TMC
03-12-2020, 05:41 AM
Being able to watch virtually the entire series on Logo (I haven't seen the more recent airings on Antenna TV, since I can't get it), this really dawned on me. I find it strange that come Season 4 (or the second season in first-run syndication), they just go straight in with Sheryl Lee Ralph taking her spot and act like Cassie never existed. Even though It's a Living was an ensemble show, it was quite obvious even back then, that Ann Jillian was the biggest factor in the show's success or appeal if you want to call it that. Maybe in my imagination, to just pull a "Chuck Cunningham" on your show's breakout character is kind of insulting to the audience's intelligence.
The Wikipedia article for what it's worth, says that Cassie went off and got married. I don't know if I somehow overlooked that, but they could've spent the last episode of Season 3 writing Cassie out of the show (Ann Jillian had I believe, made it quite known that she had only signed up for a single season) instead of a clip show set to the framing device of Sonny being paranoid about mobsters out to kill him.
Maybe given that this was a syndicated show (and thus, not seen as being as "prestigious" as a network, prime time show) in the '80s, some TV producers and writers weren't so forward thinking or ambitious as say, today. But still, I always thought that It's a Living was seriously hampered by its constant retooling (it didn't become stable until the last three seasons, when Sheryl Lee Ralph joined the show) and lack of narrative continuity.
The Wikipedia article for what it's worth, says that Cassie went off and got married. I don't know if I somehow overlooked that, but they could've spent the last episode of Season 3 writing Cassie out of the show (Ann Jillian had I believe, made it quite known that she had only signed up for a single season) instead of a clip show set to the framing device of Sonny being paranoid about mobsters out to kill him.
Maybe given that this was a syndicated show (and thus, not seen as being as "prestigious" as a network, prime time show) in the '80s, some TV producers and writers weren't so forward thinking or ambitious as say, today. But still, I always thought that It's a Living was seriously hampered by its constant retooling (it didn't become stable until the last three seasons, when Sheryl Lee Ralph joined the show) and lack of narrative continuity.