Anthony Tollin, who authored Dragnet on Radio, just sent me an e-mail with some more facts about Jack Webb…
Interestingly, Webb didn't want to star in the original 1950's Dragnet TV series. He wanted to work behind the camera as producer/director, and intended to cast Lloyd Nolan as the TV Joe Friday. NBC insisted that Webb had to star in the 1950s TV series in the role he'd created and embodied on radio.
Did you know that the 1950s Dragnet scripts were approved by a young L.A.P.D. police officer named Gene Roddenberry, who was Chief Parker's head researcher and scriptwriter? Roddenberry learned how to write television shows by borrowing Dragnet scripts from Webb's production company and comparing them to the actual telecasts, acquiring the technical terminology so he could later write his own scripts. In 1953, he was assigned as technical advisor to Ziv's Mr. District Attorney syndicated TV show, and launched his scriptwriting career moonlighting on that series.
Jack Webb was intensely loyal to police organizations, and the L.A.P.D. was equally grateful to Webb for providing the best possible P.R. for the department. When Webb died of a heart attack on Thursday, December 23, 1982, Chief of Police Darryl F. Gates eulogized the actor/producer as "a member of the Los Angeles Police Department family" and the man whose image "we all wished we could project." Chief Gates ordered all departmental flags flown at half-mast, restored Joe Friday's promotion to lieutenant and permanently retired badge #714 (which remained on permanent display at L.A.P.D. Headquarters). Webb became the first civilian to be buried with full L.A.P.D. departmental honors usually reserved for hero cops killed in the line of duty — including a Highland piper performing "Amazing Grace," a bugler playing "Taps," a memorial gunshot volley from the Police Color Guard and a missing-man helicopter formation.
If Mr. Webb boosted the rep of the L.A.P.D. — and I have no doubt he did in many ways — it's frightening to think how bad it would have been without him. No matter how good most of them are (and my perception is that most L.A. police officers are very honest and efficient), there are always a couple to remind you that they aren't all Joe Friday. After the incident in 1992 where a bunch of L.A.'s finest used Rodney King for a piñata, Darryl Gates — who was still Chief but not for long — should have projected the image of a Jack Webb. Instead, he made a bad situation worse and did nothing to debunk the notion that cops protect cops, no matter what.
I seem to remember, around the time of Webb's passing, an essay in one of the L.A. papers by a senior police officer. His thesis was that Dragnet actually damaged the image of his profession, in particular when Joe Friday would start lecturing people, berating them with what the author of the article called "one-sided police propaganda." But he also felt that Webb's other shows — Adam-12 and to a lesser extent, Emergency — had more than undone the damage by reminding all that the people who take those jobs are human beings. I forget the specific anecdotes and stats he cited but at the time, it seemed like a logical conclusion to me.
Anyway, thanks for the info, Tony but I have two questions. Did Joe Friday ever solve the case of the Clean Copper Clappers that were kept in the closet until they were copped by Claude Cooper, the kleptomaniac from Cleveland? And would that sketch have been the least bit funny if Jack Webb had been the least bit funny?