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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-26
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<text id=94TT1828>
<title>
Dec. 26, 1994: The Best Television of 1994
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Dec. 26, 1994 Man of the Year:Pope John Paul II
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE BEST & WORST OF 1994, Page 137
The Best Television of 1994
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Richard Zoglin
</p>
<p>1. O.J. on the Run.
</p>
<p> On a Friday night in June, two-thirds of the nation's TV households tuned in to the oddest car chase in TV
history: O.J. Simpson's slow-speed flight along the Los Angeles
freeways, ending with his surrender in the driveway of his Brentwood
home. The courtroom drama that followed has grown increasingly
tedious (anybody know what Judge Ito's right profile looks like?).
But that evening-long episode of The Fugitive, with play-by-play
from Barbara Walters, Tom Brokaw and seemingly every local newscaster
in Los Angeles, was the daffiest media spectacle of the year.
</p>
<p>2. Watergate (Discovery)
</p>
<p> Liddy, Magruder, Dean and the rest were back, 20 years older,
to tell what they knew and when they knew it. The BBC interviewers
elicited candor, several fresh revelations and, in five compelling
hours, a definitive account of the scandal that brought down
Richard Nixon's presidency.
</p>
<p>3. To Play the King (PBS)
</p>
<p> Francis Urquhart (Ian Richardson), the Tory party whip who had
schemed his way to the prime ministry in House of Cards, returned
to battle a reformist King of England (Michael Kitchen) in a
sequel that nearly matched the original in savage wit.
</p>
<p>4. ER (NBC)
</p>
<p> Michael Crichton drew on his experiences as a medical student
and ignored the usual formulas of TV drama to reinvent the doctor
show for the 1990s--and create the season's surprise hit.
The emergency-room action is better than the sometimes-soapy
personal stories, but no hour on TV is more gripping.
</p>
<p>5. Fatherland (HBO)
</p>
<p> In an alternate world where Hitler has won World War II, an
SS officer (Rutger Hauer) and an American reporter (Miranda
Richardson) stumble on the Nazis' terrible secret, in this suspenseful,
well-paced adaptation of Robert Harris' best seller.
</p>
<p>6. Baseball (PBS)
</p>
<p> Granted it was too sanctimonious and too long, but Ken Burns'
18-hour paean to the national pastime was a gigantic achievement
nonetheless, packed with history, nostalgia and, yes, poetry.
Burns (The Civil War) was too much in love with his subject,
but could anyone else have got this made, or made it so well?
</p>
<p>7. She TV (ABC)
</p>
<p> ER showed that quality drama could still make it in prime time;
this short-lived summer series showed that quality comedy could
not. An hour of satire from a female point of view, the program
skewered everyone from Rush Limbaugh to Barbra Streisand, as
well as (most refreshingly) the way real men and women miscommunicate.
</p>
<p>8. David's Mother (CBS)
</p>
<p> Kirstie Alley played the overprotective mother of an autistic
teen-ager (Michael Goorjian) in this surprisingly affecting
TV movie. Directed by Robert Allan Ackerman from Bob Randall's
script, the film avoided sentimentality as it told the story
of a woman who must learn the difference between love and selfishness.
</p>
<p>9. My So-Called Life (ABC)
</p>
<p> Teenage angst is all over the dial, from sitcoms to Beverly
Hills, 90210, but this series from the creators of thirty-something
is the only one that seems to get it right. Claire Danes is
super as the introspective 15-year-old who makes us remember
what it was like to be, like, a kid.
</p>
<p>10. Tales from the Far Side (CBS)
</p>
<p> Just after announcing that he was retiring his daily syndicated
cartoon, Gary Larson brought his mordant wit to TV for the first
time in this weird, wordless animated special. Highlight: a
sentimental wolf weeps over home movies. Unearthly and wonderful.
</p>
<p>...And The Worst
</p>
<p> Madonna. The Material Girl, rapidly running out of material,
tried pouty intransigence and four-letter words on David Letterman's
Late Show, an appearance that proved you can turn your head
away from a train wreck. By the end of her bleepathon, even
the studio audience was hooting her off the stage. She tried
to salvage the p.r. disaster by acting like Little Bo Peep on
Jay Leno's show and cooing with Dave at the MTV awards. No sale.
Terumi Matthews in Madonna: Innocence Lost was more fun.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>