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Video: The "Jump the Shark" Moment

In 1985, one Sean J. Connolly coined the phrase “jump the shark”,

which his friend John Hein would use as the name of his web site 12

years later. For those of you who haven’t been keeping up with your pop

culture, here’s the definintion of “jump the shark”, taken from the

site:

Q. What is jumping the shark?

A. It’s a moment. A defining moment when you know that your favorite

television program has reached its peak. That instant that you know from now on…it’s all

downhill. Some call it the climax. We call it “Jumping the Shark.”  From

that moment on, the program will simply never be the same.

“Jumping the shark” comes from the fifth-season episode of Happy Days

in which the Fonz accepts a challenge from a rival to waterski-jump

over a shark. The rival chickens out at the last minutes, but the Fonz

is too cool to win by forfeit and makes the jump anyway. I have vague

memories of this episode (remember, this was September 1977 and I was

9) but I understand how “jumping the shark” became synonymous from

“it’s all downhill from here.”

If you’ve never seen the “jumping the shark” moment, you’re in luck:

someone recently posted it in Windows Media format [2.5 MB, enclosure],

and it’s even cheesier than I remember. Especially since the Fonz does the jump wearing his stolen-from-Brando trademark leather jacket/white T-shirt combo.

6 replies on “Video: The "Jump the Shark" Moment”

God, I haven’t seen that since it first aired. What I remember was a commercial break in the middle of that scene — and the whole lead-up consumed the entire episode. Essentially they tried to create suspense be using padding, and that’s why it was such an awful, defining moment.

God, I haven’t seen that since it first aired. What I remember was a commercial break in the middle of that scene — and the whole lead-up consumed the entire episode. Essentially they tried to create suspense be using padding, and that’s why it was such an awful, defining moment.

Dont forget the many great parodies of this “Classic” moment…family guy being my personal fave.

Dorian

You know, I looked over the footage and I think it’s been altered. In frame 377 it appears the Fonz is actually a body-double patsy, and frame 688 reveals a shadowy cigarette smoking figure by the shark pool.

Further research will be done, the Truth must be told about the Shark-Fonzi film.

I remember reading that when somebody in a tv show has a baby, that’s the kiss of death – too late to resuscitate

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