The network wanted to make Gunsmoke 90 minutes long, but James Arness π€ππ π₯ that idea ππ π¨π
He also proudly described the Western as "ππ£ππ πππ πππ£π₯πͺ."

Gunsmoke was the show the kept growing, kept evolving, kept⦠going. The record-setting Western was on for 20 straight seasons, so it had to evolve and adapt. Because television looked much different in 1975 than it did in 1955.
That meant, after its sixth season, that Gunsmoke swelled from a 30-minute show to a full-hour drama. Cast members came and went, though the trio of James Arness, Amanda Blake and Milburn Stone remained at the core. In 1966, following season 11, about halfway through its run, Gunsmoke made another major advancement, from πππππ-πππ-π¨πππ₯π πππ₯π ππ ππ π£.
The leap into color had some purists on edge. This is why the network made a press push to sell fans on the color show. That included getting the press-shy Arness out in public selling the show.
βInterviews are rare and personal appearancesβ¦ are out,β the UPI wrote of Arness, as seen in The Bridgeport Post on May 8, 1966. βIt is virtually impossible to determine where Matt Dillon leaves off and James Arness begins, if indeed there is any difference at all. Both are reflective men ππππ π£π£πππ₯ of small talk.β
Still, the reporter was able to squeeze some behind-the-scenes details from Arness. And they are quite interesting to fans of the βadultβ (Arness always made a point to label Gunsmoke an βadultβ Western, to set it apart from competition more clearly catered to boys).
For example, early in 1966, CBS, the network airing Gunsmoke, pushed to make the episodes 90 minutes long. βArness opposed the scheme,β the article explained. βIt would have meant shooting two units simultaneously and diluting the showβs quality.β
The idea of 90-minute episodes, a full movie every week, was not new to Westerns. Three years early, in 1963β64, Wagon Train had done its entire seventh season as hour-and-a-half-long episodes. For its eighth and final season, Wagon Train shrunk back to 60 minutes the following year, which speaks to the wisdom of that decision.
Arness had a clear vision for Gunsmoke and pushed to keep the series β and his personal life β to the highest quality possible.
βWeβve kept the show from becoming gaudy,β Arness said. βTowns like Dodge City were ππ£ππ πππ πππ£π₯πͺ. Weβve maintained that flavor.β He promised to readers to not βpretty upβ the setting for color cameras.
Arness also explained why he sold his stake in the show a few years prior. βAt one point he owned the show,β the journalist said, βbut he sold his interest in it two years ago.β
βBeing an owner got to be a ππ¦π£πππ,β Arness blurted. βIβm not a businessman.β He loathed having to attend meetings after long days of shooting. βI wanted my weekends and evenings free to spend with the children,β the star said. As much as he cared about Gunsmoke, family remained the priority.
Would you have liked to see 90-minute Gunsmoke adventures?