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The White Shadow - Season 1
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Features
 Closed-captioned
 Color
 DVD-Video
 NTSC

In Theaters : 27 November, 1978
DVD Release : 08 November, 2005
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The White Shadow - Season 1 description
The entertaining and sometimes powerful The White Shadow gets under one's skin very quickly. Ken Howard plays former NBA star Ken Reeves, whose career in the pro game is cut short by serious injuries. Along comes Ken's old college roomate, Jim Willis (Jason Bernard in the pilot episode, Ed Bernard after that), principal of an inner-city high school in Los Angeles with a high dropout rate and plenty of antagonism between thuggish students and an angry faculty. Jim makes Ken an offer any sensible man might refuse, but somehow Ken can't: becoming coach of the school's low-achieving basketball team.

Hardly a bleeding heart and prone to inopportune wisecracks, Ken nevertheless gets the team on its feet and slowly takes cautious interest in the personal lives of individual players. Over the course of 15 first-season episodes, Ken gets in the middle of his students' problems, including alcoholism, gang affiliations, early fatherhood, racism, and fighting. Ken is not without his own issues and biases, which have to be faced at critical times. In "Just One of the Boys," the addition of a new player, who might be gay, to the team makes him terribly anxious--and embarrassed that he feels that way. "Spare the Rod" finds Ken at his lowest moment after striking a student who punched him in the nose. What makes this story interesting is that every adult in the school rushes to Ken's defense, even praises him for taking a stand. Yet the attention deepens his shame, and makes Ken too ready to forgive his dangerous attacker. Actress Joan Pringle is excellent as vice-principal Sybil Buchanan, Ken's ally-adversary. Be on the lookout for a number of actors who would soon have starring roles on 1980s TV series, among them Michael Warren and Bruce Weitz (Hill Street Blues), Peter Horton (thirtysomething), and Jonathan Frakes (Star Trek: The Next Generation). --Tom Keogh

The White Shadow - Season 1 Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥ More dated than I would have thought, but worth watching again
Like many others I have fond memories of "The White Shadow." I was in graduate school when the show first aired in 1978, but back then when there were only three major television networks (and BBC imports on PBS), there were not a whole lot of television shows that had characters in school. "Welcome Back, Kotter" was entering its final season, but my ability to identify with the Sweat Hogs never got to the point where I was a regular viewer. But this was a show that was about basketball, and that made a difference. However, it turned out that basketball was just a hook to get you to check out "The White Shadow," and that the show ended up actually being about kids in high school, which explains both the critical acclaim the series received from educational organizations and the low ratings it had during its three-year run.

The premise was interesting. Ken Reeves (Ken Howard), a forward with the Chicago Bulls, wrecks his knee and is forced to retire. A high school teammate who is now the principal of Carver High Sch ol offers him a job coaching the basketball team. He has no experience, the job pays pretty much nothing, and his team will be a racially mixed team in a tough inner-city, lower-middle-class neighborhood, so of course Reeves takes the gig. It soon becomes clear that the show is really about teenagers and their problems a lot more than it is about winning basketball games. They jump into the deep end of the pool real quick on this series. In the pilot Hayward wants to drop out of school to take care of his single mom and little brother, then Reeves has to deal with Jackson being an alcoholic ("Here's Mud in Your Eye"), an agent trying to get Coolidge to jump to the pros ("Bonus Baby"), Reese's girl friend tell him she is pregnant ("Pregnant Pause"), Gomez being in a street gang ("That Old Gang of Mine"), and a new player who might be gay ("Just One of the Boys").

I do not think that "The White Shadow" has aged particularly well, primarily because this time around it strikes me as being very much a formula show. Instead of thinking about "Hill Street Blues," "St. Elsewhere," and other MTM series, "The White Shadow" was reminding me of "Quincy, M.E.", where Jack Klugman butted heads each week with a system trying to solve a problem. It seemed like every week Reeves would be trying to solve a problem and butting heads with Sybil Buchanan (Joan Pringle), with the coach representing an idealistic notion and the vice principle trying to point out the grim realities of the situation. Of course, television was very much about formula that point from situation comedies to westerns and everything in between, but when you watch a bunch of these episodes in a row you become aware how often these stories play out in the same way time and time again. The other complaint is that there is sure a lot of illegal activity going on with these kids, especially when the entire team goes gambling in Las Vegas ("We're in the Money"), but the roster is always back to full strength by the next episode.

Still, Season 1 of "The White Shadow" is well worth watching again for those of us who caught it the first time around. Spotting familiar faces is part of the fun watching these again, especially when Michael Warren and Bruce Weitz show up in the same episode ("Wanna Bet?") and Jonathan Frakes outs Peter Horton ("Just One of the Boys"). Plus, when Jason McElwain, the autistic manager of his high school basketball team, got into his first game and scored 20 points I have to think that every body who ever watched "The White Shadow" was thinking of the first season episode "Mainstream," which has probably the most unforgettable final freeze frame in the entire series.

Knowing what happens down the road in the show's other two seasons ("The White Shadow" ran on CBS from 1978-81), I know that none of the kids are seniors and that it will be another year until some of them graduate. Yes, that means the idea of Coolidge jumping to the NBA as a high school sophomore makes no sense, but there is no way to be a slave to continuity with this series. However, the most dated episode has to be "Airball," where it took me a while to figure out why removing your shoes (and jewelry) would be a good thing to do when preparing for a crash landing. The DVD extras are pretty sparse, with a short featurette on the series and commentary by Howard and Van Patten on "The Great White Dope." The latter was particularly enjoyable, which only makes you wish that more of the cast had shown up to talk about the old days.
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