It absolutely is.35+ years on, I still consider Hill Street Blues the single greatest TV show ever made --
Amen to that.35+ years on, I still consider Hill Street Blues the single greatest TV show ever made
I used to watch it with a group clustered around the TV in my dorm lobby. I remember one week after a typical episode conclusion (downbeat resolution, melancholy piano outro), one guy jumped up and said, "Damn, why do I watch this every week? It's so depressing!"Hill Street Blues was appointment TV. A buddy and I would rush home from a night class at college to catch it every Thursday.
Damn.
Hill Street Blues is a masterpiece. I've seen it dismissed as a mere cop show, but it was far more than that. It pioneered concepts that are completely taken for granted now and made a lot of highly-regarded shows possible. I read somewhere that Bochco had wanted to make a TV show that "had a memory" (or words to that effect) - a show where what happened in last week's episode wasn't forgotten as soon as it ended. It seems a very basic concept now but Hill Street Blues was the first to do it; just one of its pioneering aspects. I rewatched it last year and it was just as superb as I'd remembered.
I enjoyed the hell out of LA Law as well, but the only other show of his to grab my attention was the short-lived Brooklyn South. I must rewatch that, too.
Vale, Mr Bochco, and thanks for the memories - and the first TV show with a memory.
Amen to that.
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