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I doubt it would stand out or even last with all the cop/procedural shows on today.
You create a character who spills bad ideas, so that the audience can see a person full of good ideas to tell him or her (with bad ideas) to shut the fuck up, and eventually the person with bad ideas to realize that they are on the wrong side of history, after their bad ideas are explained to be bad.
I suspect that that was the intent of the Hunter character back then too.
Yes, but there has to be a more modern reference on hand.
Is TV today really devoid of characters like Hunter?Lt. Hunter (James B. Sikking) coined the phrase "your basic brown types" back on the original. I doubt that would make it onscreen today.
I doubt it would stand out or even last with all the cop/procedural shows on today.
Is TV today really devoid of characters like Hunter?
Was HSB a procedural? More like a character driven drama with a large cast of characters.
Shows like HSB aren't uncommon. Large casts. Multiple storylines. Though a lot a seem to be SFF. HSB and St. Elswhere set the standard.Yeah, not really a procedural then, but if it was remade? Bochco passed last year, so who knows what we'd end up with.
You create a character who spills bad ideas, so that the audience can see a person full of good ideas to tell him or her (with bad ideas) to shut the fuck up, and eventually the person with bad ideas to realize that they are on the wrong side of history, after their bad ideas are explained to be bad.
I suspect that that was the intent of the Hunter character back then too.
Was HSB a procedural? More like a character driven drama with a large cast of characters.
Large casts. Multiple storylines. Though a lot a seem to be SFF. HSB and St. Elswhere set the standard.
I don’t think a remake would work now, it just wouldn’t stand out like it did in 1981. Hill Street had flawed, angsty characters that the audience could relate to and identify with, but every modern show has those now.
Lockwood ended up in the slammer, watching his kid disavow everything he stood for, not dead.Of course Ben did not figure out that bigotry is wrong, instead his obsession got him killed.
It's a great television series, hard to beat.I believe Hill Street Blues stands as the single greatest television series ever created, and part of that was time and place. You couldn't recreate it with the same impact today, any more than the Beatles could've happened outside of their own unique era and milieu.
Carrying that Stylis around on the Excelsior didn't help much either.
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