Jump to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Soap Opera Network Community

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Reverend Ruthledge

Member
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Reverend Ruthledge

  1. You're welcome, Paul. As I always say, it's a pleasure to be able to share my knowledge with the other five people in the world who care about the subject of soaps' golden years.
  2. Cool. From my hometown! Where did you get that?
  3. I will say this. Even though Los Angeles was the setting until Nixon left, fewer and fewer references were made to the location towards the end of her run. It became a lot more of a generic location. And it looks like they were trying to perhaps move away from having Los Angeles and the coast be the setting although they hadn't settled on a new location yet. There are just hints of this. For example, when Julie Bauer was put in a sanitarium, it was referred to originally as "Seaview Hospital" and it was scratched out and renamed "Lakeview Hospital". I've read every script of GL from 1966 except the month of December and Springfield was never mentioned. Perhaps it is in December. But Nixon was gone by then. Her last month with GL was November 1966. Per my other post, I think Nixon had started moving away from Los Angeles being the setting but it was a later writer who settled on the new location being Springfield.
  4. Agnes wasn't the one who moved GL to Springfield. I don't know who made that decision, but Agnes didn't. The setting was still Los Angeles when she left.
  5. Interestingly, he said Irna couldn't write dialogue to save her life but that she was a master plot-writer. I found her dialogue could be dull and affected at various times but the majority of times her dialogue was good and a few times downright brilliant. Considering the amount of dialogue she had to write, weaknesses are bound to come through at times but I don't get how he could think she was a BAD dialogue writer.
  6. He wasn't saying he wrote the abortion story for AW. He was saying his character of Dick Grant on TGL was involved in the first abortion on TV. I'm not sure what that's about. Dick was on the show from 1951-1962. I have only read up to 1955. What he's referring to could have happened between 1955-1962 but it sure didn't happen from 1951-1955. I'll have to see. I doubt they would have had Dick perform an abortion. Perhaps Marie had an abortion. I don't know if I'd trust his memory. He also said he married everybody on the show but his mother. I know he's trying to be funny but he only married two people. That's a pretty low number for a soap opera and definitely not "everybody on the show". It was a weird comment to make. And I wouldn't trust him to remember the stories he wrote, either. He was the original hack writer.
  7. Just listened to the Lipton interview. Lipton: You're asking me too much about soap operas. There are much more important things about my life to talk about. Interview: Ok, we can move onto other topics. Lipton: Good. Me: click
  8. Thank you for that. It was interesting and confirmed my intense dislike for Lipton.
  9. Oh. Ok. Got it. Thanks. I was confused because the other poster made it sound like the sportscaster was 66 and it sounded like you were refuting that because the actor is only 54.
  10. There is no way that the Bill Shanks who was on ATWT is only 54.
  11. Who are the man and woman in the picture right after that one?
  12. I don't know but it could have been Lipton recalling the memory when he was playing Dick Grant and Dick also lost his ability to do surgery. Although his problem was mental.
  13. I've wondered whatever happened to him. He seems to have vanished from the public eye quickly after leaving ATWT.
  14. Was Paul Bill's stepson? I thought he was his biological son.
  15. You are correct. Cricket, at least, got a few mentions. Maggie just ceased to exist.
  16. Yes, that's true. ATWT had many more characters tied to the past when Marland came aboard than GL did. However, Bill Bauer was out there somewhere. It's strange that he didn't bring him back. Or Meta. Or Trudy, for that matter. But Bill would have had more of a relationship with the current characters at that time. But then, it's not just about bringing characters back. After all, he never brought back Donald Hughes nor Penny Hughes. But then he did bring back non-familial characters like Grant Coleman. And he was good at creating new storylines that had some kind of connection to past storylines (the Sabrina Hughes story). GL may not have had a lot of veteran characters still on, but there was definitely no lack of past storylines to mine from. I don't know. It just seems odd that Marland seemed more interested in the history of ATWT than the history of GL. But then, maybe it was that he wasn't at GL long enough to flesh those things out.
  17. I find Claudia Lonow very appealing in this interview and found Diana Fairgate so repugnant. It's a little discombobulating.
  18. Yes, I agree. The first part of the decade was harder on TGL and the latter part of the decade was harder on ATWT. Don't get me wrong. Even though I consider the 70s a weak decade for those shows compared to the prior decades, both shows were GREAT in the 70s compared to what came after (except the Marland years of ATWT).
  19. Where are you guys seeing that that's Tom Eplin in the news story? I'm not doubting it and it does look like an older version of him but I didn't see his name anywhere.
  20. Sorry. Edit button doesn't seem to work. I meant to say the 70s was a weak decade for my two favorite soaps (GL and ATWT). However, it was the best decade for most other soaps.
  21. How many years was he at GL? NO, NO, NO!!! I HATE back-from-the-dead storylines! Sorry. Just gives me a knee-jerk physical reaction. LOL.
  22. I always thought it odd that Marland didn't seem to mine the history of GL much but REALLY mined the history of ATWT when he was writing that show.
  23. You summed up completely all that's wrong with the genre. I too think the 70s were the apex for the genre even though I'm a huge fan of the 30s through the 60s. And even though I think they were kind of weak decades for my two favorite soaps (TGL, ATWT). However, for the genre itself and for most other soaps, the 70s were the best decade.

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.