It ran here in Los Angeles for about a year (1979-80) on KTLA Channel 5. I recall it being a full hour, and it ran on Wednesday nights at 7 or 8. I never knew it had been cut down to 30 minutes elsewhere in the U.S. That's too bad.
It seemed to be pretty popular--I knew other people who watched it besides my family, and Channel 5 was always promoting it well--but after just one year, it abruptly disappeared. Channel 5 had a day-long Prisoner marathon (the lady who played the child killer in season 1 did a commercial announcing it), and then the show was gone.
I never saw Prisoner again or heard about it, but it stayed in my memory over the decades. I continued to remember the closing song and characters such as Frankie Doyle, Karen Travers, Vera, and Lizzie.
I imagine the show was censored somewhat, but I remember Frankie coming on to Karen during reading lessons (unheard of in American TV), and I think uses of the word "bitch" were left in--which was also very unusual in the U.S. at that time.
Again, I never saw or heard anything about Prisoner after that one year... until Sept. 2012, when I just happened to run into it on YouTube. (I wasn't even looking for it or anything related to prisons or Australia.) I started watching it from about where I left off in 1980, and as I write this, I'm almost up to the last episode.
As a child (I was 12 when I saw it originally) I was impressed because the show was a good drama. As an adult I appreciate additional things, too, like issues addressed (e.g., prison reform, drug use, environmentalism via Wally, nuclear disarmament (as articulated by nun Anita Selby), aboriginal issues, suicide, rape, tolerance, and even animal rights...); the acting (especially considering the tight schedule); camera/directing techniques; and writing (including the plotting).
I just wish the show had kept running here for more than one year. It was light years ahead of most American TV.
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