Along with Alley, Tom Skerritt was brought in for a significant recurring role. Jay Tomas returned as Carla's husband, Bebe Neuwirth's role as Lilith was expanded (although she was still a recurring character), and Harry Anderson made a cameo appearance, reprising his role as Harry the Hat in one of the cold opens (despite starring in Night Court by that time). Robert Urich and Wade Boggs made special guest appearances.
The season picks up months down the line from the events that ended the fifth season. We discover that Sam has gone sailing around the world, selling the bar to a large corporation run by Skerritt's character, Evan Drake. Alley plays Rebecca Howe, who runs the day-to-day operations at the bar, and is totally in love with Drake, who barely notices her. When Sam's boat sinks, he returns to Cheers looking to be the boss again, but is only able to be hired on as a bartender, with Rebecca as his boss. The show continues the format that it used in prior seasons, blending procedural one-off storylines with serial arcs. The writers attempted to replicate the Sam and Diane "will-they-won't-they" storyline with Sam and Rebecca, but it mostly involved Sam hitting on Rebecca and her turning him down (or messing with him). The writers did a good job balancing the storylines for the large ensemble cast, giving all the characters good material to work with. There were more good Lilith and Frasier moments, with Bebe Neuwirth stealing pretty much every scene she was in.
The blu-ray set is a three-disc set. Like those for seasons four and five, this one does not have any bonus features, but the episodes can be played with English captions. As of this writing, the only way to get the blu-ray versions is to purchase the complete series set. The individual single-season sets are only available on DVD. The A/V quality of the episodes on blu-ray is very good, and the episodes look and sound great in the HD format, especially given the age of the show.
The season is good, and the introduction of the new characters gave the show a fresh boost. Whatever you think of Alley in real life, especially her politics toward the end of her life, she was hilarious in the show, and even though the writers tried to give her character a similar dynamic with Sam that Shelly Long's character had, she did not copy what Long did with the character of Diane. The comedy is still a lot different than today's sitcoms. In some ways, it is tamer (even though there is sexual banter and innuendo, nothing beyond kissing is shown). On the other hand, some of the jokes would definitely not fly in today's PC climate, especially the character of Sam sexually harassing the character of Rebecca every episode. Ultimately, if you liked the style and tone of the prior seasons (unless you only liked the character of Diane), you will probably like this season as well.
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