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TV REVIEW : ‘Eddie Dodd’: ABC Loses This One on Appeal

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The only thing prime time needs less than another lawyer is another lawyer who brings nothing new to the courtroom. Enter “Eddie Dodd,” the ABC series getting a tryout in the time slot of “thirtysomething.”

Tonight’s episode (at 10 on Channels 7, 3 10 and 42) is only moderately better than last week’s formulaic, hokey premiere which introduced heroic Eddie (Treat Williams) as a crusading, compassionate do-gooder who risks even contempt of court to battle for his underdog clients. The man’s a saint.

Last week Eddie successfully defended a mercy killer, and this week he triumphs again after learning that the judge in his case--a revered giant of jurisprudence--has Alzheimer’s disease. Eddie must weigh the interests of his client against the interests of the judge he idolizes, an interesting premise that the show badly botches.

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William’s saccharine Eddy has a great capacity for goodness, so great that it grates after even one episode. As in the premiere, tonight’s story is script-poor (the judge is just a mess until somehow pulling himself together for his final big scene), predictable and maudlin on cue, worth seeing only for Lee Richardson’s moving performance as the stricken jurist.

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