Meanspeed® Music Review

Entries tagged as ‘Bold and the Beautiful’

RON MOSS RETURNS TO THE ROAD WITH PLAYER – “Baby Come Back” – Objective Tempo=77.5 bpm – Calibrations, Videos, Concetpual Tempo Charts

May 15, 2009 · Leave a Comment

 

Baby Come Back, Player, bpm graph by meanspeed music school

Baby Come Back, Player, bpm graph by meanspeed music school

BABY COME BACK - Player, 77.5 bpm

BABY COME BACK - Player, 77.5 bpm

 

Player, Baby Come Back, The Speed of Bittersweetness Embodied

Player, Baby Come Back, The Speed of Bittersweetness Embodied

Ronn Moss, the star of the television program The Bold & The Beautiful, is the leader of the band formed in 1976 called Player. 

Ronn, an American, was almost voted “Australian of the Year” in 2006. This year, anything goes. As Ronn said recently, “Even if I was, as you suggest, the ‘Odds on favorite’ or ‘The man for whom the Award can only be lost’ here in ‘07, that doesn’t mean that Ronn Moss is any closer to being Australian of the Year 2007. Not one step, pal. You know, things in life do not always come as planned. Did I think I would ever be the only human alive to have a number one it single in the United States, the most recognized face in world television history, now that the show on which I star, The Bold and the Beautiful, with that of a Jack Wagner and Susan Flannery backing me up as co-stars – the *number one drama television show in the world* – is that wild, or what? – AND be so completely anonymous in England that I walk down the street and people look at me, like, who the hell are you? Do you have any idea of the freedom? It’s just a life of a blessed man.”

I would have had no idea of the popularity of Moss and Player. Looking at the song’s speed, going into areas of grace, bittersweetness and loneliness, one sees a band confused. The song’s message is odd, poorly written and confusing if not internally contradictory – sometimes within a sentence. The band’s fame is simply beyond our staff.

Like all songs, though, love some and love some less, we used our standard of highest care – one that James C.C. Manning will apply to a 1970s one-hit wonder song or a soothing ballad by that of a Don “Donald” Henley, or any Eagle for that matter.

Meanspeed-Forrester-Spencer Ssummary
title=”Baby, Come Back”
performer=Player
rhythm=4/4, commonly known as “common time”
beats measured=2,790
time elapsed=36 minutes, 00.0 seconds
average time per trial=4 minutes, 0.0 seconds
average number of beats per trial=310
average beat=0.774 seconds
mean speed=77.5 beats per minute
mean emotion according to meanspeed music theory=bittersweetness
mean slow phase=1.29 cycles per second
corresponding pitch=330.67 hertz

 

/Ian Andrew Schneider/

May 15, 2009

 

Baby Come Back is a song by the late 1970s group Player. The song was their biggest single, hitting #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1978. It was the breakthrough single for the band, gaining them mainstream success, and the only #1 hit of their career. The song is notable for its infectious riffs, and its instantly memorable hook of “Baby Come Back” during the chorus.

This hook was sampled nearly 30 years later by Vanessa Hudgens in her 2006 single “Come Back to Me”.

The song appears in the episode Homer Alone of The Simpsons. When Homer calls the lost baby hotline to report that Maggie is missing, he gets put on hold to the tune of “Baby Come Back”.

This song was also used in the 2007 Transformers film, in a scene where Bumblebee purposely stalled to a nice romantic location so that the protagonist of the movie could have some time with the girl. When the girl was about to leave, Bumblebee eventually restarted and this song played.

One band member to find future fame is musician/actor Ronn Moss of CBS’s daytime soap opera The Bold & The Beautiful.

The Bold and the Beautiful (often called Bold or annotated to B&B) is an American television soap opera, created by Lee Phillip Bell and William J. Bell. The show debuted on March 23, 1987, and still screens in the United States on the CBS network, and has a very strong worldwide audience. The show’s 5,000th episode aired on February 16, 2007.

The show has a number of unique characteristics that set it apart from other American soaps.

  • The show has the largest foreign audience of all the American soaps  ; It is well known in Italy, where it airs under the title Beautiful, and in the Francophone world, where it airs under the titles Top models and Amour, gloire & beauté. It also has a huge fan base in Australia.
  • It is the only American soap opera to simulcast in a Spanish language track for Hispanic viewers in the United States (under the title Belleza y poder).
  • This is also the only soap of the eight programs currently airing on US television that runs for 30 minutes (the other shows run for an hour). The show reaches around 450 million viewers daily [citation needed] being the number one drama series in the world.

Categories: Alternative Therapy · America · Barack Obama · Bob Dylan · Cognitive Tempo · International Language · Mathematical Psychology · Music Psychology · Music Tempo · Neurology · Science of Music · Self-Help · Susan Flannery · Tempo · behaviorism · bpm addiction · conceptual tempo · music · music psychology · pattern · self-help · tempo map
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HEART OF THE MATTER – Don Henley’s 20th Century Pop Classic is an Archetype Renewal Song with its programmed 88.1 bpm speedn

August 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

One of the most well-known songs of renewal in the late 20th Century was the song HEART OF THE MATTER by former Eagles lead singer and drummer Mr. Donald "Don" Henley. tempo graphics © 2008. Meanspeed Music Company. Use By Permission. Heart of the Matter is recorded on top of a drum machine which is playing at almost exactly 88 beats per minute. The meanspeed music conjecture has asserted that songs in the tempo range of 85-89 beats per minute have a strong tendency to emote renewal, forgiveness and homecoming. Such patterns are vividly seen on the tempo graphs I have synthesized and presented here with the the drama of the actors
John McCook (1987-present)
and Jennifer Gareis (2006-present) , making the point for me better than I write and FAR better than I photograph! In renewing their lives on the world's most popular television drama, CBS's THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL, Donna and Eric got down to the heart of the matter and then got in bed legally as man and wife. The issue in the story line is that Eric's heart is 65-70 years old and Donna's is 35-40 years old, a possible cause of Eric's heart giving out after a Viagra-induced sex marathon. He still lays in fictional real time in that same Los Angeles hospital at which thank-God-at-least-she's-still-alive Elizabeth Taylor always visits people. No, there is nothing funny about a man in a coma. Not even when that coma is inspired by the rabidly creative yet macho character Eric Forrester. However, this most interesting couple is fictional. I feature musical examples in tempo maps, graphs, abstract visuals: whatever group you are in call the same [meanspeed graphs] different names. A "graph" implies an pictoral aspect whereas a "chart" does not necessarily connote a 'visual'. A chart can be Text Only - a graph implies a picture. Another example in which The Bold and the Beautiful was used on graphs to show the tempo line of an archetypal song of lust was for the late Robert Palmer's ADDICTED TO LOVE, a pure song of lust written by Palmer in a dream. In that song, Eric's then wife Stephanie Forrester, played by the actress Stephanie Douglas Forrester (Susan Flannery), is forgiving and accepts that her rugged yet creative husband must move on with a new woman, her care turns to her family in general as she emotes graceful forgiveness - she can only accept that the lust between these characters played Gareis and McCook are smoldering in bed with the heat of the passion of Forrester Creations, the fictional Ralph Lauren in the B & B and the utility of Viagra®, a pill made by Pfizer®. For you TiVo and DVR users out there, though I know you would want to watch the commercials religiously every day, CBS's drama is only 1/2 hour and is the only television program to be broadcast (not filmed) live by satellite throughout the world in general. No, my data base does not have amongst its song very many from Brazil, but, you do what you can, and this show is popular in Brazil, it is popular in Ireland! In trying to explain the meanspeed ideas, that certain tempo ranges imply corresponding emotive characteristics where predictive elements can be quite high, using internationally known fictional characters is more useful than talking about my in-laws. In the meanspeed scale, the range of range 77-78 beats per minute strongly implies 'bittersweetness'. √60 x 10, or 'the square root of 60 seconds *divided* by ten' is equivalent numerically, with the decimal place moved over to the right 2 places, to the amount of time of each beat - i.e., while 75 beats per minute requires 800 milliseconds in between beats and is highly predictive of songs of grace and poise, songs at 80 beats per minute require only 750 milliseconds per beat and are highly predictive of loneliness and discontent. 77.5 eats per minute ironically requires 774 milliseconds per beat. This the *mean* speed, that which is numerically identical as both speed and space is not intuitive. The only speed where the numbers do not move are 77.45966692414834... beats per minute which requires exactly .7745966692414834... seconds per beat. The emotions which I translate by music tempo are universal and thus I try to translate the language and culture barrier. I am a trained lawyer, though, not a trained international music pop music research person and cannot conduct experiments around the world using 15,000 songs in German, 15,000 in French and so on. I leave that for someone else! Insofar as at least the half of you reading this who are not American, though most of you speak English, I believe it is sometimes best to comprehend, understand or feel the emotive qualities I call mean-emotions using a dramatic analogies, here, the international language of love of music, love of sex, and love of television (not necessarily in that order)! I believe that with most "process X in the brain is controlled by a timing pathway" and "the fMRI showed that people had quicker healing time in the hospital with the use of music" studies lack the narrow but essential area I study: the ACTUAL SPEED of such 'relaxing music'. What is relaxing music to me is not for *you* - which in turn is not for the next person and so on. The 10s of thousands of studies that promote 'soft relaxing music' do not tell you th etempo of their music, and even when they do, a study sample of 10 rather than 10 thousand is used, and while the experiments are closed, deductive and valid, they remain largely useless. In order to actually USE any such "music is a healer" study we need to establish that my speed is not your speed, which the German scientists essentially provided the groundwork for in the late 1800s. In the meanspeed conjecture we look to specificity. It is one thing for Professor X to assert that "anesthesia was reduced by 25 % when soft, relaxing music was played during the operation" and another assertion that "when songs chosen by the patient which had *tempi of under 76 beats per minute* reduced anesthesia by 25 %" or "song at every speed which the patient *herself *considered relaxing reduced anesthesia by 25 %" or "anesthesia was reduced by 25 % when music considered by the *surgeon* was played during the operation" and so on. If there is one thing we can all agree on it is that music taste is as varied as people's faces. My relaxing is getting my mind to slow down to about 37 beats per minute using a metronome and a song in my head I have, in my aural imagination, literally brought down to that speed. That is, when I am nervous and want to calm myself. Ian Bush, one of the first people who ever asked me about improving his sports performance by setting a mental tempo did it - in California - and went on to set new records. When everyone else was nervously chattering before the race, he would go into the corner and play 2 Genesis/Phil Collins songs, both between 92-97 bpm, I believe they were "In The Air Tonight" and "Dodo/Lurker." In fact. "In The Air Tonight" was used by Jimmy Johnson as a psyche song when he was a football coach, and Ray Lewis used it for decades as a football player. Putting speed into words is violently difficult. I discovered this pattern TWENTY years ago to the week and when I stumbled on it I thought it was an established fact that I had discovered backwards. So said, I knew if it was undiscovered I would spend up to my last breath trying to explain the benefits of autochronicity - controlling one's own mental speed. The term "autochronicity" was coined by Dr. Lawrence Silverman and until Dr. Silverman agreed with my findings I had no graphics of any kind, which was 8 years after I discovered the patterns in the first place. The great doctor bought me Excel 5.0, and I still use that program to synthesize the graphs for Meanspeed Music Education in general. A message to the "he's doing this to sell the graphics" critics: I saw the meanspeed conjecture with my eyes on a legal pad with has a page for each major metronome click, as per back in the Analogue days: 44, 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 63, 66, 69, 72, 76, 80, 84, 88, 92, 96, 100, 104, 108, 112, 116, 120, 126, 132, 138, 144, 152, 160 [and the rest of the 'standards' ], and after calibrating approximately 300 songs crudely matching a red light on a Seiko metronome. I was a 25 year old law student who was trying to make some sense of practicing piano in my down time from reading Supreme Court cases.

October 7, 2008

"The Heart of the Matter" - After the debate: Meanspeed Music still calls for an OBAMA/McCain, old school style - "Signed, Sealed, Delivered"

The original psyche song of Barack Obama was Stevie Wonder's Sign Sealed Delivered. The original manner of picking the president and the vice-president was: top voter gets top slot, 2nd place gets vice-president. The men running have plenty of mutual ground, respect. and, most importantly more competence than either of their well qualified vice-presidential choices. Meanspeed-Carlton Summary song title="Signed, Sealed Delivered I'm Yours" Album=Stevie Wonder: The Definitive Collection Intellectual Property=Motown Records, Copyright 2002 Kind=Protected AAC audio file Size=2.6 MB Meanspeed-Carlton Summary song title="Heart Of The Matter" performer=Don Henley mean speed/objective tempo=88.1 beats per minute average beat=681 milliseconds mean emotion according to the meanspeed music conjecture=Renewal /Ian Andrew Schneider/ NJ, US

Categories: International Language · Music Psychology · Neurology · Psychology · Rhythm · Tempo · Tempo · music
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“Whatever it is, it’ll keep to the morning, haven’t we both got better things to do?” MIDNIGHT BLUE – Speed of Enthusiasm,1970s American style

July 23, 2008 · Leave a Comment

“For all of the times you told me you need me, needing me now is something I could use, Midnight Blue” - Melissa Manchester, circa 1972.

The chart on the top features The Bold and The Beautiful’s Heather Thom as Katie Logan. In the screen shot which highlights the analysis of the tempo, Katie is presiding at the wedding of a man that we as the viewer know that she ought to be with. The song is full of renewal and enthusiasm, as Katie was given a heart transplant which saved her life at the last nanosecond and after her body began to reject the tissue and it appeared as though death was coming at any moment, her niece Bridget, a local medical doctor of every specialty in Los Angeles, saved her life by suggesting the transplant after



As a child I always found this song fascinating. It had something to it that was soft and gentle and encouraging if a bit maudlin. I learned to play piano and was frankly surprised that it was a Stylist song – in other words, the song is made in the performance, not the composition. I can sight-read music relatively well, and all I see on the page is a huge C7sus2 chord interwoven with an F7sus4 chord – in other words, a lot of C’s, F’s and Bb’s.

Midnight Blue was one of the first songs I calibrated when this project began 20 years ago this week. The song accelerates in a gliding, positive and comfortable pace. It uses the speed territories at the fast end of the mean emotion of renewal and the slowest end of enthusiasm. The brackish between the two categories is also seen in the song which is analyzed by meanspeed™ music on our sister page the Meanspeed™ Music Review.

Looking at the music elements of the song now, I think the perfect speed was played that day with the lush rich voice and phrasing of Melissa Manchester singing a song partially written by Peter Allen. Peter Allen could knock out hits like DON’T CRY OUT LOUD and ARTHUR’S THEME (along with Burt Bacharach and Christopher Cross) as the naturally gifted composer he was.

Meanspeed-Carlton Summary

song title=MIDNIGHT BLUE
performer=Melissa Manchester
mean speed/objective tempo=90.7 beats per minute
average beat length=662 milliseconds
mean emotion according to the meanspeed music conjecture=enthusiasm.
charts=contiguous calibrations by meanspeed™ music © 2008. Use by permission.

Best,
Ian Andrew Schneider
/ias
July 16, 2008

some web highlights!

Shopping results for Midnight Blue Melissa Manchester

Manchester, MelissaMidnight Blue: The … $6.99 – Circuit City
Melissa ManchesterMidnight Blue CD $6.79 – CD Universe
Melissa ManchesterMidnight Blue: The … $5.95 – CD Universe

See Midnight Blue Melissa Manchester results available through Google Checkout

The Bold and the Beautiful

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The Bold and the Beautiful

Current B&B intertitle, used since July 2, 2004
Creator(s) William J. Bell and Lee Phillip Bell
Senior cast member(s) Susan Flannery
Katherine Kelly Lang
John McCook
Ronn Moss
Country of origin Flag of the United States United States
No. of episodes 5356 (as of July 16, 2008)
Production
Executive producer(s) Bradley Bell
Head writer(s) Bradley Bell
Distributor Bell-Philip Television
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel CBS
Premiere date March 23, 1987
Links
The Bold and the Beautiful Official Website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

The Bold and the Beautiful (often abbreviated to B&B) is an American television soap opera, created by William J. Bell, who also serves as show runner, and Lee Phillip Bell as a sister show to their other soap opera The Young and the Restless.

Set in Los Angeles, California, the show centers around the Forrester family and their fashion house business Forrester Creations. The show features an ensemble cast, headed by its longest-serving actors Susan Flannery as Stephanie Forrester, John McCook as Eric Forrester, Katherine Kelly Lang as Brooke Logan and Ronn Moss as Ridge Forrester.

B&B is currently the only American soap opera with a running time of 30 minutes, and the only one to simulcast in Spanish utilizing SAP technology for Hispanic viewers in the United States. Since its premiere on CBS Daytime on March 23, 1987 the show has become the most-watched soap in the world with an audience of an estimated 26.2 million viewers in more than 110 countries worldwide.[1]

Contents

[hide]

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[edit] Plot and history

[edit] Background of the Forrester family

Stephanie Douglas, a strong-willed woman, daughter to a rich family, met her husband-to-be Eric Forrester, a young talented guy that aspired to become a successful and famous fashion designer, while they both studied at the Northwestern University in Chicago, Illinois. The young lovers hurried to get married after Stephanie became pregnant and, in a certain stage they moved to live in Los Angeles, California, where they established Forrester Creations, a company focused on designing and producing dresses, mainly based on the designing talent of Eric and on Stephanie’s financial funding. While winning international recognition, fame and wealth with their work, the couple managed to raise up three children in a happy and caring environment, including their eldest son Thorne and his younger sisters Kristen and Felicia. Stephanie’s eldest son, Ridge, was biologically fathered by Massimo Marone, but raised by Eric. He, Eric, also has two grown children: Rick and Bridget, from his marriage to Brooke Logan.

Eric and Stephanie’s marriage has been on-and-off on the series since the premiere in 1987 and they have recently divorced for the third time.

[edit] Start and development of the series

The pilot episodes of the show focused on the preparations of the wedding of the Forrester’s eldest son, Ridge, to Caroline Spencer, the daughter of the media mogul Bill Spencer. At this time Ridge has already become a fashion designer and vice president of Forrester Creations. Many media outlets throughout the world, from the big television networks to the most honorable newspapers, to the last gossip newspapers publicize their wedding, declaring it as “the wedding of the year in the fashion world.” Thousands of women see the pictures of Ridge in the newspapers and speculate on the identity of the woman who has won the heart of the man who has, until recently, been a playboy, and who has refused to settle for one woman.

One of these women is a chemistry student named Brooke Logan, who comes from a working class family and who lives with her single mother Beth, her siblings Storm, Donna and Katie at a typical American home at the San Fernando Valley next to Los Angeles. Brooke’s life soon became a key element in the series. Originally from a middle-class background, her love affair with Ridge set up much of the storyline beginning in the first season. Every so often, Ridge and Brooke reunite only to break up due to circumstances, and Ridge invariably finds comfort (in most cases, this would lead to marriage) with another love of his life Dr. Taylor Hayes. In addition, the rivalry between Ridge’s mother Stephanie and Brooke has played a key role in the drama since its inception. Following one of her breakups with Ridge, Brooke married his father Eric, after first divorcing from Stephanie. Brooke eventually gave birth to two of Eric’s children, before they divorced and Eric eventually reconciled with Stephanie. Likewise, Brooke and Ridge resumed their pattern of an on-again-off-again relationship, in-between Brooke’s relationships with other men and Forrester family members, and Ridge’s multiple reunions with Taylor.

[edit] Subplotting

For many years Spectra Fashions was Forrester’s main rival, headed by Sally Spectra. Sally, a larger-than-life character with outrageous clothes and a sizable red coiffure, helmed both comedic and dramatic storylines, with the help of ditzy receptionist Darla Einstein and fashion designer Clarke Garrison. Though at first Sally and Stephanie Forrester were bitter enemies, in later years they developed a friendship; Sally even went to work at Forrester Creations after she finally made the decision to shut down her own company.

Sally’s daughter Macy Alexander, a singer, underwent many traumas, most notably alcoholism. Having an on-again-off-again marriage to Thorne Forrester, whom she eventually lost to Brooke, Macy went abroad into hiding with her father Adam. After being discovered in Italy, Macy relocated back to Los Angeles where she reunited with Thorne Forrester just to found interest in fellow recovering alcoholic, Deacon Sharpe, whom she married. Weeks later, Macy was gravely injured at a nightclub where she was headlining as a singer. She went into a coma and it was implied that her family pulled the plug off-camera.

In recent years, the Spectra family and friends have been supplanted by the introduction of Massimo Marone and his entourage. Marone, a billionaire shipping magnate who was a childhood friend of Stephanie dated her in college. They slept together once just before Stephanie first slept with Eric Forrester, and after forty-something years, a medical crisis revealed Massimo was Ridge’s biological father . Shortly thereafter, Jacqueline Payne, a former lover of Massimo, arrived on scene and announced that her son, Dominick “Nick” Payne, a capitan at Marone Industries, was also fathered by Massimo. Unlike Ridge, Nick wasn’t a businessman and also changed his name to Marone.

[edit] Theme song and title sequence

The theme song of B&B, “High Upon This Love,” was written by Jack Allocco and David Kurtz. A saxophone is played by well known saxophonist Eric Marienthal. From November 1998 to July 1999 in the United States, a vocal version of the theme song performed by Dionne Warwick was played during the end credits.

The title sequence for the first seventeen years featured still photos of the show’s current cast members interspersed with photos from fashion shoots. The sequence ends with a spool of pink fabric unrolling while the title “THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL” in black 1920’s style Huxley Vertical font zooms out the white area revealed by the roll (with the letters being from in a disarranged to a rearranged order). The theme tune was tweaked slightly through the years, and the cast photos were replaced occasionally.

On July 2, 2004, the theme was revamped to go along with a completely revamped title sequence, featuring a “B&B” monogram logo above the show’s title and video headshots of the current contract players (accompanied by the character name and since 2005, the actor’s name). Recurring actors are rarely added to the opening, with the exceptions of William deVry (Storm Logan) and Daniel McVicar (Clarke Garrison), who are often added back in as fillers. Most of the cast members are dressed in either black or gray in these opening shots. Four versions are used, the full open with the cast video headshots, a shortened open with the cast video headshots, and two without the cast video headshots. Three out of the four title sequences open with a mock magazine cover which morphs into a photo shoot. The fourth open was added in December 2005 and is the shortest opener currently on B&B.

On July 3, 2008, a new updated version of the current theme aired. The new version had the cast reordered in their appearance in the sequence and even updated some of the physical appearances on some actors too. Hunter Tylo had her physical appearance refilmed, with the cast of William deVry, Daniel McVicar, Alley Mills and Eileen Davidson removed from the credits. Newcomers Robin Riker (Beth), Jacqueline MacInnes Wood (Steffy), Texas Battle (Marcus), and Brandon Beemer (Owen) were added to the credits.

[edit] Ratings history

When it debuted, The Bold and the Beautiful replaced Capitol in the CBS Daytime lineup and also took its eighth place in the final year ratings (oddly enough, .4 ratings points ahead of Capitol, which it had replaced). However, B&B aired at 1:30 p.m. ET following The Young and the Restless, while Capitol had aired an hour later at 2:30 pm ET. Initially CBS’ lowest-rated soap, its numbers were still respectable (reflecting the strength and consistency of the CBS daytime lineup) and began to climb. By 1993, after a successful crossover involving villain Sheila Carter from Y&R, it had climbed to third. By the mid-to-late 1990s, following yet another crossover (this time involving Sheila’s nemesis Lauren Fenmore) it moved up to second and since has consistently remained there.

Some CBS affiliates such as KFMB-TV in San Diego, WINK-TV in Fort Myers, Florida, and KOTV in Tulsa, Oklahoma have moved the show to the morning in order to expand their local midday newscasts to an hour.

The series reached a record low of 3,048,000 viewers on Friday, August 3, 2007. (Nielsen Media Research)

[edit] Criticisms

The show has enjoyed success by focusing on telling stories involving the core Forrester family, in particular sticking to a core group of characters: Eric, Stephanie, Ridge, Taylor, Brooke, Thorne, and Macy. However, the show has been criticized at times for not having a well-developed “B” storyline and for, at times, overexposing the core characters. Unlike other US soaps currently on the air, it is not uncommon for B&B to devote entire shows or even a week’s worth of shows to a single storyline.

The show has also been criticized for the sometimes breakneck speed in which it changes storylines, in particular with changes in romantic pairings. It is important to note that although the show is sometimes criticized for rapid changes, several leading soap critics, including Carolyn Hinsey, have lauded the show for knowing when a story isn’t working, and changing or ending the story as a result (such as the 2005 romantic story involving Bridget and Ridge). It is, however, disconcerting that storylines are sometimes dropped without any kind of resolution.

Recasting is also a controversial, yet ongoing, fixture on the show. In the show’s 20 year history, many characters have been played by two or more actors, often leading to a viewer backlash. One such instance was the 2004 recast of Bridget Forrester from Emmy-winner Jennifer Finnigan to relative newcomer Emily Harrison. Viewers did not adjust well to the new Bridget and Harrison was soon downgraded to recurring status. The mistake was rectified later that year when former The Young and the Restless star Ashley Jones stepped into the role. Jones has consistently remained with the show since. B&B has also had many other successful recasts, such as Winsor Harmon’s Thorne Forrester, Lesli Kay’s Felicia Forrester and Patrick Duffy’s Stephen Logan. The recast of Rick Forrester from Emmy-winning Justin Torkildsen to ex-Days of our Lives star Kyle Lowder in 2007 met a mixed reaction from fans. It was announced in July 2007 that three-time Emmy winner Heather Tom, famous for portraying Victoria Newman on Y&R from 1991 to 2003, would join the cast of B&B as Katie, the younger sister of Brooke and Donna Logan, a role previously played by Nancy Sloan. Tom first aired on August 30, 2007. In December 2007, Tom, who had only signed a three-month deal initially, renewed her contract through 2011.

Finally, the relatively small cast has led to many romantic pairings and love triangles involving family members and in-laws. Some of the most controversial ones have been the romantic attraction shared between Ridge and his former half-sister/stepdaughter Bridget, as well as the recent attraction shared by Rick and his much younger step-niece Phoebe. Though the characters were not biologically related, this had not been established on the show until the 2002 reveal of Massimo being Ridge’s biological father. Additionally, many of the show’s storylines have featured siblings or a parent/child in love with and/or competing for the affections of the same character. The character of Brooke has been famously married to several members of the same family: Besides once being married to Nick, she has also had a long-running romance with Nick’s half-brother Ridge, which has led to several marriages and a child. She was also previously married to Ridge’s half-brother Thorne and Thorne’s father Eric, with whom she also has two children. Finally, she had an affair with her daughter Bridget’s husband Deacon, which resulted in yet another child. Notably, Nick was also recently married to Bridget for a while. A saving point for many viewers with respect to Brooke’s romantic pairings has been Katherine Kelly Lang’s notable chemistry with most of her male co-stars.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Current cast members

Further information: Current characters of The Bold and the Beautiful
Actor Character Duration
Texas Battle Marcus Walton 2008-
Brandon Beemer Owen Knight 2008-
Eileen Davidson Ashley Abbott 2007-
Lesley-Anne Down Jacqueline Payne Marone 2003-
Susan Flannery Stephanie Forrester 1987-
Jennifer Gareis Donna Logan Forrester (#2) 2006-
Winsor Harmon Thorne Forrester (#3) 1996-
Ashley Jones Dr. Bridget Forrester Marone (#4) 2004-
Lesli Kay Felicia Forrester (#2) 2005-
Katherine Kelly Lang Brooke Logan 1987-
Kyle Lowder Rick Forrester (#3) 2007-
John McCook Eric Forrester 1987-
Ronn Moss Ridge Forrester 1987-
Robin Riker Beth Logan (#4) 2008-
Heather Tom Katie Logan (#2) 2007-
Hunter Tylo Dr. Taylor Hayes Marone 1990-2002, 2004, 2005-
Jack Wagner Dominick Marone 2003-
Jacqueline MacInnes Wood Steffy Forrester (#2) 2008-

[edit] Recurring cast members

Actor Character
Drew Tyler Bell Thomas Forrester
Shannon Bradley Catherine
Darcy Rose Byrnes Abby Carlton
Cameron and McKenzie Carr Jack Marone
Andrew Collins Jarrett Maxwell
Patrick Duffy Stephen Logan
Harley Graham Alexandria Forrester
MacKenzie Mauzy Phoebe Forrester
Alley Mills Pamela Douglas
Amanda and Rachel Pace Hope Logan
Ridge Perkett R.J. Forrester
Eric and Jacob Steinberger Dominick “Dino” Damiano

[edit] Comings and goings

Actor Character Status
William deVry Storm Logan Temp. Returns August 5th

[edit] Deceased cast members

Actor Character Date of death
Michael Fox Saul Feinberg June 1, 1996
Lesley Woods Helen Logan August 2, 2003
Tim Choate Tommy Bayland September 24, 2004
James Doohan Damon Warwick July 20, 2005
Darlene Conley Sally Spectra January 14, 2007

[edit] Notable former cast members

Actor Character Duration
Agnes Bruckner Bridget Forrester (#1) 1997-1999
Jennifer Finnigan Bridget Forrester (#2) 2000-2004
Lindsay Price Michael Lai 1995-1997
Antonio Sabàto, Jr. Dante Damiano 2005-2006
Lark Voorhies Jasmine Malone 1995-1996
Maitland Ward Jessica Forrester 1994-1996

[edit] Notable celebrities who have appeared

[edit] Crossovers

There have been several crossovers between The Bold and the Beautiful and its sister show, The Young and the Restless
  • 1992
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Sheila Carter (Kimberlin Brown) was the first major character to cross over to ‘‘The Bold and the Beautiful’’. Sheila appeared on Young and the Restless from 1990-1992 (returning as a guest in 1993, 1994 and 1995), and again in 2005-2006. She was on ‘‘The Bold and the Beautiful’’ from 1992-1998, with shorter-lived stints in 2002 and 2003.
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Molly Carter (Marilyn Alex) appeared several times after her daughter, Sheila, was revealed to be living in Los Angeles.
  • 1993
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Brad Carlton (Don Diamont) crossed over to confront Sheila Carter about the photos of his tryst with Lauren Fenmore (Tracey E. Bregman), fearing that he would lose custody of his daughter, Colleen, if they became public. Although Brad’s threats were enough to make Sheila give up the photos, Lauren later discovered that there was still more evidence proving their affair.
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Dr. Scott Grainger (Peter Barton) and Lauren Fenmore were vacationing on Catalina Island in November, where they were shocked to find Eric Forrester and Sheila Carter also on a romantic retreat. The character Scott Grainger died during this crossover, but not before he forgave Sheila for her past and begged Lauren not to reveal their history to Eric.
  • 1995
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Lauren Fenmore (Tracey E. Bregman) crossed over to The Bold And The Beautiful, where she stayed until 1999, and briefly returned in 2002 and 2004. She had already appeared on the show several times prior to her becoming an actual cast member, mostly due to Sheila’s crossover in 1992.
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Brad Carlton made another brief crossover when James Warwick (Ian Buchanan) called Lauren from Sheila’s dungeon.
  • 1998
  • 1999
  • 2000-2001
  • 2003
  • 2004
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Lauren Fenmore (Tracey E. Bregman) received an angered phone call from the husband of her employee Jacqueline Payne Marone, who demanded to know if the two had really gone out drinking the night before like he was being told. Although she was caught off-guard, Lauren said they had, assuming Jacquie had a good reason for lying to her husband. In truth, Jacquie had told her husband this to help cover up her one night stand with Deacon Sharpe Sean Kanan. (May 17 – 20, 2004)
  • 2005
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: While eating lunch at the Café Russe in Los Angeles, Katherine Chancellor (Jeanne Cooper) was approached by Massimo Marone (Joseph Mascolo). Massimo introduced her to friend Stephanie Douglas Forrester (Susan Flannery), the daughter of an old business acquaintance (John Douglas) belonging to Katherine. It was learned that Katherine was the actual owner of Forrester Creations, via the Stephanie Douglas Trust, which her associate’s daughter sought to reclaim from her estranged husband (Eric Forrester). With Katherine’s blessing, Stephanie achieved her goal, leaving the grand dame of Genoa City free to focus on her numerous other assets. (October 31 – November 01, 2005)
    • Lauren’s mother, Joanna Manning (Susan Seaforth Hayes), appeared on both ‘‘The Bold and the Beautiful’’ and Young and the Restless (the latter in December to attend her daughter’s wedding to Michael Baldwin).
  • 2006
  • 2007
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Lauren Fenmore appeared in January. (January 19 – 22, 2007)
    • The Bold and the Beautiful: Traci (Beth Maitland), Ashley Abbott’s sister, also appeared in March, while talking to her sister on the telephone. (March 20, 2007)
  • 2008
  • Possible Connection
    • The actor Robert Clary played Pierre Roulland on Young and the Restless’’ from 1973-1974 before playing Pierre Jourdan on ‘‘The Bold and the Beautiful’’ from 1990-1992. Whether or not the two characters are related is unknown.

[edit] Writing and producing team

Executive producer(s)
Head writers
Current writing team
Current producing/directing team

[edit] Broadcasts outside the United States

  • Flag of Australia In Australia, B&B airs at 4.30pm weekdays on Network Ten and is the most popular daytime soap. It is also timeshifted on the network’s High Definition channel at 5pm. Episodes are 3 months behind those being shown in the U.S.
  • Flag of Austria In Austria, B&B airs in double episodes and German dubbing from 6.25pm to 7.20pm weekdays on ATV.
  • Flag of Belgium In Belgium, B&B airs in on weekdays at 6.00pm on VijfTV. It is also available through Video On Demand, a world premiere, because of the popularity of the show in Flanders.
  • Flag of Botswana In Botswana, B&B airs an episode from 10.20pm to 10.50pm weekdays on BTV.
  • Flag of Bulgaria In Bulgaria, B&B airs in double episodes from 10.15 am to 11.00 am weekdays on Channel 1.The episodes are 4 years behind the USA.
  • Flag of Canada In Canada, B&B airs from 1:30pm to 2:00pm ET weekdays on CTV, simultaneously with CBS. It also airs in double episodes from 4.00pm to 5.00pm ET on weekdays in French on TVA, with the title Top modèles. The French episodes are 3-4 years behind the US.
  • Flag of Egypt In Egypt, B&B airs on Dream 1 at 21:00, 3 years behind USA
  • Flag of Estonia In Estonia, B&B airs from 18.25 pm to 18.55 pm weekdays on TV3.
  • Flag of Finland In Finland, B&B airs an episode from 5.00pm to 5.30pm weekdays on MTV3.
  • Flag of France In France, B&B airs an episode from 9.30am to 10.00am weekdays on France 2.
  • Flag of Germany In Germany, B&B airs an episode from 11.15am to 11.35am weekdays on ZDF. Episodes are 10 months behind the US.
  • Flag of Greece In Greece, B&B airs in double episodes from 2.30pm to 3.30pm weekdays on ERT3. Episodes are 2 years behind the US.
  • Flag of Iceland In Iceland, B&B airs everyday at 09:00 and 17:28hrs and on Saturdays 12:30 to 13:50hrs on Stöð 2
  • Flag of India In India, B&B airs an episode from 3.00 pm to 3.30 pm weekdays on Star World.
  • Flag of Israel In Israel, B&B airs at 6.10pm Sunday to on Yes Stars 3. Due to a change in the broadcasting network, episodes are currently 5 months behind the US.
  • Flag of Italy In Italy, B&B airs from 1.40pm to 2.10pm weekdays on Canale 5. Episodes are 6 months behind the US. The title for the Italian edition is simply “Beautiful”.
  • Flag of Kenya In Kenya, B&B airs an episode from 10.20pm to 10.50pm weekdays on KBC.
  • Flag of Latvia In Latvia, B&B airs from 6.30pm to 7.00pm weekdays on LTV1.
  • Flag of Luxembourg In Luxembourg, B&B airs from 6.05pm to 6.30pm weekdays on RTL9.
  • Flag of the Netherlands In the Netherlands, B&B airs an episode from 6.00pm to 6.25pm weekdays on SBS6.
  • Flag of Poland In Poland, B&B currently airs in double episodes from 4.05pm to 5.00pm weekdays on TVP1. During the two-months of holidays airs in double episodes also in weekends. The show started to run in Poland in 1994 since episode 216 and is at the moment the only American daytime soap opera on Polish TV. The chronology of the episodes’ numbers is misled. Since the 216th episode have started the series, TVP1 considered it as the very first. The mistake still hasn’t been corrected. Polish fans still send petitions to TVP1 to correct the mistake, unfortunately without any success. The episodes are 4 years and 10 months behind the premiere ones.
  • Flag of Serbia In Serbia, B&B airs in double episodes from 6pm to 7pm weekdays on FOX.
  • Flag of Sweden In Sweden, B&B airs in double episodes from 5.35 pm to 6.35 pm weekdays on TV4 Plus.
  • Flag of the United Kingdom In the United Kingdom, B&B airs in double episodes from 7am to 8am Repeated at 11.00am to 12.00pm and 23.00-00.00 on weekdays. Also there is a weekend onubus on Saturdays from 11.00am to 12.30pm and Sundays 11.00am to 13.30 on Diva TV. Episodes currently showing are from 2005. The UK is roughly 3 years behind the USA, However this gap will reduce due to the double episodes. Calculations suggest (if double episodes continue) that England will catch up with America by 2012.

[edit] B&B in other languages

  • Flag of Egypt Arabic الجرئ و الجميلات
  • Flag of the Netherlands Dutch The Bold and the Beautiful (Netherlands) / Mooi en Meedogenloos (Beautiful and Relentless) (Belgium)
  • Flag of the United Kingdom English The Bold and the Beautiful (In the USA, Australia, Canada, the UK and New Zealand)
  • Flag of France French Amour, Gloire et Beauté (France) / Top Models (Belgium, Luxembourg & Switzerland) / Top Modèles (Quebec)
  • Flag of Germany German Reich und Schön (Rich and Beautiful)
  • Flag of Greece Greek Τόλμη και Γοητεία (Boldness and Charm)
  • Flag of Israel Hebrew היפים והאמיצים
  • Flag of Latvia Latvian Hameleonu rotaļas (Chameleon’s plays)
  • Flag of Poland Polish Moda na sukces (Success is Trendy / Fashion for Success)
  • Flag of Russia Russian Дерзкие и красивые / Audacious and Beautiful
  • Flag of Serbia Serbian Одважни и лепи

[edit] Awards

[edit] Emmy Awards

[edit] TV Soap Golden Boomerang Awards

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^“The World’s Number One Show: CSI”“. The Huffington Post. Retrieved on 2008-06-17.

[edit] External links

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