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J.J. Starbuck

Created by Stephen J. Cannell
(1941-2010)

“I reckon a diamond is just a hunk of coal that stuck to the job.”

Did someone say Texas?

Just in case anyone missed the point, TV’s cornpone-spouting J.J. (JEROME JEREMIAH) STARBUCK (played by Dale Robertson) wears ten-gallon hats, cowboy boots and fancy western shirts, drives a flashy limo with steer horns on the hood and a horn that plays “The Eyes of Texas,” and spouts a steady stream of folksy homilies.

Good thing he’s loaded or someone might point out what a dang annoying fool he is.

Although maybe we should cut him a little slack. He was just a workaholic businessman turned Texas billionaire jackass who made his fortune in oil and a slew of slick  investments, when his wife and son were killed when their plane. That was the turning point for J.J.–after that, he handed over the reins to his company to his second-in-command, Charlie Bullets, and hit the road in his 1961 Lincoln Convertible, figuring it was his duty to help out “good folks” in trouble using his considerable influence and contacts.

About halfway through its first (and only) season, Robertson broke his leg, and they wrote it into the show, bringing on the character of E.L. “Tenspeed” Turner, the fast-talking black con artist refugee from an earlier Cannell show, Tenspeed and Brownshoe,  to lend ol’ J.J. a hand and do the driving. The clash between straight shooter J.J. and Tenspeed, who never met a corner he didn’t want to cut, should have been a hoot.

But it didn’t work. The show was scrapped after one season.

THE EVIDENCE

TELEVISION

FURTHER INVESTIGATION

Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

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