Dragnet — The Stamp

Dragnet Stamp The U.S. Postal Service has released a "Dragnet" stamp featuring series star, writer and producer Jack Webb, who began the program on radio in 1949 and brought it to television in 1951. The stamp is part of a commemorative series honoring programs that include "Alfred Hitchcock Presents," "The Ed Sullivan Show," "Hopalong Cassidy," "The Honeymooners," "Kukla, Fran and Ollie," "The Lone Ranger," "Perry Mason" and "Twilight Zone."

I suppose we should be smoking Fatima cigarettes (an early sponsor) at the Daily Mirror HQ in honor of the show, but we're not. The "Dragnet" formula was set in concrete the first time Webb stepped before the microphone, and it never varied: A long-suffering, thin blue line of dedicated, hardworking, underpaid officers threading their way through a landscape of dithering housewives; folksy, long-winded clerks and cashiers; and sullen, cop-hating suspects. Except to make a point under rare circumstances, there are no corrupt officers and no police brutality in the world of "Dragnet." 

At its best, which was brilliant in the beginning, "Dragnet" was a welcome alternative to shoot-'em-up shows that dominated radio programming. At its worst, "Dragnet" was a ghastly self-parody of a robotic Sgt. Joe Friday delivering rambling, almost-angry monologues about the ills of American society. Not that Webb ever became too upset; Gort, the extraterrestrial police officer in "The Day the Earth Stood Still," showed a wider range of emotion than Webb had as Joe Friday. 

Twilight Zone_Stamp My biggest objection to "Dragnet" is that it is accurate without being realistic. All the details are correct down to the names of actual officers and crime lab personnel, and the show even used the LAPD's radio call sign, KMA-367. When Webb brought the show to TV, he precisely and painstakingly re-created the LAPD offices (then at City Hall) on a sound stage down to the number of holes in the ceiling tiles, the dots on the linoleum floor and the cigarette butts in the ashtrays on the detectives' desks. 

But at the same time, the show is terribly unrealistic. There are never any unsolved cases in "Dragnet." Especially in the early years, Joe Friday is part of an all-white police department working in an all-white city. His first partner, Ben Romero, is perhaps the only Spanish-surnamed person in Los Angeles with a Southern accent. Taken in that light, the show is ridiculous.

I'm glad Jack Webb got a commemorative stamp, and I wish he were around to see it (he died in 1982). But we'll be using "Twilight Zone" stamps around here. Rod Serling — now there was a writer.

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About lmharnisch

I am retired from the Los Angeles Times
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3 Responses to Dragnet — The Stamp

  1. Arye Michael Bender's avatar Arye Michael Bender says:

    At least in the early shows, Friday and sidekick wore hats. When they went color and bareheaded, nothing could save us from being lectured to by William H. Parker from inside the tight lips of Jack Webb.

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  2. Raul Moreno's avatar Raul Moreno says:

    About time.I knew Webb very well and he would have loved this.He left me some of his awards when he passed away.It was his show,but Thad Brown and Parker had a say in things for sure.I almost bought a series reporter badge in 1996 but $200 was too much for me at the time.How I regret that move!

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  3. Sam Flowers's avatar Sam Flowers says:

    My father in the early 50’s and 60’s was, on occasion, a technical director on Dragnet. Webb asked him one day if the recreation of the Detective HQ. office was accurate. My father said “Yes” except his brief case was usually on top of a file cabinet, Webb had him put his brief case there for the scene. Dragnet by todays standards was pretty lame and full of corn ball, but people then were not so demanding of blood and guts.
    As Tech. Director you got a take home car from the Department, I remember the trunk was full of old Dragnet scripts. I wish I had grabbed a few but never thought they would be worth anything.

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