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The Great 2020 All Time Television Draft: The Simpsons is judged the greatest show of all time (6 Viewers)

Yep, he did those bad things, but I will still take this pick.  Wasn't it 3 Emmys in a row?

31.15:  ALEXANDER SCOTT  (lead male, drama - 50-70)

 
I have about 10 picks I want to make with this turn.  Decisions, decisions.  Yo Mama selects:

31.16 – Margaret Pynchon – 71-90 Supporting Woman

Pynchon is the epitome of a powerful supporting character that helps define the main characters.  She was the powerful, capricious, eccentric owner of the Los Angeles Tribune (the newspaper in Lou Grant).  Margaret and her evil dog Barney forced the editorial staff to cater to her every whim, including forcing them to cover her favorite sports lacrosse and hockey.

Nancy Marchand won 4 emmys (nominated for 5) for this classic supporting role.

32.01 – Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town – Holiday

This was my favorite of the stop motion Christmas specials as a kid (sorry Rudolph).  This classic from 1970 starring the voices of Mickey Rooney and Fred Astaire is still in regular rotation today.

It’s got a younger Kris Kringle and his origin story of how he became Santa Claus – delivering toys to the kids of Sombertown despite the evil rulings of the Burgermeister Meisterburger, and escaping the seemingly menacing Winter Warlock.

This was the last of my list of top holiday shows, not sure what else I would have taken here so I need to take this now.

 
31.16 – Margaret Pynchon – 71-90 Supporting Woman

Pynchon is the epitome of a powerful supporting character that helps define the main characters.  She was the powerful, capricious, eccentric owner of the Los Angeles Tribune (the newspaper in Lou Grant).  Margaret and her evil dog Barney forced the editorial staff to cater to her every whim, including forcing them to cover her favorite sports lacrosse and hockey.

Nancy Marchand won 4 emmys (nominated for 5) for this classic supporting role.
As great as Marchand was in the Sopranos, her defining moment for me is when she recognizes Drebin as Enrico Polazzo in the Naked Gun Film.  :eek:        :lmao: :lol: :lmao:

 
32.03: Alexis Colby, 1971-1990 Leading Woman - Drama

The "quintessential character you love to hate" wrote reviewer Vernon Scott of the Orlando Sun-Sentinel. I don't want to do a deep dive here due to spotlighting, but I do wonder: Did she essentially invent the catfight on network television?

 
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I thought this was taken but I can't find her in the spreadsheet

32.04 Tolstoy selects Beatrice Taylor, portrayed by Frances Bavier, Andy Griffith Show

Supporting Woman, 1950-1970
She was taken as "Aunt Bee", I think.

@rickroll

31.07  1950- 1970 supporting woman mphtrilogy Aunt Bee

 
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Rd 31- Louie De Palma- Supporting male 1971-1990

"Some men climb mountains, others date 'em!" 

"That dame is older than the Continental Shelf!"

Louie is the main antagonist of the sitcom Taxi. The vain head dispatcher of the Sunshine Cab Company, Louie spends his time holding court inside the caged-in dispatch office at the garage, arguing with and bullying the drivers. He not only lacks morals, he is openly proud of his misdemeanors and outright crimes. Louie will do anything to benefit himself. 

Taxi portrayed Louie De Palma as the worst person anyone could ever know—unapologetically conniving, greedy, and abusive. And yet there’s humanity underneath it all, which makes him one of the greatest sitcom characters of all time.  in fact, In 1999, TV Guide ranked De Palma first on its list of the 50 greatest TV characters of all time.

 
What? That’s a drama. 
Huh it's described as a sitcom on the online article I was reading about it. I have both categories open - is the consensus that it is a drama? 

I'm not old enough to have seen it. ;)

 
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Rd 31- Louie De Palma- Supporting male 1971-1990

"Some men climb mountains, others date 'em!" 

"That dame is older than the Continental Shelf!"

Louie is the main antagonist of the sitcom Taxi. The vain head dispatcher of the Sunshine Cab Company, Louie spends his time holding court inside the caged-in dispatch office at the garage, arguing with and bullying the drivers. He not only lacks morals, he is openly proud of his misdemeanors and outright crimes. Louie will do anything to benefit himself. 

Taxi portrayed Louie De Palma as the worst person anyone could ever know—unapologetically conniving, greedy, and abusive. And yet there’s humanity underneath it all, which makes him one of the greatest sitcom characters of all time.  in fact, In 1999, TV Guide ranked De Palma first on its list of the 50 greatest TV characters of all time.
Nice. Almost took him with my last pick. 

 
Rd 31- Louie De Palma- Supporting male 1971-1990

"Some men climb mountains, others date 'em!" 

"That dame is older than the Continental Shelf!"

Louie is the main antagonist of the sitcom Taxi. The vain head dispatcher of the Sunshine Cab Company, Louie spends his time holding court inside the caged-in dispatch office at the garage, arguing with and bullying the drivers. He not only lacks morals, he is openly proud of his misdemeanors and outright crimes. Louie will do anything to benefit himself. 

Taxi portrayed Louie De Palma as the worst person anyone could ever know—unapologetically conniving, greedy, and abusive. And yet there’s humanity underneath it all, which makes him one of the greatest sitcom characters of all time.  in fact, In 1999, TV Guide ranked De Palma first on its list of the 50 greatest TV characters of all time.
nice grab, I thought he was snagged already...

 
Huh it's described as a sitcom on the online article I was reading about it. I have both categories open - is the consensus that it is a drama? 

I'm not old enough to have seen it. ;)
i'm cool widdit either way. it's an outgrowth of an anthology comedy, Love, American Style (i dont care if i'm spotlighting - if that''s your comedy pick u deserve what u get), so is proper in either cat

 
i'm cool widdit either way. it's an outgrowth of an anthology comedy, Love, American Style (i dont care if i'm spotlighting - if that''s your comedy pick u deserve what u get), so is proper in either cat
I'm happy to defer to wikkid here. So, for now, leave it in the comedy category. I'll specify if I switch to to drama. Everything I'm seeing online suggests it is both. :shrug:  

 
What? That’s a drama. 
Huh it's described as a sitcom on the online article I was reading about it. I have both categories open - is the consensus that it is a drama? 

I'm not old enough to have seen it. ;)
I don't want to spotlight -- just want to point our that in the era that Love Boat came out, show categorizations were not always so pat. There was a category of programming (esp weekend television) that aimed to serve as pure escape. Some drama, but not too much. Some "everyday life" comedy and witty banter. A little something for everyone and all ages.

Post more later.

 
I read tim's post to be a tongue-in-cheek joke (comedy, you see) about how The Love Boat was serious business.  

 

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