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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rexfeatures_6528331a_edited.jpg]]
2->''"Film provides an opportunity to marry the power of ideas with the power of images."''
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4Steven Ronald Bochco (December 16, 1943 – April 1, 2018) was a television producer and writer. His best-known series tended to be workplace dramas, particularly in some sort of legal setting, although he worked in different genres throughout his career. Many credit him with redefining the structure of TV dramas.
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6Bochco got his start as a writer and story editor for Creator/{{Universal}} Pictures. In 1978, he was hired by [[Series/TheMaryTylerMooreShow MTM]] [[Series/WKRPInCincinnati Enterprises]], where he began working a producer. His first big hit came in 1981 by co-creating, writing and producing the police drama ''Series/HillStreetBlues''. The show received acclaim for its innovations (having story arcs rather than being purely episodic as well as having a large regular ensemble cast) with the TV drama and won numerous awards. He was fired from MTM, though, after his sports comedy-drama ''Bay City Blues'' got cancelled after 4 episodes aired (4 more aired afterwards). He then moved to Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox (which eventually acquired MTM) and co-created ''Series/LALaw'', which was also an acclaimed series. During production of that show, he met Creator/DavidEKelley, who was then a writer, and the two would co-create ''Series/DoogieHowserMD'' together before they went their separate ways.
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8In 1987, Bochco signed a 8 year deal with Creator/{{ABC}} (whose parent Creator/{{Disney}} acquired 20th Century Fox in 2019), where he agreed to produce 10 shows. It had flops like ''Series/CopRock'', a musical cop show, but it also had hits like ''Series/NYPDBlue'', which ran for 12 seasons and help popularize the anti-hero protagonist that would become more prevalent as, and after, the show aired. While short-lived, he made an influential show during this period called ''Series/MurderOne'' which, rather than having one case per episode, would instead see a case being investigation throughout the whole season, predating the concept in shows like ''Series/TwentyFour'' and various cable/streaming crime shows. He produced other shows for the network, but they tended to be lucky to last more than one season, even though a couple got critical praise.
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10Bochco got involved in internet TV through a show called ''Café Confidential'', which consisted of 44 one-minute episodes, each featuring unscripted confessions by members of the public. He produced another legal drama, ''Series/RaisingTheBar'', for Creator/{{TNT}}, but it was cancelled in its second season. His final show was the detective anthology ''Series/MurderInTheFirst'' for TNT, which lasted 3 seasons before getting cancelled. He was diagnosed with leukemia around the time the series began, and he would later die from the disease in 2018.
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12Bochco received several awards in his lifetime including ten Emmys and four Peabody awards. He received the TV Writing Achievement award from the Writers Guild of America and he was inducted in the Television Hall of Fame in 1996.
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15!!Shows that Bochco worked on with TV Tropes pages include:
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18[[folder:Creator or co-creator]]
19* ''[[Series/TheBoldOnes The Bold Ones: The New Doctors]]'' (1969–73)
20* ''Series/{{The Invisible Man|1975}}'' (1975–76)
21* ''Series/GeminiMan'' (1976)
22* ''Series/HillStreetBlues'' (1981–87)
23* ''Series/LALaw'' (1986–94)
24* ''Series/{{Hooperman}}'' (1987–89)
25* ''Series/DoogieHowserMD'' (1989–93)
26* ''Series/CopRock'' (1990)
27* ''WesternAnimation/CapitolCritters'' (1992; co-production with Creator/HannaBarbera)
28* ''Series/NYPDBlue'' (1993–2005)
29* ''Series/MurderOne'' (1995–97)
30* ''Series/PublicMorals'' (1996)
31* ''Series/BrooklynSouth'' (1997–98)
32* ''Series/BlindJustice'' (2005)
33* ''Series/RaisingTheBar'' (2008–09)
34* ''Series/MurderInTheFirst'' (2014–16)
35[[/folder]]
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37[[folder:Writer only]]
38* ''Series/{{Columbo}}'' (7 episodes, 1971–90)
39* ''Film/SilentRunning'' (1972)
40* ''Series/McMillanAndWife'' (3 episodes, 1974–77)
41* ''Series/{{Delvecchio}}'' (8 episodes, 1976–77)
42* ''Series/TheWhiteShadow'' (1 episode, 1979)
43* ''Series/{{Turnabout}}'' (7 episodes, 1979)
44* ''Series/{{The Twilight Zone|1985}}'' (1 episode, 1986)
45* ''Series/CommanderInChief'' (5 episodes, 2005–06)
46[[/folder]]
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48----
49!!Bochco’s work included these tropes:
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51* AcclaimedFlop: A couple of his shows (''Hooperman'' and ''Murder One'') had received critical praise but wouldn’t survive past season 2 if they were lucky enough to get a second season in the first place. ''Hill Street Blues'' started out as this as it's first season had poor ratings despite positive reviews though it did gradually pick up steam.
52* CopShow: ''Hill Street Blues'', ''Cop Rock'' and ''NYPD Blue''.
53* {{Dramedy}}: ''Hooperman'' and ''Doogie Howser, MD'' which where not too dramatic to be full on drama like ''Hill Street Blues'' but at the same time toned down key tropes (like laugh track) present in many comedy shows. The term was even coined in response to those shows.
54* EnsembleCast: He was famous for making TV shows that had a regular large ensemble cast, including ''Series/LALaw'', ''Series/HillStreetBlues'' and ''Series/CopRock''.
55* GenreRoulette: While his career heavily focused on either cop, lawyer or medical dramas, he had done work in other TV genres like [[TheMusical musical]] (''Cop Rock''), a {{Sitcom}} (''Public Morals'') and an action/war series (''Over There'').
56* MedicalDrama: ''Doogie Howser, M.D'' and ''City of Angels''.
57* LawProcedural: ''L.A. Law'' was his most successful in this genre though he had others like ''Murder One'', ''Philly'' and ''Raising the Bar''.
58* PoliceProcedural: His cop shows tended to mix emphasis on both of the character’s personal lives and professional lives.

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