TV Reviews : ‘Grand Slam’ Special Barely Makes It to First Base
- Share via
Like a lot of baseball teams, “Grand Slam,” a syndicated special airing Saturday at 5 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. on KHJ-TV Channel 9, is packed with talent but ill-managed. A “bases-loaded celebration of baseball,” the two-hour show looks at the arts of pitching, hitting and defense through the eyes of several top players--with an emphasis on not-too-old old-timers, including Pete Rose.
The problem isn’t with the lineup but with how they’re used--mainly as talking heads answering questions put to them by interviewer-host Dick Schaap. The emphasis is on heroes, homers and the homely cliches of the game.
Predictability of themes plus predictability of format doesn’t add up to a winner. Still, the show has its moments. In fact, it has plenty--as when we see the George Brett “pine tar” incident or a rare scene of Babe Ruth doing a radio show. But the jittery framework within which they’re set is hard to take. As is Schaap. After asking a couple of ballplayers who their heroes were, Schaap turns to us with this bit of wisdom: “Everybody has idols. Even the idols have idols.” Right, Dick.
Produced and directed by James Moskovitz, “Grand Slam” takes a long time to get around the bases in its 120 minutes, and the macho attitude only shows one side of the game (“Ain’t nothin’ like a grand slam/To make you feel like a real man . . .” goes the theme song). But for baseball fans who don’t mind its approach, “Grand Slam” may prove a decent enough, if not really grand, way to fill in the time until the next televised game starts.
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.