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      Two fictional CHP motorcycle officers

      • The CHP gained international recognition in the late 1970s to the early 1980s through the broadcast of the TV series CHiPs, which chronicled the adventures of two fictional CHP motorcycle officers and served as technical advisors to the 1950s TV show Highway Patrol. [clarification needed]
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › California_Highway_Patrol
  1. The California Highway Patrol got the best PR they could ever hope for in this classic buddy cop show from the 1970s. Built on comedy and riveting freeway chases, Larry Wilcox and Erik Estrada starred as officers Jon Baker and Frank "Ponch" Poncherrello.

    • (12K)
    • 1977-09-15
    • Crime, Drama, Mystery
    • 60
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    • Caitlyn Jenner Once Replaced Erik Estrada.
    • Erik Estrada and Larry Wilcox Did Not Get along.
    • The Cops Almost Never Drew Their Guns.
    • Estrada Was Badly Hurt Doing A Stunt.
    • Wilcox Left The Show.
    • Estrada Inspired The Village People Cop.
    • Ponch Was Supposed to Be Italian.
    • It Was Almost Canceled in Its First season.
    • The Title For Syndication Made No sense.
    • The Toys Weren’T Built to last.

    When Estrada left the series during the beginning of its fifth season over a salary dispute, producers hired Olympian Caitlyn (then Bruce) Jenner to replace him: the athlete, who was already working for NBC Sports as a commentator, also happened to be an experienced motorcyclist. When Estrada came to an agreement with MGM and returned to work, Jenn...

    Onscreen, co-stars Estrada and Wilcox had each other’s backs. Off-camera? Different story. When Wilcox got married in 1980, he told Peoplemagazine he made a point of not inviting Estrada and noted the two had argued ever since the show began. "I thought it was asinine to pick someone just for being photogenic," he said of Estrada’s casting. “Erik a...

    For a cop show, CHiPs had a pretty conservative approach to ammunition. According to some fan tallies, a gun was drawn by police in just three out of 139 episodes—and never by Estrada or Wilcox. Estrada toldABC News that the show’s 8 p.m. family time slot contributed to the pacifistic approach. “It was about helping pedestrians, people in trouble, ...

    Unlike many of the actors working in primetime today, Estrada insisted on doing many of his own motorcycle stunts. While shooting a 1979 episode, the actor was critically injured after he lost control of his bike while cruising around for a scene. Braking abruptly, he flew into a parked car chest-first, the bike landing on top of him; he broke eigh...

    With the tension between Wilcox and Estrada unresolved, Wilcox elected to leave the show just as it was beginning its sixth and final season. The character of Baker was replaced with Bobby “Hot Dog” Nelson (Tom Reilly), with the switch prompting a decline in ratings. Reilly made news in December of 1982 when United Press International reported he w...

    Though he didn’t get top billing in the show, Estrada’s blindingly-white smile and good looks quickly became a pop culture staple. According to TV Guide, Estrada’s appearance had some major influence over Victor Willis of the Village People: Willis took notice of his extra-tight patrol uniform and adopted it for his role as the “cop” in the musical...

    The role of Frank Poncherello was originally Poncherelli; producers envisioned an Italian character. They changed their minds when Estrada auditioned, possibly out of abject fear: Estrada punched a doorduring the meeting, frustrated he had flubbed a line.

    Critics and media observers were indelicate in describing CHiPs’s ratings performance during its first season in 1977 to 1978, describingit as “dreadful.” The show’s fortunes improved in season two, when NBC moved it from Thursdays to Saturdays and where it began winning its time slot.

    After completing five seasons, CHiPs was sold into syndication in the fall of 1982. To help avoid viewer confusion between reruns and new episodes, MGM re-titled it CHiPs Patrol. This was redundant, as “CHP” is an acronym for “California Highway Patrol,” making the complete series name California Highway Patrol Patrol.

    Mego toy company was quick to pounce on the popularity of the series, offering 8-inch action figures and vehicles. Their CHiPs products were said to have reused a lot of molds from other lines—Fonzie’s motorcycle, Klingon boots from Star Trek—but the real disappointment came when the Ponch and Jon figures sat on shelves for too long. Owing to Mego’...

    • There was a big-screen reboot in 2014. There was also a theatrical version (simply called CHiPs) released in 2014. Dax Shepard wrote, directed and starred in the film as Jon, whilst Michael Peña played Ponch, and the film was a raunchy spoof of the show in the vein of 2012’s film adaptation of 21 Jump Street.
    • Estrada later became a real-life police officer. Credit: Erik Estrada Twitter. Years after finding fame as a TV traffic cop, Erik Estrada tried his hand at law enforcement for real.
    • A made-for-TV movie starring Ponch and John aired in 1999. More than a decade after the show’s final season in 1983, a made-for-TV movie was released – one that continued the adventures of CHiPs cops Ponch and Jon.
    • It was broadcast alongside The A-Team and Magnum, P.I. Despite the fact that it was originally only shown in the London region of the UK, and from the start of the second series rather than the first, CHiPs was eventually shown nationwide alongside some classic shows.
  3. Dec 29, 2016 · CHiPS, an acronym for California Highway Patrol, was the motorcycle equivalent to a previous episodic police series, Adam 12. Jon Baker and “Ponch” Poncherello were two state motorcycle patrolmen, both young bachelors, whose adventures helping citizens, fighting crime and leading active social lives were all woven into the series.

  4. Feb 2, 2024 · Catch up with the 'CHiPs' TV show cast and discover all they've been up to since their time as California Highway Patrol officers!

  5. Road action with California Highway Patrol motorcycle cops, focusing on partners Jon and Ponch.

  6. Ponch and his partner are California Highway Patrol (CHiPs) motorcycle officers. This long-running television series entertained viewers with the drama in law-enforcement, from routine calls to exciting emergencies.

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