Monday, December 27, 2010

White Shadow season one episode eight - Just One of the Boys


Plot - When this episode opens we see Coach Reeves wearing a bad-fitting floral apron and teaching a cooking class to a well-behaved Carver class. The apron was not coincidental, for the wrenching topic du jour for this installment was homosexuality. Carver recently received a transfer student/basketball player from Palisades High named Collins, played by Peter Horton. At first only the administration and Reeves were aware of Collins' alleged homosexuality, but later the team and the school found out as well. Reeves and Miss Buchanan worked through the delicate issue throughout the episode with the confident yet confused Collins. Ultimately, Reeves used the topic to teach his team a lesson in tolerance, and Buchanan took a star turn in her closing heartfelt conversation with Collins that convinced him to return to Palisades High.
Observations - I was impressed with this episode as it clearly was not a typical topic for a drama series in 1979. Reeves captured his generation's ambivalence and inarticulateness towards homosexuality early in the episode but ended up taking the high road and teaching us all a lesson.
The well-behaved class was refreshing to see. It seems all classroom tv shows since this time have had disruptive and disrespectful students trying to one-up each other.
Reeves paid a visit to Collins' parents. His father was the kind of old-school So Cal power player that was common on tv in this age. He dismissed his wife from the room and was disrespectful to Reeves. He also wanted nothing to do with what was going on with his son.
While this was not the most entertaining episode it was certainly well-acted, thanks to Peter Horton and Reeves and Buchanan upping their game.
Horton was 25 years old at the time of the episode so he fit in with the other members of the team.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

White Shadow season one, episode seven - This Old Gang of Mine


Plot - Ricky "Gogo" Gomez has been kicked off the basketball team due to poor grades and then falls back into hanging out with his old gang called "The Aztecs" who speak a blend of Spanish and accented English. Enter Coach Reeves. Reeves is visibly upset by the decision and goes about uncovering clues and fighting for Gomez throughout the episode.
Gomez is seemingly one of the only Hispanics at the school. He struggles to read books such as Little Women and understand the nomenclature of biology class. Reeves fights on two fronts to restore Gomez to Carver and the team: one of getting him safely away from the Aztecs and the other to fight the Carver administration and faculty to cater more to Gomez. It works and at the end everyone is happy.
Observations - This is an interesting look at multi-culturalism and takes us away from simple black and white as the show is sometimes viewed. Gomez is proud of his Mexican heritage.
Reeves and an LA detective spend some time driving around LA at night looking for a "rumble" that Gomez was a part of. Some of the exteriors were reminiscent of "Grease" and others of The Terminator movies.
The Mexican actors were not very convincing. First, Gomez' mother made a terrible grammatical error when speaking to Reeves through an interpreter. Second, the Aztecs actors didn't look Mexican or menacing at all for that matter.
I'm willing to give this the benefit of the doubt as this is not the White Shadow's strength, and the producers and writers were willing to go out of their comfort zone to try to create a compelling episode.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

White Shadow season 1 episode 4 - Bonus Baby


Plot - Warren Coolidge stars at the Inter-city tournament and becomes MVP despite Carver finishing second. This attracts the attention of unsavory sports agents that want him to forego college and declare for the NBA. Never mind that he is nowhere near that level of player. They just want a piece of his bonus. Coolidge aids them by become prideful and arrogant.
Coolidge is seduced by the fast talking agent and sexy lady who shows him around town. Luckily Reeves and a certain dishwasher were able to prevent Coolidge from making the wrong decision, and by the end he had shunned the agent and returned to his simple life.

Observations - This is another example of White Shadow being before its time. Nowadays this would be a blah story as we've seen so many real-life Coolidges either succeed in the NBA or fall way short.
The agent wore an suit, unbottoned shirt and gold chain.
Many references that Coolidge was the nest "Dr. J".

Monday, December 13, 2010

WS season one, episode 3 - The Offer


Plot - Coach Reeves is approached by a lovely local newslady named Sally Adams to be part of human interest story. The turning point of the episode is when she reviews raw footage of Reeves with her producer. He was enthralled and wanted to push Reeves into being a color commentator for NCAA or NBA games. Backing up a pit, Reeves was never really comfortable with the concept. He lost his cool and was ejected from a game with cameras rolling. Later he blew off a phone call from Gomez because he was on his way to a swanky party with the TV people.
That foreshadowed why Reeves ultimately rejected the offer. He lost the team after Gomez was sent to juvenile detention from shoplifting. Gomez was in jail when he called. Reeves' focus was on winning back the trust of the team, and less and less on the tv project. Finally, he parted ways with the lovely blonde and coached his team to a close loss at the end of the episode. All is well at Carver High.

Observations - I liked seeing how the TV producer dressed, which was eerily similar to Sean Penn in Carlito's Way. When did white guys stop unbuttoning their shirts and wearing gold chains? I guess when leisure suits and disco went out of style.
As in Pregnant Pause we are treated to a shower singing scene, only this time it takes an ugly turn. The wood board that was placed to cover private parts didn't work this time, as there was "something" showing with Goldstein. It wasn't clear but it was fleshy and unappealing. I hope that doesn't happen again.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

WS season one, episode six - Wanna Bet?


Plot - Coach Reeves is on a picnic in the park with a pretty blonde but doesn't pay much attention to her. That's because he's watching Bobby Magnum, played by Michael Warren, hustling others in basketball for cash. Reeves takes an interest in him and then cajoles him into enrolling and playing for Carver. Bobby has a lot of baggage, mostly owing money to loansharks. The other Carver players don't immediately accept him.
Eventually Bobby's past catches up with him, and despite Reeves best intentions it just doesn't work out. The show ends with Bobby heading back to Oakland pledging to be a better person.
Observations - this is the least satisfying episode so far. First of all, Michael Warren, a former UCLA player and character on Hill Street Blues, was 34 when the episode aired, yet claimed to not be 18 yet in the show. Two parts of the plot were never tied up. First, what happened after Reeves dined with his date. Second, Bobby still owed some $880 when the show ended.
One thing I did like was how Bobby called Reeves and the pawn shop owner "old folks." I will try to use that term at some point if I can find the right situation.

Monday, December 6, 2010

WS season one, episode five - Pregnant Pause


Plot - Milton Reese is enjoying a fine season and even attacting the attention of college scouts. As the episode opens we see the closing of a game in which Reese improbably scores four points and gets an assist in literally seconds. Reggie Miller would have been jealous. He is quickly brought back to earth after the game when his girlfriend informs him she is pregnant.
The rest of the episode goes back and forth between the young lovers' predicament and Reeves doing some thinking and investigating. Reeves discovers, perhaps even before the audience does, that Darlene is not actually pregnant. She is the oldest of eight or nine siblings and doesn't want to lose Reese to a scholarship, and concocted the plan to trap him into marrying her.
Thanks to coach Reeves, with a minor assist from Miss Buchanan, the problem was averted.
Observations -
In the pilot Reeves drove a nice convertible Roadster; in this episode he drove a massive Woody.
The principal changed. It was no longer his benign buddy from the pilot but a more intense man who seems more likely to bend to Miss Buchanan but is still somehow Reeves' old friend, although they have little rapport or chemistry.
Teen pregnancy was not a typical topic on tv in 1978, so this was considered a bold episode at the time.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

WS season one, episode two - Here's some mud in your eye


Plot - One of the Carver players, Curtis Jackson, has a drinking problem. Reeves is the first one to figure it out and later proves it to the rest of the doubting team. As Reeves seems to be at loose ends all day except for practice time, he has the time to drive around LA to resolve the situation. What does this entail? He visits Jackson's father, who is a preacher, and some honest, heartfelt dialogue is involved. He visits and later dines with a mildly attractive psychologist who eventually helps him break through to Jackson. He somehow is present hours after practice when the other players hatched a successful intervention on Jackson.
Observations
As I watch the show sometimes I envy Reeves, as he must have saves tens of thousands of dollars from playing pro ball, which allows him to coach the game he loves and help troubled youth in the process. It really is noble. Also, he always has a good deal of witty dialogue with others, which obviously doesn't occur that often in the real world.
The dollar was stronger back then. Jackson was in hock to some of the other players; one a dollar, another 60 cents, and another 40 cents. When the players hit up Reeves for $26 in their intervention scheme, it really appears to be a significant amount, even for a former NBA player.
The pace of the show is leisurely, allowing sufficient time for plot and character development.
I don't understand the why the episode is titled as it is.

White Shadow - Season one, episode one - Pilot


Plot - The show starts with Ken Reeves playing basketball for the Chicago Bulls and for the first five minutes we only see action with music in the background. Reeves is injured, rehabs, and then sits on the bench. After one game an old college friend joins him in the empty arena and convinces him to become a high school basketball coach at Carver High in Los Angeles.
The rest of the show consists of cursorily meeting the other characters in the show; school administrators, students that play basketball, and family.
The main plot is how Coach Reeves helps a talented player named Hayward to not quit school despite their initial differences and Hayward's family issues. The team loses their first game but wins the second. As the show closes, Reeves tells the players he has their back and will watch over them, to which Thorpe responds, "like a white shadow". Hence the name of the show.
Observations-
The pilot likely had the biggest budget and highest production value.
The drive-thru at Jack in the Box had a jack in the box.
Everyone is relatively thin.
70s soundtrack music permeates the show.
Reeves roughs up Hayward at one point but dismisses it as no big deal with the assistant principal and the issue is dropped.
Currently the 'elite' media seems to have grown tired of the white savior concept as evidenced by their criticism of Avatar last year. In effect, Reeves plays this role, but it is subtle and seems genuine and wholesome in the show.