magnum PI: sole mare (hawaii, waikiki) storie assurde il pollo di magnum e sopratutto higgins era robin masters o NO?
inoltre faccio notare come l autorevole sito http://www.jumptheshark.com/ citi magnum PI tra i film che non hanno mai deluso ovvero e' sempre stato su ottimi livelli e non ha mai saltato lo squalo: ovvero non ha mai raggiunto un punto dopo il quale e' stato una minchiata:
copio la definizione da wikipedia in inglese di questo concetto che viene usato anche in business per indicare un momento dal quale in poi una azienda e' andata a puttan3: esempio la fiat ha saltato lo squalo producendo la stilo...
Jumping the shark is a metaphor that has been used by US TV critics and fans to denote the tipping point at which a TV series is deemed to have passed its peak. Once a show has "jumped the shark," fans sense a noticeable decline in quality or feel the show has undergone too many changes to retain its original charm.
The phrase specifically arises from a scene in the hit TV comedy series Happy Days in which the central character, Arthur "The Fonz" Fonzarelli, on water skis, literally jumps over a shark. The scene was written into the show at a point when the viewing ratings were beginning to drop, and it is generally regarded as the creative low-point at which the show finally lost all credibility. A show may continue well after the point when fans feel it has "jumped the shark" but will likely decline in popularity.
Jump-the-shark moments may be scenes like the one described above that finally convince viewers that the show has fundamentally and permanently strayed from its original premise. In those cases, they are viewed as a desperate and futile attempt to keep a series fresh in the face of a decline in ratings. In other cases, the departure or replacement of a main cast member or character or a significant change in setting changes a critical dynamic of the show.
The term has also evolved to describe other areas of pop culture, including movie series, music, or acting celebrities or authors for whom a drastic change was seen as the beginning of the end. These changes are often attempts to attract their fans' waning attention with over-the-top statements or increasingly overt appeals to sex or violence (see circling the drain). Some have broadened its use to simply describe any decline in viewer appeal for the TV series in question, without requiring a significant "jump the shark" moment as justification.