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TV Shows - Dukes of Hazzard, The
The Dukes of Hazzard is an American television series that originally aired on the CBS television network from 1979 to 1985. It was inspired by the 1975 film Moonrunners.
The television series The Dukes of Hazzard followed Bo and Luke Duke, two cousins living in a rural part of the fictional Hazzard County, Georgia, racing around in their modified 1969 Dodge Charger, The General Lee, evading corrupt county commissioner Boss Hogg and his inept county sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane. Bo and Luke had been sentenced to probation for illegal transportation of moonshine - their uncle Jesse made a plea bargain to stop brewing moonshine in return for the boys to forgo jail time and instead be placed on probation. As a result, Bo and Luke were not allowed to carry firearms (they often used compound bows, sometimes tipped with dynamite) or leave Hazzard County (although the exact details of their probation terms varied from episode to episode; sometimes it was implied that they would be jailed for merely crossing the county line; on other occasions, it was shown that they may leave Hazzard as long as they were back within a certain time limit).
Corrupt politician Boss Hogg, who either ran or had fingers in just about everything in Hazzard County (and whose exact powers, much like the terms of the Duke boys' probation, often varied in different episodes) was forever angry with the Dukes, in particular Bo and Luke, for eternally foiling his crooked scams and was always looking for ways to get them out of the picture so his plots had a chance of succeeding. Many episodes revolved around Boss trying to engage in an illegal scheme with criminal associates. Some of these were get-rich-quick schemes, though many others affected the financial security of the Duke farm, which Boss had long wanted to acquire for nefarious reasons. Other times, Boss hired known criminals from out of town to do his dirty work for him, and often tried to frame Bo and Luke for various crimes such as bank robbery (thus resulting in imprisonment and allowing Boss easily to acquire the Duke farm). Bo and Luke always seemed to stumble over Boss' latest scheme, sometimes by curiosity, and often by sheer luck, and put it out of business.
Due to their fundamentally good natures, the Dukes often wound up helping out Boss Hogg, albeit begrudgingly. More than once Boss was targeted by former associates who were either seeking revenge or had turned against him after a scheme unraveled in any number of ways: Boss' greedy nature, Rosco's bumbling, the criminals simply outsmarting the two or their consciences came to the surface. Sometimes criminals who were even more crooked and ruthless than Boss came to town. Sheriff Rosco also found himself in trouble more than once. On such occasions, Bo and Luke usually had to rescue their adversaries as an inevitable precursor to defeating the bad guys; these instances became more regular as the series went on.
Wikipedia Link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dukes_of_hazzard
eBay Link: View Dukes of Hazzard, The on eBay
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I really wonder what the hell was going on behind the scenes with this show. Besides the Coy & Vance thing, there were also a few episodes with fake Rosco and fake Cooter. -- Submitted By: (Travoltron) on June 16, 2012, 6:08 pm - (1 votes)
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The original Bo and Luke left the show after CBS refused to increase their salary which proves that not all execs are stupid. -- Submitted By: (lrbloom) on November 30, 2010, 8:31 pm - (-2 votes)
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After having watched every episode of Dukes of Hazzard on DVD, I'm inclined to agree bringing in Coy and Vance was the BTF moment. -- Submitted By: (BigAl) on June 14, 2010, 12:49 pm - (2 votes)
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Thanks Pelirojo, glad to get that mystery straightened out :-) I actually did know the bit about moonshining and how NASCAR started. Not that it makes NASCAR's existence today right of course.
Really if not for Catherine Bach the show would've been unwatchable to me, even as a kid and before the Coy And Vance Fiasco. -- Submitted By: (DolFan316) on March 4, 2010, 5:50 pm - (1 votes)
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DolFan,
Coy and Vance were cousins to each other but brothers to Bo and Luke, respectively but I couldn't tell you which of them went with which True Duke because they weren't bothering to remember.
An interesting footnote to all this is the fact that for all its carchases and hokum, the "Dukes" did somewhat capture a little-known part of Southern US history in that many a 'good ole boy' moonshiner revved up their cars and trucks just so they COULD gallavant up and down those very steep hills to literally stay ahead of the law! Some of them saw the looky loos watching the chases and got the idea that they could make money off of CHARGING folks to watch so, yep, the NASCAR races among others evolved from this! -- Submitted By: (Pelirojo) on March 2, 2010, 11:21 am - (1 votes)
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I could've sworn Coy and Vance were cousins, not brothers. Oh well, in any case they sucked. I was 8 at the time and even THEN I could tell that was a BTF moment. -- Submitted By: (DolFan316) on March 1, 2010, 7:58 pm - (1 votes)
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Oh, yeah, PLZrulz, Fake Dukes were rather lame. Even if one ignored the fact that EACH of them was supposed to be a brother of one of the True Dukes who had never once referred to them before or after their own absence from the show- and, of course the True Dukes treated each other like brothers so it makes no sense that they'd have ignored their actual brothers! -- Submitted By: (Pelirojo) on February 24, 2010, 7:33 am - (1 votes)
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Fake Dukes. Would of been better off just waiting for the strike to end, then have a few phonies jump the picket line, and bone a show. -- Submitted By: (PYLrulz) on February 24, 2010, 5:58 am - (1 votes)
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Coy and Vance, without a doubt. Fake Dukes = BTF. -- Submitted By: (Mythigator) on June 8, 2009, 12:03 am - (1 votes)
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While I still love the series overall, the first BTF moment came in the first season when after 5 episodes they changed from filming part of the show on location in Georgia. I guess the studio discovered that it was more economical to shoot the series closer to home entirely on a backlot in Hollywood. And Coy and Vance definitely is BTF. I read somewhere that they didnt even bother changing the scripts to accomodate Coy and Vance, they just replaced the names "Bo and Luke" to "Coy and Vance". This is quite evident in one episode where Boss Hogg needed a place to hide out for a while and chooses the Duke farm. When Coy and Vance objects, Boss Hogg points out that their Uncle Jesse would want the boys to help him because, as Boss Hogg says: "Thats the way your Uncle Jesse raised you". And I'm thinking, "when did Uncle Jesse ever raise these guys?". -- Submitted By: (bmovies) on April 24, 2009, 9:44 am - (1 votes)
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crispy,
What could the show have done with two sets of Duke Boys? If there had been two Daisys, that would have been a different matter. LOL -- Submitted By: (Pelirojo) on March 27, 2009, 6:59 am - (1 votes)
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The only thing that I think was worse than bringing in Coy and Vance as scabs when negotiations broke down with 'Bo' and 'Luke', is that as soon as the network worked out its problems with Bo and Luke, Coy and Vance just vanished. I think it would have been nice to keep them. -- Submitted By: (crispy) on March 27, 2009, 5:53 am - (1 votes)
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