#also bricker and stubing are in love
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lizard-speed · 3 years ago
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Since I subjected ya’ll (how dramatic, ya’ll) to my MTMS edition of gayness here’s a new one!
I present: Let’s See How Gay Malcolm Can Make This Old TV Show: The Love Boat Edition!
Captain Stubing: Heteroflexible (he/him)- very likely to change, events have occurred which are making me change my mind
Doctor Adam “Doc” Bricker: Non-binary (he/him) polyamorous omnisexual (I’m reconsidering the polyam hc though)
Yeoman Purser Burl “Gopher” Smith: Gay trans man (he/him)
Isaac Washington: Bisexual man (he/him)
Julie McCoy: Sapphic-oriented aroace (she/her) 
Vicki Stubing: Pansexual demigirl (she/they)
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kwebtv · 4 years ago
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Gavin MacLeod (born Allan George See; February 28, 1931 – May 29, 2021) Film and television actor, Christian activist, and author whose career spanned six decades. He also appeared as a guest on several talk, variety, and religious programs.
MacLeod made his television debut in 1957 on The Walter Winchell File at the age of 26.  He was soon noticed by Blake Edwards, who in 1958 cast him in the pilot episode of his NBC series Peter Gunn, two guest roles on the Edwards CBS series Mr. Lucky in 1959,
Between 1957 and 1961, MacLeod made several television appearances. He was cast as the devious Dandy Martin in the 1960 episode, "Yankee Confederate", of the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews and starring alongside Tod Andrews and Elaine Devry.
In December 1961, he landed a guest role on The Dick Van Dyke Show as Mel's cousin Maxwell Cooley, a wholesale jeweler. This was his first time working with Mary Tyler Moore. MacLeod had three guest appearances on Perry Mason: in 1961 he played Lawrence Comminger in "The Case of the Grumbling Grandfather", and in 1965 he played Mortimer Hershey in "The Case of the Grinning Gorilla", and Dan Platte in "The Case of the Runaway Racer". He played the role of a drug pusher, "Big Chicken", in two episodes of the first season of Hawaii Five-O. His other guest roles included ones on The Untouchables, Dr. Kildare, Rawhide, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., The Man from U.N.C.L.E., My Favorite Martian, Hogan's Heroes, Combat!, The Big Valley, The Andy Griffith Show, It Takes a Thief, The Flying Nun, The King of Queens, and That '70s Show.
His first regular television role began in 1962 as Joseph "Happy" Haines on McHale's Navy; Between the years of 1965 and 1969, MacLeod appeared in many weekly episodes in multiple roles on the television series Hogan's Heroes including Major Zolle (season 1, episode 19), General Metzger (season 3, episode 27) Major Kiegel (season 4, episode 1), and General von Rauscher (season 4, episode 23). Each role was usually a stern and discerning officer of the Schutzstaffel (SS), Luftwaffe or Geheime Staatspolizei (Gestapo) which are vastly different in nature from the lovable characters he portrayed in his subsequent TV roles.
MacLeod's breakout role as Murray Slaughter on CBS' The Mary Tyler Moore Show won him lasting fame and two Golden Globe nominations. His starring role as Captain Stubing on The Love Boat, his next TV series was broadcast in 90 countries worldwide, between 1977 and 1986 (9 seasons). His work on that show earned him three Golden Globe nominations. Co-starring with him was a familiar actor and best friend Bernie Kopell as Dr. Adam Bricker and  Ted Lange as bartender Isaac Washington. (Wikipedia)
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eclecticanalyst · 4 years ago
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We’re Expecting You...To Boldly Go [part 2]
In my last post, I expounded on the similarities in the general premise and structure of The Love Boat and Star Trek: The Next Generation, two shows that on the surface seem not to have much in common but on closer examination have some unexpected similarities. In my follow-up post on this theme, I will be drawing parallels between the main/regular characters of both shows. The crew lineup on each ship can be broken down into six character functions/profiles: The Captain, The Captain’s Confidant, The Big Brother, The Two Buds, The Chick, and The Kid.
The Captain
Star Trek TNG: Captain Jean-Luc Picard
The Love Boat: Captain Merrill Stubing
“The Captain” is...the captain! Beyond his role as the primary authority figure, he can be characterized in the following ways. Being the one to whom the rest of the crew reports, he is a bit socially removed from the rest of the main characters. While they can pal around with each other, they still treat him with a bit more deference even as he comes to be just as integral a part of their found family as the rest of them. The Captain can be rather intimidating at times—especially in the early days, when he had a tendency to be overly gruff with his crew. Part of that gruffness is the fact that he has very high standards for the people who serve under him. At the same time, however, he cares deeply for those people and is willing to put himself on the line for them, even bending the rules a bit in order to help them out of a difficult spot. He’s full of thoughtful advice should one of his crew ask for it, and is the most likely of the crew to give speeches about moral responsibility. He also has a playful streak, which he keeps under wraps but uses to mess with his crew from time to time. In terms of appearance, he’s older than the rest of the cast and he is bald(ing). He’s played by the best actor of the cast—Patrick Stewart is, of course, Patrick Stewart, I don’t think I really need to say more there, and Gavin MacLeod was a veteran actor (probably best known at that point for his role as Murray on The Mary Tyler Moore Show), able to handle both the comic and the dramatic whenever needed.
The Captain’s Confidant
Star Trek TNG: Dr. Beverly Crusher
The Love Boat: Dr. Adam “Doc” Bricker
I could have called this character profile “The Doctor,” following the same pattern as “The Captain,” but there was another aspect to Beverly and Doc that I wanted to draw attention to, beyond their being the respective healers of their crews. Both Beverly and Doc have a slightly different relationship with the Captain than the other members of the crew. They are a bit closer to the Captain, able to address him easily as a friend instead of as a superior officer if the situation calls for it. Notice that when working, Beverly will address Picard as “Captain” and “sir,” but when it’s just the two of them chatting in a more intimate setting she calls him “Jean-Luc.” Beverly is also one of the few people on board that Picard is comfortable with opening up to regarding his own insecurities or worries, while he takes more care to maintain his “self-assured captain” persona with everyone else. The same dynamic plays out between Stubing and Doc: there are several instances of Doc addressing his friend as “Merrill”—which none of the other members of the crew would even consider doing—and the power difference between the two is not as pronounced as it is between the captain and the other crew members. Whenever Captain Stubing has a personal problem, he goes to Doc for advice, and vice versa. Dr. Crusher and Captain Picard have a history, having been friends long before he took command of the Enterprise. In the same vein, Doc seems to know Captain Stubing’s past more intimately than the rest of the crew, as there are a few episodes in which the two of them discuss Captain Stubing’s alcohol addiction and current status as a teetotaler as if this is something Doc has always known about Merrill.
The Big Brother
Star Trek TNG: William Riker
The Love Boat: Adam “Doc” Bricker
So this is cheating a bit because I already have Doc listed under a character profile above, but TNG’s main cast has more people than that of TLB, so a one-to-one mapping wasn’t going to happen anyway. Doc’s “Captain’s Confidant” role deals with his relationship with the captain, and his “Big Brother” role deals with his relationship with the rest of the regulars. The fact that Doc is a bit older than Julie, Isaac, and Gopher means that even though he, like the rest of them, is under the supervision of the captain, he has a slight position of seniority over the other three. He balances the by-turns mischievous and responsible aspects of an older brother figure—he’ll tease Julie about her latest infatuation, and set up elaborate pranks to mess with Gopher, yet whenever Gopher and Isaac get swept up in some not-well-thought-out scheme, he’s the level-headed one who tries to point out that they’ve gotten carried away—or sometimes refuses to get involved altogether. William Riker is, of course, first officer of the Enterprise, and therefore has the same seniority-among-underlings position (in a more official chain of command capacity than Doc does). His big-brother-ness manifests as the poker-playing, jazz-loving guy who will do things like give Worf’s son music recordings that he knows Worf will hate one day but get actively upset and almost personally offended at the idea of Data getting hurt the next.
Not necessarily related to the “Big Brother” role, but another little parallel between Doc and Riker that I would like to point out—they are each the designated ladies’ man of their ships, yet both are able to completely switch to focusing solely on their job responsibilities the moment it is called for. (Honestly, Doc always struck me as going beyond “ladies’ man” and skirting dangerously close to “creep” territory at times, but I did appreciate how he would always drop everything the instant there was any sort of medical issue on the Princess.)
The Two Buds
Star Trek TNG: Geordi La Forge and Data
The Love Boat: Isaac Washington and Burl “Gopher” Smith
Although both the TNG and TLB crews form a group of close friends, The Two Buds are best friends. They are the two most likely people to hang out together in their down time, the two who understand each other the best, the two most sympathetic to each other’s problems and most likely to indulge the other long after everyone else would have put their foot down. When Gopher gets some conspiracy theory into his head about a passenger, Isaac will hear him out and sometimes even help him investigate. When Data wants to do some questionable experimentation on his positronic net, Geordi is there with a tricorder making sure the whole thing doesn’t go completely haywire. Data once said that he didn’t know what a friend was until he met Geordi, and Isaac once told Gopher that he (Gopher) is the only one Isaac would resign in solidarity for. All four men/androids have a tendency to get a little too wrapped up in their obsession of the week—see Isaac’s novel-writing attempts, Geordi’s holographic Leah Brahms, Gopher’s conspiracy theories, and about half of anything Data does.
Each pair also consists of one white guy and one Black guy. (Obviously, Data is an android and therefore is not technically any human race or ethnicity, but he’s played by a white guy and his artificial skin is paler than anyone else’s skin on the senior staff.) The white guy representatives, Gopher and Data, are almost polar opposites—Data is calm and logical, and Captain Picard trusts him implicitly, while Gopher is a goof who freaks out easily and who is often upset with the way Captain Stubing dismisses him (those dismissals are especially prominent in the first few seasons—Gopher does mellow out later on). But they do have some similarities, one of the most striking being that they both struggle with appropriate social behavior as well as their own emotions. This is more readily apparent with Data, of course, who is literally not human and is trying his best to understand the nuances of things like humor and love, constantly asking his friends to explain behaviors they take for granted. Gopher’s struggles are more understated—he has a tendency to make comments and observations that the rest of the crew find slightly tasteless, he goes into several anxious tailspins over the course of the show, and he at one point believes his emotional attachments to his friends compromise his ability to fulfill his job duties. Both Data and Gopher use their respective best friends—each of whom are the more level-headed of the pair—as a steadying force.
Now for the characteristics shared by those respective best friends. The Black guy’s job responsibilities root him in a specific place and often set him slightly apart from the main action. While Geordi can and does go up to the bridge on several occasions, as Chief of Engineering he spends most of his time hanging around the warp core, communicating with the bridge over the com system. Meanwhile, Isaac can be seen wandering hallways and so forth, but he spends most of his time behind the bar, whether that’s in the Acapulco Lounge, on the Lido Deck, or in Pirate’s Cove. The rest of the crew, despite having nominal work stations like the Enterprise bridge or the Pacific Princess purser’s lobby, are seen to roam more extensively. (I’m pretty sure we never see Julie’s office.) Isaac is busy serving drinks in pretty much every episode while Doc and Gopher are chatting and dancing with passengers on the dance floor of the Acapulco Lounge. The Black guy also gets the short end of the stick in the romance department. When you see a Black guest actor on the opening credits of The Love Boat, it’s a good bet that Isaac will be involved in their storyline. If it’s just one Black woman, there’s a 99% chance that Isaac will be involved in her story, and his involvement will be as her love interest. I remember one particularly glaring example of the show going to extreme lengths to avoid even hinting that Isaac could potentially do something vaguely romantic or sexual with a white woman—Julie’s hosting her high school reunion on the ship, and there are a few scenes where everyone is discoing in the Acapulco Lounge. Isaac gets out on the dance floor, and conveniently some random Black woman appears out of nowhere as his dance partner. This woman is not named or acknowledged at any other point in the episode. Over on the Enterprise, Geordi isn’t restricted along race lines like Isaac, but I find it highly suspicious that the one Black guy is the least successful in romance out of everyone on the senior staff. Geordi struggles to even start up a conversation with women he’s attracted to, let alone flirt with them. Data has a better romance track record than Geordi does, and Data usually ends up in a romantic entanglement by accident! It’s as if the show was afraid to let Geordi enjoy those kinds of relationships to the same degree as the rest of the crew, which is a different kind of restriction than Isaac’s, but still a restriction nonetheless.
The Chick
Star Trek TNG: Deanna Troi
The Love Boat: Julie McCoy
The standard lineup for both TNG and The Love Boat consisted two female main characters, thus allowing the ladies to gossip about “girly” things in keeping with gender stereotypes, but Vicki was a preteen/teenager and Beverly had a sort of matron vibe going on, which left Julie and Troi to be the respective sex appeal characters out of the main cast. The Chick has non-standard dress that sets her apart from the others and their status as officers. While Doc, Gopher, and Captain Stubing wore nautical stripes and white uniforms (and Isaac usually had a variation on this outfit, wearing a red or blue jacket), with very little in the way of costume changes whether they were greeting boarding passengers, chatting on the Lido deck, or dancing in the Acapulco Lounge, Julie had no stripes to speak of. She would wear a (feminine) uniform at boarding, switch to a casual outfit during the rest of the day, and was always wearing a gown of some sort in the evenings. Deanna Troi for her part cycled through purple jumpsuits and asymmetrical dresses, her Starfleet badge precariously pinned to her neckline. We didn’t even get to see the pips indicating her rank until she was finally given (in story, ordered into) a normal uniform in season six.
The Chick gets saddled with way too many romance plots, some creepier than others. Giving Troi something substantial to do in an episode usually consisted of making her the love interest of whoever happened to be boarding the Enterprise that week, like the ambassador with the telepathic interpreters or the quarter-Betazoid interplanetary negotiator. Deanna also got her mind invaded by a man who was interested in her, prematurely aged by a man who took advantage of her, and kidnapped by Ferengi (who have a disturbing species-wide infatuation with non-Ferengi women). I’m not as upset about Julie having several romance-related plots, as romance was the name of the game on The Love Boat and the men on the crew had their own share of romantic entanglements—but I do find issue with the fact that when Julie was in love she always seemed on the verge of getting married and leaving the ship, which was a vibe we didn’t really get from, say, Doc or Gopher when their love lives turned particularly intense. In terms of creepiness, Julie had to deal with fending off the extremely aggressive advances of Captain Stubing’s uncle, a computer programmer who rigged his dating algorithm to ensure he matched with her, and a college acquaintance of Gopher who actually came to her door to badger her as she was getting dressed.
The Kid
Star Trek TNG: Wesley Crusher
The Love Boat: Vicki Stubing
For some reason, both of these shows thought it necessary to have a preteen/teenager in the cast whose character has way more responsibility than is realistic for either a cruise ship or a pseudomilitary starship. Instead of Vicki wearing a uniform and checking in guests on the Pacific Princess, we really should have seen Julie’s or Gopher’s staff fulfilling check-in duty (Doc and Isaac were also too often seen checking in passengers, which I will say again is a duty that on a real cruise ship would definitely not fall to either the ship’s doctor or chief bartender, but we’re talking about Vicki at the moment). Wesley, meanwhile, was made Acting Ensign on the Enterprise, saving the ship way more than he should have and probably earning the ire of all the official ensigns who actually went to Starfleet Academy and were losing precious time at the conn due to Picard’s favoritism.
Speaking of Picard, The Captain has a paternal relationship with The Kid—literally in Vicki Stubing’s case, emotionally in Wesley Crusher’s. He is very concerned with imbuing The Kid with strong morals, and has a vested interest in The Kid’s upbringing and making sure The Kid has a bright future. Meanwhile, the rest of the main crew are like an assortment of aunts and uncles, being the cool, approachable sources of advice when The Captain’s not around. In fact, The Kid hardly seems to have any friends their own age. Instead, they hang out with the adult crew members and get involved in their social drama, which may or may not have always been appropriate.
Isn’t there someone you forgot?
The TNG fans among you may now be thinking to yourselves, “What about Worf?” Alas, there seems to be no satisfactory Worf counterpart on The Love Boat. After all, there isn’t really any need for a tactical officer on a cruise ship, so a warrior-type personality is not represented on the Pacific Princess crew. Other Worf characteristics would be that of an outsider, or one who is occasionally not sure if they truly belong on the ship, but everyone on the Princess seems pretty happy to be there. I guess in a pinch I could say Ace, the late-addition ship’s photographer, might serve as Worf’s counterpart, but other than the fact that Ace’s family is rich and it is established that he doesn’t really need a job on the ship to get by, I’m not sure there’s much of an “outsider” status brought to the table here. I also haven’t watched enough Ace episodes to have a really good read on his character.
 Thus ends my Love Boat/TNG comparison! It was nice to finally get this analysis out of my head and onto the page.
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narcisbolgor-blog · 7 years ago
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‘The Love Boat’ cast reunites on ‘Today’ more than 40 years after show first aired
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'The Love Boat' cast reunites
More than 40 years after the show first aired, the original cast of the beloved 1970s TV series 'The Love Boat' reunited on the 'Today' show. The cast had just received an honorary star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in partnership with Princess Cruises.
All aboard! The cast of "The Love Boat" is back on deck. 
On Friday morning, the original cast of the beloved 1970s TV series "The Love Boat" reunited for one more cruise on the "Today" show. 
More than 40 years after the show premiered, the famous cast ‒ including Gavin MacLeod, Ted Lange, Bernie Kopell, Lauren Tewes, Jill Whelan and Fred Grandy ‒ appeared on the morning show live from Los Angeles, where on May 10 they received an honorary star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in partnership with Princess Cruises.  
For their reunion, MacLeod, known for his iconic role of Capt. Merrill Stubing, donned his signature captain hat while Lange, who played the ship's spirited bartender Isaac Washington, sported his signature red jacket and mustache. Koppell, who played the ship's doctor, Adam Bricker, wore his signature specs. 
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"The Love Boat" cast awaits the unveiling on their Hollywood Walk of Fame Star.  (AP)
Also in attendance was the ship's cruise director, Julie McCoy, played by Tewes, the captain's angelic daughter; Vicki, who was played by Whelan; and Grandy, who played Yeoman Burl Smith but was known for his character nickname, "Gopher."
Prior to reuniting on "Today," the cast sat down with morning hosts Hoda Kotb and Savannah Guthrie to talk about the significance of the classic TV show in May of last year.
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'The Love Boat' celebrates its 40th anniversary
When asked how often the cast gets together, Whelan said, "We were all together last night at my apartment." 
But the fun-loving cast, who went on to tape eight seasons of the hit series, admitted that they didn't know that the show was going to be a success when it first aired in 1977, produced by Aaron Spelling. 
"We got the worst reviews," Koppell said. 
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The show's cast on the "Today" show on May 23, 2017.  (AP)
According to MacLeod, he knew right from the start "The Love Boat" was classic material. "We had a reading in the office, just the guys. And we finished the reading ... and I'm walking down and a guy says, 'Well, I hope this goes well," and I said, 'I'm telling you we're gonna go at least seven years.'"
Grandy said the show turned out to be such a success partly because there was nothing like it on the air.
"It was romance, at the time there were only cop shows and sitcoms on the air," he said. "So, this show filled some kind of need that only Aaron Spelling understood." 
You can find Morgan M. Evans on Twitter @themizfactor.
On Our Radar
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Lauer caught on tape
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apcoid · 5 years ago
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The Love Boat opens its ship doors to new stories, characters and match-3 puzzle fun!
Captain Stubing is ready to set sail again, and he’s hired you as his new Happiness Officer! Help the original crew from the famous TV show decorate, design and depart on a new adventure full of fun and romance!
Match colorful inflatable blocks to make them pop like bubbles as you play match-3 puzzle levels with unique new casual gameplay mechanics.
By completing levels, you’ll collect Stars that unlock new chapters and episodes, where you’re free to renovate ship amenities such as the pool or guest rooms. Each chapter unfolds an original story involving popular Love Boat crewmates and guests.
LOVE BOAT GAME FEATURES
- Match colorful inflatable blocks in classic match-3 puzzle gameplay that’s jam-packed with fun and new game features such as the Color Wheel. Make combos and chains to charge the meter and clear the screen in a fantastic match-3 puzzle party.
- Collect Stars as you play to progress through levels and quests, such as building a new poolside cocktail bar for Isaac or a fancy new restaurant for your chef. You’ll also discover new missions, such as accomplishing Julie's dream to organize a Three Mermaids Water Show.
- Feel free to choose your own unique decorations and furniture to design a fabulous cruise liner, and create your own style of luxury decor.
- Collect boosters to crush even the hardest level you’ll face.
- Get hooked by the story, featuring a star-studded cast of guests in addition to the original Love Boat characters, including Captain Stubing, sweet-as-candy Julie McCoy, the always smooth Isaac, amorous Dr. Bricker, and fun-lovin' Gopher!
- The TV legend, loved by millions, continues its romantically comedic moments full of twists on this unforgettable dreamboat.
- Play tons of fun and addictive game levels packed with rubber ducks and power-ups to help you crush every block in your way.
- Free yourself from life at home and travel to uncharted island-escape locations. There's a new paradise on the horizon every chapter!
- Unlock new ship expansions such as the Dining Area… Just keep Gopher away from the free candy!
- Compact download size and the ability to play offline means anyone can enjoy the high-seas fun anytime!
Download Love Boat - Puzzle Cruise NOW and make every day a dream cruise!
For fans of free to play fun, match 3 puzzle pop action, celebrity characters, classic TV show comedy, bursting blocks, paradise locations, having a blast with celebrity guests, island excitement, color matching puzzles and happy stories that drop you into an escape far from home.
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adrian-paul-botta · 7 years ago
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The Love Boat – TV Series (1977–1987) ABC television Network
Love is in the air…Well, not only in the air but also in the sea! Passengers who search for romantic nights aboard a beautiful ship traveling to tropical or mysterious countries, decide to pass their vacation aboard the “Love Boat” where Gopher, Dr.Adam, Isaac, Julie and Captain Stubing try their best to please them and sometimes help them fall in love. Things are not always so easy but in the end love wins and everybody leaves the dreamboat satisfied…
Isaac’s Teacher/Seal of Approval/The Successor
Episode aired 10 January 1981
A woman (Florence Henderson), who believes she is cursed and will die prematurely, is determined to find her husband (Jeffrey Tambor) a new mate, and he chooses a young passenger (Christina Hart); Isaac (Ted Lange) is afraid of running into his old high school teacher, when she (Lillian Gish) and her grandson (Reb Brown) come aboard; a seal (The Seal Shirley) is jealous when her trainer (Donald O’Connor) and another passenger (Georgia Engel) get together.
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R.S. Allen … (written by) (segment “The Curse of the Dumbrowskis”) Wilford Lloyd Baumes … (developed by) (as W.L. Baumes) Harvey Bullock … (written by) (segment “The Curse of the Dumbrowskis”) Madora Mckenzie … (written by) (segment “Seal of Approval”) Sidney Morse … (story editor) (as Sid Morse) Andy Ruben … (written by) (segment “Seal of Approval”) Jeraldine Saunders … (suggested by) Lloyd J. Schwartz … (written by) (segment “Isaac’s Secret”)
Gavin MacLeod – Captain Merrill Stubing Bernie Kopell – Doctor Adam Bricker Fred Grandy – Ship’s Purser ‘Gopher’ Smith Ted Lange – Bartender Isaac Washington Jill Whelan – Vicki Stubing Lauren Tewes – Cruise Director Julie McCoy Georgia Engel – Karen Hughes Lillian Gish – Mrs. Williams Florence Henderson – Harriett Rogers Donald O’Connor – Oscar Tilton Jeffrey Tambor – Mr. Harold Rogers Christina Hart – Cindy Sterling
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Produced by R.S. Allen … producer (as Ray Allen) Harvey Bullock … producer Henry Colman … producer Douglas S. Cramer … executive producer Hudson Hickman … associate producer Aaron Spelling … executive producer
Isaac’s Teacher/Seal of Approval/The Successor (1981) Runtime 1 hr (60 min) Sound Mix Mono Color Color Aspect Ratio 1.33 : 1 Negative Format 35 mm Printed Film Format 35 mm (source: IMDB)
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The Love Boat is an American comedy/drama television series set on luxury passenger cruise ship S.S. Pacific Princess, which aired on the ABC television network from May 5, 1977 until May 24, 1986; plus, four three-hour long specials aired in 1986, 1987, and 1990. The series revolves around the ship’s captain Merrill Stubing (played by Gavin MacLeod) and a handful of its crew, with several passengers—played by various guest star actors for each episode—having romantic and humorous adventures. It was part of ABC’s popular Saturday-night lineup of the time, which also included Fantasy Island until that series ended two years earlier in 1984.
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The original 1976 made-for-TV movie on which the show was based (also titled The Love Boat) was itself based on the nonfiction book Love Boats by Jeraldine Saunders, a real-life cruise director on a passenger cruise ship line. It was followed by two more TV-made-for movies (titled The Love Boat II and The New Love Boat), all before the series began its first season in September 1977.
The executive producer for the series was Aaron Spelling, who produced several TV series for Four Star Television, and American Broadcasting Company (ABC) from the 1960s into the 1980s.
In 1997, the episode with segment titles “Hidden Treasure”, “Picture from the Past”, and “Ace’s Salary” (season 9, episode 3) was ranked No. 82 on TV Guide’s 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time from TV Guide magazine. The Love Boat ran for nine seasons plus four specials. Another made-for-TV movie, titled The Love Boat: A Valentine Voyage, starring four of the original cast members, aired finally on February 12, 1990. (source: Wikipedia)
The series was filmed primarily on sets in southern California’s—20th Century Fox Studios for seasons one through five, and the Old Warner Brothers Hollywood Studios for the remainder of the series. The “star of the show”, the cruise ship itself, after being renamed the MS Pacific and being sold then owned by another cruise line in Spain, the now-world famous Pacific Princess was retired to Turkey in 2013, where she was scrapped by a ship breaking company after no further buyer could be found.
Another unique aspect of The Love Boat was its writing format. Every episode contained several storylines, each written by a different set of writers working on one group of guest stars.
The Love Boat Season I, Episode 1
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The Love Boat – TV Series (1977–1987) The Love Boat - TV Series (1977–1987) ABC television Network Love is in the air...Well, not only in the air but also in the sea!
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lizard-speed · 3 years ago
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More In-Depth Love Boat Headcanons
I’ve had these for a while and it took me SO LONG to write them AND I’ve put in too much effort for this stupid little tv show so I’m gonna share them 
(also I’ve gotten a few notes on my basic hc rundown post which is weird???? anyway, I digress)
Merrill Stubing: Heteroflexible Man
Stubing never questioned his sexuality. He was raised in a traditional American household. He was barely even aware of queer people. He took no notice of them. Didn’t have any specific bigotry to them— just generally ignorant. He went through life expecting to get married to a beautiful woman and have a few kids. However, the sea was his first love and what he kept going back to. Any prospective partner he had wanted to stay on land, not live and raise a family on a ship. So Stubing remained relatively single. When he hired Doctor Bricker he didn’t think anything of it. Sure the man got many ladies but that wasn’t unusual. They became close friends and he was very fond of Adam. After a few years, he began to have some doubts. His feelings towards his friend had grown. He thought he was handsome, good-looking. Fantasizing about dancing with him in the moonlight. He tried to dismiss it but it wouldn’t go away. And yet he still insisted he was straight. He’d never felt like this for another man before. One night, after a particularly difficult cruise, they hooked up. In the morning, riddled with guilt, Merrill tried to explain to Adam what had happened but to his surprise, Adam wasn’t angry. They mutually agreed that although they were attracted to one another, a relationship wouldn’t be a viable option. Adam also explained his polyamory which Stubing understood surprisingly well. After a few weeks of hookups, however, Merrill found himself thinking of the man more and more. He eventually confessed to Adam that although they had to hide, he wanted them to be together. Properly. He said that he didn’t want to ignore Adam’s polyamory so he’d allow him to continue to be romantic with others (it would also look strange if suddenly he started not seducing women) but Merrill wouldn’t go out with anyone else. They agreed to this and we’re satisfied. Eventually, they told Vicki who confessed her pansexuality to them, and over time and many years, everyone came out to each other.
Doctor Adam Bricker: Non-Binary Polyamorous Omnisexual
Doc had always been a very flirty person, full of charm and charisma. He’d always found most people attractive and had crushes left and right. He’d never felt any guilt over liking men, it was just sort of another fact of life for him. He didn’t hide it per se but he also never had any boyfriends as there weren’t any out gay men in his small hometown. As for his polyamorous nature, he never entirely understood why people were only limited to one partner. He knew it was for religious reasons and since he was rather atheistic, he thought life would be better if he had more than one partner. He tried explaining this to each partner he had but they all just misinterpreted his words and thought he was a cheater which became a sort of reputation of his. When he left his home for college he decided to bury that part of himself to avoid that humiliation. I’m college he found more freedom with being omnisexual. He had a few male partners but overall knew he liked women more. He went to an all-boys medical school and there he started to experience some uncomfortableness with being labeled a man. He knew he wasn’t a woman but liked dressing up in drag and being referred to in feminine ways. He didn’t like feminine pronouns though as they always felt mocking and never right. He didn’t identify as “non-binary” however as that wasn’t really a concept at the time and simply settled on the fact that he was “just Adam”. On the Pacific Princess, he became very good friends with Captain Stubing before becoming attracted to him. After they got together (which was explained in Stubing’s comment), he continued his relations with other women and (rarely) other men. Stubing, he found, was the first partner who genuinely understood polyamory despite his very monogamous ways.
Gopher: Trans Man and Gay
Gopher knew he was a boy from a young age and was always described as being a “tomboy”— a label he didn’t hate because it was technically calling him a boy. He always wore shorts and kept his hair in a baseball cap. He flat out refused to wear dresses until about middle school when he started to get interested in boys and thought he had to be feminine to get them to like him. When he was in high school he discovered queer people in general (mostly due to the Stonewall Riots) and figured out that transsexuality (to use historically accurate terminology) existed. After he graduated high school he went awol and joined an underground queer group where he met doctors and such who gave him hormones and got top surgery. He received bottom surgery a little while later but told any women he ever had a relationship with that he was infertile and thus, unable to get them pregnant.  He gave himself the name Burl after his paternal grandfather who fought in WWI.  The nickname Gopher came from the friends he made before reuniting with his family.  After his physical transition was completed he began living in San Francisco to “test out” his new self in a relatively safe environment.  After he was confident enough, he went back home to a rather shocked mother and father.  His sister Jennifer was quite young at the time so she didn’t find it strange.  As Gopher had always had a strong relationship with his mother, she was more accepting than his father.  She didn’t entirely understand but she realized that it sort of made sense as Gopher had always been a masculine child.  And, she realized, it would be strange for her to keep referring to Gopher as her daughter.  His father, on the other hand, was a lot less accepting.  As he had never really known Gopher as a kid, he didn’t understand why he was trans.  He had always seen him as a feminine girl, not his tomboy side.  In private, he continued to be cold to him though in public he referred to him as “he” and his son– again, to avoid confusion and isolation.  He was touched that Gopher named himself Burl though he would only tell him that years later.  Gopher became more and more distant from his father but deep down all he wanted was to be accepted by him.  He then went to college at an all-boys school where his secret was never discovered. On Mothers Day in 1979, Gopher invited both of his parents aboard the Pacific Princess.  He hadn’t spoken to his father in a few years and hoped to repair the damage.  Things were awkward between them and Gopher spent most of his time with his mother who now saw him only as her son.  His father spent his time watching the two of them and conversing with the crew in an attempt to learn things about his son.  He found that they spoke highly of him and it caused Mr. Smith to reconsider how he saw Gopher.  When they eventually confronted one another, he apologized profusely to Gopher while he explained that all he wanted was to be a good son and do father-son things.  They made up and Mr. Smith called him Gopher for the first time.  He didn’t tell anyone else he was trans until he met Julie and they confided in each other their secrets. Ever since he transitioned he was acutely aware he was only attracted to men but had a lot more difficulty accepting his homosexuality. He consistently fooled himself into “falling for” women as a manner to try to avoid his homosexuality. Only after talking extensively to Julie was he able to finally accept himself.  
Isaac: Bisexual Man
Isaac always knew he liked men. His family was pretty open-minded when he was a kid so he sort of understood that sometimes men liked other men but due to society outside the home he knew the world wasn’t super accepting of it. He wasn’t exceedingly supportive of queer people and did feel slightly ashamed of his bisexuality. He did know, however, that he liked women which helped ease his guilt as he felt like he could sometimes act on his homosexual urges while knowing he was still mostly attracted to women. He had a brief relationship with a man when he was in high school. He had met the guy at the movie theater he was working at. Unfortunately, the boy moved away at the end of the summer and Isaac never saw him again. In his young adulthood, he went to a few gay bars occasionally but mostly hid his attraction to men. When he was hired on the Pacific Princess he almost immediately started crushing on Gopher and eventually, Julie found out. Luckily she was understanding and he was able to confide in her. What he didn’t know was that Julie was also talking to Gopher and that he was in love with Isaac. Eventually, Julie helped them get together.
Julie McCoy: Sapphic-Oriented AroAce
Julie had never liked anyone romantically. She always assumed there was something wrong with her as she wasn’t getting crushes like her friends. Eventually, she came to understand that she simply wasn’t “cut out” for romance and tried to leave that out of her life. She was very popular in high school due to her good looks but would refuse any offers from boys to take her to dances or on dates. This resulted in her getting a reputation of being “cold and callous”— something she resented as she was actually incredibly friendly but simply wasn’t interested in romance. When she went off to college she found that although she still didn’t experience romantic or sexual attraction, she found women more aesthetically appealing. She tried to convince herself that she was a lesbian but it didn’t work as she never did feel like she romantically loved any of her partners. She much preferred to be in the company and live with her friends than bother with romantic relationships. When she got her job aboard the Pacific Princess, she took up a cover of being attracted to men to protect herself from being labeled as cold again. One day, after one too many drinks Gopher confessed everything to her and for once, she felt able to talk to him about it as well. Once they had sobered up they clarified what they had said and made a pact that if society wasn’t better for them by the time they left the liner, they would get married and move in together simply to protect each other’s identities.
Vicki Stubing: Pansexual Demigirl
Vicki was raised very conservatively. Her aunt was a devout Christian and she was told from a young age that homosexuality was wrong. When she moved in with her father, he never mentioned anything about gay people. One day, however, Vicki was sitting with Julie and Gopher, doing schoolwork, when the adults mentioned something vague about gay men. Vicki told them off and said that being gay was wrong because the Bible said only men could be with women. Gopher looked disappointed and left the room while Julie calmly explained to her that it wasn’t wrong and many men liked men and many women liked women. Vicki was struck by this and although it took a while, she eventually got over her prejudice (in an albeit reluctant way). When she became older, hit puberty, and started to be interested in pop culture and such, she found that she liked the actresses in the same way as the actors. Recalling what Julie had told her a few years back, she concluded that she liked both men and women and told Julie. Julie was accepting, of course, and helped Vicki overcome any hesitation she had. She didn’t label herself as pansexual as the term didn’t exist and didn’t use any labels at all. She mostly remained in the closet. At some point, Vicki discovered that although she was very comfortable being a woman, she felt like she was more. Not a man, per se, but not entirely a woman. She confessed this to Julie who didn’t entirely understand. Having to face this herself, she went around confused until one day she overheard a man call a group of people “they” and it settled in her funny. That night, she stood in front of her mirror and spoke to herself, calling herself “them” and “they”. They really liked it and found that it aligned well with the whole “not entirely a girl” thought. She told Julie this who still was confused but enthusiastically supported her anyway.
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some of it is like,,, not really historically accurate (esp with gopher’s transition stuff).  I know a basic amount about physical transitioning esp in the 60s and 70s but because this is a fictional world I can do what I want ha.  And with labels and stuff, most of these didn’t exist back then so technically they wouldn’t really be labeled but for simplicities sake here are their modern labels.  Also, all the stuff with Gopher’s dad I adapted from Third Wheel which is an episode in season 2 where Gopher’s mom and dad come aboard the ship and Goph and his dad have this heart to heart (hits different if you hc Gopher as trans).  ANYWAY- if anyone does see this thanks for reading and if you have any hc of your own PLEASE PLEASE reblog this and comment them because I am desperate to make more friends who like the love boat
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eclecticanalyst · 4 years ago
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We’re Expecting You...To Boldly Go
[or, a fun exercise in comparing The Love Boat to Star Trek: The Next Generation]
I’ve always had a fondness for shows that aired several decades before I was born. When I was a kid, I loved the TV channel Boomerang, because it broadcasted classic cartoons like Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! and Snorks and The Jetsons. As I entered my preteen years, I graduated to live-action, checking out DVD box sets of The Facts of Life and Fantasy Island and The Love Boat from the library.
I don’t know if other people in my generation are familiar with The Love Boat—it was a television show that ran on ABC from 1977-1987. The show took place on a cruise ship, the Pacific Princess, and a typical episode would begin with the Princess leaving out of its home port of Los Angeles, proceeding to such stops as Cabo San Lucas and Puerto Vallarta before ultimately returning to Los Angeles at the end of the hour. The Love Boat’s claim to fame was its rotating roster of guest stars (with a new lineup in each episode), who were a mix of contemporary actors/celebrities (like Jim Nabors, Florence Henderson, and Sonny Bono) and old Hollywood/Broadway royalty (like Gene Kelly, Ethel Merman, and Zsa Zsa Gabor). These guest stars would provide the Pacific Princess with its passengers. There was a regular cast of characters that helped anchor (pun intended) the show—Merrill Stubing, ship’s captain; Adam “Doc” Bricker, ship’s doctor; Burl “Gopher” Smith, assistant yeoman purser; Isaac Washington, chief bartender; and Julie McCoy, cruise director. Vicki Stubing, the captain’s teenaged daughter, was added to the cast in season 3. In the final few seasons, Julie was replaced by her sister Judy, and the ship gained a photographer in Ace–full name Ashley Covington Evans. (Also, every so often, a guest star would play a member of the crew, like the gift shop manager or the chef, rather than a passenger.)
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A standard episode was divided into three storylines that played out simultaneously over the course of a cruise. The vast majority of the storylines were romance-based, but there were others that consisted of family drama or old friends getting together. The regular cast members would participate in the passengers’ stories to varying degrees, sometimes being an integral part of the plot and sometimes only existing on the sidelines. The storylines would all get resolved by the time the Pacific Princess returned to Los Angeles, and the passengers would (almost always cheerfully) disembark, usually never to be seen again. Plotlines did not carry over from one week to the next, and even if a guest star returned in a later episode, chances were they would be playing a completely new character.
Although the guest cast took up the majority of the screen time, I was always more invested in the regulars, and wished we could spend more time with them—learning their backstories, exploring their dynamics with each other, and watching them actually do cruise ship work instead of pal around with the passengers. Because of The Love Boat’s near-anthology setup, not much effort was put into any sort of ongoing character development. Intense romances on the main cast’s part one week would be completely forgotten the next week, family deaths wouldn’t be brought up until it was relevant to that episode’s storyline, and new details about the crew’s past would be added as plot points, even sometimes directly contradicting a previous episode.
(The Love Boat had other issues that have less to do with my criticism of the writing and more to do with an adherence to certain flawed social practices, like how Isaac's love interests were always Black, or how single mothers were greeted with raised eyebrows, or how people of Asian or Latino/a descent were accompanied by specific musical cues–but these issues are not the point of this post so I won’t get into them at this time.)
Star Trek: The Next Generation premiered the year The Love Boat went off the air—1987—and ran until 1994. I only got into Star Trek in college, and TNG was my first series as it was easily available on BBC America. Although it had been several years since I had watched The Love Boat on a regular basis, one day a connection was made in my mind, and it occurred to me that there were a great deal of parallels to be drawn between a certain rom-com/drama at sea and a certain sci-fi adventure in space. I kept this observation in my head for years, but now that I have a blog (and because I have been rewatching a few episodes of The Love Boat in the past few weeks), I have decided to write out all of these parallels in detail.
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First: the basic setup. The main cast is the crew of a ship, but we only really meet a handful of the hundreds of actual crew members needed to run the ship. In The Love Boat, for example, we don’t see the engineering crew, but the Pacific Princess must certainly have one in order to function, and although we do sometimes see Captain Stubing hanging out on the bridge, we don’t even know the name of the first officer. As I mentioned above, occasionally a guest star would play a crew member in an episode, acting as if they’d been there the whole time, but we would never see them again after that one appearance. A few times, one of the main cast would interact with an extra portraying a crew member—Julie would ask a steward to escort a guest somewhere, or Isaac would ask a waitress to carry a tray of drinks over to someone—but for the most part it seemed like our regulars did all the work on the ship. When Captain Stubing would have pre-cruise preparation meetings, it was always just with the main cast, who were not necessarily the people a real cruise ship captain would be meeting with right before sailing. (Take Gopher—he was only the assistant yeoman purser, and yet he was in all those meetings while the chief yeoman purser was not. Actually, I’m pretty sure the chief purser never made an appearance in the entire ten years the show was on the air. I believe Gopher got a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it promotion to chief purser in later seasons, but he was definitely assistant-purser-with-odd-authority at first.)
In TNG, the same sort of thing would happen. CMO Beverly Crusher claimed to have other doctors working under her, but beyond a Vulcan named Selar who showed up in one episode of the show, we didn’t see them. Missions that seemed suited to one of the science departments of the Enterprise, like xenobiology or astrophysics, would be carried out by senior staff members—also known as the main cast. There were a few more named recurring crew member characters on TNG than on The Love Boat, like Miles O’Brien and Reg Barclay, but for the most part our bridge crew did pretty much everything. And while it makes sense on TNG for the senior staff to interact with each other a great deal, they should also be interacting with their respective teams—and yet we don’t really see that happen. Geordi and Data are more likely to address an engineering problem on their own in a given episode than Geordi and the actual engineering staff, and we don’t really see Worf running his security teams through drills or target practice. On The Love Boat, Doc and Isaac for some reason are often seen checking passengers in at boarding, when that should not be in their job description at all and what we should see is Gopher supervising his staff doing those duties.
Both shows are more plot driven rather than character driven. Our main cast members in both shows are meant to serve as respondents to new situations brought aboard their respective ships, rather than personalities to be interrogated in depth. The main cast is defined enough that the audience can have a favorite character and know how a Picard story differs from a Worf story, or a Gopher story from a Julie story. But all in all the draw and focus of TNG was more “What is the crisis on the planet of the week?” or “What common ground can be found with this new alien species?” or “What commentary on the human condition can be extrapolated from this shipwide invasion?” rather than, say, Beverly’s mental and emotional state as a widow working under the man who ordered her husband to his death or the nuances of Troi and Riker’s no-longer-dating-but-still-sort-of-in-love friendship. Meanwhile, The Love Boat was preoccupied with “What sort of antics will this week’s cast of characters bring on board?”. Doc joked regularly about his multiple ex-wives, but we never got a character study about how Doc seemed to like falling in love more than maintaining a romantic relationship in the long term.
The Love Boat’s regular cast were pretty much the same season to season—Gopher was accident-prone and quick to goof around, Doc maintained his Lothario status, Captain Stubing was quick to both rebuke and advise. I didn’t really watch the post-Julie seasons, so maybe some character developments happened that I missed, but generally the passengers were the ones transformed by their time on the ship, not the crew. TNG characters did have a bit more of an arc than the crew of the Pacific Princess—Data got more in touch with his humanity and Picard relaxed more around his personnel, for instance. But that didn’t apply to all the characters—I’m hard-pressed to think of any sizeable developments in Geordi’s character beyond being promoted to Chief Engineer. Speaking of that promotion, once the show found its footing and everyone had the positions they would come to be known for—Geordi as Chief Engineer rather than the helmsman he was early on, Worf as Chief Tactical Officer post-death of Tasha Yar—nothing really changed for our main characters’ situations. The status quo was strictly enforced despite events unfolding that would have naturally led to transitions. After “Best of Both Worlds,” it would have made sense for Riker to ascend to his own command, but instead he stayed first officer season after season. Worf resigned his commission to fight in the Klingon Civil War, but once that was over, he strolled back onto the bridge without even any extra paperwork.
That aversion to long-term change was in keeping with the episodic nature of both shows. Nowadays, we’re used to the need to keep up with each season’s developments in a television show and watch every episode lest we miss some important revelation. In the case of TNG and The Love Boat, for the most part, you can drop a new viewer into any given episode and they’ll be fine. The stories are largely self-contained, and everything is pretty much resolved at the end of the hour.
This TNG/TLB comparison, however, is not resolved just yet...stay tuned for part 2!
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