Impact on emergency medical services Before
Emergency!, ambulances had been operating for decades in the United States. However, their crews rarely had training beyond basic
first aid. Most states did not license them to perform more advanced medical treatment. The alternative was to staff ambulances with traditional healthcare professionals like doctors, which was expensive and posed recruitment challenges. A 1977
Newsweek article wrote that "[t]he television series
Emergency! helped create a national demand for such services." In a 1993 paper, Byron K. Toma argued that it "helped convince the public that they are entitled to the highest levels of emergency medical aid technologically available." In episode 17 of season 3, "Fools", singer
Bobby Sherman plays an arrogant intern who shows disdain for John and Roy ... until he is sent out with them by Dr. Brackett to see exactly what they do. Sherman's character changes his mind quickly upon watching them perform a harrowing rescue. In real life, Sherman would leave show business and become an EMT. He worked with paramedics and taught CPR and first aid and subsequently joined the Los Angeles Police Department Reserve Officer Program. He served as a training officer for many years and would be promoted to the rank of Captain; Sherman credited his role on that episode of
Emergency! as a guiding force in his choice of career change.
Spin-offs and crossovers Emergency! was a third-generation spin-off, having been spawned from Jack Webb's
Adam-12, which itself was spun off from Jack Webb's
Dragnet. All three series take place in the same universe and depict different aspects of the public safety infrastructure of Los Angeles, California. Characters from
Emergency! and
Adam-12 "crossed over" twice. The police officers appeared briefly in the
pilot episode of
Emergency!, and the firefighter/paramedics appeared in the
Adam-12 episode titled "Lost and Found". Unusually, in the
Emergency! episode titled "Hang-Up", there was a subplot in which the crew of Station 51 watched the television show
Adam-12, despite sharing a fictional universe with those characters.
Emergency! spun off an animated version called
Emergency +4 which ran on NBC Saturday mornings from 1973 to 1976, and featured four youngsters and their three pets who participated in rescue adventures with firefighter/paramedics DeSoto and Gage. Mantooth's Gage and Tighe's DeSoto appeared in the tenth episode of
Sierra, another Webb/Cinader production about a pair of
National Park Service rangers, which appeared for only a partial season in 1974. In that episode, "The Urban Ranger", the two paramedics participate in
mountain rescue training and get involved in many of the episode's subplots. Following recurring themes from
Emergency!, Gage continues to fail in his attempts to get a date, while DeSoto briefly considers changing careers to become a park ranger. The "905-Wild" episode of
Emergency!, broadcast during the closing of its Season 4 on Saturday March 1, 1975, was intended to be the pilot for a new series created and produced by Jack Webb. The series was to have been about the adventures of two Los Angeles County Department of Animal Control officers, and the staff of a county
animal shelter. The episode featured
Albert Popwell and
Mark Harmon as the officers and
David Huddleston and
Gary Crosby in supporting roles. However, it failed to sell and the follow-up series was never produced. Squad 51 briefly appeared in the
CHiPs episode "Cry Wolf" (season 1, ep. 18), where it can be seen responding from the station to a false accident report. Further in the episode "MAIT Team" (season 2, ep. 15), Engine 51 and Squad 51 can be seen responding from the station to a traffic accident. Again in the episode "Hot Wheels" (season 3, ep. 8) Squad 51 arrives on the scene of a traffic accident. It has a major role in the episode "E.M.T" when it responds to aid a young boy trapped in his clubhouse under a busy freeway, where
California Highway Patrol officers Ponch and Jon retrieve equipment from the squad to aid in the rescue of the boy. The episode "Cover Up" of
Quincy, M.E. featured a paramedic team from Squad 44 contacting Rampart General Hospital while tending a heart attack patient, although the patient is directed to a closer hospital. When Dr. Quincy later visits Station 44 to question the paramedics concerning the patient's death, stock footage of the exterior of Station 51 is used. This episode was written by R.A. Cinader. Earlier, in the season 1 episode "Has Anyone Seen Quincy?" Harbor General Hospital is used as the filming location of the unnamed hospital seen throughout the episode. Rampart is again contacted in season 7's "The Golden Hour", but the patient is directed to a closer hospital, and Engine 51 responds to a hotel fire in the same season's episode "Smoke Screen". Station 51 appears in the TV movie
The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (1990), in a segment where all Los Angeles police and fire personnel are deployed to prepare for a massive Southern California earthquake. Stock footage from "Emergency!" is used. Rampart Hospital is briefly mentioned in the
9-1-1 episode "Hen Begins" (season 2, ep. 9), where Hen is introduced to fellow peers who are struggling to fit into their roles (Edit: The Rampart mentioned is not the fictional hospital, but the real-life LAPD station.)
TV movies From 1978 through 1979, the show returned as a series of "Movies of the Week". The TV movies premiered in this order:
The Steel Inferno: A fire breaks out in a skyscraper and the members of Squad 51 along with other Los Angeles County Fire Department members from Station #110 help rescue those who are trapped. Personnel from Rampart General Hospital set up a triage area at the scene to care for the injured awaiting to be transported to the hospital. A Coast Guard helicopter helps firefighters with rooftop evacuations. One conflict of the episode is Squad 110's paramedic attempting to save his missing fiancé. This television movie was similar to
Irwin Allen's
The Towering Inferno (1974).
Survival on Charter #220: While Squad 51 is on a call, two planes collide with one crash landing in a Los Angeles subdivision, trapping Gage and DeSoto. A resident of the subdivision which was the site of the crash was the girlfriend of one of Squad 51's other paramedics from another shift. The on and off-duty firefighters make multiple rescues to save survivors. During the event, however, one of the engines from the plane lands on the squad, destroying it.
Most Deadly Passage: The paramedics from Squad 51 travel to Seattle to watch how their paramedics of the
Seattle Fire Department Medic One Program treat patients and respond to calls for help. The most notable incident in the movie is the ferry that catches fire in the middle of a trip due to a fueling error. ''What's a Nice Girl Like You Doing?'': Gage and DeSoto travel to San Francisco to observe some female paramedics work as well as the rescue crew of the
San Francisco Fire Department. A worker is rescued from the Golden Gate Bridge, an ambulance gets into an accident that ends up killing the patient being transported to the hospital, an epileptic in a coffee shop is treated along with someone having a heart attack at a dance bar. A pier at the Embarcadero catches on fire.
Greatest Rescues of "Emergency!": Gage and DeSoto are both promoted to the rank of captain, at which rank they were no longer permitted to hold paramedic certification. They think back to their time on Squad 51 and some of the rescues they carried out.
Robert A. Cinader wrote and directed the framing story, which included clips from other such installments as the pilot, on whose writing Harold Jack Bloom had collaborated with Cinader. This film marked the "official" ending of the series.
The Convention: John and Roy are back in San Francisco for a paramedic convention and they ride along with the San Francisco Fire Department's paramedics. The TV movies were shown in syndication as two-part episodes starting in the 1980s. They also aired on
TV Land in 2001, on
MeTV in June 2015, and on
Cozi TV in late 2019 to 2024.
Other media The book
Emergency!: Behind the Scenes by Richard Yokely and Rozane Sutherland was published in 2008.
Charlton Comics out of
Derby, Connecticut, published several issues of an
Emergency! comic book in the mid-1970s, geared towards young readers. One of the issues contains some of the earliest published work of
John Byrne. Charlton also published four issues of an illustrated black-and-white magazine geared more towards adult readers featuring art by
Neal Adams and others, these projects were overseen by publisher Steve Kahn, in parallel with similar books for
The Six Million Dollar Man and
Space: 1999.
Wonderland Records produced three original
audio dramas based on
Emergency!; these were released on a single 33 rpm
LP. These were: "The Jaws of Life" (in which the title gadget proves its worth when Gage and DeSoto must rescue one man from a subway mishap and another from a burning car; they also help a woman shocked by a high-voltage power line; both are uneasy about supper this week, since Lopez is the designated chef at Station 51), "Front Page Story" (in which Gage and DeSoto, after rescuing an elderly man from a burning – and supposedly abandoned – wharf, must deal with investigative reporter Jenny James ... who's been instructed to write an exposé on Squad 51; she observes – and unwittingly complicates – their treatment of a blind teenage diabetic with a fractured skull, who might need on-the-spot surgery to save his life), and "The Used Car Caper" (in which our paramedics assist a security guard shot in a bank robbery, and then a young woman injured by a reckless driver; the latter call ties into the subplot, as DeSoto puts his old car up for sale ... and gets an offer from a fellow who's suspiciously eager to close the deal). Milton Bradley released an
Emergency! board game in 1973.
Emergency! Annual 1979 Emergency! Annual 1979 was published in August/September 1978 by World Distributors (Manchester) Ltd. (ISBN 7235 0469 5) in the U.K. for the Christmas market. However, its original price is unknown as none was displayed—either on the book's back cover or on the title/contents page inside. The annual had a circular photo-montage cover featuring shots of Roy DeSoto and Johnny Gage, along with various action scenes from the show, as well as a red center cover flash reading
All-action excitement with the paramedic rescue squad. The content was made up of reprints of three of the 1970s comic book stories published by Charlton Comics, a feature about the Los Angeles paramedic program, and detailed profiles of the actors on the show, as well as a short story.
Picture stories •
One Big Happy Family (in color, and divided into two parts), •
Hanging High (in black-and-white, with alternating blue and red monotones) •
His Bark is Worse Than His Bite! (in black-and-white, with alternating red and blue monotones)
Features •
The Paramedics (the development of the Los Angeles paramedic program) •
Randy Mantooth — the Man Behind John Gage •
Meet Kevin Tighe •
Trial by Fire (short story featuring Johnny Gage who, while Roy DeSoto is away on vacation, is given the task of breaking in a new firefighter-turned-paramedic named Ed McKeon, but he is concerned that McKeon may have lost his nerve after having previously been hurt during a factory fire) •
Robert Fuller — Cowboy Turned Doctor! •
Mr. Versatile... (Bobby Troup) •
...And his Wife! (Julie London)
Syndication The series was first
syndicated in 1976, after the fifth season. Local stations mainly aired it between 4:30 and 6 p.m. Eastern (3:30 to 5:00 Central) for the same viewers that were its most loyal audience on NBC, elementary school-aged children. However,
Emergency! was not nearly as successful in reruns as
Dragnet 1967–70 and
Adam-12 were. When the program was first syndicated, it went by the title
Emergency One! (the stock title "Emergency!" appeared with the word "One" fading in beneath) to avoid confusion with the new episodes still airing Saturday nights on
NBC and continued to be called that when the TV movies aired as well. The syndicated episodes would revert to the original title,
Emergency!, in 1979. Renaming programs for syndication was commonplace until the 1980s. Although in the early 2000s it had a brief run on
TV Land,
Emergency! had been rarely seen in recent times because the series had come under the ownership of the Jack Webb Estate.
Emergency! seasons 1 – 6 were available on
Netflix on Demand in high definition (though several episodes are missing due to rights issues), having been restored and rescanned from the original film negatives. The series ran on
MeTV from September 2013 to December 2016, an over-the-air service mainly seen on digital subchannels of local television stations. Starting in January 2017, the series moved to the NBC Universal-owned digital broadcast network
Cozi TV until it was removed in September 2024. As of April 2022, the series airs on
FETV, a satellite and cable network featuring classic programming and family entertainment. It currently airs every night at 9:15 p.m. ET. It is only available for purchase on DVD in the US from
Universal Studios Home Entertainment and through major retailers On October 14, 2024, MeTV resumed airing the show airing weekdays at 5 p.m. ET. As of 2025, the series is currently available to stream on
Peacock.
Home media In 1998, Universal Studios released 39 episodes on VHS, in a 20-volume set, distributed through Columbia House. The videocassettes each contained 2 episodes from the series, except for the first one, which only contained the two-hour pilot.
Universal Studios has released all six seasons of
Emergency! and the six post-series tele-films (as
The Final Rescues), on DVD in Region 1. On July 12, 2016, Universal released
Emergency! – The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1. The 32-disc set contains all 122 episodes of the series as well as the 6 post-series tele-films. In 2017–2018, Universal re-released the first two seasons on DVD in new single sided disc collections.
Note: Seasons 1 & 2 in the complete series set were released on single sided discs; they were originally released on double sided discs in the individual season sets. == Los Angeles County Fire Museum ==