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Primetime Soaps

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Hotel was The Love Boat on land but a little soapier. I never thought of it as a primetime soap though.

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11 hours ago, DRW50 said:

What sizzling plots could cause Hotel to skyrocket to #1 in the ratings?

1984 National Enquirer commercial

10 hours ago, te. said:

My first thought was the bisexual storyline in 2x04 (aired October 24th, 1984). Otherwise since it has Gary Coleman dressed like Indiana Jones it would probably be around Halloween. Maybe they had a good slate of guest stars in the November sweeps?

The Gary Coleman photo is from his February 1984 TV movie The Fantastic World of D.C. Collins. He played an imaginative kid who ends up in a real life adventure.

Hotel's February 1984 plots, according to IMDB, included:

"A father is determined to make a man out of his very reluctant son. A man who is a klutz around women arranges to meet up with a woman with whom he has been corresponding."

"The St. Gregory is hosting a wedding between two people from wealthy families. However, the groom's father is having money troubles and the bride's father is having an affair. And that's just the start."

"Christine is enamoured with a man who can only remember his past through brief flashbacks. An infertile couple are in San Francisco for artificial insemination when the husband wants to change their plans."

Real ratings winners, the whole lot of them ...

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Background on the short lived NBC quasi soapy family drama The Family Tree:

The Family Tree was a short-lived NBC soap opera–style drama that aired in early 1983, exploring the emotional complexities of remarriage and blended families. The series was based on the 1982 television movie The Six of Us, which introduced the characters and premise later expanded into a weekly format.

Premiering on January 22, 1983, the show aired on Saturday nights at 10 PM, a difficult time slot for serialized programming—especially a character-driven drama. Despite its thoughtful themes and ensemble cast, The Family Tree struggled to attract a consistent audience and ultimately failed to gain traction, leading to its cancellation after just over a month on the air. Its final original episode aired on February 26, 1983.

In an unusual postscript, NBC brought the series back a few months later. When part of the network’s summer 1983 programming unexpectedly collapsed, NBC used The Family Tree as a temporary replacement, airing repeat episodes on Wednesday nights at 10 PM. However, this second chance did not revive interest in the show, and it was not renewed.

The series centered on Kevin Nichols, a successful lumber company owner, and Annie Benjamin, a part-time real estate agent, as they attempted to build a new life together after divorce. Their marriage merged two already-established families, creating the kind of ongoing emotional tension and interpersonal conflict typical of a soap opera.

Kevin’s family included his grown daughter Molly, who was already married, and his teenage son Jake, who lived with Kevin’s ex-wife, Elizabeth. Annie, meanwhile, had three children still living at home, including Toby, her deaf son. Much of the drama focused on the children’s difficulty adjusting—remaining loyal to their biological parents while coping with the arrival of a new stepparent.

Leaning into soap opera conventions—continuing storylines, emotional confrontations, and layered relationships—the show aimed for a more grounded and realistic tone than many later primetime soaps. Themes of patience, resentment, loyalty, and adaptation were central to its storytelling.

The cast featured Frank Converse as Kevin Nichols, Anne Archer as Annie Benjamin, and a young James Spader as Jake Nichols, supported by Melora Hardin, Joanna Cassidy, and others.

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