Jump to content

Soaps In The Time of Crisis


Recommended Posts

  • Members

@Aback Your thought on the characters being quarantined during the gap is a really good idea. Hopefully, learning from the disastrous DAYS TJ, the 3 soaps could  present new stories based on things that may have happened during quarantine. Clearly soap characters continued living - so maybe couples reconciled during that time, broke apart from stress, unexpected pregnancies (we know a boom is coming 1Q in 2021 in the real world), etc.

 

We certainly won't want to watch a quarantine/characters being sick (soaps are an escape), but the fallout could be a good launch for new stories.  

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 189
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Members

 

That's interesting. I had thought of the boom in 2021 but not of the impact on soap babies.

 

I agree the soaps should take this chance to reboot themselves. It could also help them sell their shows to new channels.

 

It's weird because soaps should provide escapism but at the same time they can't escape reality (see how 9/11 + war affected certain soaps) and the world will be totally different after covid-19.

Edited by Aback
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I don't think anybody has announced plans yet, but Y&R's music director tweeted that the show plans on airing some classic episodes to keep the show on the air. I don't know if they'll cut down on 5 episodes a week to stretch, but at least we do know the show is tentatively scheduled to stay on air. 

 

Do y'all think it would be smarter to run through the episodes and go straight to classics or 2-3 episodes a week to stretch them?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

 

I think it would less confusing to run through the episodes and then switch to classics. The show will have to take a long hiatus in any case, so it might as well 'fire its last few rounds', so to speak.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members
SOAP OPERA DIGEST OWNER AMERICAN MEDIA INC. CUTS STAFF PAY BY 23%...MASS LAYOFFS AND SHUTDOWN OF MAGAZINES POSSIBLE...
American Media Inc., is cutting the payroll of the National Enquirer and at least nine other AMI publications by 23 percent starting April 1, the company announced in a staff memo last week.The company-wide move, which comes as AMI is ending its fiscal year, could well be a harbinger of worse things to come, including mass layoffs and the shutdown of several AMI titles, according to people who are familiar with AMI’s financial condition. In the memo: "Beginning April 1, we will need to reduce the compensation of all staff by 23%, however, such reduction will not cause an employee’s compensation to fall below the applicable minimum wage for the city/state in which the employee resides.”
Edited by JAS0N47
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

 

Even though I purchase a copy here or there electronically, it's rare, especially with it being more expensive as a Canadian. $6.99 is a bit rich. I snag one as a treat if there's a new feature on some of the defunct soaps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I loved getting SOD as a teen in the '80s, the soap heyday. My mom once surprised me with a subscription for my birthday. Back then, there were some great articles and commentary, not to mention actual covers using real photography. Sometime in the mid-to-late '90s, I recall the quality beginning to slide and eventually stopped my subscription. And then I would get constant phone calls, trying to get me to renew.

 

Why? All of the non-butt-kissing articles and such were long gone, they spent no more money on actual photo shoots, and the magic was gone.

 

I have not read an issue in EONS. I am sorry, however, that so many are losing their livelihoods, but SOD's time has come and gone, mostly gone with only four soaps left.

 

I do still mourn the loss of Soap Opera Update, which I thought was a great magazine. And, in the '90s, I think the defunct Soap Opera Weekly did a much better job, as well, compared to its sister magazine, SOD.

 

Anyone remember the simply-titled Soap Opera Magazine? It began in the early '90s and seemed to disappear rather quickly. That one seemed a bit more tabloidy to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

 

Soap Opera Magazine ran from about 92-98 I think. It was a bit more slick, although Update was probably the slickest to me. Of the 4 Weekly was the one that tried hardest to talk about the genre in a more intelligent way - until the hammer was brought down by Corday, or whoever. I'm still amazed Weekly managed to limp along for another decade. I'm amazed the soap magazines lasted as long as they did.

 

Digest, for me, was ruined once Carolyn Hinsey, a repulsive individual, got so much power. The quality became much more trashy, and also a huge personality cult focused on her. 

 

I do recognize SOD's importance to the genre, and it was the first soap magazine I ever read, the first time I ever started to really know about what was going on behind the scenes. I especially enjoyed their old Best/Worst issues. With that said, once I started getting more into soap magazines, I appreciated the '70s variety, especially Daily TV Serials and Daytime Stars, much more. They had a much more honest and less patronizing approach to the genre that clearly could not last.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My first issue of SOD was the 25th anniversary of GH issue. Which i got from my neighborhood supermarket. I only started watching soaps a couple of years before. SOD and the other soap mags were a great resource. In the a pre-internet world of the late 1980's. I loved all the articles . My favorite features were Remember When and Questions. There i learned off older stories and characters. Also loved all the creative covers. Over the years SOD became an overpriced  shell of its former self.  Which i rarely saw on sale in places like CVS and Duane Reade. Where they were afraid to properly critique any of the soaps. 

Edited by victoria foxton
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

SOD subscription is a little high, yes, but since it covers all soaps I subscribe to it, since it's much cheaper to subscribe than to buy.     I do agree SOD has gone downhill in the last few years. SID subscriptions aren't too bad, and again still cheaper when susbscribe. 

 

Maybe they'll temp stop production and come back once the covid 19 crap is over. 

 

Agree Soap Opera Update was a very slick, nicely produced magazine, and I collected their year end issues.

Edited by David_Vickers
hit submit too soon
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • Leslie and her family are from Chicago? Anita's background also includes being a former Chi-Town native? Might they connect this and go somewhere with it?
    • Honestly who's to say Leslie even birthed Eva, I mean she's a liar, I wouldn't believe a word she says about Eva being Ted's(or hers)
    •   1. 11/1/83 cast/set list:  

      Please register in order to view this content

          The "11/2/83" video you posted of Ruth Buzzi's scenes includes Roman and Hope in them, meaning the video you posted is actually 11/1/83, since Roman and Hope aren't in 11/2/83.   2. The video you posted of "11/2/83" has scenes with Roman and Hope. As you can see from my cast/set list, Roman and Hope are not in the 11/2/83 episode (see above note):   4573...11/2/83: Cast: Mickey, Julie, Doug, Maggie, Neil, Don, Marie, Alex, Liz, Andre as Tony, Gwen, Chris, Eugene, Sandy, Letitia, Charlene, Mrs. Whiting, Wanda/Guard, Dave, Delia, Saleslady # 1, Saleslady # 2, Figure in Dark, Raven/animal, Cats/animals, Birds/animals.   2.  11/3/83 :My video collection starts with 11/4/83. so I don't have the 11/1/83 or 11/3/83 video, but in addition to the cast/set list for 11/3/83, here is also the parking clearance call sheet for that day, showing Ruth was not only in the cast/set list but did work that day:     They even had hired the animal trainer and all the animals for the day, so It's sort of a certainty that her scenes were not cut that day, or it would have been a big waste of the budget. 3. As for 11/7/83, I just fast-forwarded through that whole episode myself. Letitia is in it from start to finish. It's her big final episode where she is killed. She starts the episode saying "Eugene, are you there?" In the next act, Marlena shows up and meets Letitia's lion. Later in the episode, Letitia is killed by "Eugene" (the Salem Slasher in a Eugene mask).   So, as we can see from your own post, the 11/2/83 date you have listed on that video is incorrect, since Hope and Roman are in that video but not in the 11/2/83 episode.It seems the dates you have on all your early November 1983 episodes are incorrect.   When you post videos and suggest that my data is incorrect, do you not first compare who is in the scenes and see if that matches who is in the episode? You didn't do that with the "11/2/83" episode, which based on Roman and Hope being in it means that is actually 11/1/83. Best to do something like that first before suggesting my data and research is incorrect.
    • Within the Dupree family, I predict Vernon/Anita will be conflicted about what to do about Bill and his role in the whole Ted/Silk Press Sheila situation... especially since Bill knows where the particular bone about Martin is buried. Dani, Chelsea, and Naomi's reactions to what Bill possibly did isn't hard to guess.. but Hayley's reactions will be interesting to hear.  Especially given her recent pregnancy scare.. she might not be so much on Bill's side, or she'll totally surprise us and be totally on Bill's side.   Either way, I think Martin's secret will be the main focus in May sweeps.. with the fall out of the Eva secret playing out in the background... while the Joey/Vanessa/Doug thing continues to boil/develop.
    • Hotel was The Love Boat on land but a little soapier. I will forever maintain that Hotel was a time slot hit. I don't believe that 1983/84 Hotel was a better show than Knots Landing.
    • The Golden Girls key episodes by ratings September 14, 1985: The Engagement (series premiere), rating 25.0, #1 Season highs February 22, 1986: Adult Education, rating 25.2 October 4, 1986: Ladies of the Evening, rating 27.3 November 8, 1986: Isn't it Romantic, rating 27.3 February 6, 1988: My Brother, My Father; rating 24.6 November 26, 1988: Sophia's Wedding (Part 2), rating 24.3, #1 September 23, 1989: Sick and Tired (Part 1) (season 5 premiere), rating 23.5 January 12, 1991: Sisters of the Bride, rating 19.3 May 9, 1992: One Flew Out of the Cuckoo's Nest (series finale), rating 18.9 Season lows October 19, 1985: The Triangle, rating 18.6 May 16, 1987: Empty Nests (season 2 finale), rating 17.8 February 20, 1988: And Ma Makes Three, rating 18.0 April 29, 1989: Rites of Spring, rating 18.7 April 28, 1990: All Bets are Off, rating 15.8 February 16, 1991: Older and Wiser, rating 11.6 October 26, 1991: Mother Load, rating 10.9 Ten highest-rated episodes October 4, 1986: Ladies of the Evening, rating 27.3 November 8, 1986: Isn't it Romantic, rating 27.3 January 3, 1987: The Sisters, rating 27.0 November 22, 1986: Family Affair, rating 26.8 January 10, 1987: The Stan Who Came to Dinner, rating 26.6 January 24, 1987: Before and After, rating 26.4 February 28, 1987: Whose Face is This, Anyway?; rating 25.8 September 27, 1986: End of the Curse (season 2 premiere), rating 25.6 November 15, 1986: Big Daddy's Little Lady, rating 25.3 February 22, 1986: Adult Education, rating 25.2 Ten lowest-rated episodes October 26, 1991: Mother Load, rating 10.9 September 28, 1991: The Case of the Libertine Belle, rating 10.9 October 19, 1991: Where's Charlie?, rating 11.0 February 15, 1992: Ebbtide VI: The Wrath of Stan, rating 11.3 February 16, 1991: Older and Wiser, rating 11.6 December 14, 1991: The Pope's Ring, rating 11.7 April 25, 1992: Home Again, Rose (Part 1); rating 12.3 October 5, 1991: Beauty and the Beast, rating 12.7 November 2, 1991: Dateline: Miami, rating 12.7 December 7, 1991: From Here to the Pharmacy, rating 12.8
    • The timing is strange, though. How far in advance would they normally be on location? The Achille Lauro hijacking was on October 7, 1985. Nancy had arrived in Egypt in the storyline by October 18. But the character of Hawk, Chris' Native American friend from Arizona, had already appeared onscreen by September and brought a letter telling Chris to be in Egypt by October 25th.  Why did they already have the link to Arizona before the reason to cancel the shoot in Egypt?  The dust and the jar it came in were from Egypt though. Nancy bought it there and sent it to Mac as a gift before she came back to the states and followed Chris to Arizona.
    • Actually that is not what happened. Nor is the timing right for it to have been. We learned from a WOST interview with Pete Lemay  in 2006, which can be found on YT, that it was Fred Silverman's idea to do the 90 minute show. I don't know how much you know about him but he had these amazing successes as head of daytime at both ABC & at CBS. Then he came to NBC where basically everything he touched turned NOT TO GOLD but to shite. Some of the most expensive shows ever produced up to that time were huge flops. Although even he, like a broken clock, could be right on occasion. However, as we know, he was not right about the 90 minute show. As a matter of fact, afterward,  NBC programmers, who worked FOR him, were asked why they did it & they were quoted as saying it was because they couldn't think of anything else to try. It was a stupid idea from a man who had reached the point where he was throwing anything at the wall to see if it would stick.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

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