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Boston Public is an American television series created by David E. Kelley and broadcast on Fox from October 2000 to January 2004. It centered on Winslow High School, a fictional public high school located in Boston, Massachusetts. The show was named for the real public school district in which it takes place. It featured a large ensemble cast and focused on the work and private lives of the various teachers, students, and administrators at the school and their various personalities. Its slogan, as it was depicted on the show's website at the time, was "Every day is a fight. For respect. For dignity. For sanity." [1]
[edit] HistoryAt the beginning, Boston Public preceded Ally McBeal on Monday nights and received initial popularity and critical acclaim for its drama and ethnically diverse cast. However, the series had a hard time finding a direction or an audience. It was generally felt that the important 18-to-24 year-old demographic would not be interested in a drama about high school teachers, so attempts were made to focus more on the lives of high school students. However, this only caused critics to accuse it of copycatting. These problems, along with bizarre storylines and casting changes, caused its ratings to decline. The final nail in the coffin was when Fox moved it to the Friday night death slot for the 2003-2004 season. The number of viewers plummeted accordingly, and it was cancelled after a truncated fourth season. The last episode to air on its normal time slot was on January 30, 2004. The final two episodes aired on March 1, 2005 later in syndication on TV One. Neither episode wrapped up any of the character stories as the series was cancelled in the middle of its fourth season. [edit] Social soapboxThe series often served as a soapbox about various contemporary issues. In the tradition of series such as Picket Fences, Boston Public often intertwined a social issue in context of the lives of the characters, and approaching it through discourse between the characters and developments in the storyline that were meant to be reflective of particular sides of the issue. The title of each episode was a numbered chapter, similar to that in a high school textbook, and each character had a certain story arc, with the professional and personal lives often intersecting with the issue at hand. The particular issues tackled by the show included many modern controversies and problems facing American public high schools today, such as affirmative action, teenage pregnancy, school violence, bullying, obesity, racism, gay-bashing, school prayer, terrorism, political correctness, poverty, rape, drug abuse, state funding for public education, and general teen angst/alienation. The show typically highlighted the tendency of public schools to serve as the flashpoints for many of the politically volatile controversies in the larger scope of American society. Social commentary also sometimes took the form of using the high school setting to serve as a microcosm of America, enabling the show to act as a forum for public discussion, while other times making more subtle criticisms and statements of contemporary American culture. Boston Public was the Winner of the 2002 Peabody Award ("Chapter Thirty-Seven") from the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia. [edit] Regular castMain article: List of Boston Public characters [edit] EpisodesMain article: List of Boston Public episodes [edit] Awards and Nominations[edit] Awards Won
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Categories: 2000s American television series | 2000 American television series debuts | 2004 television series endings | Boston, Massachusetts in fiction | American drama television series | Black television drama series | High school television series | Fox network shows | Television shows set in Massachusetts | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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