by Ed Robertson PART TWO You actually could break down "Rockford" into three different series: the episodes from the first year, when it was a Top Ten hit; the shows from the second year, when it lost a huge chunk of audience that it would never recover; and the episodes from the last three years, when it started winning all those Emmy Awards. "Rockford" in the first season (1974-75) was to private-eye shows what "Maverick" was to Westerns in the 1950s: fresh, irreverent, and clever. At a time when network TV was saturated with flatfoots and gumshoes, "Rockford" took all the cliches and turned them inside out. NBC programming executives may not have understood the show's sophisticated sense of humor, but the viewers certainly did, taking to Garner like a long-lost friend. "Rockford" suddenly made it cool to stay home on Friday nights. When the first season ended, exec producer Roy Huggins left "Rockford" in the hands of his protege Stephen J. Cannell (now the author of such best-sellers as "King Con, "Final Victim" and "The Plan"). Though Cannell understood Maverick/Rockford almost as well as his mentor, and had himself created two of the show's greatest characters (Rocky, our hero's salt-of-the-earth dad, and Angel Martin, Jimbo's former stir mate), he initially lost sight of what made the "Files" work - and the show suffered as a result. The key to Rockford was that, no matter what, he was smarter than anyone else (especially, the bad guys). But that wasn't the case in the early going of the second season (1975-76) when, week after week, Jimbo found himself taken advantage of, particularly by his own friends. Both "Maverick" (and "Rockford," under Huggins) dared to invert that most sacred of TV rules: the hero always comes out on top in the end. Maverick/Rockford was occasionally done in by his own mercenary tendencies, often to hilarious effect. But Huggins also knew that the key to breaking the rules was doing so with restraint. The audience was bound to grow tired of watching if Rockford ended up looking stupid every week. That's exactly what happened in the second season. By Halloween, "Rockford" had lost nearly 20% of its total audience, and was finishing third in a time slot it once owned. Though Cannell recognized the problem with the stories, and was able to steer the series back on track, "Rockford" would never see the Top Ten (or even the Top 20) again. NEXT:
The Soprano's producer |
Please consider a donation
so we can continue this work!
|
Everything
you're looking for is right here: |
|||||||
TV Shows on DVD/ / / / / / / Classic TV/ / / / / / / 2009
TV Show Reviews / /
/ /
/ / / / / / /
Holiday
Specials on DVD / /
/ / / / Classic
Commercials |