This site is about the tv cop show Nash Bridges, starring Don Johnson, which aired on CBS with 122 episodes in 6 seasons. The series is currently syndicated in many television markets and is available on DVD.
LookSmart, a subsidiary of Reader's Digest which reviews over a million Web sites, awarded us the Editor's Choice Award... "this award conveys the highest standard for providing a useful and high quality website."
Thanks for all your support!
A Case of Mistaken Identity (January 25, 1997)
According to the Saturday, January 25, 1997 San Francisco Chronicle, Collette Crutcher, a 39-year-old San Francisco resident, was handcuffed by police officers giving the NASH BRIDGES film crew a 'ride-along' in November 1994. Crutcher said that she was near Market Street when a man in a vehicle said to her, "Hey, Mary!" Two men, later identified to be plain clothes police officers, jumped out of the car and handcuffed Crutcher. Crutcher said that the film crew "had no camera and was supposedly soaking up the atmosphere, I guess." Crutcher filed a complaint with the Office of Citizen Complaints, the city's police watchdog agency, because she was "hysterical with fear... [about] being kidnapped in broad daylight." This strange and unusual case was rejected by the Office of Citizen Complaints because "the person they stopped was an unusually close match to the person they were seeking, so they had reason to detain her."
NetGuide Gold Site Award! (January 21, 1997)
NetGuide has selected our site as a Gold Site: "one of the best on the Web":
The Gold Award recognizes Web sites that meet our stringent criteria for overall excellence. NetGuide has screened over 100,000 URLs and reviewed more than 50,000 sites. Thanks for giving us a great site to review.
Thanks for all your support!
We've Seen the Future of NASH! (January 20, 1997)
Through our sources, we were able to peruse a blue copy of the "Inside Out" script. While we were trying to decide whether to release advance info about episodes, we ultimately decided to wait until episodes aired. Lucky we did - this particular blue script contains many modifications and script changes from minute details such as the name of the racing horse that Nick bought (the horse was originally named Flying Cloud instead of the aired version of Mr. Woody) to changes in dialogue. Joe Dominguez's dialogue was made tougher in addition to scene changes. The teaser sequence contained dialogue, but the aired version is a musical montage.
Script re-writes and changes are color coded - from white, to green, to blue, to yellow, etc. depending on production company procedures. For "Inside Out," we saw a blue copy.