Wednesday, August 23, 2023

David Jacobs


David Jacobs, the creator of CBS primetime series “Knots Landing,” “Dallas” and “Paradise,” has died. He was 84.

Jacobs, who battled Alzheimer’s for several years, died Sunday at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center in Burbank. His son Aaron confirmed to Variety the news of his death.



David Jacobs was responsible for a lot of TV and responsible back in the day when you were lucky to have three networks (ABC, CBS and NBC) and maybe a local PBS and/or a local independent station.  Meaning, there weren't a whole lot of choices.  So if you watched TV then, end of the 70s on up, chances are you saw something he had worked on.  I remember 1977's KINGSTON'S CONFIDENTIAL as a TV movie/pilot.  It brought IRONSIDES and PERRY MASON back to the small screen.  Raymond Burr was a publisher.  The TV movie was interesting but the NBC show ran up against ABC's CHARLIE'S ANGELS so it didn't last a full season.  

Jay Presson Allen created ABC's FAMILY (she also wrote screenplays to many films including CABARET and TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT) and Jacobs wrote for it in the third season.  (Fourth season is generally considered when the drama jumped the shark.)  Right after that?

Some would say he created DALLAS.

They'd be wrong.

He created KNOTS LANDING.

He pitched it to CBS but the network wasn't really interested.  He came back with DALLAS and that they were interested in.  It started as a mini-series.  Bobby (Patrick Duffy) married Pam (Victoria Principal) and they were going to his family to tell them of the marriage.  J.R. took an instant dislike to Pam and made it his mission to make her miserable.  Pam was the best female character the show ever had.  Sue Ellen (J.R.'s wife) was really pathetic at the beginning of the series and all teenage Lucy (Charlene Tilton) did was roll around in the hay with the man who turned out to be her uncle (don't ask, I won't tell).  It was a hit and then CBS was willing to go with KNOTS LANDING.

So that's when he hit his high mark.  

KNOTS LANDING was one of the best show's on TV . . . after . . . they added Donna Mills to cast and stopped being touchy and feely.  Oh, we gals went to a house and it was haunted.  Who the hell cared?  No one.

But they added Donna Mills as Abby in season two and they hooked her up with Gary (first in a grift story regarding stolen parts) and they let her set out to break up Gary and Val and they had a show that couldn't quit.

Val gets back with Gary for a moment, is pregnant by him, has twins.  Abby knows the truth about the paternity (and she's now married to Gary herself).  The twins end up kidnapped by someone wanting Abby to owe them a favor.  Who can forget that?  Or Val thinking she's crazy (and other thinking Val's crazy as well)?  Or when Abby reunites Val with the babies?


There were so many great storylines.

Donna Mills left and the show struggled a bit.

They'd already brought on Mac's ex-wife for an episode.  She was Paige's mother and she made an impression.  They made her a regular.  Michelle Phillips played her, Anne, and she was devious and marvelous and sparkled and shined.  So the show was able to survive without Abby.  

And it was probably better that Abby left.  The only thing left for her to do was ping pong back and forth between Gary and Greg.  She really had worked through her arc and I loved her fair well (she got on the elevator to "Don't Worry, Be Happy").  I still remember that and her smile and I only watched it once.  Back then, the shows would repeat in the summer but I never had time.  I had to make time for Thursday nights when it was new.  But it really was much watch television and it lasted for 14 seasons -- and only left the air because CBS thought it was too expensive to make.  It was still a ratings hit.  

Anne worked because she wasn't Abby-lite.  She was her own person and character.  She was probably as devious as Abby but Anne wasn't as smart as Abby.  Anne could and did fail.  There was a time when she was homeless and didn't want anyone to know.  Michelle, looking back, really did invest a lot into the part.  If you don't know her acting, you should know her music.  The Mamas and the Papas were her, John Phillips, Cass Elliot and Denny Doherty.  She co-wrote "California Dreamin'" and "Creeque Alley" which were two of the group's biggest hits. After the group, she really made her focus acting.  

KNOTS LANDING was not the highest rated night time soap opera -- DYNASTY and DALLAS vied for that (with DYNASTY the winner after it got going) but it was the best quality.  The stories were consistently good (once Abby was added to the characters).  FALCON'S CREST, for example, should have been so much better.  But they'd do stupid things over and over.  They hire Ana-Alicia and don't know what to do with her forever.  Then they notice that the actress has created a character on her own and start writing Melissa the way the actress is playing her.  We the fans fall in love with Melissa so . . . kill her off.  Ratings tank, they try to bring her back as a different character.  

KNOTS LANDIND did kill off CiJi and I loved her but they brought Lisa Hartman (now Lisa Hartman Black) back as Cathy Geary ("C G," get it?) and that worked because it was a completely different character (and they brought her back near immediately, not after the ratings tanked -- KNOTS' ratings never tanked, to be clear).  

And they had the best actors in the world.  That's Donna Mills, Michelle Phillips and Lisa Hartman, it's also Julie Harris, Alec Baldwin, Michelle Lee, Constance McCashin, Joan Van Ark, Ted Shackelford, Kevin Dobson, William Devane, Nicolette Sheridan, Quinn Cummings, Larry Riley, Tonya Crowe, Douglas Sheehan, Ava Gardner, Howard Duff, Ruth Roman, Hunt Block, Michael Sabatino, Michael York, Lynne Moody, Betsy Palmer, Maree Cheatman (of SEARCH FOR TOMORROW fame), Robin Strasser, Brian Austin Green and so many more.  

He worked on KNOTS LANDING the duration of the series.  During that time he also created SECRETS OF MIDLAND HEIGHTS which aired on Saturdays and had Linda Hamilton in the cast and that was about it for that show for me (Saturday wasn't a day I was watching TV so I probably only caught about two episodes).  It lasted one season.  Oh, wow, Lorenzo Lamas was in that series.  Didn't remember that.  (He went on to FALCON'S CREST where he played Lance (who married Melissa -- I was just noting her). 

And he created BEHIND THE SCREEN which I loved and which Maggie, Dak-Ho and Toni will all tell you that I said, "Janine Turner looks like Genie Francis."  

Why will they tell you that?

Because after BEHIND THE SCREEN, Genie Francis left her role of Laura Webber Baldwin Spencer and they brought on a new character, Laura Templeton, who was a lookalike of Laura Webber et al -- and Janine Turner played that role.

When I said that she looked like Genie, all three of them scoffed.  Then when she was cast as Laura Templeton (her sister Jackie was played by Demi Moore), suddenly it became, "You were right!"  I was too.  Janine did have dark hair on BEHIND THE SCREEN but she still looked like Genie.

I see that BEHIND THE SCREEN only lasted 13 episodes. That's really too bad.  It was a great show.  It was a show created for late night.  It aired a new episode every Friday night.  (For 13 weeks -- although it may have been 14, I remember being made one week when we didn't get a new episode).  We'd watch while we were getting ready to go out. Yes, we were that young once that as midnight approached, we'd be getting ready to go out.  Along with Janine, the show included Michael Sabatino -- second time I've mentioned him (he was on KNOTS LANDING).

Jacobs produced the mini-series LACE -- in which Phoebe Cates asks, "Which one of you bitches is my mother?"  (He had nothing to do with the sequel LACE II in which Phoebe asks, "Which one of you bastards is my father?"

In 1985, he tried another prime time soap opera -- BERRENGER'S -- but that was so dull and so bad.  I think it was on NBC.  Yep, CBS passed on that one.  Rightly.  Anita Morris was in the cast but she couldn't save it.  12 episodes and it was gone.  And forgotten.

He continued with KNOTS LANDING during all this so he continued working and continued doing great work with KNOTS but that really was the end of it. There had been a lot of hope around BERRENGER'S.  But they tried to do NYC -- no nigh time soap opera succeeded with that, the closest was PAPER DOLLS (the series with Morgan Fairchild, not the TV movie with Joan Collins).


But he really did impact television and he provided a lot of entertainment to a lot of us.


Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Wednesday, August 23, 2023.  Turkey meets with Iraq and Turkey has demands (yes, Turkey), no capture in Baghdad's nearly year-old heist of the century, hate merchants in Iraq go after LGBTQ+ people while in the US we are still reeling from the death of Lauri Carleton who was murdered thanks to the climate the hate merchants here created.



Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan on Tuesday denounced a separatist Kurdish group that operates in Iraq as an enemy of both countries and urged the Iraqi government to ban it as a terrorist organisation, as Ankara has done.

Mr Fidan called on Iraq to designate the Kurdistan Worker's Party, or PKK, as a terrorist organisation during his first visit to Baghdad since taking office.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is expected to visit the country shortly, after months of escalating hostility between Turkey and Turkish-backed groups on one side, and Kurdish fighters in Iraq and Syria on the other.



 AFP notes, "The issue of water and dams on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, both of which have their sources in Turkey before entering Iraq, is a particularly sensitive topic for the two countries."  However, the big issue will be the PKK and Turkey's actions with regards to it.  The water issue?  That would require reflection and an admission of guilt and the Turkish government never takes accountability for anything.  The Armenian genocide at the start of the last century?  The Turkish government still lies about it.  Recep visits the US and his thugs assault US citizens?  He just ignores it -- and so did the White House at the time.  

No Turkey doesn't want the water flowing so it's not going to happen.  The Turkish government doesn't give, it just takes.

So it'll stomp its feet and make demands and I guess we'll find if Iraq has a real prime minister or just another poser.  



Iraqi officials, especially those affiliated with the Iran-backed Shiite Coordination Framework, will likely raise their own security concerns.

  • Parties close to the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) have objected to the presence of Turkish troops on Iraqi soil, in particular at a base in Nineveh Governorate.

  • Sentiment against the Turkish military presence became particularly vocal after Turkey killed nine Arab tourists in an artillery barrage at a resort in July 2022.

And they point out:

There were at least five major airstrikes in Iraqi Kurdistan between Aug. 6 and Aug. 11. At least seven people were reportedly killed, including five civilians. Turkey has not confirmed its involvement. However, it has notably been targeting the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in the area.

  • On Aug. 6, a civilian was reportedly killed and another was wounded in an airstrike in Duhok Governorate’s Chamanke district. Earlier in the day, a separate airstrike killed one person near Aghjalar in Sulaymaniyah Governorate’s Chamchamal district.

  • On Aug. 9, another civilian was reported to have been killed and a second injured in an airstrike near Dukan. The attack took place on a major road between Sulaymaniyah and Erbil used by many personal and commercial vehicles.

  • The same day, an alleged PKK fighter was killed in an airstrike in Sulaymaniyah Governorate’s Mawat district.

Two days later, on Aug. 11, an airstrike reportedly killed three civilians. The victims were traveling on the busy Penjwen-Sulaymaniyah road. The route links Iraqi Kurdistan’s major cities with a border crossing with Iran.

  • The Kurdistan Counterterrorism Service, affiliated with the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), was quick to claim that PKK militants were killed in the attack. However, this assertion was later dismissed by local reports.

  • Telecommunications company Asiacell on Aug. 11 confirmed that one of those killed was a local employee. The man had apparently been traveling with his neighbor and her daughter to the border crossing to meet another daughter who is studying in Iran.

Who's the terrorist here because it doesn't appear that the Turkish government meets with the clean hands doctrine itself.  ALJAZEERA notes, "Baghdad has regularly complained that Turkish air attacks in northern Iraq constitute a violation of its sovereignty, despite Ankara’s claims that it is trying to face off a force that has “occupied” parts of Iraq."

Meanwhile, corruption continues to run rampant in Iraq and the government remains humiliated by the 'heist of the century' that was revealed last fall.  In an update on that theft, Joe Fatallah (SOCIALIST PARTY) writes:

On 5 August, the government of Iraq called for the extradition from the UK and US of four former officials accused of embezzling over $2.5 billion of public money between September 2021 and August 2022, in one of the worst cases of corruption in the history of the country.

Five companies cashed 247 different cheques written by state employees, and the funds were then withdrawn from the company accounts. Most of the business owners concerned have also fled Iraq. Interpol red notices have already been issued for three of the suspects. These are Raed Jouhi, cabinet director for former prime minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, Ahmed Najati, al-Kadhimi’s personal secretary, and Ali Allawi, who held the offices of finance minister and deputy prime minister. Jouhi and Najati hold American citizenship, while Allawi is a dual British national. The final suspect Mushrik Abbas, al-Kadhimi’s media advisor, is believed to be in the United Arab Emirates.

Corruption is endemic at the top of Iraqi society. Former president Barham Salih claimed in 2021 that $150 billion of money from the oil industry had been illegally exported from the country since the US-led invasion in 2003. Transparency International’s corruption perception index scored Iraq 157th out of 180th countries ranked, with one being the least corrupt.




A law amendment in Iraq has proposed capital punishment for homosexual relationships. Campaigners have called it a “dangerous” escalation in the country where people already face frequent attacks and discrimination. However, life for queer Iraqis hasn’t always been this way. As with so many stains on worldwide human rights, the worsening homophobia and transphobia in Iraq can be traced back to the British empire.

Iraq: debating the death penalty for LGBTQ+ people

The amendment to a 1988 anti-prostitution law passed a first reading in parliament last week. It would enable courts to issue “the death penalty or life imprisonment” sentences for “homosexual relations”. This is according to a document seen by Agence France-Press (AFP). The amendment would also set a minimum seven-year prison term for “promoting homosexuality”.

Currently, no existing laws explicitly punish homosexual relations. However, the state has prosecuted LGBTQ+ people for sodomy, or under vague morality and anti-prostitution clauses in Iraq’s penal code. This also comes at a time when the state and the media are also cracking-down on open discussion about LGBTQ+ issues.

The national media and communications commission is considering banning Iraq-based publications from using the term “homosexuality”. Instead, it would advise media outlets to use the derogatory term “sexual deviance”. It also wants to ban the term “gender”.





The Iraqi government should immediately withdraw a proposed law currently before parliament that would impose the death penalty for same-sex conduct and imprisonment for transgender expression, Human Rights Watch said today. If adopted, the bill would violate fundamental human rights, including the rights to freedom of expression, association, privacy, equality, and nondiscrimination of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people (LGBT) in Iraq.

On August 15, 2023, Raad Al-Maliki, an independent member of parliament, introduced a bill that would amend the “Law on Combatting Prostitution,” No. 8 of 1988, to explicitly make same-sex relations and transgender expression a criminal offense. If passed, the bill would punish same-sex relations with the death penalty or life in prison, punish “promoting homosexuality” with a minimum seven years in prison and a fine, and criminalize “imitating women” with up to a three-year sentence. In introducing the bill, Al-Maliki said its purpose was to “preserve the entity of the Iraqi society from deviation and calls for ‘paraphilia’ [abnormal sexual impulses] that have invaded the world.”

“Iraq’s proposed anti-LGBT law would threaten the lives of Iraqis already facing a hostile environment for LGBT people,” said Rasha Younes, senior LGBT rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Iraqi lawmakers are sending an appalling message to LGBT people that their speech is criminal and their lives are expendable.”

Though consensual same-sex conduct is not explicitly criminalized in Iraq, the authorities have used vague “morality” laws to prosecute LGBT people. The introduction of the anti-LGBT bill follows months of hostile rhetoric against sexual and gender minorities by Iraqi officials, as well as government crackdowns on human rights groups.

The bill reviewed by Human Rights Watch equates same-sex relations with “sexual perversion,” which it defines as “repeated sexual relations between members of the same sex … if occurring more than three times.” The law also provides for seven years in prison and a fine between 10 million Iraqi dinars (US$7,700) and 15 million dinars ($11,500) for “promoting homosexuality,” which is undefined.

The bill specifically targets transgender women, with a prison term between one and three years or with a fine between 5 million dinars ($3,800) and 10 million dinars ($7,700) for anyone who “imitates women.” The law defines “imitating women” as “wearing makeup and women’s clothing” or “appearing as women” in public spaces.

The bill prohibits hormone replacement therapy and what it calls “sex change” based on personal desire, as well as any attempt to change one’s gender identity, punishable by prison terms between one and three years. The same penalty applies to any surgeon or other doctor who performs gender-affirming surgery. The law makes an intersex exception for cases that require a surgical intervention to confirm biological sex, based on the binary categories of male and female.

Violence and discrimination against LGBT people is already rampant in Iraq. The targeting of LGBT people online and lethal violence against LGBT people by armed groups in Iraq has routinely been met with impunity, Human Rights Watch said.

On August 8, the Iraqi Communications and Media Commission issued a directive ordering all media outlets to replace the term “homosexuality” with “sexual deviance” in their published and broadcast language and banning use of the term “gender.”

On May 31, a court in the Kurdistan region of Iraq ordered the closure of Rasan Organization, a human rights organization in the Kurdistan Region, over “its activities in the field of homosexuality.”

In September 2022, members of the Kurdistan regional parliament introduced the “Bill on the Prohibition of Promoting Homosexuality,” which would punish any individual or group that advocates for the rights of LGBT people.

The Iraqi government is responsible for protecting the rights of all Iraqis, Human Rights Watch said. The proposed law contravenes Iraq’s Constitution, which protects the rights to nondiscrimination (article 14) and privacy (article 17), as well as its obligations under international human rights law. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which Iraq ratified in 1971, affirms the rights to life, liberty, privacy, free expression, and security of the person. Similarly, the Arab Charter on Human Rights, of which Iraq is a member, affirms these rights.

Unequal protection against violence and unequal access to justice are prohibited under international law. The ICCPR, in its articles 2 and 26, guarantees fundamental human rights and equal protection of the law without discrimination. The United Nations Human Rights Committee, the international expert body that provides authoritative interpretations of the covenant, has made clear that sexual orientation is a status protected against discrimination under these provisions.

“The Iraqi government has failed to tackle discriminatory practices that underpin violence against LGBT people,” Younes said. “Instead it has promoted anti-LGBT ‘morality’-based legislation that fuels violence and discrimination against already marginalized sexual and gender minorities. The Iraqi government should immediately abandon the proposed anti-LGBT law and end the cycle of violence and impunity against LGBT people.”


There are hate merchants all over the world.  In the US, they're responsible for the murder of Lauri Carleton.



Her daughter Ari remembers her mother in the video below.




Chris Hayes covers the story in the video below.




























 


This is a time in which a disturbingly violent segment of society feels entitled to lash out against those who promote the self-evident truths upon which this nation was founded. Carleton, like many others before her, appears to have died for expressing her conviction that sexual orientation and gender non-conformity have no role in determining who does or does not belong.

So fly the flag that Carleton flew, in her memory and honor, and in support for the right to express oneself and be oneself. Fly it in defiance of killers and terrorists who undermine personal freedom and expression. Fly it in support of our unalienable rights. Fly it in support of the LGBTQ+ community and its righteous defense against bigotry. Fly it for pride.



The following sites updated: