NBC censors repeatedly challenged the creators of Hill Street Blues, nearly preventing the influential crime drama from airing. Steven Bochco and Michael Kozoll fought for creative control, supported by Grant Tinker, to bring their innovative series to life. The show, which aired from 1981 to 1987, redefined the genre with its ensemble cast and serialized storytelling.
The development of Hill Street Blues faced significant hurdles from NBC's censors, who objected to early scripts and sought to impose changes. Creators Steven Bochco and Michael Kozoll had expected creative freedom after NBC's agreement, but post-writing meetings revealed otherwise. In one tense encounter, Bochco stood firm, declaring, "We can't do this project. This project will not be what you wanted us to do — and what we want to do — if we have to accommodate all these ridiculous notes." He then left the meeting, prompting a strong reaction from network executives, as he later recounted to CNN: "They went berserk."
Grant Tinker, co-founder of MTM Enterprises and former NBC CEO, backed Bochco and Kozoll in resisting the interference. Their persistence allowed the series to premiere and become a fixture in NBC's 10 p.m. slot from 1981 to 1987. Despite ongoing disputes, the show introduced groundbreaking elements to crime dramas, moving beyond lone-hero narratives to explore a large ensemble of officers' personal and professional lives. It employed serialized plots instead of episodic cases and used handheld cameras for a documentary-like realism.
Bochco emphasized the stakes in his CNN interview: "Here we had, at an impetuous moment from a network floundering in last place, extracted the promise of creative autonomy. And I knew I had something unprecedented in terms of that kind of control, and I wasn't going to give it up. I knew if I gave it up, I'd never get it back."
Hill Street Blues earned 26 Emmy Awards and left a lasting legacy, though it also inspired the poorly received spin-off Beverly Hills Buntz.