I was watching this shlock boxing movie on Turner Classic Movies, whose name I
don’t remember, starring people I don’t remember and if I did I would have no idea
who they were. But man, were those guys
fake-punching their hearts out!
(It was not TCM’s
“Finest Hour.” The word “Classic” was
shading its eyes.)
Anyway, the film’s motif
reminded me of the first Taxi episode
I wrote. Which was the second produced Taxi episode of the series.
I once explained to someone that I had written the second Taxi script, the second Cheers script and the second Cosby Show script, and they said,
“Earl! You were one script away from a
billion dollars!”
Anyway…
Let me tell you something about writers.
Sometimes, you think you made stuff up, and it turns out later,
it was not quite the case. I know that
sounds technically like “Plagiarism.” But
this isn’t on purpose. It’s just a
million things fly into your head, and when they fly out, you think at least some of them are yours.
Two small – post-“Statute of Limitations” – examples.
I am creating Best of
the West. I pick the name for the
local bar. I call it The Lucky Chance Saloon. Years later, I am watching a Clark Gable
western I have apparently already seen, because there, displayed prominently – to
my startled and innocent surprise – is The
Lucky Chance Saloon!
A slightly larger example, though one not rising to courtroom
adjudication.
A premising element in Best
of the West is the fact that “Southern Belle” Elvira met her new husband,
former “Yankee” officer Sam, while he was burning her plantation to the ground.
Years later, but again, clearly also before, I watched She Wore A
Yellow Ribbon, where exactly the same thing happened with John Wayne and
Maureen O’Hara.
I couldn’t believe it!
“Yeah, yeah.”
I couldn’t! Both that
that relationship setup was not original to me, and that burning down their
plantations was such a “turn on” for “Southern Belles.”
Though in no way deliberate, it would therefore not be surprising
if I “remembered” but thought I made up the second episode of Taxi.
Here’s how early this was in Taxi’s development. The
episode, ultimately called “One Punch Banta”, was originally called “One Punch
Ryan”, because the “boxer” character was intended to be Irish, but then Tony Danza
– an actual professional boxer – came in, captured the role, and changed the
ethnicity.
(An interesting tidbit for uninteresting parties.)
Anyway, maybe it was the spirit of Rocky, maybe it was the true story of Chuck Wepner (“The Bayonne
Bleeder”), I don’t know. But I brought
in the idea that boxer-in-the-show Tony Banta, for a few extra bucks, gets a
job, sparring with the middle-weight champion before an upcoming “Title” fight,
and during the sparring, Banta knocks the vaunted “Champion” on his butt.
Suddenly, Banta’s a “hot fighter”, earning a shot at a “Top
Ten” contender. (Which I originally
pitched as he actually got to fight the “Champ”, but my more experienced bosses
sensibly lowered the stakes.)
Then, in a pre-fight moment, Tony learns that the sparring “knockdown”
was a setup. The “Champ” had seemed
unbeatable, and his “handlers” needed a detectable “weakness” to heat up the
betting.
Which leads to the “Big Payoff” – Banta, entering the ring
against a “Top Ten” contender he has no business fighting. (We do the “comedy” version, rather than the
“Brain Damage” version.)
That was my first Taxi
episode.
It came off quite well.
(The “Guest ‘Contender’” was Carlos Palomino, which means “My friend” in
Italian, and if it doesn’t, it should.)
(Sorry. I am still not well.)
If the idea sounds familiar, let me know.
I enjoy making stuff up.
But not if I didn’t.
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