The most elaborate TV crossover universe in history
Posted: 2004-10-04 01:48am
Ok--my head just exploded from trying to figure this out....
Got this little conundrum from here http://www.xoverboard.com/blogarchive/w ... tml#000967
I absolutely love things like this. Brace yourself, this one's a bit complicated.
Okay, so there was once this medical drama on TV called St. Elsewhere. It was before my time, but I know of it; probably a lot of you know what I'm talking about. The series, to much controversy, ended its final episode by revealing that the entire series- the characters, the story, everything- was in fact the dream of a dying autsitic child named Tommy Westphall.
A strange concept in itself, but wait- this just gets better.
This website http://home.vicnet.net.au/~kwgow/crossovers.html has started tracking an interesting "gimmick" of television- crossovers. For example, a character on one show appears not just as the same actor, but actually the same character. Like, say, Michael Richards as Kramer appearing on an episode of Mad About You. It's a gimmick, but it also suggests, logically, that Mad About You and Seinfeld exist in the same "universe" of story continuity.
Thanks to series creator Tom Fontana, of Oz, Homicide, and Law & Order fame, these crossovers occur frequently. Richard Belzer, for example, has played Detective John Munch on at least three series. So since this guy exists in all these series, that means Oz, Homicide, and Law & Order take place in the same New York City in the same plane of TV existence.
Now, on an episode of The X-Files, Belzer once again appeared as Munch. Logic dictates that this means The X-Files exists in the same plane as Law & Order: SVU. But wait, in a later episode of The X-Files, there's a crossover from a character from Millenium, so those two series also share the same universe.
You're starting to see where this is going, aren't you?
That's right... on one episode of Law & Order, the lawyers were involved in a trial of a doctor from St. Elsewhere. Which, as explained above, didn't really exist.
So this website, by means of a Kevin-Bacon-style relationship of crossovers, has logically linked one hundred and sixty-two television series as existing in the same universe of continuity... and therefore are all the creation of the autistic Tommy Westphall.
In other words, in a very subtle, but logically solid way, Tom Fontana has technically implied that over 160 television shows are complete figments of one of his own characters' imagination.
The man is a genius.
Got this little conundrum from here http://www.xoverboard.com/blogarchive/w ... tml#000967
I absolutely love things like this. Brace yourself, this one's a bit complicated.
Okay, so there was once this medical drama on TV called St. Elsewhere. It was before my time, but I know of it; probably a lot of you know what I'm talking about. The series, to much controversy, ended its final episode by revealing that the entire series- the characters, the story, everything- was in fact the dream of a dying autsitic child named Tommy Westphall.
A strange concept in itself, but wait- this just gets better.
This website http://home.vicnet.net.au/~kwgow/crossovers.html has started tracking an interesting "gimmick" of television- crossovers. For example, a character on one show appears not just as the same actor, but actually the same character. Like, say, Michael Richards as Kramer appearing on an episode of Mad About You. It's a gimmick, but it also suggests, logically, that Mad About You and Seinfeld exist in the same "universe" of story continuity.
Thanks to series creator Tom Fontana, of Oz, Homicide, and Law & Order fame, these crossovers occur frequently. Richard Belzer, for example, has played Detective John Munch on at least three series. So since this guy exists in all these series, that means Oz, Homicide, and Law & Order take place in the same New York City in the same plane of TV existence.
Now, on an episode of The X-Files, Belzer once again appeared as Munch. Logic dictates that this means The X-Files exists in the same plane as Law & Order: SVU. But wait, in a later episode of The X-Files, there's a crossover from a character from Millenium, so those two series also share the same universe.
You're starting to see where this is going, aren't you?
That's right... on one episode of Law & Order, the lawyers were involved in a trial of a doctor from St. Elsewhere. Which, as explained above, didn't really exist.
So this website, by means of a Kevin-Bacon-style relationship of crossovers, has logically linked one hundred and sixty-two television series as existing in the same universe of continuity... and therefore are all the creation of the autistic Tommy Westphall.
In other words, in a very subtle, but logically solid way, Tom Fontana has technically implied that over 160 television shows are complete figments of one of his own characters' imagination.
The man is a genius.