the familiar garage with highway signs on the walls.

We see the
Saturday Night Live cast in 1970’s outfits. Dana Carvey as Keith. David Spade as Chris. And Chris Farley watching with great satisfaction as Reuben Kincaid.

And of course, we see Susan Dey back in her familiar position at the keyboard with a brown, long-hair wig to recreate Laurie Partridge.

Dey truly looks like she’s enjoying herself. It amplifies the sketch’s power.

Okay. Pop culture idol recreates her retro persona. Interesting. Funny. Appealing.

But the sketch takes off when Melanie Hutsell enters the garage with her spot-on impersonation of Eve Plumb’s Jan Brady from
The Brady Bunch.

When Jan realizes
The Partridge Family doesn’t sing its own songs and lip syncs, she rushes to get her brothers and sisters.

More 1970s clothing.

And Kevin Nealon as Greg Brady challenges the Partridge Family to a battle of the bands.
The Brady Six versus the Partridge Family.

Sunshine Day versus I Think I Love You

When It’s Time to Change versus I Woke Up in Love This Morning

After some choice words, the conflict looks like it will continue with no resolution in sight, until Chris Rock enters as another 1970s character, Mushmouth from
Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids. He inspires the two bands to patch up their differences.

The sketch struck a nostalgic chord with the songs and dialogue that referenced well-known incidents from the two shows.

Laurie recalls a skunk’s spraying forcing the Partridge Family to take baths in tomato juice to get rid of the odor.

Jan recalls Marcia dumping Charlie for Doug Simpson, the big man on campus.

But an interesting question remains. Who would win in a battle of the bands? For that matter, who would win in a battle of the shows? And what do we use as a measure? Record sales? Ratings? Longevity?

Indeed, the question is a pop culture conundrum.

But on this particular night, let the record show that in a fictional world of a
Saturday Night Live sketch, the Brady Six and the Partridge Family joined together in harmony.