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Let me rephrase. I can't know whether or not the creators intended for their series to last decades, but I think the reality of the situation is that aging into those decades have done more harm than good for the shows that have made it that far. There used to be hope that they could get better, but that was before the television industry as a whole went through dramatic shifts that took us further and further away from what soaps traditionally were in their glory days.

 

 

That's what I meant when I said those characters all deserved better. I'll give you love interests, but I kid you not, I recall ten years ago people wanting Lisa in a love triangle on the frontburner. Clearly all of those characters should have been regularly visible (and there were brief moments in which they were, something I remain thankful for), but too many people wanted them to carry the show. Keep in mind that these were actors and actresses in their 70s who had already carried the show through 30 years of day-in, day-out, TOUGH work, many years of it done live. I know they all wanted to be on more, but I don't think they wanted to continue carrying the show when everyone else their age was enjoying retirement.

 

 

I am by no means defending writers for not caring about previous characters and storylines, but a handful of examples doesn't really change the fact that expecting writers to pull in 30-year-old plot lines in a genre that is constantly running 250 episodes a year with no gaps between series or incarnations is a tall order. The greats could do it because that's what makes them the greats. If we're sitting around expecting that caliber of writing again, then we're spinning wheels.

 

Re: Star Wars, Star Trek, Doctor Who. Apples and oranges, IMO. Mainly, these are still hugely successful franchises that TPTB respect and care for. None of the production companies involved in today's soaps give a damn about their quality, only their profit, and so they don't care if a writer comes in who is completely unfamiliar with a show. Also consider that those other franchises have been in reruns and other media for years. Each soap has been in daytime TV and nowhere else.

 

 

1976 soaps and how many years they were on the air by that time:
(Guiding Light - 39 years/24 years)
Search for Tomorrow - 25 years
Love of Life - 25 years
As the World Turns - 20 years
The Edge of Night - 20 years
General Hospital - 13 years
The Doctors - 13 years
Another World - 12 years
Days of Our Lives - 11 years
One Life to Live - 8 years
All My Children - 6 years
Somerset - 6 years
The Young and the Restless - 3 years
Ryan's Hope - 1 year

I didn't count GL's radio run in my original calculation, but even including those years, the average age of a soap in 1976 was 14 years. Today, in 2018, the average age of a soap is 46 years. To me, that's a huge, huge, huge indicator that the genre is broken beyond repair, and it will never, ever be what it once was. Daytime was at its best and most successful when it was filled with a nice mix of old stalwarts and newer shows. That arrangement started to dry up in the early 90s when 6 years passed between the premieres of Generations and The City, and now we're at year #19 since the last network daytime soap premiered.

Look, I love the fact that these shows just kept going and going and going like life itself, but when it all boils down, what good has it done for them? ATWT and GL, THE quintessential long-runners, now sit in a warehouse. No reruns, no streaming, no more DVD sets, nothing at all from TPTB. I can't even go into a novelty store and buy some ridiculous Erica Kane tchotchke. The only thing keeping them alive is the work done by fans for other fans. I don't think any other form of entertainment has suffered that fate.

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Where I disagree is I think what killed the genre was in large part the censorship and cowardice of the higher-ups. Gottlieb didn't leave because she was tired of OLTL's length or history - she left because of ABC's control issues. 

 

I also think that many things about daytime in the last 30-40 years, like the grueling format and the ignorance and callousness and interfering of executives, kept away many people who were acclaimed in other genres and could have turned the ship around - people like Harding Lemay and Henry Slesar. 

 

Instead we got hacks who were hyped to the skies for being "different" or bringing a "manly" flair to soaps or making them more "modern", yet have gone on to little of note outside of that period of overhype. Chuck Pratt has had flop after flop after flop in primetime. JER (RIP) never really went anywhere. Hogan Sheffer managed nothing. Ron Carlivati went nowhere fast. Bob Guza managed nothing. I don't even know if they managed to do what maligned soap writers like Leah Laiman (who wrote a number of books) did. Guza's best known work outside of soaps was C or D-level horror movies. Yet the man was worshiped as a god by the soap "press" for years because he wore a leather jacket and loved to have tiny men waving big guns.

 

I'd love to believe that if the older soaps had come to an earlier, natural end, the genre could have continued on, but I just don't think the networks would have managed it. 

 

I also think that the general move toward, as you say, ingenues in their 40s, is less about soaps being on too long and more about a shift in entertainment at large toward refusing to write people in that age group as behaving in a mature way. 

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Sheffer came from outside - he worked in development at DreamWorks before ATWT. But I'm not sure he was ever as big a wheel as he became in daytime, whereas Gottlieb certainly was (Dirty Dancing, etc). I think he may have been a bit of a functionary.

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When HT left, you've said it was because the show wanted a "Shick" show. Not a Nick show.  And no, those two are not the same. When Shick were featured, Sharon did the heavy lifting. Nick was never driving any story alone. I stick with my original statement. JM has never been asked to carry this show alone. 

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As much flak as JER got, he seemed able to tap into the youth demographic pretty easily compared to the other soaps

 

P&G was justified in not selling AW to ABC. Frons would've cancelled AW when he arrived

 

OJ trial gets all the flak for eroding the soap fanbases, but coming out the trial, the emerging juggernaut know as "The Jerry Springer Show" especially had a hand in weaning people off the soaps with its violence and trashiness

 

No matter how horrible it was, OLTL "Satin Sheets" intro is iconic. People who dont watch soaps but came of age in that era can instantly name it when a "name something that takes you back to your childhood/adolescence" discussion on social media/forums happens. Not to mention the infamy it has among soap fans

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"Let me rephrase. I can't know whether or not the creators intended for their series to last decades, but I think the reality of the situation is that aging into those decades have done more harm than good for the shows that have made it that far. There used to be hope that they could get better, but that was before the television industry as a whole went through dramatic shifts that took us further and further away from what soaps traditionally were in their glory days."

 

But is it the AGE of the shows that is the problem, or is it the endless, incomprehensible mismanagement, cheapness, indifference and idiocy on the part of TPTB? Television overall has evolved, but in many ways for the better. We get wonderful serialized dramas throughout the primetime schedule. But the navel-gazing, lazy, rigid soap ghetto went to pot decades ago and has never done anything to get up to date or back into shape. I firmly believe that it's not only the age of an institution that affects how well and vibrantly it survives. The care it receives plays a significant (if not the primary) role. In the last few decades (or more), capable, savvy, talented and inspirational caregivers have been non-existent in the soap world. I no longer have hope that any of the current four soaps will be saved. In truth, I wish they had been cancelled a long time ago, and put out of their misery while they still had some dignity. The soap opera medium can still a viable one, however, but only if people who know what they are doing produce and write them. That ain't going to happen anytime soon in daytime TV, alas.

 

"That's what I meant when I said those characters all deserved better. I'll give you love interests, but I kid you not, I recall ten years ago people wanting Lisa in a love triangle on the frontburner. Clearly all of those characters should have been regularly visible (and there were brief moments in which they were, something I remain thankful for), but too many people wanted them to carry the show. Keep in mind that these were actors and actresses in their 70s who had already carried the show through 30 years of day-in, day-out, TOUGH work, many years of it done live. I know they all wanted to be on more, but I don't think they wanted to continue carrying the show when everyone else their age was enjoying retirement."

 

I do not want or need every older character to be on the frontburner all the time. I really do like seeing storylines centered around characters of all ages, and even around newbies...if the stories are well-written and the roles well-cast. It's important to kept the cornerstone characters woven into the fabric of the show, of course. Viewers love them and want to keep seeing them on a regular basis, along with all the newer/younger characters on the canvas. (BTW, ATWT treated Lisa abysmally in its last years. If not a frontburner romantic triangle, she should AT LEAST have had a romantic interest and some actual attention paid to her from time to time. She was shoved so far onto the back burner, I'm surprised she never fell right off the stove. Shameful.)

 

"I am by no means defending writers for not caring about previous characters and storylines, but a handful of examples doesn't really change the fact that expecting writers to pull in 30-year-old plot lines in a genre that is constantly running 250 episodes a year with no gaps between series or incarnations is a tall order. The greats could do it because that's what makes them the greats. If we're sitting around expecting that caliber of writing again, then we're spinning wheels."

 

Well, I do not demand that new writers pull in plots from many decades ago, but I do want the scribes to know the history well enough not to make major and annoying errors. Someone once asked Jamie Frame on AW how he was related to Sally Frame. He replied, "She's a cousin or something." Um...no. On TGL, Kelly Nelson once asked his godfather Ed Bauer, "Do you remember Steve Jackson, the surgeon?" Ed replied, "Sure, he was on staff here at Cedars." Again...fail. Steve Jackson was Ed's former father-in-law. Steve Jackson was Frederick's grandfather. Why would Kelly ask such a dumb question to begin with? And even if he did, Ed should have replied with, "Wake up, idiot! Of course I know my own son's grandfather!" LOL.

 

I am just waiting for a scene on Days in which Julie Williams says that being pregnant with Hope was a difficult time in her life, but that giving birth to such a beautiful daughter was a joy. 

 

"Re: Star Wars, Star Trek, Doctor Who. Apples and oranges, IMO. Mainly, these are still hugely successful franchises that TPTB respect and care for. None of the production companies involved in today's soaps give a damn about their quality, only their profit, and so they don't care if a writer comes in who is completely unfamiliar with a show. Also consider that those other franchises have been in reruns and other media for years. Each soap has been in daytime TV and nowhere else."

 

Well, soap operas were HUGELY successful franchises that supported the entire networks' schedule for decades. TPTB USED TO respect and nurture them. That is the problem. Star Trek, Star Wars, Dr. Who, etc., are being well-maintained and remain profitable because TPTB put effort and money into them. Soaps are NOT being well-maintained, TPTB just don't care, and therefore the soaps' viability has plummeted as TPTB's indifference and incompetence have grown.

 

"Today, in 2018, the average age of a soap is 46 years. To me, that's a huge, huge, huge indicator that the genre is broken beyond repair, and it will never, ever be what it once was. Daytime was at its best and most successful when it was filled with a nice mix of old stalwarts and newer shows. That arrangement started to dry up in the early 90s when 6 years passed between the premieres of Generations and The City, and now we're at year #19 since the last network daytime soap premiered."

 

I agree. The genre is broken and the shows we still have on the air are beyond repair. Well, as long as there are no miracle workers left to overhaul them, and there are not.

"Look, I love the fact that these shows just kept going and going and going like life itself, but when it all boils down, what good has it done for them? ATWT and GL, THE quintessential long-runners, now sit in a warehouse. No reruns, no streaming, no more DVD sets, nothing at all from TPTB. I can't even go into a novelty store and buy some ridiculous Erica Kane tchotchke. The only thing keeping them alive is the work done by fans for other fans. I don't think any other form of entertainment has suffered that fate."

 

Again, ITA, but the problem is not that no one out here in audience-ville wants to see quality serialized dramas anymore. The problem is that NO ONE IN THE DAYTIME SOAP WORLD is giving it to us. The idiots at P&G let their archives sit and rot even though Dark Shadows was a huge success when released on DVD . The Doctors reruns must be doing fine. If they weren't they would have been yanked a long time ago. Sony should try a streaming service at a reasonable cost, and air Y&R from the beginning. If no one buys DVD releases or subscribes to streaming services, fine. I'll admit there is no market. But I'll bet there is. I'll bet fans would pay the money if only the material were available to us somewhere, somehow.

 

On eBay, the bidding for a single hour of AW from 1973/4, on VHS, soared to over $300.00. Soap fans aren't cheap, LOL. Let us spend money!

 

The atrocious "bedsheets in the wind" opening, with anonymous models "crying" fake tears, and men showing their horse teeth?

 

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!! I loathed that opening!

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No character besides Victor drives story alone. And even in most of his stories Nikki plays a primary role. So if Nick's stories are equally about who he's paired with then the same applies to everyone else.

 

But there are primary characters who receive the lion's share of airtime and emotional character arcs. If, as you say, Sharon Case did the "heavy lifting" in the Shick stories it's because she's the better actor.

 

Also it doesn't matter if it Nick was paired with Sharon or Phyllis during the period, the point was THOSE STORIES WERE ABOUT NICK.

 

And that does NOT lessen Nick's status as the primary non-senior male character on the show after Heather's exit. He received the majority of the airtime, general story and prime romantic pairings over every male character on the show (besides Victor) from that point up until very recently.

 

In fact Y&R was sent into a virtual panic when at the very idea that JM was potentially going to exit the show. Y&R did NOT put similar effort forth when Heather left the show for the final time because Y&R was no longer invested in Victoria as a primary character.

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I haven't been following this thread at all, so apologies if I'm repeating something that's already been stated previously.

Okay, here are my Unpopular Opinions.

 

The very ideas that were the strength of soaps in the 1980s became liabilities in the decades that followed:

 

Reliance on the idea of a supercouple-- diminished the writing of individual characters, especially when it came time to introduce a new character. Led to ridiculous 'stan' wars simply based on who was/is with whom.  Both side effects persist to today and have served to weaken storytelling.

 

Writing stories that emphasized fantasy and escapism too often-- it's not coincidence that the emergence of reality television (which is actually lightly scripted) preceeded a serious ratings decline for daytime soaps. 

People got tired of countless back from the dead stories, saving the earth from freezing or families with immense wealth creating contrived conflict because they all can't stop sleep with each other's partners or their children's partners.  

Daytime dramas started out as a window into the lives and travails of characters who seemed ordinary on the surface but underneath had lives of conflict.

 

Being tied to the Dallas and the Dynasty effect.  J.R. had an immense effect on popular culture and it seemed many (not all soaps) wanted their own J.R. in the way of having a scion of a wealthy family or in the case of Dynasty, their own titan of industry like Blake Carrington.  The Abbotts of Y&R soon emerged with Jack (charismatic scion) and John (beloved titan of industry).  Does anyone think that is a coincidence?

Even Dallas (in its original incarnation) and Dynasty got canceled as audiences no longer had a taste for Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous soap-style.

Yet soaps still continue center characters like Jack and Victor while they marginalize and limit their female characters.

 

Also, it seemed exciting in the short term to dispense with your middle and working class characters (the Dallas and Dynasty effect again) but long-term is limited storyline possibilities and likely alienated soap fans, some of whom might have remembered when there was an emphasis on characters who were seen as more empathetic.

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Meg, full of self-pity gets drunk and manages to get Rick drunk when she tells him Skyler Mountain is out. She then reminds him of how their relationship used to be and renews his passions, now affected by liquor. After they spend the night together, Meg decides to go ahead with the Skyler Mountain project after all. Rick makes it clear, however, that he still loves Cal and his relationship with Meg will be strictly business. Betsy continues to refuse to see Ben and is determined to be self-supporting. When she inadvertently mentions Ben’s letter to Bruce Sterling, the mayor of Rosehill, he has to turn it over to the district attorney. Meg is furious upon discovering that her own brother in law is the one who found the evidence against Ben. Dr. Joe Cusack is quite concerned about a teenaged alcoholic patient at the clinic, Lynn Henderson, who is determined not to be helped. She tries a sob story on Vanessa Sterling, but Cal, Van’s niece, overhears and warns Lynn not to put the bite on her friends and relatives. So Lynn, who refuses to heed Joe’s warning that alcohol has so destroyed her stomach lining that she could die from another binge, steals money from Van’s fund-raising folder and takes off. She later turns up at Van’s to apologize for stealing charity money and explains she was the ugly daughter of a beautiful mother and grew up feeling unloved. Van persuades Joe to let Lynn stay with her instead of returning to the halfway house she hates. Bruce, Van’s husband, sees Lynn as another of Van’s strays and asks Lynn not to take advantage of Van. Cal. is concerned to learn Rick will again be involve in business with Meg. He assures her it will be okay and that Meg is his last chance to fulfill his dream of making it big. When Meg overhears Cal telling Ben that she and Rick are engaged, Meg tries to tell Cal that Rick’s not the marrying kind and she’s wrong for him. Seeing that Cal is serious and Rick apparently is too, Meg threatens to tell Cal everything, including their most recent intimacy, if Rick doesn’t call it off immediately; she gives him twenty-four hours. Rick, for Cal’s own good, he feels, tells her he’s not the monogamous kind and she’d be better off without him. Cal, knowing she really loves him, refuses to let  go easily. So. he uses Cal’s knowledge of the fact that his son Hank dearly wants his parents to reconcile and tells Cal he and Barbara are planning to try again, for the boy’s sake. But Cal later runs into Hank and mentions that he must be glad his mother’s coming home. Hank has no knowledge of this and is confused. Rick, therefore, has to tell the child he used this as an excuse to get out of marrying Cal. But Hank, miserable at having his hopes raised and dashed, spills this to Cal when she tries to cheer him up. He tells her it was all a lie. Jamie warns Rick that his Skylar Mountain contract with Meg has so many contingencies that if anything happens, he’ll be holding the financial bag. But Rick, wanting this success badly, signs the papers, and Meg releases the money.
    • I genuinely in my 20 year history of watching Days can’t recall a single Bo and Phillip scene though I’m assuming there had to be one or two? Phillip was always much more presented as Lucas’ brother due to Kate’s involvement in their love lives and closer age post SORAS. I will say my favorite thing about PR though is he made Bo the only Kiriakis to actually pronounce it like Victor/John Aniston despite Papa Brady obviously being the dad he was associated with.
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