The Young and the Restless Watching The Young and the Restless

Daniel Avery

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Due to a scheduling conflict, Jess Walton was unable to play a plot arc written to include Jill Abbott. The show opted to do a short-term recast with longtime Days actress Lauren Koslow, who plays (and will continue to play) Kate Roberts. Roberts's turn as Jill is set to begin on May 25.

Koslow's first soap role was photographer/blackmailer Lindsey Wells on Y&R. She actually blackmailed Jill (then played by Brenda Dickson)! Koslow then became an original cast member of B&B (as Margo), then assumed the role of Days's Kate Roberts from Deborah Adair in 1996. Oddly enough, Adair had played Y&R's Jill Abbott after Dickson was fired, so it makes a weird kind of sense that Koslow gets her turn as Jill. From what was written in the article, the temp recast has no effect on either actress's job: Days was willing to "loan" Koslow but plans to keep her on as Kate, while Jess Walton has not been "replaced" in the part she's had for 40 years.
 

Chris2

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Deborah Adair played Jill after Brenda Dickson left in 1980 (after following failed recast Bond Gideon). Adair left in 1983 to do “Dynasty” and Dickson returned. Adair filled in for Dickson for a week in 1986, but Dickson returned and stayed in the role for about another year. Jess Walton filled in for her briefly in 1987 and then took over the part permanently several weeks later.
 

Monzo

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I find it lovely how connected Jess Walton feels to Y&R—making video cameos possible, or even (was it last year?) returning to the set in person. However, I can also understand why she no longer drops everything to appear on the show. It was already tiresome that every one of Jill's appearances over the last few years revolved solely around Billy—though, at least he is her son. Since last summer, things have shifted; now, every appearance centers entirely on Cane—whom she views as a sweet, dear man, despite everyone else misunderstanding him. I can certainly sympathize with Jess Walton having no desire to deal with that, as Jill's next stint on the show will, in all likelihood, revolve around Cane once again.

Lauren Koslow will surely do a fine job in the role. I feel that Kate Roberts and Jill aren't all that dissimilar as characters, though Lauren Koslow isn't quite able to convey the same range of facial expressions as Jess Walton anymore.

Lauren Koslow is now the fifth actor in the span of a single year to join Y&R after previously working on Days of Our Lives. Josh Griffith—who has a Days past himself—truly seems to get whatever he wants. He keeps bringing Days actors over to Y&R, yet not a single one of them has really clicked with the audience. Even Stacy Haiduk—who actually has a history with Y&R—feels completely superfluous right now. Which begs the question: why does Josh Griffith still have his job as head writer? It’s yet another week where B&B has outperformed Y&R in two key demographics, and yet, nothing happens. CBS just lets Josh Griffith do whatever he pleases.

It strikes me that daytime television is perhaps the most conservative spot of the entire entertainment industry. This isn't just true behind the camera—where one person seems to dictate everything—but also within the storylines themselves; take, for instance, Jack's rape storyline, in which he was portrayed as being partly to blame because—as a recovering addict—he supposedly should have been thinking clearly when he got drugged by Patty. What kind of message is that supposed to send?

Generally speaking, I actually enjoy it when writers play with the audience's expectations—B&B has been doing a pretty good job of that lately (or at least doing it better than in previous years)—but Y&R gets absolutely everything wrong. I can imagine Josh Griffith assuming that the audience will be furious if Sharon gets kidnapped for the fourth time in two years—only to feel incredibly relieved when the latest abduction is over after just two episodes. But Josh Griffith is wrong: fabs aren't relieved, they're just annoyed that Sharon is being kidnapped yet again—regardless of how brief or prolonged the ordeal turns out to be.

One thing I generally no longer enjoy about daytime soaps is when new characters eventually turn out to be relatives of legacy characters. It happens so often these days that it loses its magic—and now it’s happened to Holden, too. I miss the days when characters won us over simply by being themselves—characters like Sharon or Phyllis. Perhaps that’s one reason I find myself liking Audra more and more: she isn't related to anyone—what a rarity in the world of soaps! So, Holden is Malcolm’s son. I didn't feel it was necessary, but at least it means Malcolm and Stephanie are back on the show. However, something happened next that I didn't see coming—and it turned out to be an unpleasant surprise: Malcolm’s return stint seems to exist solely to redeem Cane—Josh Griffith’s apparent favorite character on the show. It makes absolutely no sense for Cane to be the donor when neither of the twins—who, after all, carry both Malcolm’s genes and Cane’s—is a match.

In a way, we’ve been waiting for this moment—and yet, in another way, we haven't, or at least I haven't —for Michelle Stafford and Roger Howarth to cross paths; and now, it has actually happened. Part of me hopes it will be just like Sharon’s fourth kidnapping—nothing more than a brief teaser. But with Josh Griffith, you never know; he might just pair Phyllis and amnesic Matt up and force us to endure them as a couple for weeks on end.

I appreciate that the show is exploring the possibility of Adam reverting to his darker side. The future of the show lies with the next generation of Newmans. Nick is the ideal hero, while Adam really ought to be the villain—much like EJ DiMera on Days. Victoria has faded somewhat into the background. While she has found another daughter—who, admittedly, has become rather boring by now—to worry about, she hasn't shown any real spark since the conclusion of the Ashland storyline. Consequently, she could easily end up completely sidelined—just like Abby.

One character I’ve found surprisingly enjoyable since her return is Riza, whom I didn't really notice much during her original run. Now, she is exactly what Sienna ought to be: simply interesting. I’d love to see her stick around on the show for a while longer—though, please, without any familial ties to anyone else.
 
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Daniel Avery

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Sally McDonald, who had been acting as Co-Executive Producer of the show, has been named the show's sole Executive Producer as of last week, chipping away at Josh Griffith's unchecked power (he had been hired as both EP and Head Writer). On paper, she now has the authority to fire Griffith if she wants (since the EP has power over writing as well as all other aspects of the show), though I'd be surprised if she did it this soon.
In a way, we’ve been waiting for this moment—and yet, in another way, we haven't, or at least I haven't —for Michelle Stafford and Roger Howarth to cross paths; and now, it has actually happened
You may recall they were paired on GH when she played Nina and he played Franco. They seemed to be chugging along just fine when all of a sudden they were broken up and sent into separate storylines, never to share a scene again (much less acknowledge all that screen time they'd had together). At the time I believed that the speed and finality of their break-up had to be some kind of backstage thing, given both actors' reputation for being kind of difficult. I don't recall any substantive gossip, but like I said it was just an assumption I made. Seeing Y&R pair Howarth and Stafford again gives me hope that their "GH breakup" was purely story-dictated and not some kind of falling-out IRL.
 

Monzo

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Josh Griffith is finally out as head writer—what wonderful news! But does anyone really believe he left voluntarily, as is being claimed?

Josh Griffith had held the position since 2019, and I think the biggest mistake he made was listening to the fans who constantly complained about how boring Y&R had become. It was all just about who held which job and man pain. Back then, I actually still enjoyed watching Y&R. Yes, it was mostly boring, but I liked the way the characters conversed; it was relaxing, especially compared to the other soaps I watch. You could zone out while watching Y&R, though I could understand the frustration if it was the only soap someone watched.

Josh Griffith wanted to turn Y&R back into must-see TV rather than a sleep-inducing soap, but he went about it all wrong. Ever since the veterans were wandering around that maze last summer, Y&R has been a disaster, and the two main reasons are a lack of logic and taking the easy way out. One of dozens of examples of illogical writing: When it looked as though Lily and the twins had been kidnapped by Victor (and yes, the kidnapping story was exaggerated), Cane was supposed to ensure Phyllis to give everything back that she’d stolen from Victor using that AI program, so Cane told Phyllis that since he had developed the AI program once before (which never made sense anyway), he could simply do it again and use it to return everything to Victor. So, even though Cane had the skills and Lily was supposedly in grave danger, nothing happened. There are so many plot holes in every storyline now; it’s awful. As for the easy way out: Cane suddenly becomes a donor for Malcolm and is forgiven by Lily; Matt gets amnesia so that Roger Howarth can stay on the show. What Josh Griffith was thinking when it came to Matt—aside from the fact that yet another psycho from the past is showing up—is a mystery to me anyway. When Nick collapsed in the hotel room, Matt and Phyllis were the ones who managed to save his life; Victor—a man of action—just stood there looking clueless, and no one thought to simply open the hotel room door and call for help. And then, once again, comes the easy way out: Victor is so grateful to Phyllis that he even gifts her one of his companies, and she doesn't have to go to prison, either. Meanwhile, Matt gets to prove himself by befriending Cane and playing the spy. By the way, why could Matt only recall the terrible things he had done a few weeks ago, rather than decades ago? Right—because Matt was played by different actors back then. Also, I certainly didn't expect Patty to kidnap someone again right after being involved in Jack's kidnapping; how original—not.

Things can only get better for Y&R with a new head writer. I think any character (even Matt) can still be salvaged with the right writing; still, I hope that when the next round of budget cuts hits, it’s the newer characters—like Matt, Sienna, Cane, or Noah—who get the axe. As far as I’m concerned, Liy could finally disappear too, but that probably won’t happen.
 
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