Title Series creator Richard DiLello took the title of the series from a song written by
Pete Ham for the band
Badfinger. DiLello had previously authored
The Longest Cocktail Party, a history of the rise and fall of
The Beatles' corporation,
Apple Corps, and their record label,
Apple Records, where Badfinger had originally been signed. The song itself had no relation to the series' subject matter; it had been written by Ham in tribute to a friend of the band who had resorted to working as a high-priced prostitute to pay her bills.
Production The series was filmed on location in
San Francisco. Interior shots were done at a studio complex in the city, while exterior shots happened on location.
Theme song The series theme, as performed by
Rick Braun, has become a popular mainstay on
Smooth Jazz radio stations.
"After It Happened" controversy In the 1988 episode "After It Happened", a
bisexual man is depicted as an AIDS carrier who deliberately infects heterosexual women. As originally conceived, the man is gunned down in a
vigilantism murder by one of the women whom he infects, and a medical team in full
Hazmat suit comes to take his body away as Jack Killian comforts the distraught shooter. In the broadcast version, the victim is stopped before she can kill the carrier. Coming in the early years of the
epidemiology of HIV/AIDS in the US at a time when public understanding of the disease was quite low, the proposed episode was immediately criticised as sensationalistic, ignorant of bisexuality, and
pseudoscience. Protests were launched by
GLAAD,
BiNet USA and
bialogue, among others. Additionally
ACT UP pickets disrupted the show's filming. Then-NBC affiliate
KRON-TV in San Francisco ran a disclaimer before the show with an AIDS hotline number and aired a half-hour live special,
Midnight Caller: The Response, during which activists and public health officials aired their grievances. ==Awards and nominations==