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Barfcakes Of Justice

SUE THY NEIGHBOR: The current rage in syndication land, where the offbeat and unrepressed are allowed to flourish (see Barris, Chuck), is The People’s Court. Recently in Detroit People's Court appearances were upped from the two to five nights a week, and when presiding Judge Joseph A. Wapner (retired) appeared on a local talk show, the warmhearted vibes that emanated from the studio audience were of a kind only bestowed on benign authority figures and middle class heroes (see Young, Robert).

January 1, 1983
Richard C. Walls

Barfcakes Of Justice

Prime Time

Richard C. Walls

SUE THY NEIGHBOR: The current rage in syndication land, where the offbeat and unrepressed are allowed to flourish (see Barris, Chuck), is The People’s Court. Recently in Detroit People's Court appearances were upped from the two to five nights a week, and when presiding Judge Joseph A. Wapner (retired) appeared on a local talk show, the warmhearted vibes that emanated from the studio audience were of a kind only bestowed on benign authority figures and middle class heroes (see Young, Robert). Wapner is the type of classical daddy that turns on the Heartland and environs, which doesn’t include everybody but dam near.

The premise of the show sounds deadly dull as the setting turns out to be a small claims court in

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