I'm not sure what WW means by "It carried the name of the city." Was the name of the city in the title or just referred to during the run of the show?
As for Raf's guesses, I'm not sure any of those shows ran five seasons. Powerless was obscure and might have been in-continuity with another DC offering, but it only went (part of) one season. It had Alan Tudyk from Firefly but no one from ST DS9.
Well, I've got the city and, I think, the three shows.
Adventures of Superman
21 Jump Street
Powerless
But I don't have ALL the clues for Jump Street, which took place in a city called...
Metropolis
No, that wasn't the city, nor any of the shows I mentioned, let alone the middle show whose name is the answer this round.
Get out, 21 Jump Street's city was Metropolis? *checks* It was, but it wasn't the same Metropolis as either of the other shows. But that's just a curiosity this round.
As for "Powerless", that took place in CHARM CITY. (Per the Wikipedia page.)
"It takes place in that city, which is frequently mentioned." If that had been the clue, then it would have said the name was referred to during the run of the show.
In fairness, it obviously takes place in that city, and the show names it, so that does apply, but it wasn't the clue to which you're responding.
Some cities are more popular than others as settings for shows, and have had multiple series set in them. In this case, I recall 3 live-action series set in this city. (This city does not have its own wiki, but it has a page in at least 13 wikis.) The last of those shows was a little obscure (but has its own wiki.) The first of those shows was famous (but does not appear to have its own wiki- it has pages in a more general wiki.) That's a lot of attention for a city that doesn't even exist.
In between those shows was a show with popularity between famous and obscure. (It has its own wiki.) It ran for 5 seasons. It carried the name of the city (lawyers may wrangle on whether or not I am correct.) It was written as a serious show, an action drama. It didn't really cross over with any shows, but was in-continuity with at least 1 show that aired after this show ceased production. (But not any cartoons, AFAIK.) The last episode of the series was planned to be the last episode. It was set a decade after the rest of the series, and was titled "The Beginning..." The show borrowed freely from other media, but was as much inspired by them as anything else, taking plenty of dramatic license, which resulted in a better show. Despite this show using largely unknown actors, it could be argued that they used at least 3 actors, well-known from science fiction, in recurring roles. One of those actors had been on television, and in a major movie series, (a trilogy, sorta.) The other 2, despite not having worked together previously, were both well-known from roles in well-known Science Fiction franchises (she was from "Firefly", he was from "Star Trek Deep Space 9.".) Across one season, an electric light shone outdoors was a significant item.
This show had good ratings and was probably watched regularly by al least 1/2 of the regulars in this thread.
(Again, this was not a legal/law firm show, nor does it contain "Law" or any variation in the name, nor do lawyers play any significant role in the story. If you still think they do after this, it's not because I didn't try to warn you off a dead end. None of this parenthesis is any sort of clue, I'm just trying to head off digressions into the wrong shows.)
Lawyers may argue whether the show "Gotham" is named after "Gotham City" because "City" isn't in the show's title. The rest of us can agree. The Batman 66 show does not have its own wiki, but it's part of the "Batman wiki" with entries for the "Dozier-verse" for William Dozier's show/movie. The obscure show was "Gotham Knights", which lasted a short time (and has its own wiki.)
So does GOTHAM. Gotham was an action drama, and was only in-continuity with the later show, "Pennyworth." It was not in-continuity with any of the cartoons.) The entire show was before Bruce Wayne became Batman- except for the final episode of the series, "The Beginning." In addition to Morena Beccarin as Leslie Thompkins and Sid as Ra's al Ghul (brilliant casting there, all he was missing was the beard things to look like he stepped off the pages), we had Fish Mooney played by Jada Pinkett-Smith, as seen on television and the Matrix movies (and the Oscars.) During the "No Man's Land" storyline, the only place with electricity was where the good guys had set up the generator, so they shone a light into the sky at night to show that someplace still had power, and as a symbol of hope. It was a simple light, not one with a bat symbol on it or anything. (Well, they weren't calling him or anything.) Except for Human and Waysider, I'm confident the rest of us watched the show at least intermittently.
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hiway29
I'm not clear what your point is then. I don't think I'm much older than anyone here. I thought the whole point of this game was to stir memories ,and realize-'oh yeah-I do remember that show !' I'm
GeorgeStGeorge
In the "Jump the Shark" episode of Batman B&B, they go through all of the ways to JTS listed on that website, including having Ted McGinley on! :lol: George
GeorgeStGeorge
C) The DC/Fawcett character must be Captain Marvel, now known as Shazam. I think the show is Beat Shazam George
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Raf
I forgot Lois n Clark, which invalidates my guess i think
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GeorgeStGeorge
I'm not sure what WW means by "It carried the name of the city." Was the name of the city in the title or just referred to during the run of the show?
As for Raf's guesses, I'm not sure any of those shows ran five seasons. Powerless was obscure and might have been in-continuity with another DC offering, but it only went (part of) one season. It had Alan Tudyk from Firefly but no one from ST DS9.
George
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WordWolf
No, that wasn't the city, nor any of the shows I mentioned, let alone the middle show whose name is the answer this round.
Get out, 21 Jump Street's city was Metropolis? *checks* It was, but it wasn't the same Metropolis as either of the other shows. But that's just a curiosity this round.
As for "Powerless", that took place in CHARM CITY. (Per the Wikipedia page.)
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WordWolf
"It takes place in that city, which is frequently mentioned." If that had been the clue, then it would have said the name was referred to during the run of the show.
In fairness, it obviously takes place in that city, and the show names it, so that does apply, but it wasn't the clue to which you're responding.
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WordWolf
Some cities are more popular than others as settings for shows, and have had multiple series set in them. In this case, I recall 3 live-action series set in this city. (This city does not have its own wiki, but it has a page in at least 13 wikis.) The last of those shows was a little obscure (but has its own wiki.) The first of those shows was famous (but does not appear to have its own wiki- it has pages in a more general wiki.) That's a lot of attention for a city that doesn't even exist.
In between those shows was a show with popularity between famous and obscure. (It has its own wiki.) It ran for 5 seasons. It carried the name of the city (lawyers may wrangle on whether or not I am correct.) It was written as a serious show, an action drama. It didn't really cross over with any shows, but was in-continuity with at least 1 show that aired after this show ceased production. (But not any cartoons, AFAIK.) The last episode of the series was planned to be the last episode. It was set a decade after the rest of the series, and was titled "The Beginning..." The show borrowed freely from other media, but was as much inspired by them as anything else, taking plenty of dramatic license, which resulted in a better show. Despite this show using largely unknown actors, it could be argued that they used at least 3 actors, well-known from science fiction, in recurring roles. One of those actors had been on television, and in a major movie series, (a trilogy, sorta.) The other 2, despite not having worked together previously, were both well-known from roles in well-known Science Fiction franchises (she was from "Firefly", he was from "Star Trek Deep Space 9.".) Across one season, an electric light shone outdoors was a significant item.
This show had good ratings and was probably watched regularly by al least 1/2 of the regulars in this thread.
(Again, this was not a legal/law firm show, nor does it contain "Law" or any variation in the name, nor do lawyers play any significant role in the story. If you still think they do after this, it's not because I didn't try to warn you off a dead end. None of this parenthesis is any sort of clue, I'm just trying to head off digressions into the wrong shows.)
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Raf
That leaves
GOTHAM
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GeorgeStGeorge
By me, I think he's got it!
It did run five seasons and featured Morena Baccarin (Firefly) and Alexander Siddig (Deep Space 9).
George
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WordWolf
Lawyers may argue whether the show "Gotham" is named after "Gotham City" because "City" isn't in the show's title. The rest of us can agree. The Batman 66 show does not have its own wiki, but it's part of the "Batman wiki" with entries for the "Dozier-verse" for William Dozier's show/movie. The obscure show was "Gotham Knights", which lasted a short time (and has its own wiki.)
So does GOTHAM. Gotham was an action drama, and was only in-continuity with the later show, "Pennyworth." It was not in-continuity with any of the cartoons.) The entire show was before Bruce Wayne became Batman- except for the final episode of the series, "The Beginning." In addition to Morena Beccarin as Leslie Thompkins and Sid as Ra's al Ghul (brilliant casting there, all he was missing was the beard things to look like he stepped off the pages), we had Fish Mooney played by Jada Pinkett-Smith, as seen on television and the Matrix movies (and the Oscars.) During the "No Man's Land" storyline, the only place with electricity was where the good guys had set up the generator, so they shone a light into the sky at night to show that someplace still had power, and as a symbol of hope. It was a simple light, not one with a bat symbol on it or anything. (Well, they weren't calling him or anything.) Except for Human and Waysider, I'm confident the rest of us watched the show at least intermittently.
That's all the clues. It's Raf's turn!
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WordWolf
So, Raf was correct.
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