Old Time Radio DRAGNET Police Academy Mario Koski
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Dragnet is an
American radio series, enacting the cases of a dedicated
Los Angeles police detective,
Sergeant Joe Friday, and his partners. The show takes its name from the police term "dragnet", meaning a system of coordinated measures for apprehending criminals or suspects.
Dragnet is perhaps the most famous and influential police procedural drama in media history. The series gave audience members a feel for the boredom and drudgery, as well as the danger and heroism, of police work. Dragnet earned praise for improving the public opinion of police officers.[1]
Actor and producer
Jack Webb's aims in Dragnet were for realism and unpretentious acting. He achieved both goals, and Dragnet remains a key influence on subsequent police dramas in many media.
Dragnet was created and produced by Jack Webb, who starred as stoic Sergeant Joe Friday.
Webb had starred in a few mostly short-lived radio programs, and Dragnet would make him a major media personality in his era.
Dragnet origins were in Webb's small role as a police forensic scientist in the
1948 film He Walked by Night, itself inspired by the violent 1946 crime spree of
Erwin Walker, a disturbed
World War II veteran and former
Glendale California police department employee. The film was depicted in semidocumentary style, and
Marty Wynn (a
LAPD sergeant from the
Robbery Division) was a technical advisor on the film.
Inspired by Wynn's accounts of actual cases and criminal investigative procedure, Webb convinced Wynn that day-to-day activities of police officers could be realistically depicted in a broadcast series, without the forced melodrama heard in the numerous private-detective serials then common in radio programming. (Interestingly enough, the film contained two elements that would transfer over to the Dragnet television series: the opening text overlay containing the phrase mentioning that the story is true and "only the names are changed --- to protect the innocent", which was then immediately followed by various shots of
Los Angeles with a narrator beginning with the iconic phrase "This is the city.
Los Angeles, California.")
Webb frequently visited police headquarters, rode along on night patrols with Sgt. Wynn and his partner
Officer Vance Brasher, and attended Police Academy courses to learn authentic jargon and details that could be featured in a radio program. When he proposed Dragnet to
NBC officials, they were not especially impressed; radio was aswarm with private investigators and crime dramas, such as Webb's earlier
Pat Novak for Hire. That program didn’t last long, but Webb received high marks for his role as the titular private investigator, and NBC agreed to a limited run for Dragnet.
With writer
James E. Moser, Webb prepared an audition recording, then sought the LAPD's endorsement; he wanted to portray cases from official files to demonstrate the steps taken by police officers during investigations. The official response was initially lukewarm, but in 1949
LAPD Chief Clemence B. Horrall gave Webb the endorsement he sought.
Police wanted control over the program's sponsor, and insisted that police not be depicted unflatteringly. This would lead to criticism, as less flattering departmental aspects, such as LAPD's racial segregation policies, were never addressed.
Old Time Radio DRAGNET Police Academy Mario Koski
Old Time Radio DRAGNET Police Academy Mario Koski
- published: 16 Sep 2015
- views: 156