Vote for why you think it jumped
James has sex
Never Jumped
Puberty (James at 16)
Day One
England Dan and John Ford Coley
Shark Bytes
Absolutely adored this show and the previous movie and books. I agree the writing was excellent and the teenagers weren't just stereotypes; they had layers that made them three dimentional. It was normal for James to lose his virginity, and if it was on the air today, he'd be a virgin forever like Eddie in Family Matters due to the ridiculous notion nowadays that being honest with kids is like telling them to go out and do something. I thought it was handled realistically and with good taste. It was one of my favorite shows and then, of course, they cancelled it. It drives me crazy that shows of lesser quality are on DVD and they overlook this gem.
Also found out that James at 15 birthday gift actress, Australian born Trisha Ann Noble has a long and very impressive career. From starting on Aussie TV at age 6 to performing with The Beatles to most recently portraying Princess Padam'e 's mother in Star Wars episodes II and III. And she is still a very beautiful lady.
Found out that actress Trisha Noble played James' 16th birthday gift and actress Kirsten Baker played 'Christina Kollberg', James' first.
Though I was 13 at the time, thought the show was really good. Hey, does anyone remember or know the name of the actress that portrayed the "hooker" in that very brief but most memoriable scene? What a birthday present.
I wished I had an uncle as cool as James'. I remember when the show became "James at 16". I would like to see the episodes again, I watched them when they came out.
Has there ever been such a well-drawn teenage character as James? He'd just moved to Boston from Oregon and was having trouble adjusting, missed his girlfriend (whom he almost-but-not-quite went all the way with in a sleeping bag on the side of a mountain...it was too cold), became best friends with jive-talking Sly (who made pocket money selling "pot" to his classmates...it was really oregano), loved photography, pined after unattainable Paisley, drank the occasional beer, swam competitively...and we get all this character detail in the first episode! 99% of the ADULT characters on TV don't have this much shading, but for a show of the '70s to put so much into a KID...extraordinary television.
To the earlier poster who said no one had sex in the 70's: Are you kidding?
The post-pill, pre-AIDS 70's?
That aside, J15 was one of the freshest and most realistic youth shows until the network's prudery led to the ridiculous sex-with-the-exchange-student scene (no nice American girl would do THAT!). Aftetr that teh show lost its edge.
The post-pill, pre-AIDS 70's?
That aside, J15 was one of the freshest and most realistic youth shows until the network's prudery led to the ridiculous sex-with-the-exchange-student scene (no nice American girl would do THAT!). Aftetr that teh show lost its edge.
I've seen a lot of misinformation here about the circumstances surrounding James losing his virginity and Dan Wakefield departing the show. Allow me to set the record straight. The truth is, the network actually ORDERED the episode in which James had sex for the first time. Due to its late start (the series premiered in mid-October) and multiple pre-emptions, James at 15 wasn't doing well in the ratings, and the network planned to get huge ratings for February sweeps with a "very special" James Gets Laid episode. However, they specifically wanted James to have sex with the hooker his Uncle "bought" for him for his 16th birthday, and afterwards, they wanted James to go through a cleansing emotional hell (this kind of moral hypocrisy is straight out of the Cecil B. DeMille school of Sinning then Suffering) by worrying about either 1)unwanted pregnancy or 2)VD. In order for him to be able to worry about these things, James obviously could not use a condom. Dan Wakefield felt strongly that James's first sexual experience should be tender and loving, with someone he cared about (Swedish exchange student Gun instead of a hooker), and that James should be smart and responsible enough to use birth control. This was all going to be presented in very good taste, with nothing shown - merely a brief discussion between James and Gun about "being responsible" (the words "birth control" and/or "condoms" were never to be mentioned). However, the network overruled Wakefield, letting James sleep with Gun instead of the hooker, but eliminating any mention of birth control (thus paving the way for the awful Does James Have the Clap? show two episodes later). Wakefield, tired of fighting network interference and disgusted with what he viewed as a reprehensible lack of moral responsibility, resigned from the show. The quality took a nosedive and was cancelled after another 10 episodes.
I just got all misty when I saw this show listed. I absolutely LOVED JAMES AT 15. This was a very sweet teenage growing pains drama that was family appropriate and still entertaining. I have to confess to having a major crush on Lance Kerwin. I thought he was the cutest thing. Many people I know feel the show jumped when James lost his virginity, but I disagree. This is a normal part of growing up. Teenage boys lose their virginity. There's no getting around it. Enjoyable show that I miss...still.
Back in the 80s, this show was re-runned on A&E. Doesn't anyone remember this? I was a toddler in the 70s, so I couldn't have seen it the first time around. But I liked it (not completely sure why). James was endearing, there was something about his slightly awkward personality that any teen can relate to. And I thought Sly was cool--I could appreciate that the show didn't seem to pigeon-hole teenagers into just one category or one click...a far cry from a lot of the shows about teens when i was one (I'd take James at 15 over Saved By the Bell any day!). If it were on today, and it was a rainy Saturday afternoon and I had nothing to do...I'd watch it.
Oh man yeah i remember this show. I was almost the same age as this kid,actually I was a year or 2 older, yet I would tune in each week to see this guy get a hot girl each week while I got no one. I liked the opening theme song on the early shows.It started something like this: ''He don't got no ball and chain,he don't got no bone to pick, just because his name is James,whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa James...'' I missed some stuff I know but in the later episodes the song went something like this: ''James.its your life and its all up to you.....'' not as upbeat and peppy as the earlier theme song. I also remember the big hype over him turning 16. A non event unfortunately.
James at 15 was one of the better offerings from NBC during the 1977-78 season. Lance Kerwin was very believable as an oversexed teenaged boy, and Linden Chiles, a character actor I've always liked, played James' father. The plots were believable and represented the sort of things a teenage boy goes through. And to the poster above who commented about England Dan and John Ford Coley playing at the dance, the song they did was not "I'd Really Love to See You Tonight", it was "Gone Too Far", a track from one of their later albums, "Dowdy Ferry Road".
Never Jumped ... at least that's how I remembered it. I was 10 when it was on and I always remembered it jumping from time slot to time slot, but the episodes I saw were terrific. Like the White Shadow (which someone mentioned) the show may have been corny, but it looked and felt real ... and like the White Shadow, it had a lot of heart. Snips I remember fondly were 1) James trying to fit in at his new school by being the football team's photographer, 2) befriending a rich kid, flying to LA and stealing a canoe from a department store, 3) James running for student President against one of his best friends and in a tight and tough campaign, James, without much paying attention and distracted at the time, OK's the use of a vicious attack in the school paper written by his campaign manager.
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