Saturday, January 25, 2020

What I've Learned about Hallmark Mysteries by Cheryl Bolen


A friend turned me onto the Hallmark Mystery Channel almost two years ago because I dabble as a hobbyist antiques dealer, and he thought I’d like the Garage Sale Mysteries. Boy, did I! Unfortunately, the channel pulled the plug on the excellent series when its star, Lori Loughlin, was arrested in connection with the Varsity Blues scandal for spending half a million dollars to pave the way for her daughters’ college admissions. 

But my husband and I – neither fans of American network programming – were hooked on these mystery movies even though they are formulaic. They are still well done. 

Female Protagonists

With few exceptions, the Hallmark Mystery Movies fit a pattern. In every series, the protagonist is a female. You’ve got the assistant small town librarian in the Aurora Teagarden Mysteries, a series based on books by Charlaine Harris. Then you’ve got Murder She Baked based on books written by Kensington author Joann Fluke. You’ve got the Crossword Mysteries about, you guessed it, a gal who creates crossword puzzles for a New York daily newspaper. There’s Murder 101 about a female professor who just happens to teach a course on crime fiction, and another professor is featured in the Emma Fielding Mysteries that showcase an anthropologist whose male interest is an FBI antiquities investigator.
Then there’s the Chronicle Mysteries about a podcaster (starring the same Alison Sweeney who stars in Murder She Baked).

There are three series featuring TV personalties. The woman who does a cooking segment on The Morning Show Murders (based on Al Roker’s mysteries), as well as Seattle consumer reporter who stars in the Ruby Herring Mysteries each star in shows where they do double duty after hours solving crimes, and in the Matchmaker Mysteries, the heroine has a television show where she plays matchmaker.

Another series, Picture Perfect, features a photographer. The Hailey Dean Mysteries, based on books by Nancy Grace, who does cameos in the series, is set in Atlanta. Hailey’s a former prosecutor who is now a therapist.

All of the above feature female protagonists, and each of them solves the crime on her own, and each of them has a love interest. The heroine in Murder She Baked actually has two love interests—the town veterinarian and a police detective. They also have a cast of endearing continuing characters, usually townspeople, co-workers, and relatives of the heroine. In the case of Arora Teagarden, her mother is the actress Marilu Henner.

One thing each of these series has in common occurs before the finale when the female protagonist goes off on her own to solve the crime, placing herself in an extremely dangerous situation. (And the viewer is thinking she’s too stupid to live at this point. Doesn’t she know there’s a murderer out there?) The male interest – frequently a policeman – tries to come to her rescue, but our intrepid heroine typically extricates herself from danger just in the knick of time.

Ethnic Diversity

Like all Hallmark movies, ethnic diversity is shown. The hero and heroine in the Morning Show Murders are African Americans, and the hero and heroine in Picture Perfect are Hispanic. Also, each series features diverse characters.

Each episode also has several plausible suspects, and unlike British crime dramas, these crimes are well motivated with no “mass murders” or killing off of the cast.

While there are a few small-town settings as in Aurora Teagarden or Murder She Baked, most are in urban settings.

One series that defies the above is the Gourmet Detective. In it, the tables are turned. The San Francisco police detective is the female, and the foodie is the fellow. Jointly, they solve crimes equally. He may even provide more brains and she more brawn. But he definitely takes the lead in the romance department, and the sparks do fly.

These two-hour shows provide a satisfying mystery, a familiarly welcome cast of characters, and a sweet romance.

But I still miss The Garage Sale Mysteries.—Cheryl Bolen is New York Times Bestselling and Amazon All Star author of more than 40 books, most romances set in Regency England. 

Enter our monthly giveaway here.


25 comments:

  1. Okay... I’m in, Cheryl. I’ll watch when I get home from our winter break.

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  2. I've a long time Hallmark fan. Was so excited when they got their first channel and now have three on network and one streaming. Also love some their romance shows like When Calls the Heart also book based series. Thanks for letting me know how you liked the garage sales series. I wondered how true to the business it was. Yes, got to love our Hallmark heroines. Best of luck with your series. Maybe yours will be on too.

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    1. I'm just discovering these, Nora. Do you do that subscription streaming service from Hallmark? I'm becoming such a big fan. It's great that the mysteries don't turn off the hubby, who actually likes them.

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  3. I like some of the mystery shows, too. I loved Brooke Shields in the flower shop ones.

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    1. Yeah, Liz. I liked that one, too. They don't show it much. I don't think they've made that many. Yet. Here's hoping they make a bunch more.

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  4. These sound like fun shows. Almost makes me wish I had cable.

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  5. Except for PBS, cable is all I watch. Had to have it for the sports. How do you live without cable, Kari?

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  6. These shows sound fun, Cheryl! I've never really thought of Hallmark as diverse. It's always felt very white-washed to me. I'm glad to hear about some shows that are branching out from that.

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    1. And the nice thing. Satin, is the ethnic minorities are never stereotypes but highly respected and often professionals.

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  7. I've enjoyed Emma Fielding (archaeology!), Mystery 101, Chronicle Mysteries, and Crossword Mysteries. Haven't seen too many others, but the ones I've seen have been well made and quite entertaining.

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    1. Of course, as an archaeologist yourself, Kay, you'd enjoy Emma Fielding. John's favorite is the Gourmet Detective. I think they've only made two or three Crosswords, but I really like it because I like the urban setting. Some of the small settings don't appeal, like the hokey college in Murder 101, while I like Murder She Baked.

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  8. Why have I never heard of these? Thank you! They sound awesome.

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    1. That's exactly how I felt, Kara, when I heard about them not long ago. The station (different from regular Hallmark) just celebrated its 10th anniversary, and I've known of them less than two years.

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  9. You've made me curious enough to see if our cable package provides these series. We have cable, but mostly watch netflix, although it's sure not what it used to be.

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    1. Isn't it pitiful, Kathleen, that we pay for cable yet have to resort to Netflix, too, to give us something to watch. We also have Amazon Prime, which offers Mrs. Maisal (sp?) which we love. While I have Netflix streaming, I still love the discs because I'm a huge fan of really old movies you can't stream. So we subscribe to both.

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  10. My youngest daughter and I were both fans of the Garage Sale Mysteries. We used to dabble in antique booths and still have it ingrained in our DNA. What a shame that Hallmark couldn't find a look-a-like and continue the series. In my opinion, it was one of their best.

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    1. Me, too, Caroline! I've had booths for 26 years and still haven't figured out how to make money off of it. You and I have so many similarities, we could be sisters. Totally agree about Garage Sale Murders. It was the best.

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  11. I've thought about subscribing to the Hallmark Channel especially for the mysteries. Thanks for the rundown of the various mysteries, several of which I've read in print.

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    1. Me, too, Joan! They really are well done, and good mysteries are hard to find on TV. I love the Agatha Christie ones, but it's like they produce the same half a dozen over and over.

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  12. We watched all the Christmas Hallmark movies....I think what I loved best was the decorations and the way small-town America was portrayed, especially if one misses the Norman Rockwell portrayals. I have only seen on of the detective ones, the Aurora Teasdale mysteries and got frustrated with "too stupid to live" for the sake of drama/tension. But maybe I'll try one of the other series. A very interesting article, Cheryl, and good luck with writing some scripts.

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    1. Elizabeth, you've captured my feelings about those Christmas movies. Just love the decorations. And I, too, just loved the Norman Rockwell portrayals. Well put.

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  13. My mom watches all of those movies. I prefer to watch British crime shows.

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    1. My husband watches all the British crime shows, and while I'm a huge fan of British TV, I do not at all like the British crime shows. The ones that aren't gritty usually have murders in triplicate -- never a single homicide -- and they're often not well motivated, often motivated by craziness, which doesn't work for me. Then the police procedurals are often very gritty. Personally, I like my murder . . . LITE! I'm a wuss. All this being said, the most well done crime show, murder mystery ever, imo, is the British series New Tricks. Very well written. One homicide per show. Well motivated. Many plausible suspects. Great cast of continuing characters. Wonderful humor. And fantastic location shots in London. My favorite show.

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  14. I love these mystery stories and I've even got my husband watching them, too! It's so refreshing to be able to watch a movie that isn't loaded with cursing and graphic violence!

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