Steven BochcoΩ
[Dec. 16, 1943 - Apr. 1, 2018, BFA Carnegie Mellon University, 1966]
Writer/producer of semi-impermanent and at times abstract sci-fi, legal and law enforcement-based television dramas through the 1980's and early 1990's including Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, NYPD Blue, and the never-aired hyper-realistic Hawaiian-based series Byrds of Paradise. Widely credited for the introduction of extended story arcs into weekly primetime dramas [1], Bochco is commonly known as the father of experimental network television. As a showrunner, Bochco was notorious for extremely risky and sometimes ill-advised production choices, resulting in the almost immediate cancellation of multiple series: titles including the cyberspace-based Neuromancer offshoot wintermute, the Terminator-offshoot SKYNET SYNDROME, and My Nepenthe, a time-travel/cocaine trafficking show taking place in both ancient and modern Greece. Born to a concert violinist, musical scoring, especially opening credits, were of vital import to Bochco [2]. Throughout his oeuvre, music played an outsized role by contemporary standards [3]- whether it be the choice to present Cop Rock as a musical, or his frequent engagement of the mildly progressive rock group Octagon of Dex in the development of extended opening/closing sequences and in-episode montages.
href#[redacted] :: Beautiful Dreamer.
- ↑ Dallas is seen as an early precursor to this approach.
- ↑ Dallas is seen as an early precursor to this approach.
- ↑ Exceptions notwithstanding, ex: Airwolf, Knight Rider, Otherworld, etc.