bpatrick said:Mark_Giardina said:I did not like Amos Burke, Secret Agent.
Here is a perfect example of how network executives can screw up a decent program by making changes.
"Burke's Law" was an enjoyable detective show, but ABC decided to venture into the 'Secret Agent' fad and revamped the entire show.
"Amos Burke, Secret Agent" bombed with the viewers and I can see why, while I bet that "Burke's Law" might have been renewed for another season.
I totally agree, but I suppose ABC was trying to cash in on the spy craze; after all, NBC had "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." and
debuted "I Spy" (against Burke) and the spoof "Get Smart" in 1965; CBS had "Secret Agent" and would add "Mission: Impossible" in 1966. Why they had to pick Amos Burke, instead of going with some new character, is beyond me, unless it was just a case of audience familiarity.
The '90s revival of "Burke's Law" seemed awfully dated.
In Burke, ABC figured they had a character who was more plausible as a globe-trotting spy than as a local police homicide lieutenant. And they may have had a point. And, since the network wasn't up to its ears in stars, it was a way to keep Gene Barry.
The revival was creaky, but so was CBS at the time. With Diagnosis Murder and Murder She Wrote following the old Burke's Law formula of each episode having a few middle-aged guest stars. So a revival of the original probably seemed like a natural.