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by gunpowderNlead from Dallas, Texas USA

Last Post 3 days, 2 hours Ago


I found this article in the Dallas Morning News and had to smile.   It is true, so many people in other Countries still watch the old show.   When I visited Europe in 2003, people would always comment about my accent and then say "Do you know JR".... it was hilarious.   Anyone coming to Dallas, expecting to see J.R. Ewing or any of the rest of the Ewings roaming the streets in their big Stetsons and big hair... will be sadly disappointed.    Southfork is no longer in the Country.... it sits on it's own acreage surrounded by multi million dollar homes.    It is rented out for special events such as Proms and Weddings.  There is one thing for sure though, just about any time you drive by, you will find 10 - 15 people standing at the big gates, taking pictures of the ole girl.   She does still draw attention....approximately 30 miles northeast of Dallas proper.  
'Dallas' TV show still going strong after 30 years

 

11:20 AM CDT on Thursday, July 3, 2008

 

By JAKE BATSELL / The Dallas Morning News

 

He hangs his hat almost 5,000 miles from Southfork, but Colin Hunter has rounded up a huge herd of fans still infatuated with Dallas.

VideoAfter 30 years, TV fans still drawn to 'Dallas' (DMN - Video/editing: Jake Batsell)July 1st, 2008More local/state videoView largerE-mail ClipMore VideoLocal/State Videos

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Never mind that the iconic television show has been off the air since 1991. Each day, some 23,000 people visit UltimateDallas.com, the fan site Mr. Hunter produces out of his north London home.

“There are people from everywhere — Romania, Japan, the U.S., Indonesia,” Mr. Hunter, 36, said in a telephone interview. “We’ve got this whole new fan base, some people as young as 12 and 13.”

Three decades after J.R., Sue Ellen and company began bickering on prime-time TV, Dallas remains an unstoppable force in popular culture.

The show that epitomized American grandeur and greed during the Reagan years is still syndicated in dozens of countries. Southfork Ranch in Parker draws more than 300,000 visitors a year. Diehards and new fans devour episodes on DVDs and cable soap channels.

“Dallas is not a phenomenon of 30 years ago, but actually is continuing to bring in new viewers,” said Janet Staiger, curator of Dallas: Power & Passion on Primetime TV, a new exhibit at the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum in Austin.

The exhibit, which runs through Sept. 14, chronicles how the show’s memorable characters, scandalous storylines and TV firsts — most notably the “Who shot J.R.?” cliffhanger — spawned a global juggernaut that continues to fascinate legions of fans.

Boosters of modern Dallas, meanwhile, often cringe at the show’s over-the-top stereotypes and the lingering perception that the city remains a mecca for big hair, 10-gallon hats and cutthroat capitalism.

“It’s a blessing and a curse,” said Phillip Jones, president and chief executive officer of the Dallas Convention and Visitors Bureau.

The show’s persistent popularity makes it more challenging to promote Dallas as a progressive, ethnically diverse city with plentiful options for culture, dining and commerce, Mr. Jones said.

On the plus side, he said, “everywhere you go in the world, people know Dallas.”

“The curse is, everywhere you go in the world, people know Dallas from 30 years ago,” he said. “People think if they come to Dallas, they’re going to see J.R. Ewing walking down the street.”

 

Also Online

Quiz: Do you know 'Dallas'?

First of its kind

When the show first aired on CBS in April 1978, Dallas chiefly was known as the site of the Kennedy assassination. The Dallas Cowboys, fresh off their second Super Bowl victory, weren’t even America’s Team yetÖ.

Then came the TV series, which suddenly recast Dallas as a glitzy universe of shimmering skyscrapers, slick oil barons and gorgeous women clad in fur coats and showy jewelry.

"It was, of course, not a totally accurate image," said Dr. Staiger, a professor of film and television studies at the University of Texas at Austin. "Not all women dress as beautifully as beautifully as Pamela Barnes and Sue Ellen did when they went to lunch. But it gave Dallas an image of richness.”

By the end of the second season in spring 1980, the show gave America its first prime-time cliffhanger when an unknown assailant gunned down J.R. Ewing in his office.

The scheming, sharp-tongued oilman — played by Fort Worth native Larry Hagman — had a long list of enemies. A prolonged actors strike forced fans to wait eight months before finding out the answer to the now-historic marketing slogan: “Who Shot J.R.?”

In November 1980, roughly 360 million viewers worldwide finally discovered who pulled the trigger. At the time, it was the most heavily watched event in television history.

The success of Dallas also elevated the soap-opera plot formula — serial narratives featuring multiple, intertwined story lines — into prime time.

“Now, you can hardly find a drama on prime-time that doesn’t have this format,” Dr. Staiger said.

The show inspired a crush of merchandise, some of which is on display at the Austin exhibit — puzzles, albums, even J.R. beer in pull-top cans.

Hollywood’s efforts to remake Dallas into a movie have sputtered. Janis Burklund, director of the Dallas Film Commission, said studio executives recently told her that the project is still alive but on hold as writers rework the script.

 

Actors still pleased

Susan Howard-Chrane accepts that her public persona will always be intertwined with her Dallas character, Donna Krebbs.

George W. Bush, then governor, appointed Ms. Howard-Chrane to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission in 1995. During her confirmation hearing, the room went silent when Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Lewisville, accidentally called her Donna.

“It wasn’t any big deal,” said Ms. Howard-Chrane, a Boerne resident who now serves on the Texas Commission on the Arts and is still constantly recognized by Dallas fans.

“I am never offended by someone calling me Donna — ever,” she said.

Ms. Howard-Chrane said viewers kept tuning in to Dallas because they related to the personal stories of each character — a rare occurrence in today’s prime-time lineup of reality shows and crime dramas.

“It was probably the last of its kind,” she said. “It primarily was a show to entertain, and to showcase actors and pretty clothes and attractive people and relationships. It was entertainment. I think we’ve kind of gotten away from that.”

The show’s success surprised actor Steve Kanaly, who played Ray Krebbs, Donna’s husband and the Ewings’ ranch foreman. Mr. Kanaly, who now grows avocados and citrus crops in Ojai, Calif., said he expected a quick exit after filming the first five episodes.

“I never believed the show had a chance to be successful,” he said. “I did five shows with everybody and thought, ‘Well, this is great; it’s been fun working with you, see you later.’.”

In retrospect, Mr. Kanaly said, the show may have caught on because it provided an escape from real-world issues like inflation, unemployment and the Iran hostage crisis.

“There were a lot of negative things going on,” he said. “And then this show pops up that doesn’t have anything to do with anything except a bunch of rich people in Texas and their crazy, mixed-up lives.”

 

Worldwide reach

Shady deals, boozy carousing and messy family politics may have been off-putting to some, but the program showed the world that America was a land of big dreams, Cadillacs and swimming pools.

Just ask Tomas Spilacek. During a visit to Southfork last month, Mr. Spilacek remembered watching Dallas in communist Czechoslovakia 20 years ago.

“Every person was watching this movie because Dallas is like all life in the U.S.,” he said. “Over there, communism. Over here, Dallas. Every Saturday night watching this movie is beautiful.”

Sally Peavy, the ranch’s tourism sales manager, hears stories like that all the time. Roughly two-thirds of the visitors who show up to tour Southfork are international.

“I would’ve thought that maybe it would have died down by now,” Ms. Peavy said. “But it’s amazing to me that people are still intrigued about the show, want to come see it, want to come experience it.”

Colin Mallon, a Southfork visitor hailing from Kent in the United Kingdom, said he got hooked on Dallas in the 1980s because “the storyline was brilliant, had a good laugh in it. It’s just something that made you watch every week.”

“Some of the things that happened in the show were just kind of bizarre,” added Angie Green of Wapakoneta, Ohio. “You couldn’t wait until the next week to see what was going to happen with J.R. and Cliff and all the characters.”

 

Still holds up

On UltimateDallas, the Web site Mr. Hunter started with two friends in 1997, fans interview the show’s stars, debate old plot twists and answer poll questions like: “Which forbidden love would you have liked to see?”

Mr. Hunter runs the site and attached fan forum with help from fellow fans in London, Canada and the United States. He said interest in the show has endured because its human storylines held such universal appeal.

Viewers could relate to Bobby and J.R.’s sibling rivalry, Sue Ellen’s alcoholism, Pam’s insecurity about her inability to have children and the family squabbles between the Ewing and Barnes clans.

“It was a character-driven show in a way we don’t tend to get now,” Mr. Hunter said. “It still kind of holds up, even nowadays.”

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Member Comments Total Comments: 24
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ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 3, 2008 | 3:37 PM

"Gotta have em in Texas, where everyone's a millionaire" So this show inspired this song by Supertramp!

gunpowderNlead read my blog view my photos
Jul 3, 2008 | 4:26 PM

Dang Jimbo... someone forgot to give me my Million! To whom do I complain? Thanks for the song... brought a smile to my face and brought back a truckload of good memories.

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 3, 2008 | 6:42 PM

Your welcome Guns, that song brings back some good "beach n babes" memories for me.

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 4, 2008 | 9:42 AM

Guns,

Have a safe and happy fourth, goil!!!!!

gunpowderNlead read my blog view my photos
Jul 4, 2008 | 10:49 AM

Same to you and yours Jimbo! I am armed with some of the Best BBQ this side of the Mississippi, lots of fun in the pool and some "adult" beverages... so we are in for a good time. We don't have quite the magnificent fireworks shows that ya'll have up there, I kind of envy that but we do the best we can with what we have. I kind of wish I had been up there for Ben and Betsy's wedding last night, I just read up on it yesterday and thought it would have been a sweet event to have attended. Ya'll stay cool up there and if you have tried it.... let me know what the fried watermelon is like and also.... I read yesterday that scientist have discovered that watermelon has similar effects of Viagra, so you will have to tell me if that is a truth too.

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 5, 2008 | 9:15 AM

LOL. Watermelon sales are going to skyrocket this year.

All I have to do is walk out my front door and I can see and hear all kinds of fireworks and firecrackers. Good thing it was raining lightly last night, or I would have heard a lot of sirens also! They aren't even legal in Delaware.

Hope you didn't wake up with a sunburn and a hangover!

gunpowderNlead read my blog view my photos
Jul 5, 2008 | 12:22 PM

Hi Jimbo. I slept in today... I managed to escape the thrills of the 4th mildly pink, did have a few pina coladas yesterday in the pool and got a little looped but since I was the hostess I needed to keep all my oars in the water. We went 75 miles northeast of Dallas to a big Bass lake called Lake Fork, to do Fireworks, they aren't legal in the city limits here so we drove out and met some relatives at the Lake. It was alot of fun.... however, we were there with a whole bunch of tatooed and toothless rednecks... but they were part of the entertainment.... a few times I was expecting to see a couple of them on the news... you know the hillbilly who holds the Roman candle in his hand and lights it.... but luckily no one was hurt.... there was alot of Lynard Skynard blaring out of trucks and one guy had a rebel flag drapped over the tailgate of his truck. we watched fireworks for a couple of hours and then came back to Dallas early this morning. People were still shooting them off in the country all the way home, it was a spectacular time.
You ain't lived till you have been on a boat ramp with about 300 Bubba Jimbobs lighting fireworks with cigarette lighters... made me want to put on my daisy dukes and dance a jig.

Mattweb read my blog
Jul 5, 2008 | 4:14 PM

I'm in that next generation of Dallas fans. Didn't watch until they reran it on TNN during my college years. Now I own the DVDs! (Season 9 coming 7/15... the season where Bobby bites it)

gunpowderNlead read my blog view my photos
Jul 6, 2008 | 3:46 PM

:) Matt... Don't cry too long over Bobby

ThunderTush read my blog view my photos
Jul 7, 2008 | 4:04 PM

The ranch, near Plano, which I passed a few times last month was really dead. No fan fare- The only way that you could tell that it was the Ewing ranch was the initals on the building and the row of trees that we all saw on TV- My cousin who resides down the road from the ranch had a party there. She said most parts were roped off...

ThunderTush read my blog view my photos
Jul 7, 2008 | 4:07 PM

A huge misconception by many... 70% of the filming took place off the property

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 7, 2008 | 7:03 PM

"You ain't lived till you have been on a boat ramp with about 300 Bubba Jimbobs lighting fireworks with cigarette lighters... made me want to put on my daisy dukes and dance a jig."

-------------------

C'mon, Guns. there ain't nuttin like hangin out wit Bill-Bob, Earl and the gang! Poundin 16oz Budweisers, doin shots of so co and talkin bout thangs!

gunpowderNlead read my blog view my photos
Jul 7, 2008 | 7:04 PM

Thats right Thunder, it is used mainly for special events now. I attended a sports banquet there for my nephew last year and was sadly disappointed in the place. My house doesn't have all the acreage around it, nor does it sit way off the road.... but it comes very close to the size of Southfork... the size of the house, I guess was the biggest disappointment to me....I mean as a kid watching the show it was portrayed as bigger than life.....and later in life I have one almost as big.

gunpowderNlead read my blog view my photos
Jul 7, 2008 | 7:11 PM

Jimbo.... lol.... I swear the place I was at, was 9 miles from Coke,Texas.....plenty of interesting characters lurking about....lots of NASCAR chatter and the occasional toothless drunk who would stumble up and say "wanna daynce"- the only "dayncing" I was doing was running from and swatting off mosquito's which were enjoying a nice evening consuming the Honey Almond shea butter from my legs and had a taste for the finer things in life by partaking of my "Angel" perfume. My husband was laughing at me because I as a city girl in the country and at a lake at that, I finally had enough and just got in the cab of the truck and enjoyed the rest of the evening watching fireworks through the windshield in the nice AC. You know I am not a camper and do not enjoy anything that even resembles camping... sitting on a boat ramp with jimbob, billy bob, bobby bob and earl... swatting mosquito's was too close to camping for this girl. But I did enjoy the free entertainment.... you just can't get that kind of stuff portrayed accurately in the movies.

ThunderTush read my blog view my photos
Jul 8, 2008 | 5:27 PM

yeppers

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 8, 2008 | 8:16 PM

"Wanna Daynce?"

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 8, 2008 | 8:18 PM

Gonna need a translator though.

Black velvet and ginger ale!

gunpowderNlead read my blog view my photos
Jul 9, 2008 | 10:30 AM

LOLOLOLOL~~~~ that about sums it up. I see this gentleman has summer teeth... some are here... some are there. He reminds me of a person I know, who never grew up mentally.

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 9, 2008 | 12:28 PM

Guns, Do you knoe anyone who translates Drunken hillbilly?

I only got about three word out of that.

ibejim read my blog view my photos
Jul 9, 2008 | 12:32 PM

Save the beer!!!

rednecks

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gunpowderNlead

100% Texan

Member Since: 3/20/2008