Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Many Happy Returns


It's always an event when a recurring character on a classic TV show returns after its portrayer quits or is written off.


Such things happen all the time on soap operas – right now two characters believed long deceased on General Hospital are back, alive and well. But it’s less common with prime time shows, and thus usually more exciting when it occurs.

I’m sure I’ve missed a few, but here’s a list of the top ten returns I enjoyed the most, ranging from the milder “oh, good to see you again” to the astonished “Wow – I never thought that would happen.” Add your own to the comments if you like.

10. Bo and Luke Duke

I’ve ranked this lowest only because they weren’t gone very long.

The Dukes of Hazzard was raking in bucks from merchandising – nearly 200 products and $190 million in sales. John Schneider and Tom Wopat were supposed to get a cut, but when they didn’t get enough they decided not to show up for the show’s fifth season. There were other issues as well, including complaints about scripts, but Warner Bros. wasn’t listening and instead hired two lookalike actors to replace them – Byron Cherry and Christopher Mayer were cast as Coy and Vance Duke.


Would it matter? Critics thought the car was the star of the show, but Cherry and Mayer had no chemistry with each other of the rest of the cast. Ratings plummeted, and after 18 episodes Bo and Luke were back, and enough viewers also returned to keep the series going for another two seasons.

9. Tasha Yar
Denise Crosby was disappointed in how her character of Enterprise Chief of Security Tasha Yar on Star Trek: The Next Generation was being utilized and asked to be released from her contract. The series obliged and Tasha was most definitively killed by a malevolent puddle of black goo in the episode “The Skin of Evil.” But apparently that bridge wasn’t burned too badly as Crosby returned in the third season episode “Yesterday’s Enterprise,” which was partially set in an alternate timeline in which Tasha never died.

8. Lionel Jefferson
Sometimes the actor leaves but the character stays, as was the case when Mike Evans left The Jeffersons, after playing Lionel in season one and previously on All In the Family. Damon Evans (no relation) took over the role, but Mike came back and appeared in four more seasons. 


I’ve referenced my lack of enduring interest in Norman Lear’s shows before, so this wasn’t a big deal to me and was mostly a no-harm, no-foul switch, at least judging by the ratings, but I’m sure fans were happy when the original actor returned.

7. Jaime Sommers
I’m not sure if this qualifies as a return, since viewers who watched Jaime die in the same Six Million Dollar Man episode in which she debuted may have believed they had seen the last of her. But enough of them wrote to ABC to prompt a change of plans, so it was revealed that Jaime was kept alive in suspended animation until her condition could be stabilized. That cleared the path for a successful spinoff and an Emmy award for Lindsay Wagner.

6. Becky Connor
Of all the replacement character situations on this list, Roseanne delivered the most bizarre. Lecy Goranson played the Conners’ oldest daughter, Becky for five seasons, and then Sarah Chalke took over the role in season six. And then Goranson came back and then left again and Chalke returned. And in one episode they both appeared. References to how Becky kept changing were written into the script, and the whole thing was treated as an “It’s only TV” meta joke.

5. Jan Brady
Eve Plumb opted not to return to her TV family when they were reunited in The Brady Bunch Variety Hour, which debuted in 1976 and disappeared in 1977. Some would say she made a wise choice, and thus was born “Fake Jan,” aka Geri Reischl.



But when “The Brady Girls Get Married” aired in 1981, Plumb was back with her siblings and would return for several subsequent reunions.

4. John-Boy Walton
Richard Thomas’s Emmy-winning portrayal of the Waltons’ sensitive oldest son was the heart and soul of this series. When Thomas left in season eight he was replaced by Robert Wightman, aka the human equivalent of watching paint dry. 


Thankfully, Thomas returned to the role in three Waltons TV movies in the 1990s.

3. Jill Munroe
This one should have been so much better. Farrah Fawcett returning to Charlie's Angels, the series that launched her to icon status, was supposed to be an event, even if she was only honoring a negotiated contractual obligation to appear in four more episodes. Season three’s “Angel Come Home” came closest, but perhaps too much had happened off-screen for the cast to recapture their previous chemistry. Scenes with “sisters” Jill and Kris Munroe seemed forced. Still, this viewer was always glad to have her back.



2. Bobby Ewing
Is this the most famous character return in TV history? Or the most infamous? In Dallas’s eighth season, 300 million viewers in 98 countries saw Bobby Ewing murdered in a hit-and-run by jealous nutcase Rebecca Wentworth. It was an on-screen death, complete with a deathbed scene in which he said goodbye to his family. “Bobby is gone and can never come back,” Patrick Duffy would assert after filming these scenes. “I appreciate my public and would never fool them.”

And then Dallas lost four million viewers, and Bobby popped up in the shower at Southfork. How? Turns out the entire season, including his death, was “all a dream.” Yes, it took some brass you-know-what to try and pull that off, but once fans stopped rolling their eyes they were happy to have him back. So was Larry Hagman. “I was flabbergasted myself,” he told me when I interviewed him many years ago. “I know we lost some viewers, but we also stayed on for another four years. And those were my big money years. I was making $250,000 an episode, so I was very happy to have him back.”


1. Sarah Jane Smith
When a beloved character returns to a beloved series after a season, or a couple of years, it’s a happy moment. But when a beloved character returns to a beloved series after 30 years…there aren’t any words to describe it, since before the Doctor Who episode “School Reunion” there was no precedent for it. How many shows are even on that long?

Elisabeth Sladen joined Doctor Who as journalist Sarah Jane Smith in 1973, during Jon Pertwee’s wonderful run as the title character. She stayed until 1976, by which time she had become many viewers’ favorite companion alongside Tom Baker, who had become the most popular Doctor of the show’s original incarnation.


When Doctor Who was revived in 2005, it was reticent about whether it was an extension of the show’s original 1963-1989 run, or if we were starting fresh with the run from Christopher Eccleston to Peter Capaldi (I don’t acknowledge what happened after that – you are of course free to do otherwise).

But those questions were answered in 2006 when Sarah Jane returned, once again alongside the most popular Doctor of the era. Every moment of their reunion was so beautifully and perfectly played, from Sarah’s first glimpse of the Tardis to David Tennant’s reaction, and the jealousy of current companion Rose Tyler (which thankfully didn’t last).


It wasn’t just a great episode, it was a substantive one, as it addressed the nature of the Doctor’s relationships with those who travel with him. “You can spend the rest of your life with me, but I can’t spend the rest of my life with you,” he tells Rose. “That’s the curse of the time lords.” It also raised questions about how someone who is shown the universe can adjust back to their old life and routines. Could anything else ever be as exciting?

I don’t get choked up easily, but when the Doctor and Sarah said goodbye this time, it got me. And when Elisabeth Sladen passed away just five years later, it hurt me like no other celebrity death. I’m glad Sarah got the closure she needed, and I hope that Lis’s travels continue as she delights in the adventures of the afterlife.




Tuesday, March 3, 2026

My Journey Through 1970s TV: Wednesday Nights, 1977


Lather, rinse, repeat. Once again as we peruse another late ‘70s prime time schedule, we find ABC serving up a medley of hits, and two other networks struggling to keep up.

Having failed with The Practice and The Quest, NBC scrapped last year’s Wednesday night line-up and introduced three new shows. Only one caught on with the public, and it wasn’t even the best one. Let’s start there.

NBC
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams
The Oregon Trail
Big Hawaii


Would an evening of adventures in the great outdoors lure enough viewers away from Angels and urban sitcoms? Not entirely, though America did take a liking to Grizzly Adams, whom they first met in a 1974 film that cost $140,000 and grossed more than $45 million at the box office. When the film aired on NBC two years later it drew a 32% share, enough to green light a series. It lasted just two years but made an unlikely star out of Dan Haggerty, who was then working as an animal trainer for Disney.



What I can’t figure out is why more viewers watching that show didn’t stick around for The Oregon Trail, which got destroyed in the ratings by Charlie’s Angels, the season’s fourth highest-rated series. And that’s a shame, because this was a first-rate western with a stellar cast.


Rod Taylor, star of such classic films as The Birds and The Time Machine, played Evan Thorpe, leader of a wagon train headed west to Oregon. He also cowrote the show’s fine theme song, “Oregon Bound,” with Charles Napier, who played his second-in-command. And how refreshing it was to see Napier finally playing a good guy.

Also featured were Andrew Stevens and Darleen Carr, two hard-luck TV lifers with several quickly canceled shows on their resumes. This is the show that should have stuck, but westerns weren’t in demand in 1977 unless Clint Eastwood was in them. Only 14 episodes were made and eight aired before the series was canceled. The remaining six played only on BBC television, but fans finally got to see them thanks to a 2010 DVD release which is highly recommended. 



If you’d like to sample it first, an episode called “The Scarlet Ribbon” is on YouTube, with guest stars William Shatner, Donna Mills and Bill Bixby (who also directed). Great stuff.

As for Big Hawaii, never watched it, never heard of it, so on the “missed” list it goes. According to The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, it was set on a sprawling Hawaiian ranch run by the wealthy Mitch Fears (John Dehner). Conflicts began when his ne’er do well son (Cliff Potts) returns home. Any of that sound familiar? Regardless, like The Oregon Trail it was gone by Thanksgiving.


ABC
Eight is Enough
Charlie’s Angels
Baretta


ABC’s winning streak continued with another new hit in Eight is Enough, which would run five seasons though sadly without original star Diana Hyland, who played the wife of Tom Bradford (Dick Van Patten) and died of cancer after filming just four episodes.


As I wrote about the series more than a decade ago, “I cannot recall any other series from that era that moved as easily from sitcom style humor, complete with laugh track, to serious moments, and then back again. That tonal switch is fraught with peril, and only the best television shows can pull it off without undermining the drama or overplaying the comedy. Eight is Enough gets it just right.”

There was casting uncertainty around Charlie’s Angels as well. Would a percentage of the audience leave with Farrah Fawcett? Instead, the show rose in the ratings in its sophomore season, with Cheryl Ladd proving to be an equally popular replacement.


As for Baretta, the once top ten show had dropped out of the top 30 and was canceled at the end of this season. It was time.


CBS
Good Times
Busting Loose
CBS Wednesday Night Move


Good Times bid farewell to Esther Rolle this season. Like the previously departed John Amos she was fed up with all the hoopla around Jimmie Walker. New to the cast was Janet Jackson as Penny, a little girl adopted by Willona.


I vaguely remembered Busting Loose (okay, mostly I remembered Barbara Rhoades on it) but was able to refresh my memory with several episodes on YouTube. 




As I watched the pilot again, which introduced ten cast members for a 30-minute show, I thought I wandered back into Too Many Cooks. But to its credit all ten were well-defined and beneficial to the series, each getting at least one moment to shine. Adam Arkin was an engaging lead in a show that tried to be a buddy comedy, a workplace comedy and a family comedy all at once – and mostly succeeded.



Shows Missed:
The Don Knotts Show (1970)
San Francisco International Airport (1970)
Nancy (1970)
The Headmaster (1970)
The Man and the City (1971)
Search (1972)
Assignment: Vienna (1972)
The Delphi Bureau (1972)
Jigsaw (1972)
The Little People (1972)
The Sixth Sense (1972)
Faraday & Company (1973)
Kodiak (1974)
The New Land (1974)
McCoy (1975)
Joe and Sons (1975)
Beacon Hill (1975)
Mobile One (1975)
Big Eddie (1975)
Executive Suite (1976)
Ball Four (1976)
Young Dan’l Boone (1977)
Rafferty (1977)
Mulligan’s Stew (1977)
Big Hawaii (1977)

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Five Reasons "Angie" Didn't Last Longer


I watched an episode of Angie the other day on DVD, and it struck me again how this 1970s situation comedy had most of the elements that would appeal to an audience long enough to keep it on the air for at least 3-4 seasons, if not more. Instead, it was canceled after two years and just 36 episodes.



What happened? I suspect network hubris contributed to its early departure. After ranking fifth in its debut season, ABC moved the series three times into three different time slots and changed the cast, the setting and the narrative. Since the network dominated the Nielsen ratings in the late 1970s they may have figured they could do no wrong, and their audience would follow them anywhere. That didn’t work.

I’m not saying those poor decisions deprived us of more time with one of the best shows of the decade – that level of quality was beyond its reach. But not every series has to be venerated to be valued. Thirty minutes with likable characters and a welcome setting are all many of us need as accompaniment to unwind after a day’s work.

The series made a fine first impression with a mini arc that introduced us to Angie Falco (Donna Pescow), a diner waitress from the poor side of town, and Dr. Brad Benson (Robert Hays), who comes from a wealthy family but eats at the diner every day, and not because of the food.



They come to each other from different worlds, as sung in the show’s wonderful theme by Maureen McGovern. He proposes, she accepts, but both of their families have misgivings about the match. These stories unfold over the first five episodes, all of which are among the best of the run. The show’s creators – classic TV vets Garry Marshall and Dale McRaven – had a clear vision of what Angie should be about, and they were onto something.



With Doris Roberts as Angie’s outspoken mom and Sharon Spelman as Brad’s stuck-up sister Joyce also making strong contributions, Angie was a series that seemed destined for long-term success. 



Why didn’t it last? I offer these five reasons.


The Move

In episode five, “The Adjustment,” newlywed Angie moves into Brad’s home, which she is surprised to discover is more like a palatial estate. Her reaction, and those of her family and friends when they visit, get to the heart of what this series was about – moving from one world to another. Brad never looked down on the humble Falco home during his visits, but Angie hit the jackpot and couldn’t handle it. She seemed embarrassed in luxurious surroundings.

After a short first season of just 12 episodes, the series returned for its first (and last) full year, and that’s where it made what was to me its biggest mistake. In episode three, “Moving Day,” Angie insists that they move into a humbler dwelling. The house she chooses is unappealing from a set design perspective, and Brad clearly hates it but goes along to appease his wife. The show removed one of the defining characteristics of its premise, cutting off access to rich comedic material long before its freshness date.


What to Do with Tammy Lauren?


Teenage Tammy Lauren was billed third in the opening credits of the series’ first season, right behind Pescow and Hays. She played Joyce’s daughter Hillary, but if you blinked you might miss her entire contribution to that season.



Lauren was completely absent in some episodes, made one-scene appearances in others, and probably spoke no more than 15 lines for her entire duration on the show. In fact, her most memorable contribution happened in the opening credits, when she laughs as Angie wheels her around on a serving cart in the diner, until Joyce puts a stop to that. Now we’re set up to think that Hillary is the only member of Brad’s family who thinks Angie is fun, but in her early scenes she’s just as snotty as Joyce, and that transition is never made. Another missed opportunity – plus she was cute enough to get some teenage boys to watch.


Phipps

Season two introduces Emory Bass as Phipps, a butler Brad hires to help Angie, even though she’s already uncomfortable with the trappings of wealth. Having a butler made sense when they lived in a mansion but seemed silly after they moved to a middle-class residence. Phipps was no scene-stealer like Benson on Soap, and like Hillary was another character left to drift through scenes for which he seemingly had no purpose.


The Marys

The same episode that introduced Phipps (“Angie’s Old Friends”) also introduced the Marys – three childhood friends of Angie: Mary Grace the nun (Susan Duvall), pregnant Mary Katherine (Nancy Lane) and ditzy Mary Mary (Valri Bromfield).


None of them were believable as real people, and not one of the eight episodes in which they appeared was made more memorable by their presence. They were the original Larry, Daryl and Daryl, except those characters worked on Newhart because that show was in the absurdist tradition of Green Acres. Angie already had Debralee Scott as Angie’s sister Marie, who pushed the boundaries of believability by sometimes being too incompetent to function as an adult. Why add three more abstractions?


The Beauty Salon

I can only speculate that having Angie leave the diner to buy a beauty salon was a desperation move to inject new life into a show with dwindling ratings. The network hoped a fresh setting and new supporting characters like Tim Thomerson as a skirt-chasing stylist would catch on with viewers. Instead, they likely hastened its departure.

“I don't try to understand it anymore,” said Donna Pescow after learning of the show’s cancelation. “You have to take it as a big chess game and the only person who sees the total logic is the person making the moves.” It’s sad in this case that all the moves were as appealing as Elaine Benes’s moves on the dancefloor – but at least we have a DVD release to remind us of the show’s best moments – and what might have been.  




Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Defending the Traditional


In a recent conversation about the new Star Trek series (Starfleet Academy) I remarked that one of the many reasons I disliked it was how it couldn’t tell the difference between depicting diversity and fetishizing it, something the original series had figured out back in 1966. One of my friends, whose politics lean left, responded that I wouldn’t have a problem if it were fetishizing something traditional.

I had to think about that for a while. And I’ve concluded he was right.

But first I had to question whether it was even possible to fetishize (have an excessive and irrational commitment) to widely shared beliefs and customs that have not changed for a very long time.


I guess so. Baseball has been played in America since 1869, and over the decades new rules were added, interleague play was adopted, and both leagues now have designated hitters. Someone who fetishized the game might object to all of that. But at its core baseball is still the same – nine players to a side, three strikes and you’re out. Fans may have different views on non-essential rules modifications, but we know where the line is that shouldn’t be crossed.

We should be able to say the same about tradition, at least in how it is manifested in our lives and our art, which includes television. Our minds seek truth, our souls seek happiness, and for many of us those things are found in the traditional. Whether it’s the classic shows of the past, our daily routines, or the beliefs found in centuries-old creeds, we come to these things because they are familiar, they are time-tested, and they just seem to work.


And in this strange era when so much of what falls under that category is not only being challenged but disparaged, it awakens in many of us a crusade to defend what is being lost. That wasn’t upmost in my mind when I started this blog in 2012, but as I’ve analyzed, celebrated and occasionally defended the Comfort TV era, that impetus was never far from the surface.

When did we lose sight of where lines should be drawn? Television used to be a purveyor for such knowledge, extolling through its shows the responsibilities of citizenship, what separates the rational from the fanatical, and the basic differences between right and wrong. Family sitcoms, dramas, westerns, police procedurals, all endorsed community over individuality, and recognized how the exaltation of the self, when we claim the right to define our own concept of existence, just leads to narcissism.



There was also, even if it was rarely stated implicitly, the conviction that there was inherent value in our nature and purpose as human beings, beyond what we ascribed to ourselves.

That is why I cling to the traditional in my television viewing. It did not dismiss the lessons of the past because they were old but valued them as the achievement of the striving of our ancestors.


Television is no longer a central figure in America’s households, which is particularly regrettable because the lessons it once imparted are also disappearing from other sources. The foundations of Western civilization are either denigrated or no longer taught, and that also diminishes the artistic works – television, literature, music, and art – which are the products of that civilization. Quotations from the Bible or Shakespeare, characters from Casablanca or I Love Lucy, the knowledge of which could be assumed across generations, are now as unfamiliar as Egyptian hieroglyphs.

To speak of “seeing through a glass darkly,” or “Here’s looking at you, kid” or “One of these days, Alice…” will not register with people who are the product of what one writer described as “four years of expensive brain deprivation, known as a bachelor’s degree.”

What is emerging to fill that vacuum? Nothing from television, I’m afraid, because not as many people are watching, much less watching the same shows as we did for decades. There are no universal messages being sent through that medium anymore, and the ones that are loudest are doing more harm than good.

We are in a period of cultural decline, not because of material or military failure, but because we’ve succumbed to destructive messages that we, in our superior wisdom, can simply dispense with God, nature, and our great spiritual and intellectual beliefs. In other words, all of what has come to be viewed as traditional.


I guess I didn’t talk about television the way I usually do in this blog. I apologize for that. But if you share my affection for the classic shows of the past, you know that these musings apply to them and are one of the reasons – perhaps the most important reason – that we still enjoy them.

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

My Journey Through 1970s TV: Tuesday Nights, 1977

Classic TV fans still rhapsodize about the CBS prime time schedules of the early 1970s featuring Mary Tyler Moore, Bob Newhart, and Carol Burnett. Fifty years later many contend these were lineups never surpassed in quality.

But what ABC achieved on Tuesdays in 1977 is arguably more impressive. For the first time, and I would guess the only time in television history, one network aired the year’s three highest-rated shows in one programming bloc on the same night. Let’s start there.

ABC
Happy Days
Laverne & Shirley
Three’s Company
Soap
Family


Laverne & Shirley surpassed the series from which it was spun to take the #1 spot in 1977, with Happy Days finishing at #2.


I can only speak for myself, but in the ensuing years I find my appreciation for Laverne & Shirley steadily rising, as my interest in Happy Days dwindles.

Both series floundered in their later seasons from location changes and cast departures. But here in their respective heydays (and taking nothing away from the eternally iconic status of The Fonz), L&S blended the nostalgic appeal of its predecessor with elaborate physical comedy stunts not seen in prime time since the glory days of Lucy and Ethel. I don’t think we appreciated the talent and timing involved in creating those moments as much as we should have at the time – but then I can say the same for just about everything back then.



Speaking of Lucy, Three’s Company was one of Lucille Ball’s favorite shows. It was the third highest-rated series of 1977, despite (or perhaps because of) its scandalous depiction of a man cohabitating with two attractive women. No one would blink an eye at that now, but Jack masquerading as gay to fool the landlords, complete with lisping voice and limp wrist, would get the show canceled. Times do change.



How does it hold up nearly 50 years later? It’s not in my DVD collection, but as a drawing room farce with a slapstick chaser it was often better than its shallow sex comedy reputation. Plus, Norman Fell’s smirks at the camera still make me laugh.

And if we’re talking controversy, Soap made Three’s Company look like Little House on the Prairie. Thousands of letters poured into ABC demanding its cancelation before the first episode aired. Such movements tend to generate more interest in a show, and that campaign combined with strong lead-ins elevated Soap to #13 that season.

As for Family (#26) I’ve said it before in this blog and I’ll likely say it again: one of the best shows of the 1970s or any decade.


CBS
The Fitzpatricks
MASH
One Day at a Time
Lou Grant


CBS more than held its own against ABC’s powerhouse line-up, placing two shows in the top ten: MASH at #8 and One Day at a Time at #10. And scheduling Lou Grant against Family was just unfair – why make viewers choose between two such excellent shows?

I know I was watching Lou Grant, a show that had a profound impact on my teenage self. I already knew I was probably going to be a writer, but this show steered me toward journalism – and taught me how that trade was supposed to be practiced. Now how can we get more of today’s “journalists” to study the DVDs – they could use a refresher in objectivity – not to mention ethics.

The Fitzpatricks was a show I had been curious about for a long time. It sounded like CBS’s version of Eight is Enough – the joys and sorrows of a large Irish-Catholic family in the Michigan suburbs. 


I thought it was destined for the “missed shows” list but a few months ago a full episode turned up on YouTube, and that’s when my excitement turned to disappointment. Nothing about it worked for me except for Helen Hunt as the girl next door with her eye on the Fitzpatrick boys, one of whom was played by Jimmy McNichol. The series was canceled after 13 episodes, while Jimmy’s sister Kristy ascended into 1970s stardom on Family.


NBC
The Richard Pryor Show
Mulligan’s Stew
Police Woman


Once again we find NBC struggling to keep up with the competition and failing miserably. Viewers enjoyed Police Woman for a couple of years but here, in its final season, the ratings dropped into the 70s. As for The Richard Pryor Show, it was likely doomed from the start given the censorship battles between the star and the network.

Mulligan’s Stew goes on the “missed shows” list, which is unfortunate because I’m as curious about this series about a large family as I was about The Fitzpatricks. I’m sure the cast alone assures it would be better.


As the Mulligan patriarch, Lawrence Pressman has one of those faces that is instantly recognizable from Doogie Howser, MD and a hundred guest appearances on other shows. This was his first shot at series stardom, but it lasted just seven episodes. Father Know Best’s Elinor Donahue played his wife, and among their blended family brood were former Partridge Family tambourine virtuoso Suzanne Crough and future Facts of Life castoff Julie Anne Haddock. That’s got to be worth a look for any Comfort TV fan, right?


Shows Missed:
The Don Knotts Show (1970)
San Francisco International Airport (1970)
Nancy (1970)
The Headmaster (1970)
The Man and the City (1971)
Search (1972)
Assignment: Vienna (1972)
The Delphi Bureau (1972)
Jigsaw (1972)
The Little People (1972)
The Sixth Sense (1972)
Faraday & Company (1973)
Kodiak (1974)
The New Land (1974)
McCoy (1975)
Joe and Sons (1975)
Beacon Hill (1975)
Mobile One (1975)
Big Eddie (1975)
Executive Suite (1976)
Ball Four (1976)
Young Dan’l Boone (1977)
Rafferty (1977)
Mulligan’s Stew (1977)



Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Lost '70s Show - Found! Tenafly


During my ongoing review of the 1970s prime time schedules, I've kept a list of the shows I’ve never seen. It’s always fun when I get to cross a series off that list, and I can now do so with Tenafly, thanks to a kind soul who uploaded the first episode to YouTube a few months ago.

From 1973, Tenafly was introduced as a new entry in the NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie wheel. It debuted on Oct. 10 and lasted just one season. James McEachin played Harry Tenafly, a happily married, middle class family man who gave up being a police officer to work as a private investigator for a large L.A. detective agency.



The corporate approach to this profession is one rarely covered on television – most TV private eyes are lone wolfs, operating out of rundown offices and working the streets for clues. Tenafly was one of many investigators in an upscale building in a fancy office park. He has a desk and a secretary, and a grouchy boss who hands out assignments.

In the first episode, however, the client comes directly to him. Ted Harris (Ed Nelson) is a popular but controversial radio talk show host who returns home from work to find his wife dead in their home. He calls Tenafly because Harry is one of his most frequent callers and on-air sparring partners.


Harry takes the case and quickly tracks down the man with whom the victim was having an affair – but did he really do it, or was it someone else? A coat hanger turns out to be the key to unravelling the case.

Tenafly was created by Richard Levinson and William Link, the creators of Columbo, Mannix and Murder, She Wrote. Obviously that’s a positive sign, and you can see the level of professionalism in every aspect of production. I enjoyed the episode I watched and would gladly sample more – so the question is why didn’t it last longer?

I don’t have an easy answer. I do know that the ratio of hits to misses for the Wednesday and Sunday Mystery Movie wheels is likely not as impressive as you might remember. For every McCloud and Columbo there was an Amy Prentiss and Lanigan’s Rabbi. If there wasn’t an intriguing enough hook to bring viewers back, NBC wasted no time dropping some concepts and replacing them with others.

Even outside the Mystery Movie universe, the most successful 70s detective shows all had some unique feature to separate them from the crowd. Cannon was a portly fellow, Barnaby Jones a senior citizen. McCloud was a country boy in the city. The only special feature one could associate with Tenafly was that he was black – and that was enough in 1973.



To its credit – and I’ll choose my words carefully here – while this was a show with a black leading man, it wasn’t a show about a black leading man. At least from the episode I watched race was not a factor in any aspect of the story or his character. Contrast that with Shaft, which also debuted that October with Richard Roundtree reprising his iconic film role, in which the African American experience was intrinsic to its authenticity. That series was likewise canceled after one season.



It's too easy to say audiences were not ready for a show with a black leading man – not after Greg Morris’s contributions to Mission: Impossible and Lloyd Haynes in Room 222. Maybe fans of the Shaft films found the TV version too watered-down, and Mystery Movie viewers found Tenafly too generic.

Whatever the reason, at least in the latter case, it was our loss. But happily, James McEachin remained in demand as an actor, working steadily for the next three decades. You may remember him best as Lt. Brock in the series of Perry Mason TV movies that aired throughout the 1980s. He was also a Korean War veteran who according to IMDB, earned several medals for valor including the Silver Star. He died in 2025 at the age of 94, after a life well lived.






Monday, January 5, 2026

My Visit to the Brady House


In 2019 I reviewed A Very Brady Renovation, the four-part HGTV series in which the Brady Bunch house shown in nearly every series episode was purchased and renovated into a replica of the home that is as familiar to series fans as their own.

Back then I wrote: “The entire project was a completely impractical thing to do, requiring thousands of hours and millions of dollars. But seeing the results, it feels like time and money well spent. I only wish that all of us who love the show would have an opportunity to visit this treasured TV Land artifact that, most improbably, now exists in our mundane real world.”

Well, it took a few years, but the home is now open, and not long ago I made my pilgrimage to this Comfort TV shrine. I’m still struggling to find the words to describe the experience.


I’ve been to TV show tapings, where the rooms that looked so expansive on television appear much smaller on a soundstage. I still remember my first look at Laverne and Shirley’s apartment, and how it was now bordered by plywood dividers and resembled a miniature replica when viewed at a distance from the studio audience. This was an entirely different experience, being immersed in this space. There were no cameras or overhead lighting grids. I was in a real home on a real street in a real community.

I could easily see how visitors may envision themselves transported into that alternate universe where Mike would announce “Honey, I’m home!” as he strode through the living room, briefcase in hand, wearing a shirt louder than a Motorhead concert. While Carol greets him, Alice is in the kitchen making dinner, and the kids are upstairs in their respective bedrooms, dealing with that week’s adolescent trauma.


Did I feel that way? Not quite. Much as I have loved this show since childhood, my imagination wouldn’t carry me that far. I’ve never been one of those people who go to Disneyland and stand in line to “meet” Ariel or Cinderella and talk with them as if they were the actual characters from the movie. I admire those with the childlike wonder to preserve that illusion, spending a few moments with someone who is, to me, a coed from Orange County who happened to be blessed with the features of a princess.

This world has made me too cynical for such flights of fancy – but I’ll admit to the occasional twinge of a surreal but soothing sensation inside the Brady residence. 


I had entered someplace special, isolated from harsh reality, much like the Bradys themselves were portrayed in the 1995 movie that gently poked fun at their out-of-step existence.

In every room there are reminders of specific episodes – clearly, someone had done their homework before opening the house to fans who have watched every episode dozens of times.


Marcia’s many ribbons and awards fill the dresser in the girl’s bedroom (along with a letter from Davy Jones), while on the desk is Jan’s essay about America, which almost won a contest. Kitty Karry-All rests on Cindy’s bed. 


In the boys’ room you’ll see the newspaper clipping proclaiming Peter a hero for saving a little girl in Driscoll’s toy store, and above Greg’s bed a copy of The Red Badge of Courage – remember when that was mentioned?



There’s a house of cards in the living room, and a silver platter engraved with the names of all six kids. 


Items on the family room table recall other memorable episodes, and in the den Mike proudly displays his “Father of the Year” plaque. Alice’s bedroom is here as well, as are the parents’ bedroom and Greg’s converted attic, complete with Raquel the goat and sheet music for “We Can Make the World a Whole Lot Brighter.”


I went through all the rooms at least three times and each time found something I missed in my previous visit. Even the backyard offers a few familiar sights.






And if you were curious, even with all the references to specific shows, I did not see any related to Cousin Oliver. I applaud that decision.

Thinking of going? Here’s what you need to know. The cost is $275 for 90 minutes, and an advance reservation is required. Don’t expect to have the house to yourself – there may be other visitors who booked the same day and time (there were when I was there) and there are two tour reps who monitor guests to make sure no one walks off with any artifacts.

Other ground rules: you must take your shoes off before entering, you’re not allowed to sit on the furniture, and for heaven’s sake don’t play ball in the house (yes, the vase featured in that episode is back in its rightful place). You are, however, allowed to open the refrigerator – and you’ll know why once you do.

Final thoughts: I’m sure that price may seem high to some, but for the moment business is brisk. One of the home’s caretakers told me that they’ve seen visitors walk in and burst into tears. I get that. Perhaps, growing up, the Brady house was the only happy home they knew.

I write about classic TV here and in my books because it means something to me. Something beyond mere escapism and entertainment. That someone thought enough to provide the time and effort required to transform the Brady Bunch house suggests that I am not alone in those sentiments. The generations that grew up with the series are, to paraphrase Bob Dylan, “so much older then,” but also “younger than that now.” Here is a place to be younger, feel younger, and believe once more in sunshine days.