Jack & Bobby
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Jack & Bobby is an American drama television series created by Greg Berlanti, Vanessa Taylor, Steven A. Cohen, and Brad Meltzer. It aired on The WB from September 12, 2004, to May 11, 2005. The series’ title is a reference to real-life political brothers John and Robert Kennedy.<ref name=":5" />
The series starred Matt Long and Logan Lerman as Jack and Bobby McCallister, respectively; two teenage brothers in Missouri of whom one would become the president of the United States from 2041 to 2049. The series also starred Christine Lahti as their mother, a college professor, as well as Jessica Paré, John Slattery, Edwin Hodge, Keri Lynn Pratt, and Bradley Cooper. Episodes would generally focus on the boys' family and school lives, with flash-forwards of a documentary about President McCallister used as a framing device.
While it received critical acclaim, Jack & Bobby struggled from low ratings on the network and was cancelled on May 17, 2005.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Premise
The series follows the lives of fifteen-year-old Jack and thirteen-year-old Bobby McCallister, two teen boys being raised by their strong-willed mother Grace in a small Missouri college town. Grace is a history professor at the local university and has an unconventional approach to parenting, which includes discouraging her sons from watching TV. Elder brother Jack is popular and a star on the track team, while Bobby is nerdy and asthmatic. Each episode is interspersed with flash-forwards from a documentary about the life of President McCallister, who would take office in the 2040s. The documentary clips feature interviews with members of the McCallister administration reflecting on the president's years in office and how his formative experiences shaped his later life and how he governed. It is not revealed which of the McCallister brothers would later become president until the end of the pilot episode.
Cast and characters
Main cast
- Christine Lahti as Professor Grace McCallister
- Matt Long as Jack McCallister
- Logan Lerman as Robert "Bobby" McCallister, future President of the United States (2041-2049)
- Tim Robbins voiced the future President McCallister in the series finale
- Jessica Paré as Courtney Benedict, the future First Lady of the United States
- Brenda Wehle portrays the future Courtney McCallister in a recurring role
- Edwin Hodge as Marcus Ride, the future senior counsel of President McCallister
- Ron Canada portrays the future Marcus Ride in a recurring role
- John Slattery as Peter Benedict, the new college president and Courtney's widowed father
- Norman Lear guest starred as the future Peter Benedict
- Keri Lynn Pratt as Missy Belknap (episodes 1-20)
- Bradley Cooper as Tom Wexler Graham (episodes 4-17)
Recurring cast
- Dean Collins as Warren Feide, Bobby's best friend
- Harry Groener guest starred as an adult Warren Feide in one episode
- Mike Erwin as Nate Edmonds, Courtney's former boyfriend
- Cam Gigandet as Randy Bongard, Missy's on-and-off boyfriend
- Kyle Gallner as BJ Bongaro, Bobby's "frenemy"
- Kate Mara as Katie Torcoletta, Jack's former girlfriend
- John Heard as Dennis Morgenthal
- Ed Begley, Jr. as Reverend Belknap, Missy's father
- Jeanette Brox as Dex Truggman, Bobby's former girlfriend
Development
The idea for the series was conceived by novelist Brad Meltzer and Steve Cohen, the latter who served as deputy communications director in Hillary Clinton’s office during her husband's tenure as president.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite news</ref> In 2002, Meltzer and Cohen pitched their idea to Thomas Schlamme, then an executive producer on The West Wing. The WB agreed to produce the series and Schlamme brought on Dawson’s Creek alum Greg Berlanti as well as Berlanti’s Everwood colleague Vanessa Taylor to pen the pilot episode.<ref name=":1" />
Taylor said her writing on the pilot was informed by her feelings about current events, particularly the Iraq War and the failed search for weapons of mass destruction. Taylor said at the time, "I just feel that we've come into an era in which there's a certain brazenness about lying to the American public. Which, in turn, has fostered a certain degree of cynicism and apathy."<ref name=":1" /> The show's title is meant to "evoke the hopefulness of the Camelot era."<ref name=":5" />
Berlanti said he intended to eschew the use of the words “Democrat” and “Republican” in the pilot to “avoid criticism…based on partisan politics.”<ref name=":1" /> He added that the show’s emphasis on the boys’ formative years “underscores how life's seemingly insignificant events can ‘have ripple effects on the future that are exponential.’”<ref name=":1" />
Though the character of Grace does not steer her sons towards a particular ideology, the series creators said the show would not avoid taking stands on certain issues. Said Schlamme, "Besides the personal stories, [Jack & Bobby] allows us to talk about thematic elements that are existing in 2004 America, which is race, which is religion, which is war, and kind of get: How did these little snapshots of his life right now affect the future of the world? And then we get to see how, in fact, they could affect the future of the world."<ref name=":5" />
The WB ordered 13 episodes of Jack & Bobby prior to mid-May 2004 when TV networks traditionally unveil their fall season lineups, which garnered the new series advance buzz as the first show to be picked up for the 2004 fall season.<ref name=":1" /> The WB acquired the show as part of a wider attempt to cultivate older audiences beyond teenagers.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite news</ref>
Episodes
Reception
Critical reception
The show was acclaimed by multiple critics and outlets. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the show has a rating of 88% based on 16 critical reviews.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Rob Owen of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote Jack & Bobby is "undoubtedly the most grown-up series" aired by the youth-skewing WB network and called it "an absorbing drama with hints of the idealism found in early seasons of 'The West Wing.'"<ref name=":5">Template:Cite web</ref>
Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times wrote the show "could have been just another coming-of-age tale of teenagers growing up in a small town with an overbearing single mother," but its historical framing sets it apart.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite news</ref> She wrote, "'Jack & Bobby' is unusual in many ways, and one is that unlike so many modern shows it is cynical about television but deeply romantic about politics and public service...moments of misty patriotic yearning are leavened with sharp dialogue and self-mocking asides, including some at the expense of other WB series. (On tonight's episode, Jack sarcastically tells his mother that their family is ‘straight out of '7th Heaven’).”<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Stanley praised Christine Lahti’s performance in particular, writing “Ms. Lahti is an actress who works the underlayers of each role and resists the pull of easy sentiment. Grace is a complicated, strong woman who is sympathetic without being quite likable, and that makes both her bond with Bobby (he helps her match her outfits) and her tensely hostile relationship with Jack plausible.”<ref name=":2" />
Writing for Entertainment Weekly, Gillian Flynn gave the show a grade of A− and said, "On a grand scale, 'Jack & Bobby' reflects the American obsession with picking apart our childhoods ad nauseam for clues to the adults we become."<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> In The New Yorker, Nancy Franklin likened the show to a mix between The Wonder Years and The West Wing, concluding it “is most emotionally effective when the lines that are drawn between Bobby’s boyhood and his adulthood meander through unexpected oxbows.”<ref name=":0">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
James Poniewozik of Time found the documentary flash-forwards to be distracting, but said it’s “a smart, well-written show that constantly subverts our expectations, and it takes a rare demographic risk.”<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
A plot line about the parentage of Jack and Bobby, in which the mother had hid the fact that the boy's father was "just a Mexican dishwasher", received criticism from the Los Angeles Times<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and was described by The New Yorker as implausibly convenient.<ref name=":0" />
Awards and nominations
Cancelation
Despite critical acclaim and a strong start,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> the show was not a successful ratings draw for the network,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> averaging only 2.7 million weekly viewers,<ref name=":3" /> and was canceled by The WB on May 17, 2005. This has been partly attributed to its airing in the same Sunday night time slot as popular primetime series Desperate Housewives.<ref name=":0" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":4" /> The WB changed its time slot to Wednesdays,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> though the ratings did not improve as it was then competing against The West Wing, The Bachelor, and American Idol.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite web</ref>
To date, physical home media for the series has not been released, but it has intermittently been made available for digital purchase on Amazon and iTunes.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref name=":4" />
See also
Notes
References
External links
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- Jack & Bobby official site by co-creator Brad Meltzer
Template:Greg Berlanti Template:The WB Template:GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Individual Episode
- Pages using IMDb title instead of IMDb episode
- Pages using IMDb title instead of IMDb episodes
- 2000s American political television series
- 2000s American teen drama television series
- 2004 American television series debuts
- 2005 American television series endings
- Television series set in 2004
- Television series set in 2040
- Television series set in 2049
- American English-language television shows
- Television shows about teenage pregnancy
- Television series about brothers
- Television series about families
- American television series about teenagers
- Television series about bullying
- Television series by Warner Bros. Television Studios
- Television series created by Greg Berlanti
- Television shows set in Missouri
- The WB television dramas
- Coming-of-age television shows
- 2004 United States presidential election in popular culture
- Television series about presidents of the United States