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CBS (Ended 1992)
Show Overview

Show Score

 
7.6 Good
102 votes

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Status

Ended

Premiered

September 26, 1987

Ended

September 12, 1992

Genre

Drama

Theme

Mystery

Final Episode

More Episodes
Beautiful Dreamer (a.k.a. Mickey Daytona)
Episode Score
 
8

Beautiful Dreamer (a.k.a. Mickey Daytona)

Notorious New York cop Mickey Daytona pursues the legal counsel Thomas Chetwin suspecting him of rape. Jake, who is a friend of Mickey and his old father, reluctantly teams up with Mickey. Chetwin is trapped and commits suicide.

Aired: 05/06/92

Show Summary

District attorney J.L. McCabe strikes down on the crime in Los Angeles (and later Hawaii) together with his special investigator Jake Styles and assistant D.A. Derek Mitchell.

Production Companies:
Dean Hargrove Productions
The Fred Silverman Company


More /> Viacom Productions Inc.

Distributors: CBS Television

Air Day & time
Sep 1987 -- Sat 10:00pm
Sep 87-Feb 88 -- Tue 9:00pm
Mar 88-May 88 -- Wed 9:00pm
Jun 88-Sep 88 -- Wed 8:00pm
Oct 88-Feb 89 -- Not On.
Mar 89-Jun 92 -- Wed 9:00pm
Jun 92-Sep 92 -- Sat 10:00pm

Filming Locations:

1. 2nd Street Tunnel, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA
2. Hawaii Film Studio - 18th Avenue & Diamond Head Road, Honolulu, O'ahu, Hawaii, USA (studio)
3. Honolulu, O'ahu, Hawaii, USA

From the Forums

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  • DVD release

    Just announced - Season 1, Volume 1 of Jake and the Fatman is coming to DVD on July 8th ! It's a big day for William Conrad on DVD - the first half of Season 1 of his 1970s PI show Cannon also streets that day. Here's your cover art. I never saw this show, but am a fan ofMore cop/PI mysteries, and a fan of Matlock . I also like William Conrad, but I know him more for his voice than his acting in TV and movies. His old-time radio work (especially as Matt Dillon on Gunsmoke and in performances on Suspense and Escape! ) is fantastic, and his narration on The Fugitive is great too. So, I'm debating trying this series out. Any recommendations/suggestions from fans?

    5 comments, last one Jan 29, 2009
  • Submission Guidelines

    Welcome to the guide for Jake and the Fatman . Please ensure that you have read the TV.com Guidelines and the guidelines below prior to submitting information to the guide. If you need any clarification on the guidelines, please PM me and I will be happy to help. More_ncis_now More Guidelines Copy/Paste Sources Submission Comments Acceptance/Rejection PMs Spelling/Grammar Nielson Ratings Links Episode Submission Guidelines Trivia Notes Allusions Quotes Cast/Crew Copy/Paste Copy & Pasting of information from another site is disallowed on TV.com. I do a Google search on all submissions sent to me to ensure that they have not been copied from another website, so please don't try this - I will catch the copy/pasting! (Back) Sources Please always provide a source for your information - I will enjoy receiving your submissions far more if you tell me where you gained your information! If you gained your information from another website, please copy the exact URL for the page on the site that you gained the information from - try not to just give me the main website page as I may not be able to find the information on the site & this may result in rejection of your submission. If your source is "I watched the episode" this is fine, but please try to make a note of where in the episode the information was - a time stamp is always good, even if it's just to give me a rough idea of which part of the episode I need to check to confirm your submission. If your source is a book or a magazine, I may PM you and ask if you can scan the page for me. To speed things up, you could consider including a scanned version of the page in your submission comments - this is not required, but could help your submission to be dealt with faster. (Back) Submission Comments Please always include a comment. Comments are there for two reasons - they help me to see what changes you are making and they help you to see the same when you check the submissions tab in your profile. An ideal submission comment will tell me as specifically as possible what you are changing (i.e. If you are removing an incorrect guest star and adding two missing stars, please name them and tell me what you're doing with them!) and will also include a source. (Back) Acceptance/Rejection PMs Please always try to read both the acceptance & rejection PMs that you receive from me. I will often make suggestions in the acceptance PMs for future submissions and will always explain a rejection, with suggestions on how the submission could be improved, wherever possible. (Back) Spelling/Grammar checking Please check your spelling and grammar before hitting the submit button. Errors can be easily missed while you're concentrating on typing out a submission, but can be easily caught with a quick check before pressing the submit button. I will correct minor spelling and grammar errors where possible, but if your spelling and grammar is so bad that I can't understand your submission, I will be forced to reject! If you're submitting to an American guide, please try to use American English wherever possible. If you submit to a British guide, please use British English. If you're browsing one of the American guides that I edit and you notice that I have used British English, please go ahead and change it to American English - I will be grateful for the correction. (Back) Nielson Ratings Please do not submit Nielson Ratings. These are copyrighted and are not allowed in the TV.com guides. (Back) Links Please do not link to sites outside of the CNET arena in your submissions. As a general rule, I don't add links to other Cnet guides within submissions, but if you do wish to add a link while submitting information I will not reject. Do not edit an existing submission to add a link to another guide - I will reject this type of submission. (Back) Episode Submission Guidelines In order to submit a new episode to the guide, you must have 2 out of 3 of the following criteria: Title Air date Summary. This means you can submit an episode with: Title & Summary but no airdate. Title plus Airdate but no summary (if you do this please leave the summary box completely blank). Title, Summary and Airdate. You will be unable to submit an episode without a title. Please provide a source for episode additions - if you watched the episode and are using your knowledge from the viewing rather than using an internet source, please note this and note when and where you watched the episode. (Back) Trivia From the TV.com guidelines: "Trivia is any small detail or goof that may not be known to people who view an episode. Trivia deals with on screen information. A car license plate is trivia. A goof is also trivia. Anything that happens off screen is not trivia." (Back) Notes From the TV.com guidelines: "Notes deal with off screen details. Details relating to show production should be included in the notes section." Music included in an episode can be added to the notes section. Please only make one submission with all of the episode's music - don't make 5 notes for 5 songs, I will reject these with a request that you edit the first note to add the additional music. If a main actor does not appear in an episode, please remove them from the cast listing for the episode rather than adding a note saying "Actor X did not appear in this episode". If an actor is credited by another name in the episode, please do not submit this as a note - this can be added as an alias to the biography section of the actor's guide. (Back) Allusions From the TV.com guidelines: "An allusion is an indirect reference to another form of media - a show, movie, book, piece of music etc. If the media is directly referred to, for example the star of a show names another show, this is not an allusion. Please include as much information as possible when submitting allusions to the show." When you submit an allusion, please include either the quote from the episode or a header of some form in bold followed by a short explanation of the allusion, for example: Person X : Hey, you look just like Captain Kirk! Captain Kirk was a character in the Sci-Fi show, Star Trek . (Back) Quotes When submitting a quote, the character name should be in bold. The colon following the character name should not be in bold. Any actions in the quote should be in italics. A quote is submitted as follows: Character Name : Quote line one. (action here) Character Name 2 : Quote line two. (Back) Cast/crew Please submit all cast members in one submission. Likewise, please submit all crew members in one submission. Submissions which add guest stars/cast to an episode one person at a time are ****d as gaming and will not be accepted. If you spot a person listed for an episode incorrectly, please remove them from cast. Please do not submit a note indicating that "Person X did not appear in this episode" - this information will be gained from checking the cast list. If you are making a submission to remove a cast/crew member from an episode, please provide a source. When submitting guests to a talk show, please input the guest star's role as Himself or Herself (with capital letters at the start of the word). (Back)

    1 comments, last one Nov 9, 2007
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  •  
    8 Great

    A hybrid of sorts between "Matlock" and "Nero Wolfe," "Jake and the Fatman" is light-hearted B-movie inspired mystery. hide show

    Part cop show, part courtroom drama, "Jake and the Fatman" overcomes its unfortunate title and turns out to be a pretty good mystery show.

    What drew me to the series was the titular Fatman - William Conrad. Though he looks like he's been sleeping at death's door, Conrad still infuses the character of J.L. McCabe with a ton (no pun intended!) of humor and tenacity. In some respects, he's a more colorful character than Conrad's standard-issue, but heavyset, PI Frank Cannon. McCabe is crafty and shrewd - there's more than a shade of Columbo in his rumpled appearance and seemingly befuddled courtroom persona. Like fellow TV sleuth Andy Griffith, Conrad shines in the courtroom scenes when McCabe cuts a defendant to pieces on the stand. Conrad's having a ball, and his enthusiasm elevates the series as a whole.

    Though not as strong as Conrad, Joe Penny is well cast as Jake Styles, the Fatman's go-to investigator. Their relationship is a good one, following in the footsteps of other TV old/young odd couple partnerships. Styles' footwork and way with the ladies also conjures up images of Archie Goodwin, erstwhile legman of Nero Wolfe. Penny's got some better acting chops than a lot of his 80s TV star contemporaries, and while the show doesn't give him much of a chance to flex them, he acquits himself well.

    The show is cut from almost the same cloth as "Matlock," "Diagnosis Murder" and the other whodunits of the era. Basically, they bring the sensibilities of Hollywood B-movie mysteries into the 80s and 90s. The crimes here are usually solved not by forensics or procedure, but by an errant clue or deduction - the suspect smokes the same French cigarettes that were found at the scene, etc. They're the kind of clues Charlie Chan or Perry Mason would hang a conviction on, but since "Jake and the Fatman" is such a throwback itself, these never hurt the plot.

    It's definitely worth a look for fans of Conrad and/or light mystery fare. It's no classic, but it's damn entertaining with a good leading duo.

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