Pitting J.R. Ewing of ‘Dallas’ up against Blake Carrington of ‘Dynasty’ in a cutthroat battle of ’80s oil tycoons.....
It’s big oil versus big oil, patriarch versus patriarch in what was once a hotly contested battle of ratings. ABC’s “Dynasty,” which premiered 36 years ago this week, has always been compared and contrasted to the show’s soapy counterpart, CBS sensation “Dallas.”
Often, the shows boiled down to one driving question: Does morality trump deceit?
While the leading characters — Blake Carrington and J.R. Ewing — proved highly watchable, their moral integrity can certainly be drawn into question.
The two prime-time soaps featured ratings-grabbing, cliff-hanging season finales — and often unsatisfactory returns.
Then, there’s “Dallas,” an equally soapy drama about a powerful family which owns the Ewing Oil company, and the cattle-ranching land of Southfork, Texas. The series hit the small screen in April 1978.
The show featured an incestuous relationship between Lucy Ewing and her uncle Ray Krebbs, and constant attempts on J.R.’s part to undermine the marriage between his brother, Bobby, and Pamela.
Then again, there was Cliff Barnes, a man who hated J.R. and the Ewings as much as J.R. hated him. He set out for revenge against the strange marriage.
After taking a trip down memory lane, it’s time to decide which patriarch had the more solid footing. We know that either one would quickly rake someone over the coals if it were beneficial to his company.
On top of that, who was truly more devious? More cold-blooded?
After careful review, we’ve decided J.R. takes the cake.
But a stern, cowboy-hat-wearing, drink-carrying, vest-wearing Texas tycoon beats the more stately, slicked-back, charismatic and uppity business owner up in Colorado any day. Forbes on it now-dated"Fictional Fifteen,"lists the imaginary wealth of characters, and features Ewing in ninth place — at a $2.8 billion estimated net worth.
The site writes, “(J.R.) fought bitter internecine battles with brother Bobby and wife Sue Ellen in order to remain at helm of Ewing Oil, company built by father Jock. Most recent victory: successfully evading federal regulators investigating him for manipulating price of crude. Socializes with group dubbed ‘The Cartel.’ Failed 1980 assassination attempt dominated headlines worldwide. Unrest in Middle East threatens some overseas interests, but war likely to boost price of oil — and net worth.”
And even if there was a secret debt that J.R. tried to sweep under the rug, this sturdy, resilient Texan could go 12 rounds with the best of them.
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