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- <text id=93TT0297>
- <title>
- Sep. 27, 1993: Bochco Under Fire
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 27, 1993 Attack Of The Video Games
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 81
- Bochco Under Fire
- </hdr><body>
- <p>His racy NYPD Blue finally airs after a summer of controversy
- and a wave of affiliate defections
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--Reported by Patrick E. Cole/Los Angeles and William Tynan/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> "For 20 years," Steven Bochco told an interviewer recently,
- "I've made a living swimming upstream." But for the past three
- or four of them, TV's brash experimenter has been thrashing
- mostly in dry creek beds. The creator of Hill Street Blues and
- L.A. Law tried a musical police show (Cop Rock), an "adult"
- cartoon (Capitol Critters) and a sexy law show (Civil Wars).
- Now, with his new ABC series, NYPD Blue, Bochco is back where
- he is most comfortable: chronicling the dark, turbulent world
- of big-city law enforcement. And fighting a raging current.
- </p>
- <p> Bochco's show, which he invented partly to test the boundaries
- of TV sex and language, finally goes on the air this Tuesday
- (10 p.m. EDT) after a hot summer of controversy. Conservative
- watchdog the Rev. Donald Wildmon has launched a campaign against
- the show. By late last week, 44 ABC stations had decided not
- to run at least the premiere; the majority won't air the series
- at all. Though most are in smaller markets, the defections could
- seriously hurt the show's ratings. Advertisers, meanwhile, have
- been wary. Although ad time on the first episode is sold out,
- ABC entertainment president Ted Harbert admits the show has
- "not been a huge sales bonanza. There's a wait-and-see attitude."
- </p>
- <p> It is a sign of how placid the rest of network television has
- become that Bochco's strong but relatively conventional cop
- show has incited such an outcry. The first episode contains
- a lovemaking scene with some fleeting, shadowy glimpses of breasts
- and buttocks -- more nudity than elsewhere on network TV, but
- discreet by cable and feature-film standards. Language is a
- touch rawer than usual ("pissy little bitch," "douche bag")
- but stays outside of verboten four-letter territory. As for
- violence, it is less graphic and less prevalent than in dozens
- of older TV shoot-'em-ups, from Gunsmoke to Miami Vice. The
- show's chief problem is unlucky timing: as one of the few new
- shows this fall to portray any serious violence, it has been
- put in the spotlight by antiviolence crusaders desperately looking
- for targets. NYPD Blue is also, by the way, a crackling good
- TV show, probably Bochco's best since Hill Street Blues. Better
- than Hill Street in some ways: sleeker, more focused, less distracted
- by those often annoying comic interludes. Instead of a Hill
- Street-style ensemble cast, the show revolves around two characters:
- detective John Kelly (David Caruso), a red-haired department
- veteran going through a painful divorce, and Andy Sipowicz (Dennis
- Franz), his hotheaded, battle-fatigued partner. Some of Bochco's
- devices have become too facile and familiar (the shaky, hand-held
- camera; a major character who takes six slugs at point-blank
- range and survives miraculously the following week). But his
- storytelling skills have never been sharper, and his favorite
- theme -- the clash between institutions and people, between
- the law and justice -- has never been dramatized at a higher,
- more compelling pitch.
- </p>
- <p> ABC is quietly trying to downplay the show's racy content. The
- network sent its affiliates two episodes in addition to the
- pilot (neither segment has as much explicit material) and got
- Bochco to trim 15 seconds from the first show's lovemaking scene.
- ABC's Harbert says that scene is the "high benchmark" for what
- the series will allow; half the episodes, he promises, will
- have no nudity at all. "Given that our schedule is so dominated
- by family programming, such as Roseanne and Home Improvement,
- we felt there is room for a show that stretches the boundaries,
- so long as we inform the audience about what the show is doing."
- </p>
- <p> What the show is doing, however, has scared off many affiliates
- -- more than have rejected any network show in recent memory.
- Most say they made their decision independently of Wildmon's
- organized campaign. Executives of WHAS in Louisville, Kentucky,
- decided not to run the show after screening it at an ABC affiliates'
- meeting in June. Says station manager George Hulcher: "The kind
- of product they showed us was not for broadcast television.
- It's for cable." Jan McDaniel, general manager of Wichita's
- KAKE, rejected the show after a torrent of anti-NYPD Blue letters
- and phone calls that followed local newspaper coverage of the
- controversy. Says McDaniel: "I received so many thoughtful expressions
- of frustration, I felt we had to take a stand."
- </p>
- <p> Bochco expresses mystification at the response, pointing out
- that the show is mild compared with what the audience can see
- on cable and home videos. Indeed, he scaled back his original
- ambition -- to do TV's first R-rated show -- after long discussions
- with ABC over what the network would allow. "We gave a lot,
- and they gave a lot," he says. Still, NYPD Blue marks a small
- advance. "We have a new generation today," says Bochco. "What
- people watch is significantly more adult because they can access
- so much more. This show gave us some additional colors to paint
- our pictures." Those new colors may be startling to some, but
- they are a welcome alternative to the old, bland shade of network
- beige.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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