Stephanie Edwards: Dig Dagger and Twist

The topic of the Pasadena Rose Parade is far afield from the fare on the CrackTeam (CT) website. But I think there are enough mitigating circumstances to include the Parade in our website this year: George Lucas is the Grand Marshall, Star Wars floats on the road, 501st Stormtrooper garrison marching, CT members working just a couple of blocks from the parade route, Pasadena JPL and its role in the birth of CT, etc. etc.

I have to address one of the cruelest moments in the parade. No, it was not the disgraceful sight of Darth Vader ambling down the street waving at the crowds. Embarrassing. The Lord of the Sith should have more comtempt for the crowds; perhaps he could have pelted them with LucasFilm (TM) merchandise and completed the spectacle.

No, the cruelest moment was the comment made by Bob Eubanks while the U.S. Marine Mounted Color Guard was parading for the cameras. He mentioned that the horses are periodically retired, much like “aging commentators on TV.” He was of course referring to the absence of Stephanie Edwards from the coverage this year. Stephanie is a victim of the ol’ double standard: guys age gracefully and look more distinguished, gals just age. She was probably also experiencing the Star Trek Maxim: a new series (TNG, DS9, Voyager, Enterprise) comes up every few years because the more established actors get paid lots more and expect the salaries to keep on going up every year with a successful series. Stephanie and Bob are probably very expensive to keep, and that’s the first place you cut (according to management).
But this is a prime example of management “not having a clue.”  In TV-Land you are supposed to extract as much viewer interest as you can, for the money you are spending. I would have done a couple of “Farewell” type broadcasts and engaged the audience in that way. Having Stephanie say her goodbyes last year in the pouring rain was just NOT the way to do it. And the bad blood between KTLA and the viewers is not a good thing.

But perhaps Bob was referring to the fact that his option is coming due soon, and that perhaps he would also be let go. That would be a shame. He and Stephanie were a fixture on New Years Day morning and should be accorded some respect. But I’m sure he’ll get the Fond Farewell option (accompanying harp strings and wavering video effects, please).

One final note to KTLA management: if you want to bring the viewers in, please feel free to manipulate us. A “Final Farewell” broadcast with the old commentators would be a ratings hit. And I’d be the first dupe watching. For now, I recommend the ABC local broadcast feed; it’s the best HD feed after the KTLA offering.

3 thoughts on “Stephanie Edwards: Dig Dagger and Twist”

  1. An ignorant question for you.
    Having never actually traveled anywhere but the Eastern timezone during New Year’s:
    How do other timezones celebrate the big ball drop? Surely watching the NY event at 9:00pm in California seems odd.
    Is there an LA ball drop? Or a Chicago ball drop? Dallas?

  2. Actually, it’s pretty pitiful.

    New York’s Times Square has the “ball dropping” market pretty much sewn up. We have an Orange County New Year’s event where a *orange* ball is dropped, but it hasn’t received much publicity. Most CT agents probably do not know about it, although it is a local Southern California event.

    We all watch the NY Times ball drop on tape delay. This seems normal, since all events (even those taking place locally) are tape-delayed for the California market. The only events not delayed are the big sports events (like the SuperBowl) and the Oscars. Come to think of it, you can play odds on the results of those two events, so maybe that is why they are not tape-delayed.

    There are balls dropping at New Years’ Eve in Las Vegas, but perhaps that’s a personal matter and we shouldn’t be talking about it……. : )

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