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free text l0 to three-to-one, three-to-one today, i hanako montgomery in tokyo and this jensen: it s a time of enormous turmoil. shut up in here. the 60s are over dad. durham: here s michael at the foul line, a shot on ehlo. -good! -yeah! ha-ha! turner: we intend to cover all the news all the time. we won t be signing off until the world ends. isn t that special? any tool for human expression will bring out the best and the worst in us, and television has been that. they don t pay me enough to deal with animals like this. people are no longer embarrassed to admit they watch television. we have seen the news and it is us. clark: slowly but surely, the 1970s are disappearing. the 1980s will be upon us. what a decade it is coming up. happy new year! [ cheers and applause ] auletta: as you begin the 80s in the television world, the landscape was, on any given evening, 9 out of 10 people were watching only one of three networks. more than 30 million people are addicted t ....
Unh-unh, tell the truth. if you had to do it all over again and she walked into your office and she said, take my case, would you? well. of course you would, because it is juicy, newsy, exciting stuff. bochco: it was really fun to take the hill street blues format and use it to frame an entirely different social and cultural strata with vastly different results. i wonder if i might engage with my client privately. certainly. [ sighs ] what are you doing for dinner tonight? i was planning on having you. in that case, skip lunch. bianculli: the formula had gotten established of how you can do a dramatic show and yet still have an awful lot of fun. we didn t used to be able to accept that very easily in a tv hour. and even before the 80s are out, it s like, oh, okay, i get it. you know, so it s like, all right, what are the rules now? ....
We didn t used to be able to accept that very easily in a tv hour. and even before the 80s are out, it s like, oh, okay, i get it. you know, so it s like, all right, what are the rules now? what are you doing? i m doing what i should have done all along. .should have done all along. what i wanted to do originally. .do originally. what i should have done .last night. last night. stop that david! stop that david! i m calling the police, david! .the police, david! hello, police?■■■■hello, police? shriver: the networks realized there was an audience looking for something less predictable than traditional prime-time fare. -[ groans ] -[ gasps ] bianculli: moonlighting was another of those shows that said, okay, i see the formulas that we ve had up to here. let s do different things. hello. hello. we re looking a little pale [pail] today, aren t we? and who have we here? i don t know. moonlighting was a really experimental show. they had a shakespeare episode. they had a blac ....
in that case, skip lunch. the formula had gotten established of how you can do a dramatic show and yet still have an awful lot of fun. we didn t used to be able to accept that very easily in a tv hour. and even before the 80s are out, it s like, oh, okay, i get it. you know, so it s like, all right, what are the rules now? what are you doing? i m doing what i should ve done all along. what i wanted to do originally. what i should ve done last night. both: stop that, david! i m calling the police, david! hello, police? the networks realized there was an audience looking for something less predictable than traditional primetime fare. moonlighting was another of those shows that said, okay, i see the formulas that we ve had up to here. let s do different things. hello. hello. we re looking a little pale ....
well of course you would, because it is juicy, newsy, exciting stuff. it was really fun to take the hill street blues format and use it to frame an entirely different social and cultural strata with vastly different results. i wonder if i might engage with my client privately. certainly. what are you doing for dinner tonight? i was planning on having you. in that case, skip lunch. the formula had gotten established of how you can do a dramatic show, and yet still have an awful lot of fun. we didn t used to be able to accept that very easily in a tv hour. and even before the 80s were out, it s like, okay, i get it. so it s like, all right, what are the rules now? what are you doing? i m doing what i should have done all along. what i wanted to do originally. what i should have done last night. stop that, david. ....