NBC’s ‘Pink Lady And Jeff’ Revisited

At a time when the network variety show was clearly becoming obsolete — The Carol Burnett Show had ended its long run two years earlier, there was no longer a beat for The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour, and there was no more Donny & Marie — NBC had an idea.

The season was 1979–80. The month was March 1980. And the competition in the Friday 10 p.m. hour was a speeding juggernaut named Dallas on CBS, with a movie on ABC. So how do you battle Larry Hagman as that ol’ rascal J.R. Ewing? You tap into international appeal with a variety hour featuring a Japanese female pop group named Pink Lady and pair them with a rising comedian named Jeff Altman. At least that was NBC’s plan.

Specifically, Pink Lady — childhood friends Mie (Mitsuyo Nemoto) and Kei (Keiko Masuda) — were wildly popular in Japan, boasting a string of chart-topping singles and a fervent fan base. From 1976 to 1979, they were massive J-Pop stars before attempting to cross over into American television.

When NBC premiered Pink Lady and Jeff, the network was hoping to lure younger viewers not tuning in for the over-the-top scheming on Dallas. Instead, it delivered one of the most notorious flops in television history.

Problem #1: Mie and Kei spoke limited English, forcing them to memorize dialogue phonetically. Their discomfort was evident onscreen, particularly in comedy sketches requiring timing and spontaneity.

Problem #2: Jeff Altman was saddled with broad material that critics widely panned. The show’s format — musical numbers, sketch comedy and guest stars — felt like a relic of another era just as audiences were gravitating toward edgier, serialized fare (particularly the aforementioned Dallas).

Problem #3: At a time when a strong lead-in was imperative, NBC had nothing consistently scheduled in the Friday 9 p.m. ET time period, leaving the 10 p.m. entry without meaningful momentum.

Needless to say, critics were unsparing. Reviews described the series as awkward, unfunny and painfully stilted. The language barrier became a recurring punchline in coverage, though many later acknowledged the performers were placed in an almost impossible situation. Pink Lady’s polished musical performances simply could not compensate for sketches that felt forced and culturally disconnected.

After just five abysmal episodes, NBC pulled the plug. Pink Lady and Jeff quickly became shorthand in industry circles for misguided development — a case study in what happens when concept and execution collide in the worst possible way.

Fortunately, the failure did not diminish Pink Lady’s legacy in Japan, where they remained a defining pop act of the late 1970s. In the United States, however, the show is still cited alongside other infamous misfires as one of broadcast television’s biggest prime-time stumbles — a high-profile swing that missed by a mile.

For NBC, star power abroad does not automatically equal crossover success at home. And for television historians, the message was clear. Unlike earlier times when anyone – and everyone – seemed to be hosting a popular variety series, it really was truly the end of an era.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/marcberman1/2026/03/01/a-tv-variety-series-gone-wrong-nbcs-pink-lady-and-jeff-revisited/