David Ross
Created by Roy
Huggins
The
Outsider was an above-average 1967 made-for-television movie,
which served as a pilot for a memorable but short-lived TV series
the following year. It featured the adventures of low-rent ex-con
turned resigned, wistful private eye DAVID ROSS. The word
"loser" springs to mind. Ross lived and worked out of
a rundown apartment in a rundown building, drove a beat-up car,
and was often beat up himself in the course of his cases. And
life had never been particularly kind to Ross. Orphaned at an
early age, a high-school dropout, he eventually ended up in prison
on a trumped up murder charge. Even when he was released, after
six years in the slammer, the cops continued to harass him. Ross
had discovered that the world wasn't exactly a friendly place
for those on the "outside," and so he set out to help
them, hence the name of the show. His "outsider" status
allowed him to empathize with other people, and he was an extremely
thorough and dedicated detective, and would often take on low-paying
cases. One of the first of the sensitive, compassionate eyes to
be featured on television (he didn't even carry a gun!), echoing
literary eyes such as Ross Macdonald's Lew
Archer, and anticipating television's Harry
O.
As in most of Huggins series, his 1949 novel The Double Take, which had featured Stuart Bailey of 77 Sunset Strip fame, was adapted as an episode. Although the series never caught on, it bore more than a few similiarities with another show about an ex-con eye that Huggins had a bit more success with, The Rockford Files.
And here's an interesting bit of trivia: Rockford kept his gun in the cookie jar, Ross kept his phone in the fridge. Is this some sort of Huggins' trademark?
TELEVISION
- "For Members Only" (September 18, 1968)
- "What Flowers Daisies Are" (September 25, 1968)
- "Along Came a Spider" (October 2, 1968)
- "A Wide Place in the Road" (October 9, 1968)
- "As Cold as Ashes" (October 16, 1968)
- "A Time to Run" (October 30, 1968)
- "Love is Under L" (November 6, 1968)
- "The Twenty-thousand Dollar Carrot" (November 13, 1968)
- "One Long Stemmed American Beauty" (November 20, 1968)
- "I Can't Hear You Scream" (November 27, 1968)
- "Tell It Like It Was--and You're Dead" (December 4, 1968)
- "The Land of the Fox" (December 18, 1968)
- "There was a Little Girl" (December 25, 1968)
- "The Girl from Missouri" (January 8, 1969)
- "The Secret of Mareno Bay" (January 15, 1969)
- "The Old School Tie" (January 22, 1969)
- "A Bowl of Cherries" (January 29, 1969)
- "Behind God's Back" (February 5, 1969)
- "Take the Key and Lock Him Up" (February 12, 1969)
- "The Flip Side" (February 26, 1969)
- "Handle with Care" (March 5, 1969)
- "All the Social Graces" (March 12, 1969)
- "A Lot of Muscle" (March 26, 1969)
- "Periwinkle Blue" (April 2, 1969)
- "Service for One" (April 9, 1969)
- "Through a Stained Glass Window" (April 12, 1969)
.- NOTE: Four of the episodes were combined to form two movies:
"Anatomy of a Crime" (comprising Tell It Like It Was...and You're Dead" & "There Was a Little Girl") and "The 48 Hour Mile" (comprising "The Flip Side" and "Service for One")
NOVELIZATION
Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks to Ted Fitzgerald for his help on this one.
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