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- <text id=91TT0686>
- <title>
- Apr. 01, 1991: Revenge Of The Nerd
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 01, 1991 Law And Disorder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 73
- Revenge of the Nerd
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Neighborhood pest Steve Urkel makes Family Matters fly and gives
- the Miller-Boyett team yet another comedy hit
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--With reporting by Sally B. Donnelly/ Los
- Angeles
- </p>
- <p> For unprepared viewers, the first exposure to Steve Urkel
- is apt to come as a shock. With oversize glasses, pants hiked
- up to his armpits, piercing nasal voice and snorting laugh,
- he's the nerd who came to dinner. When he isn't rattling off
- irrelevant factoids ("Did you know there are 99.3 million cows
- in the U.S.?") or speaking Japanese with the high school
- principal, he is making a general pest of himself with the
- family down the block. He is especially smitten with their
- 15-year-old daughter Laura, whom he showers with pet names ("Hi,
- my little Jell-O mold") to no avail. One night he even shows
- up outside her bedroom window to woo her with an accordion
- serenade of Feelings.
- </p>
- <p> Only in the world of TV sitcoms could Urkel become a
- sensation. Make that only in the world of Tom Miller and Bob
- Boyett. As executive producers of Family Matters, the ABC
- series Urkel calls home, and a string of other sitcom hits,
- they have mastered the art of low-IQ, high-Nielsen TV comedy.
- At ABC, they are the kings of Friday night: for much of the
- season, they have monopolized the evening with four shows
- running back to back.
- </p>
- <p> Now in its second season, Family Matters, which centers on
- a black policeman and his Chicago family, has been moving
- steadily up the Nielsen chart, often cracking the Top 10. There
- it usually joins Miller-Boyett's reigning champ, the
- four-year-old Full House, in which three unattached males cope
- with a houseful of little girls. Not far behind is Perfect
- Strangers, a buddy comedy with Bronson Pinchot as an immigrant
- weirdo who comes to live with his cousin (Mark Linn-Baker) in
- the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> The team's newest Friday-night offering, Going Places (four
- perky twenty-somethings working on a TV show and sharing a
- house), ended its season's run earlier this month. But their
- CBS sitcom Family Man, about a fire fighter raising four kids,
- will return from hiatus later in the spring. And the duo is
- gearing up yet another family comedy for ABC in the fall, this
- one about two single-parent clans that move in together.
- </p>
- <p> Clearly, we are not in Twin Peaks territory. Miller-Boyett's
- shows are what used to be described as
- lowest-common-denominator programming: cuddly, heartwarming,
- undemanding. They usually focus on wholesome families with
- incurably cute tots and problems that are solved in a few swift
- strokes just before the closing credits. Their interchangeable
- theme songs reinforce the upbeat message. "Standin' tall on
- the wings of my dream," goes the ditty for Perfect Strangers,
- while Going Places celebrates the "wide open spaces for my
- dreams," and Family Matters opens jauntily: "All I see is a
- tower of dreams/ Real love bursting out of every seam."
- </p>
- <p> In the Miller-Boyett comedy stylebook, no joke is too broad,
- no character too outlandish, no plot twist too cloying. When
- a four-year-old in Full House is told she can be a batboy on
- the Little League team, you can bet she'll come downstairs
- wearing a Batman costume (and get a big laugh for it). On the
- morning of his wedding day, one of the three dads sneaks off
- to go skydiving (why not?). He gets stuck in a tree, falls into
- a truckload of tomatoes and arrives hours late for the
- awww-inspiring ceremony. A better response is arrrgghh!
- </p>
- <p> The masterminds behind these syrupy confections bristle at
- the critical drubbing their shows usually get. Miller, 46, a
- Milwaukee native, started out as an assistant to director Billy
- Wilder, then wrote episodes for The Odd Couple and The Brady
- Bunch. Boyett, also 46, grew up in Atlanta, moved to New York
- City to become a playwright and wound up as a program executive
- at ABC. They met when Miller was co-producing one of ABC's big
- hits of the '70s, Happy Days. Boyett later joined Miller (and
- his then partner Edward Milkis) to produce such shows as
- Laverne & Shirley, Mork & Mindy and Bosom Buddies. "What we
- really care about is pleasing people," says Miller. "If that's
- what we're charged with, the verdict is guilty."
- </p>
- <p> Their shows don't always please enough people: the pair have
- had flops (Goodtime Girls, Joanie Loves Chachi) as well as
- hits. But they have gained a reputation in TV circles as expert
- fix-it men, skilled at tinkering with shows and playing up the
- elements that work. Their legendary success was boosting the
- role of Fonzie, the greaser with a heart of gold, in Happy
- Days. "Basically, the concept of a show is merely a vehicle to
- get it launched," says Boyett. "What keeps it going is the
- ability to present characters people want to follow."
- </p>
- <p> Improbably, Urkel has become one. The goony neighbor kid,
- played by 14-year-old Jaleel White, did not make his first
- appearance on Family Matters until its 12th episode. The
- producers saw his appeal instantly, and now Urkel is the
- centerpiece of virtually every show. "I think people like him
- because he's unique," says White, who gets so much fan mail
- that his family had to hire a firm to open it.
- </p>
- <p> With his deft timing and vaudeville hamminess, White brings
- such extravagant high spirits to the role that he is hard not
- to like. Moreover, his presence has helped turn Family Matters
- into Miller-Boyett's most watchable comedy. His constant
- grating presence--the eager beaver who sets everybody's teeth
- on edge--has added a dash of vinegar to the cotton-candy
- formula. Maybe every TV family needs a nerd in the
- neighborhood.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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