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In fact Roger Ebert comes to mind when I read Mr. Castleman's and Mr. Podrazik's take one everything from the classics like I LOVE LUCY or half season duds like THE BRADY BRIDES. They clearly love television from a refreshing middle brow point of view and are able to convey that to the reader in a wonderful plain language. While the authors do tend to turn their backs on some interesting shows (70's cop shows, in particular, are greeted with a yawn), their reviews of ALL IN THE FAMILY, M*A*S*H, and even THE LONE RANGER are dead on and illuminating.
I hope the puplisher will give this out of print title another go around. Besides, I wonder what Harry and Wally think about SIENFELD?
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Harry Castleman and Walter Podrazik took a linear look at television history, going season by season -- all the way from the mesozoic days of 1944-45 to 1979-80. The impact of new shows, trends in the industry, hallmarks in news coverage, the regulatory landscape, and other things important to the medium are discussed in detail, but you never feel as if you're being sidetracked. "Watching TV" conveys the sense of excitement and fun that television can give us, and explains why certain shows heightened that pleasure. At the same time, it takes the medium seriously, keeping the reader mindful of its increasing power as the years went on, and chronicling its success or failure in handling the responsibility that came with that power.
As someone who first read the book not long after it was published in 1982, one of the things that came across for me was the degree to which the networks emerged in the book as having distinct personalities.
CBS, the "Tiffany" network -- leader in news, champion purveyor during the '60s of so much rural drivel, but then turning on a dime, just in time for the '70s, to become the home of the smart, post-modern Norman Lear comedies, as well as "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," and "M*A*S*H." NBC, for so many years the distinguished No. 2 network behind CBS, solid in every daypart and division, driven by parent RCA to lead the industry's transition to color. And then ABC, during the '50s and '60s the perennial No. 3, capable of hits here and there like "The Untouchables," "Ben Casey," "The Fugitive" or "Batman," but just as likely to squander some of those successes with horrendous programming mistakes ("The Outer Limits" comes to mind, and even "Ben Casey," for a while). Then, finding gold in the mid-'70s with "Happy Days," "Laverne and Shirley," "Three's Company," etc.
The book is also fascinating for latter-day readers as a look back at the three-network landscape. The proliferation of cable networks and the rise of home video and DVD give us more choices than ever before. The price we've paid for those choices -- aside from the monetary cost -- is a matter of conjecture. With so many competitors, the broadcast networks have been forced to cut costs to cope with having a smaller share of the advertising pie. The result has been shows like "Are You Hot?" and "Fear Factor."
"Watching TV" gives us an important glimpse of where we have been, and what elements of the past we might want to have back.
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Yusuf Paradisi
Currently attending a top law school myself, I thought some of the earlier reviews characterizing the book as "generic" or "common" were way off the mark and likely written by dumb poo-poo heads who went to state schools.
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Even though it's more than a decade out of date, "Harry and Wally's Favorite TV Shows" is still a valuable reference work for students of pop culture or just fans of classic TV. It covers a great many series that other TV books skip over, including series on PBS and shows imported from the UK. The idea of giving each series a rating from zero stars to four stars also sets "Favorite TV Shows" apart from other similar books. Better yet, the reviews are usually right on the money.