Somehow I got dragged into the ABC soaps for a point in high school. Never watched Guiding Light or the others on CBS. It's unfortunate that a series with such history is going away after 70+ years, but apparently the writing has been on the wall for some time now. Ratings across all of the daytime soaps are down significantly. There are fewer soaps on today then there were a few years ago. Guiding Light is currently the lowest-rated soap, so if one had to go, GL is it.
I'm honestly not surprised that the soap opera genre is fading. I admit to watching some of the ABC soaps in the late '90s (General Hospital, particularly). I remember getting really tired of the storylines stuck in neutral, wasted characters who never did anything useful, the endless talking and talking without much happening, the plots that were ridiculously contrived, made little sense, and went nowhere... If the writing was bad then, I can't imagine what these shows are like today.
Oh I so AGREE With you. General Hosptial just kept telling, and is still telling, the same stupid stories with Sonny--Carly--Jax and the other characters connected with them.
I'll take Robert Scorpio fighting aliens over that crap anyday of the week!!!
Rob
No, you fracking don't. That stuff and those plots were dumb as hell, and had
NO BUSINESS ever being written or filmed-those were the nadir days of soaps, and they were deservedly got rid of a long time ago.
You want good soap operas? Look to England, with soaps like
East Enders,
Coronation Street, and
Emmerdale (formerly
Emmerdale Farm)-those are the real deal, about
real people,
real concerns, and
real problems, mostly because the people are/were blue collar middle class people (farmers in
Emmerdale's case),and not white collar middle class, or upper middle class people as seen in most of these American soaps. That's what the producers of
General Hospital are probably aiming for storywise, but are missing the bull's eye with-they should take a look at the British soaps, and see how they do it, because last time I heard, the British ones are still going strong, with no cancellation in sight for them. It's all a matter of learning from others, which Americans only do when it suits them or when it makes a profit-or when it's bringing over cheap shit like reality shows.