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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsJust watched the worst M*A*S*H episode
In terms of anachronism and continuity -- "A War For All Seasons," the one that begins with a New Year's Eve party with Col. Potter as Father Time, ushering in 1951. Problem was, Potter didn't arrrive at the 4077th until Sept. 19, 1952.
M*A*S*H is notorious for continuity errors. How many can you think of? And, when do you think the show jumped the shark?

hlthe2b
(110,698 posts)Good grief... So, what if there were a few "continuity" mistakes that those needing a hobby dissect out 40 years later?
M*A*S*H at its worst is better than 90 plus % of what is available today--even on paid networks. YMMV, but I'd bet the majority will agree with me.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)to today's shows? I'm comparing it to itself.
hlthe2b
(110,698 posts)Your comment is the standard for the latter.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)is the standard for shows with a capable continuity editor.
As you can see from the comments and recs, the majority of us still like and enjoy it.
Had you been sincere in wanting to talk about the lack of continuity in shows, you could have posted a thread about this among all comedies and dramas. But, instead all you wanted to do was make an issue of M*A*S*H. You didn't like it. We get it. Bye.

I'd just watched what I consider one of its worst episodes because it threw logic into the shredder. I didn't realize i was butchering anybody's sacred cow.
You want me to critiqué other sitcoms? I can do that. Pick one.
LetMyPeopleVote
(166,503 posts)That makes continuity issues difficult
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(166,503 posts)If you have a holiday episode each season for ten seasons, it is hard to keep continuity for a war that only lasted three years.
I loved Mash and the show did a great job given the fact that the series was three + time longer than the actual war.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)is a continuity editor who keeps track of everything and reads each script to make sure, for example, Col. Potter isn't a Methodist when he first gets there and a Presbyterian about fìve seasons later.
Wiz Imp
(6,087 posts)Ptah
(33,827 posts)Attilatheblond
(6,711 posts)Agree, TV shows are not reality and back when that one was on, people knew the difference between real and TV shows.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)boonecreek
(1,139 posts)were a hallmark of the Sheldon Leonard sitcoms.
Names changed, characters changed, etc.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)In "The Dick Van Dyke Show," Laura had two maiden names: first Meeker, then Meehan.
boonecreek
(1,139 posts)Sam Pomerantz or Sol Pomeroy first played by Henry Calvin who played Sgt. Garcia on Zorro,
then later by sitcom veteran Allan Melvin.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)originally Sol?
Seems like Allan Melvin was on half the sitxoms from the mid-'50s to the late '60s, and always as either a cop or a soldier. First, as far as I know, he was the cop whse beat included Danny Williams' (Danny Thomas) apartment building on "Make Room for Daddy." Then he was Cpl. Henshaw in "The Phil Silers Show" ("Sgt. Bilko" , and later Sgt. Hacker in "Gomer Pyle, USMC," in ddition to playing the aforementioned Sol (or Not Sol) in "The Dick Van Dyke Show." I'm almost certain he was a. one-ooff or ocasional character in other shows.
Oh -- he played the space sheriff in "Lost In Space" who was on the trail of Old West outlaw Zeno, who bore an uncanny resemblance to Dr. Smith in obe of that show's silliest episodes.
boonecreek
(1,139 posts)Looked it up on IMDb, the episode was "Sol and the Sponsor." He was also on "I'm Dickens He's Fenster" with John Astin
and this crazy movie called"Wild and Wonderful" with Tony Curtis, Christine Kaufman and a spoiled rotten poodle. IIRC, I
saw it on a double bill wth "Dr. Strangelove."
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)is being married to Shirley Jones.
I barely remember "I'm Dickens, He's Fenster." Must not have watched it much because I can't remember what it was about. Weren't they handymen or somethin'?
boonecreek
(1,139 posts)Basically, house builders. Their foreman was played by Frank DeVol who was primarily a
musician. If you see an old TV show where "Music by DeVol" is in the closing credits, that's him.
The episode I remember best was where Harry tells a joke and the job site splits into two armed
camps over whether to joke is funny or not.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)First tine I recall noticing DeVol was in the "Family Affair" closing credits. (I had a bit of a crush on Cissy )
RockRaven
(17,625 posts)and DECADES in reruns!
Ilsa
(63,043 posts)Christmas episodes. So, 251 episodes could hypothetically translate to an episode for every 4 or 5 days of the Korean Conflict?
Wounded Bear
(62,534 posts)I'm not surprised at some chronological inconsistancies.
The war started in Jun of 1950. By the spring of 1951 it had stabilized into trench warfare that lasted until the armistice in summer of 1953. The front lines moved a little, but nothing significant like WWII. The mountainous terrain lent itself to defense and static warfare.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_War
M*A*S*H would have occurred in the later, non mobile part of the conflict. Thus the hospital camp never really moves much. Helps to keep production costs down. That gives a window of just over 2 years to contain the 11 seasons and 256 episodes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M*A*S*H_(TV_series)
Marie Marie
(10,341 posts)One of the best shows ever aired on TV. JMHO.
3catwoman3
(27,184 posts)
Diamond_Dog
(37,658 posts)
LetMyPeopleVote
(166,503 posts)ms liberty
(10,407 posts)electric_blue68
(22,444 posts)hunter
(39,671 posts)... with some small effort made to put them in a pseudo-chronological order.
niyad
(125,307 posts)of us are too heartsick and exhausted to be able to care.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)Like "What's your favorite breakfast cereal?"
debm55
(48,514 posts)
niyad
(125,307 posts)debm55
(48,514 posts)
True Dough
(23,701 posts)It's the friendly nature of the people who start them. Some are naturals at it (like yourself) and others are just not very good at it (no names necessary).
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)That should be obvious by the question at the end of the OP.
ms liberty
(10,407 posts)You picked on MASH, one of THE most sacred shows of the 20th century and the show that taught premium unmatched smart-assed repartee to a nation of ypung people.
(Finest kind!)
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)who learned it from Marx Brothers movies. (Swordfish.)
electric_blue68
(22,444 posts)Polly Hennessey
(7,968 posts)electric_blue68
(22,444 posts)Otherwise I'd be cursing, and crying a whole lot more! Keeps my mental, and physical health at least better otherwise.
Rigpa108
(53 posts)26 episodes per year at one hour per episode would be 26 hours, times 11 year run = 226 hours divided by 24 hours in a day = ~12 days. Counting reruns would double that to ~24 days.
Great show BTW.
And I tend to agree, never jumped the shark.
Wiz Imp
(6,087 posts)Morbius
(583 posts)The show took a hit when Henry got killed. It was still good for several more years, and declined over time, especially in the last three seasons. Really, the prime was in the first four seasons before Larry Gelbart left.
Radar at the beginning was a cunning participant in whatever Hawkeye and BJ were up to; in the first season he would go into the Swamp and drink their moonshine. Then the show runners decided he needed to be naive and youthful, so he switched to grape Nehi and assumed an air of innocence. His character didn't grow; it changed based on the needs of the show.
Margaret was a joke until Loretta Swit negotiated a new contract, and she became a more sympathetic character. It's not like her character grew; her character changed. And so on.
Don't get me wrong; it's not like the show got terrible, not ever. But the end was a good deal less great than the beginning. It was a comedy and a good one; then they made it a dramedy and it was much less entertaining.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)the Alan Alda Virtue Signalling Show, but I don't think that was its downfall. That came with Radar's departure and Klinger's promotion to the main cast.
First, Radar wasn't a cohort of all the officers, but a comedic adjutant to them. Klinger, who was nothing but a clown from the beginning, became a member of the officers' club while contributing nothing but complains and bad puns. Then, this perennial bozo got promoted to sergeant. Unbelievable.
Meanwhile, Hawkeye and B.J. became overbearingy "punny" and Potter expanded his lexicon of "down-home" exlaations to absurdity. We also got too much of Sgt.Rizzo, one of the most inane, pointless characters in TV history.
Gary Burghoff's departure led to a chain reaction that showed how important hee was to the show.
Wiz Imp
(6,087 posts)Only Harry Morgan as Colonel Potter was a good replacement IMO though his casting significantly changed the tone of the show. But he was such a good actor to me I could accept him in that role. I like and respect Mike Farrell, but his character of BJ couldn't hold a candle to Trapper. David Ogden Stiers was a great actor, but his character was all wrong for the show. As horrible a person as the character of Frank Burns was, he added a lot to the dynamic of the show though I understand why Larry Linville chose to leave the show. They were probably smart in not replacing Gary Burghoff with a new actor, but he was crucial to the show, and the show declined precipitously after he left (even if the rest of the cast hated him as is rumored). The changing of Klinger's character was absolutely terrible to me.
The last several seasons are completely unwatchable to me. This blogger nails it for me:
https://manofwow.blogspot.com/2015/06/the-slow-burn-of-mash-jumping-shark.html
I can watch any episode from the first 3 seasons at any time. The next couple seasons after that are OK - watchable if I'm in the mood. If a Post Frank Burns episode come on, I'll generally change the channel (probably quickly). If an episode comes on from when after Radar left, I'll run screaming the other direction.
As much as I love Alan Alda and the general underlying politics of the show, as it went on, Alda had more control over everything and seemed to either forget or ignore what made the show so likeable in the beginning. M*A*S*H was much better as a comedy with dramatic elements than the other way around.
Omnipresent
(7,018 posts)
ProfessorGAC
(73,641 posts)I like none of the Blake episodes, except maybe(!) the last one, where he is going home.
I didn't care for Wayne Rogers & the Trapper character, either.
I like everything AFTER the point you prefer ended.
Maybe that's why the show lasted so long. There was a little something for everyone.
yourout
(8,500 posts)ProfessorGAC
(73,641 posts)Made me laugh out loud!
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)than a C.O., but at least he knew he wasn't much of the latter. He had a couple of moments, like when Hawkeye's old friend Tommy died (the one who was writing the book about the war) and Blake tried to console Hawkeye with the adage about doctors not being able to prevent young men from dying in war. But, mostly, he waps a clown.
That doesn't mean those episodes themselves were all bad, though. It's more that, for the most part, they were strictly comedy. ("Yankee Doodle Doctor" was great.)
I think the best seasons were the three after Col. Potter arrived. He was an excellent leader, yet quite human, and the writing seemed to be at its peak during that time.
ProfessorGAC
(73,641 posts)Completely agree. It also made more sense to me that a regular army doctor would be in charge of a hospital unit.
I also prefer the BJ character to Trapper, and the 2 of them arrived 2 episodes apart.
appmanga
(1,212 posts)...those first three years were hilarious, and the show didn't take itself so seriously. It eventually got too preachy for me, and I stopped watching after season four.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)In the original run, though by about the eighth season, a lot of episodes were pretty eye-rolly. I never minded the "preachiness" too much, just the bad plots (I mean, a bowling tournament with a portable lane?Surgeons mixing and pouring concrete?*) and resulting sub-par writing nd directing.
*For that matter, why would they send their two best surgeons to diffuse an unexploded bomb instead of calling in EOD, or at least using a couple of enlisted men? And that was in the first season.
Paladin
(31,084 posts)Tiny Tabby
(49 posts)Someone started singing the Mickey Mouse Club theme song to taunt another character. Mickey Mouse Club started in 1955, war ended in 1953.
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)One that I've totally missed
sdfernando
(5,812 posts)the show ran for 11 seasons and the US was only involved in Korean War for 3 years.
edbermac
(16,236 posts)In one early episode she tells Col Blake Do you know that you look just like my father before he died?. A few seasons later guess who shows up at the 4077?
Ptah
(33,827 posts)Can you explain that?
Oeditpus Rex
(42,110 posts)most people would know?
Besides, you're referring to a movie that was pure satire. M*A*S*H wasn't.
ProfessorGAC
(73,641 posts)But, not this one. I rather enjoy that episode.
Xoan
(25,538 posts)
electric_blue68
(22,444 posts)famous ribs he's had previously.
My favorite part is when he throws his food to the tent, jumps on the table, and starts chanting, "we want something else !", till he gets the whole lunch crowd chanting it. Does a little dance, too.
😄😄😄