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Yes, and that's probably why The Dream Season of DALLAS didn't work very well, despite its new producer/show-runner, Peter Dunne, having come fresh from KNOTS where he had done several seasons of spectacular work (under the watchful eye of David Jacobs).I have been thinking about this and like others have said it is probably easier to spin new story and arise new dramas in a workplace or location situation. Like Grey's, Melrose and even Knots. The family dramas can of course do that too and succeed but they need to work harder and take risks. I don't think any of the Prime time soaps really wanted or even knew how to do that. If you think about medical shows or even stuff like Knots and Melrose, new characters come in, say new doctors or nurses on Grey's, new residents on the cul-de-sac or at the apartment complex. They don't really need links to anyone. They simply arrive and get to work being this new character and they shake things up. They form love interests and get promotions and interfere in what has already been established. With say, Dynasty or Dallas rarely did new characters ever get to really shake up what was established. Adam comes along on Dynasty and is entertaining enough, but he didn't really change the formula. He's just son #2. Nothing really happened. His animosity with Steven was kind of unexplored. He was always going to be relegated to being outside of the big three stories. That of Blake/Krystle/Alexis. I think part of the primetimes soaps failure was the fact that they were unwilling to change or grow. They were set in very limited formulas. Blake and Alexis hate each other and try to ruin each other. JR the crafty devil always outwits everybody at the last minute. Sue Ellen drinks and gets sober and drinks. It's like they never wanted to rock the apple cart and upstage their leads or that formula. But if you watch that formula every week for 5 or 6 years it becomes dull and you lose interest.
The primetime soaps needed distant/surprise relatives showing up to add some spice and relief from that tired old formula. Shows like Grey's don't need that. Anyone can show up, unrelated and just work at or be at the hospital and cause a commotion.
I think Peyton Place managed to do it best. It had the family saga with the Harringtons, it had the big beautiful mansion with the staircase and ominous portraits. It had the town/community thing and it also had the hospital/medical drama and the family business thing at times.
The Harrington family on Peyton Place twisted and mutated with every secret reveal/new relative and it grew beyond what it initially started out as. The Peyton/Harrington mansion changed hands multiple times and was even burned down. And somehow the show managed almost seasonally to reinvent itself and yet stay true to what it was. They weren't confined to a strict formula of what made the show a hit. They didn't seem to have keep delivering what they thought the public wanted. I think the '80s soaps got it all wrong. They thought what made the show popular must be ordered in bulk and force fed to us over and over. There was no real growth for the shows. It was just more of the same, more of the same...
Then again... Peyton Place didn't even last a quarter as long as Grey's. So...
KNOTS was chock full or subtlety and nuance, and, not being about a nuclear (okay, oil) family, the narrative tended to wander and wander. And it was fabulous. It took a couple of quirky, not-fully-serialized seasons to really click (and of course the last two or three seasons were tricky, and started to look like a youth-obsessed daytime soap because all the originals had either quit or were being cut over budget issues) but KNOTS strength was its lyrical lack of structure... Sometimes the plot was very focused and intense, and other times it was very leisurely and casual. But it was all so clever and character-based that nearly any and every phase of the show worked, and often worked brilliantly.
One of the weakness of it parent series was that DALLAS, because it indeed focused on a family living in one house, had to be always "on point" plotwise, or the thing fell apart or, at the very least became pedestrian and overtly repetitive. Which is why there wasn't one season post-"WhoShotJR?" of DALLAS which really worked without David Paulsen and his inspired sense of ironic plotting. (Katzman alone sure couldn't do it. Neither could Art Lewis or god knows Howard Lakin).
So when Dunne left KNOTS and took over DALLAS a year when Bobby was dead, he seemed to bring his KNOTSian sensibility to DALLAS. But what had seemed so brilliant on KNOTS felt politically correct and neck-clawing on DALLAS -- the "strengthened" Ewing women were a joke, the stories rambled ineffectually, people did and said things totally out of character, and, worse, it was boring! (But then David Jacobs wasn't supervising DALLAS as he was KNOTS). So when Katzman returned a year later with Paulsen in tow, despite that ghastly and perfunctory dream explanation, DALLAS came screeching back to what it should be, not stumbling too badly again until Paulsen left in 1988.
DYNASTY, as I often assert, started out with the most potential of any of them, a show cast and molded to become a classic. But as another show about a rich family living in the same house, the needed to stay focused on plot and character was the same as DALLAS'. And as we know, DYNASTY soon veered off onto becoming a smuggy, posing show that was a half-hearted celebration of the rich-and-famous, and any consideration of anything else just wasn't there... Diahann Carroll said years later that DYNASTY "really was just about wearing pretty clothes and being on a Number One show," and then asked the interviewer, "What do you remember about DYNASTY -- I mean the plot of DYNASTY?"
Well, yeah, that's pretty much sizes it up.
PEYTON PLACE benefited from an infamous book and hit movie to draw from, an established group of characters whom the writers could use and re-imagine (as long as the show's writers were paying attention to what they were doing, as they seemed to). Also, for the same reason the '60s has often been cited as the best decade for movie horror, there was a vibe that just seemed to be in the water during the '60s where you could do shock, torment, mystery and noir -- there was this fundamental sense of paranoid focus and atmosphere to be easily tapped into just so long as the producers weren't dolts... Sure, PEYTON PLACE "only" ran five years but the show was airing twice, and then thrice, per week, so it burned out quickly. But less is sometimes more. (For similar reasons, that's why I'd like to have seen how DARK SHADOWS might have fared had it been shot on film and broadcast in prime time).