1. Jerry Lewis in France

Jerry Lewis used to be one of the biggest stars in America, until America got tired of him, stopped going to his movies, and only let him appear in public once a year to host a telethon for the Muscular Dystrophy Association. In fact, Lewis’ appeal to American audiences soured to the point where his popularity in France has, for decades now, been used as a club used to assault French taste: If a country could love that guy who did the silly voices and the pratfalls, how can it be trusted to be right about anything? It’s a bit more complicated than that, though. Lewis’ best films—which combine a strong visual sense and a reckless approach to physical comedy—have stood the test of time nicely. (In short, Lewis deserves to be revered, though his toxic approach to public relations continually short-circuits attempts to rehab his reputation.) As for Lewis’ appeal in France, it’s real, though overstated. In 1999, Cecil Adams devoted a Straight Dope column responding to a French reader who didn’t understand why Americans asked him about Jerry Lewis all the time. Adams responded that his reader was a bit too young to remember when Lewis, riding a wave of highbrow French appreciation in the mid-’60s that led to a revival of his previous films, made a triumphant visit to the country. Those warm feelings persisted into the ’80s, when Lewis received both the Order Of Arts And Letters, a cultural honor, and the Legion Of Honor, for his charity work with the MDA. And for his 80th birthday in 2006, France tacked a promotion onto that honor by making Lewis a commandeur in the Legion Of Honor. In his acceptance speech, Lewis offered his own theory about his popularity: “Even if the French people cannot hear my language, they have always heard my heart.”

2. Donald Duck in Scandinavia

As one of the faces on Disney’s Mt. Rushmore, Donald Duck isn’t exactly unknown in the U.S., but he’ll always play second banana to Mickey on these shores. But in Scandinavia, Donald is king: He’s graced postage stamps in Finland and served as a perpetual write-in candidate in elections in Finland and Sweden, where he’s allegedly the country’s ninth-most-popular political party. Whether he’s Aku Ankka in Finland or Kalle Anka in Sweden, Donald’s been a weekly comics mainstay for more than six decades (Kalle Anka & C:o is Sweden’s best-selling comic magazine of all time) and remains a Christmastime tradition, with nearly half of all Swedes tuning in each year to Kalle Anka Och Hans Vänner Onskar God Jul (Donald Duck And His Friends Wish You A Merry Christmas). Donald’s popularity extends to the rest of Europe as well, especially Germany, where he’s evolved into a slightly deeper figure than the easily enraged goofball Americans know: According to The Wall Street Journal, which calls him “the Jerry Lewis of Germany,” the Donald Germans know “quotes from German literature, speaks in grammatically complex sentences, and is prone to philosophical musings.” Not bad for a duck who doesn’t wear pants—which, contrary to popular rumor, did not get Donald banned in Finland.


3. Top Cat in Mexico

Hanna-Barbera’s Top Cat didn’t enjoy a particularly long life in the United States, running in prime time from September 1961 to April 1962 for a total of 30 episodes on ABC. In Latin America, though, those same 30 episodes of Top Cat are huge, possessing popularity on par with The Flintstones. In Mexico, Don Gato Y Su Pandilla (Top Cat And His Gang) even inspired a 2011 3-D movie of the same name that became one of the most successful Mexican films ever, breaking the record for biggest opening weekend ever with a gross of nearly $3.2 million.

4. ALF in Germany

Like plenty of American pop culture, NBC’s science-fiction sitcom ALF became incredibly, inexplicably popular when it began airing in Germany. Its popularity reportedly resulted in signs posted around the German city of Alf being repeatedly stolen, resulting in the mayor autographing and selling prefab copies. Tommi Piper, who dubbed ALF’s voice for German broadcasts, even had a minor hit in 1989 with the pop single “Hallo ALF Hier Ist Rhonda” (“Hello ALF, This Is Rhonda”), which has Piper singing as ALF to his love interest.

5. Cheap Trick in Japan

Cheap Trick made three classic albums one after the other in 1977 and 1978—Cheap Trick, In Color, and Heaven Tonight—but America shrugged at the finest power-pop group Rockford, Illinois ever produced. Not so Japan, where each album proved a little more popular than the last, and the band built a steady following that turned into a fervent following by the time it toured the country behind Heaven Tonight. To understand the extent of the appeal, look no further than the 1978 live album Cheap Trick At Budokan, recorded at the Tokyo concert arena Nippon Budokan. Appreciative screams become another instrument in the songs, and rise in pitch whenever the band talks to the audience, whether it’s singer Robin Zander introducing “Surrender” (“This next one is the first song on our newwww album…”) or, on the uncut version of the concert released as The Complete Concert in 1998, guitarist Rick Nielsen praising a local product. (“The first thing I did when I got to Japan was buy a Japanese guitar.”) First released as a 10-track album strictly for the Japanese market, At Budokan became a popular import, and soon made Cheap Trick a star in its native land. Maybe not Japan-big, but pretty big.

6. Bill Hicks in the UK

Although the Texas-bred Bill Hicks styled himself like a consummate vision of outlaw Americana—a chain-smoking, black-clad nexus of Lenny Bruce and Johnny Cash—he became the toast of Britain well before his home country caught on. By 1991, Hicks had already toured the U.S. club circuit for years, appeared on several TV specials, and released his first album, but he didn’t truly become the revered cult figure he is now until an appearance at Montreal’s Just For Laughs Festival made him a UK sensation. It certainly helped that Hicks “debuted” overseas having already honed his act, as did the fact that his specials, particularly the London-taped Revelations, aired repeatedly on British TV in their uncensored entirety, rather than in the bite-sized, sanitized form necessitated by U.S. talk shows. Hicks himself credited his UK popularity to the country’s eagerness to laugh at America, and cynically praised the UK’s more sophisticated sense of irony. Whatever the reason (and certainly it was a combination of all those factors), being bigger overseas allowed Hicks to think of himself as something of an expatriate, and you can’t get much more “outlaw” than that.

7. Lionel Richie in Iraq

As Operation Iraqi Freedom turned from triumph to quagmire in the mid-’00s, the daily reports of sectarian violence and political instability in the country naturally led some news outlets to seek out a few lighter-side-of-the-news stories. So in May 2006, ABC News picked up on the curious fact that erstwhile R&B superstar Lionel Richie was second only to bombs as America’s hottest export in Iraq. ABC’s John Berman reported that many Iraqis who couldn’t speak a word of English knew the lyrics to Richie’s songs, and Richie was told that “All Night Long” could be heard as tanks rolled into the country in 2003. Richie himself didn’t have an answer for his popularity, outside of his extensive touring in the Middle East, but in an interview with The Guardian, he mused about the power of his songs to bring people together: “The Sunnis and the Shi’ites can’t agree on anything, but they’re all getting married and partying to my songs.” If the Iraqi people need a statue to replace Saddam Hussein’s in Firdos Square, a blind student has already taken care of the head.


8. Rodriguez in South Africa

Enigmatic Detroit protest singer Rodriguez released two albums of trippy folk, soul, and blues in the early ’70s—1970’s Cold Fact and 1971’s Coming From Reality—that flopped so spectacularly, the artist disappeared from the American music scene amid rumors he’d killed himself onstage or died of a drug overdose. But while Rodriguez’s career never took off in his home country, it flourished unexpectedly on the black market in South Africa, where his music became the soundtrack to the anti-Apartheid movement and inspired generations of rebels. The crowd-pleasing forthcoming documentary Searching For Sugar Man, which wowed audiences at Sundance, tells the story of Rodriguez’s remarkable fall and rise as he’s rediscovered, very much alive, by some of his most devoted South African fans, and travels to the country for the first time to play stadiums.

9. Who’s The Boss? in Germany and the UK

Who’s The Boss? was a popular sitcom in the United States, landing in the Nielsen top 10 for half of its run and running a respectable eight seasons. Yet the show came at a time when most of the best sitcoms on the air were workplace shows, and though it had strongly drawn characters, it also had Tony Danza as a lead, a poor starting point for any show. Oddly enough, the series became enough of a sensation in other countries that the show’s distributor took the then-unusual step of allowing foreign remakes of the program. The show was particularly popular in the United Kingdom, where it led to the long-running remake The Upper Hand, which ran for seven seasons and 95 episodes (very long by UK standards) and brought in original series star Katherine Helmond for a guest spot. And in Germany, the whimsically titled Wer Ist Hier Der Boss? was so unexpectedly popular that 15 early episodes were remade in German, though they didn’t live up to dubbed reruns of the original.

10. Josephine Baker in France

A dancer on Broadway and a nightclub entertainer during the Harlem Renaissance, The St. Louis-born Josephine Baker lives on as an enduring symbol of the Jazz Age—in Paris. She first performed there in 1925 at the Theatre Des Champs-Elysees, and like many celebrated black jazz musicians, was immediately won over by the acclaim and freedom from overt racial discrimination that she’d never experienced in America. In fact, she liked Paris so much, she never wanted to leave. She starred in French movies, headlined her own shows, and was celebrated by European fans who delighted in her talent and charisma, not to mention her nude dancing and pet cheetah. Her support of the French Resistance during World War II earned her official honors and cemented her legend as a heroic figure. But in America, she was mostly reviled as an opportunist who had disgraced herself by turning her back on her native land. It was only toward the end of her life that she began to earn a measure of respect here, after lending her support to the American civil-rights movement and appearing with Martin Luther King, Jr. at the 1963 march on Washington.

11. AM Gold in the Philippines

It’s well-documented that many Asian countries have a soft spot for soft rock from the West, and the inhabitants of the Philippines in particular like to fire up their lighters for big pop songs from this side of the world. Journey is probably the biggest and best example of this crossover, with the Bay Area band passing the mic once held by Steve Perry over to a Filipino named Arnel Pineda, who against all odds has been accepted with open arms by the band’s fans. The pair of Australians in Air Supply (who actually reside in America now) also remain marquee names in Manila, but perhaps the two most notable where-are-they-now?-oh-maybe-you-should-check-the-Philippines acts from the U.S. are Christopher Cross and Dennis Lambert. The former, known for such squeezably soft yacht-rock classics as “Sailing,” “Arthur’s Theme (Best That You Can Do),” and “Ride Like The Wind,” can’t get arrested in his homeland, but still receives significant Filipino airplay. The latter, meanwhile, has the unofficial Valentine’s Day theme of the Philippines—“Of All The Things” from Lambert’s one and only solo album, 1972’s Bags And Things—and nobody on these shores has any idea who the hell he is. Unless, of course, they’ve seen Of All The Things, the 2008 documentary directed by Lambert’s son that examines the songwriter’s improbable popularity in the Philippines and his return to the stage after he retired from music and become a Florida real-estate agent.

12. Paul Williams in the Philippines

Similarly, Stephen Kessler’s new documentary, Paul Williams: Still Alive, proceeds from the director finding out that the once ubiquitous singer-songwriter is, indeed, still alive. Kessler then goes on to follow the “Rainbow Connection” tunesmith around on tour, including a jaunt into the Philippines, where Williams is apparently still a huge draw. In one of the film’s more memorable sequences, Kessler slow-burns his way through an anxiety attack as he and the rest of Williams’ entourage tag along on a bus ride through a Filipino jungle apparently teeming with al-Qaida militants. For his part, Williams seems totally game to bask in the appreciation, even if it means travelling half a world away.


13. Samuel Fuller in Europe

“Film is like a battleground. Love. Hate. Action. Violence. Death. In one word—emotion.” The definitive statement of Samuel Fuller’s ethos comes not from his autobiography, A Third Face, but from his cameo appearance in Jean-Luc Godard’s Pierrot Le Fou, a tribute orchestrated by the onetime critic who dubbed Fuller the master of “cinema-fist.” By 1965, just after his twin masterpieces Shock Corridor and The Naked Kiss, Fuller’s career in the U.S. was almost over; he returned only for The Big Red One, which was gutted before its initial release, and White Dog, an anti-racist allegory whose “anti-” aspect was missed by contemporary viewers. But in Europe, Fuller was critically lionized, and more importantly, funded, allowing two more films: Thieves After Dark and Street Of No Return. A World War II veteran, Fuller saw his homeland’s hypocrisies as well as its greatness: The scene of a black mental patient shouting Ku Klux Klan slogans in Shock Corridor is a bracing attack on the country’s racist madness. That might not have made him popular at home, but it endeared him to foreign cinephiles who saw him as a true-blooded American.

14. Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton in Africa

As country stars, wig models, and chicken roasters, Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton are pretty big—insert bra-size joke here—in America. Among some country naysayers, though, they don’t garner much respect, for whatever reason. Luckily, in parts of Africa, Rogers and Parton are musical gods. For whatever reason, the countrypolitan stars of the ’70s and ’80s do especially well in countries like Kenya and Nigeria, where singers like Crystal Gayle and Don Williams are revered for their “sentimental music.” There are a lot of theories as to why, but scholars think Rogers and Parton have particular appeal because of rags-to-riches ditties like “Coat Of Many Colors,” which might be easy for the poorer citizens of African villages to identify with. Those types of ballads have even influenced popular African-produced songs, like Roger Whitaker’s “My Land Is Kenya.”

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15. David Hasselhoff in Germany

The star of Baywatch and that unfortunate drunk-cheeseburger video has never really risen above camp status in his native land. This reputation is buttressed by his supposed mega-star status in Germany, where his single “Looking For Freedom” held the No. 1 position for eight weeks in 1989 and is inextricably linked, for better or worse, with the fall of the Berlin Wall—not to mention light-up leather jackets and piano scarves. But while Americans seem to never tire of the ol’ Germans Love Hasselhoff joke, which has become a go-to trope in various media, the Hoff’s 1989 star-power has considerably cooled over the last 20-plus years in Deutschland, where he’s now mostly a nostalgic figure—as evidenced by a spotty comeback tour there in 2011.

16. Rich Hall in the UK

Comedian Rich Hall spent the ’80s bouncing from one notable gig to the next, starting as a writer/performer on ABC’s Fridays from 1980-1982, then moving over to HBO’s Not Necessarily The News in 1983 until the faux news magazine folded in 1990. But in spite of walking away from the latter experience with a lifetime’s supply of Sniglets, Hall struggled to find further success in the States. His profile in the UK, however, is substantially higher, with appearances on panel quizzes like QI and Never Mind The Buzzcocks helping earn the comedian a series of BBC programs, including Rich Hall’s Fishing Show and Rich Hall’s Cattle Drive. In addition, Hall’s stand-up has earned considerable acclaim, in no small part due to a character called Otis Lee Crenshaw, a singer-songwriter who falls somewhere between David Allan Coe and Tom Waits. In his guise as Crenshaw, Hall has recorded several albums, released a concert movie, and, perhaps most notably, was the recipient of the Perrier Comedy Award at the Edinburgh Fringe arts festival in 2000.

17. Manowar in Germany

Germany has no shortage of its own mythically macho metal artists, but for some reason, it’s embraced New York’s Manowar as one of its own. Marauding onto the scene in the early ’80s with cartoonish, borderline Wagnerian albums like Battle Hymns and Into Glory Ride, Manowar never fit into the glam-and-thrash of the decade’s American metal scene. But in Deutschland, the group became stars, to the point where even its live DVDs consistently go gold there. Could the fact that Manowar’s founding guitarist, Ross “The Boss” Friedman, also played in the proto-punk band The Dictators (sample song: “Master Race Rock”) have anything to do with Germany’s Manowar obsession? It might be best not to ask.

18. The Runaways in Japan

Manufactured girl-group The Runaways was a little ahead of its time in terms of both the eventual mainstreaming of punk and the potential star power of two of its teenage members: Lita Ford and Joan Jett. During its brief existence in the late ’70s, the band fought in vain to find a wide audience and chart success in its native America. In Japan, though, things were different. Hailed there with a frenzy of Beatles-worthy mania, The Runaways were at one point Japan’s fourth-biggest musical import, behind ABBA, KISS, and Led Zeppelin. Accordingly, the group’s 1977 concert album, Live In Japan, was recorded in Tokyo. The screams speak for themselves.

19. Fun Lovin’ Criminals in the UK

Founded in New York City in the early ’90s, Fun Lovin’ Criminals all but fell into a record deal with EMI, but the group’s debut album, 1996’s Come Find Yourself, earned the Criminals instant recognition via its hit single, “Scooby Snacks.” Although the song remains FLC’s lone chart success in the States, where it reached No. 14 on the Billboard Modern Rock chart, the UK embraced the group, which landed its next seven singles in the Top 30. Similarly, whereas only Come Find Yourself broke the album charts here (and only at No. 144), the band’s first three albums all made it into the UK Top 10, and its most recent two releases, 2005’s Livin’ In The City and 2010’s Classic Fantastic, are available only as imports in America. Although Fun Lovin’ Criminals’ success has cooled somewhat since its heyday, the band continues to tour Europe on a regular basis, with frontman Huey Morgan also carving a side career for himself as a radio host and occasional chat-show guest.

20. Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me in Japan and the UK

David Lynch and Mark Frost’s experimental TV series Twin Peaks enjoyed phenomenal success in America as an eight-episode midseason “event,” only to crash and burn during its second and final season. Fourteen months after the series finale, Lynch’s feature-film prequel about the events leading up to the murder of Laura Palmer was all but booed off the screen at the Cannes Film Festival, and when the movie opened in U.S. theaters during the dog days of August, it was treated as a cultural non-event and a critical and commercial disaster. However, the Twin Peaks cultists of Japan never lost the faith, and the movie was enough of a blockbuster there to make up for the losses here, where the total box-office receipts didn’t cover half the movie’s $10 million budget. Meanwhile, reviewers in England got a head start on the inevitable re-evaluating of the film, with many prominent British critics calling it a masterpiece released into the punishing gears of international backlash.

21. House music in Europe

House music got its start in Chicago in the early ’80s, making it an all-American phenomenon. In spite of occasional efforts to brand it as the next big thing and the rare crossover hit, house and its various offshoots remained strictly underground for years in the States. Not so in the UK, where house quickly caught on and emerged as a mainstream genre. Following Britain’s infamous Summer Of Love in ’88, house (and its Detroit-born cousin, techno) did become the next big thing, sparking rock-rave crossovers (the Madchester scene), pop hits (22 Top 40 hits in 1991, including 10 Top 10s), one of Radio 1’s most enduringly popular shows (Pete Tong’s weekly Essential Mix), and even a nationwide law designed to crack down on the dance parties. House music has finally, in recent years, become mainstream in its country of origin as the backbone of innumerable Hot 100 hits, but even to this day, it’s still nowhere near as much a part of the larger culture as it became in the UK.


22. Gossip Girl in China

The superficiality, greed, and glamorization of wealth on The CW’s Gossip Girl seemingly represent all the worst aspects of capitalism—which is why China loves it. After all, to Chinese students ruled by societal expectation and forced modesty, there’s apparently something attractive in the adventures of a bunch of preening, manipulative New York high-school students who spend all of their time attending fabulous parties and exchanging sophisticated barbs over afternoon cocktails. The show has become an object of fascination in Asia, inspiring comics and myriad online forums devoted to picking it apart and gazing in awe at its opulence. For the class-obsessed China—particularly wealthy young women who take brands and fashion perhaps even more seriously than their American counterparts—Gossip Girl is seen as some sort of didactic lesson on success, rather than the frothy fever dream it is to most U.S. audiences. Its popularity is so great, in fact, that even the incredibly restrictive, government-run Chinese TV is currently preparing a homegrown version of Gossip Girl—one that will likely be slightly less risqué, yet still have all the fetishization of wealth and social status.

23. Dark Skies in Europe

The X-Files was a huge hit domestically, but it was also a giant success for 20th Century Fox internationally. Sales of the program became a substantial source of revenue for the studio’s television production arm, in a time when international television sales were really beginning to heat up. The series inspired numerous copycats, as all TV hits throughout history have, yet where the American audience mostly rejected these shows, many gained larger audiences overseas. Such was the case with the short-lived 1996 series Dark Skies, a one-season show that purported to tell a secret history of events on Earth since the 1960s. In the show, an alien race known as the Hive prepare an invasion to coincide with the millennium, slowly taking over more and more honest human beings. The series was schlocky, but it had a way with a plot twist, and it was apparently popular enough in Europe that producers floated the idea of reviving it for another season or a series of TV movies before finding no one was interested domestically. All those European fans are probably still wondering how series star Eric Close got off that spaceship.


24. Gloria Jones in the UK

Partly because of her relationship and collaborations with T. Rex’s Marc Bolan—and partly because her signature song, 1965’s “Tainted Love,” was a massive Northern Soul hit in England in the ’70s—American R&B singer Gloria Jones has long been huger in the UK than in the States. Then again, many of her fellow Northern Soul acts such as The Flirtations and Geno Washington shared a similar lopsided fame, releasing singles that packed dance floors across England while barely scraping the Billboard charts in their own country. It’s ironic that when the English synth-pop band Soft Cell released its famous version of “Tainted Love” in 1981, British audiences recognized it as a cover of an American artist, but Americans didn’t.

25. Albert Ayler in Europe

Free jazz’s biggest name, Ornette Coleman, was able to secure and retain notoriety in the U.S. throughout the ’60s, but Albert Ayler had less luck. Far more extreme in his approach to improvisation and flights of discordant fancy, Ayler left the States in the early part of the decade. He was embraced in Sweden and wound up moving back and forth across the Atlantic often before his untimely death in 1970. And while he was able to secure the patronage of the eminent jazz imprint Impulse for a short while—thanks mostly to a recommendation from the label’s leading light, John Coltrane—Ayler’s simultaneously abrasive and spiritual style was destined to be more warmly received in places like Sweden, Denmark, and France—as was most of free jazz’s more exploratory wing.

26. The Big Bang Theory in Canada

If you consider the Great Lakes a “sea” (and we do), then the popularity of The Big Bang Theory in Canada is worth considering in this Inventory. Chuck Lorre’s nerd-centric sitcom is plenty popular in the U.S., with dependably high ratings and prominent syndication, but it’s insanely popular north of the border. When the show’s fourth season premièred in Canada, it drew an estimated 3.1 million viewers, the largest audience for a sitcom since the Friends finale in 2004. Bus ads and billboards now drape Canadian metropolises (i.e. Toronto) touting it as the No. 1 show in Canada. Our theory? Canadians relate to these maladjusted weirdoes, because Canada is basically the dweeby Big Bang Theory to America’s thick-necked According To Jim.


27. Gossip in Europe and the UK

Pacific Northwest soul-punk-turned-dance-rock trio Gossip has always been a powerhouse live band led by singer Beth Ditto, and the group has built up a respectable Stateside following. But it’s nothing compared to the attention the band commands overseas. Things really began to take off with 2006’s Standing In The Way Of Control, whose title track was strongly associated with Skins and has been given all kinds of props by NME, including being named the 34th best song over the previous 15 years. The list of foreign accomplishments doesn’t end there: Gossip has enjoyed prime spots at music festivals like Glastonbury; its 2009 single “Heavy Cross” broke records on the German charts and soundtracked a Christian Dior commercial featuring lots of famous people; the group just played the Cannes Film Festival, where Ditto could be seen grinding with Sacha Baron Cohen’s Admiral General Aladeen character; and the band’s most recent album, A Joyful Noise, landed in the Top 10 in Switzerland, Germany, France, Austria, and Belgium. By comparison, it peaked in the U.S. at 100 on the Billboard 200.

28. Scott Walker/The Walker Brothers in the UK

Formed in Los Angeles, The Walker Brothers—the showbiz moniker of the unrelated Scott Engel and John Walker—enjoyed some of the usual modest success of early-’60s rock groups, drawing decent crowds on the Sunset Strip and signing with Mercury Records to release a single. But it wasn’t until former Standells drummer Gary Leeds convinced them to give the UK a shot that things truly began to happen for them. The London mod scene was at its apex when the group arrived, and the country immediately warmed to the Walkers’ dapper, soulful mix of R&B—which cut even deeper in Engel’s resonant baritone—and Phil Spector-esque, resplendent orchestral arrangements, sending songs like “The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore” to the top of the charts in a parallel to The Beatles’ British invasion back home. Though the Brothers’ popularity was short-lived, Scott Engel also went on to have great UK success as Scott Walker, his newfound worldliness mirrored in his stylistic drift from darkly baroque Jacques Brel ballads to mournful country to avant-garde rock. Walker officially became a UK citizen in 1970, having found himself by getting lost in a faraway place.

29. Pan Am in Europe

Part of a weird network movement to create a version of Mad Men that would be palatable to a mass audience, Pan Am, a series about stewardesses on the titular airline in the 1960s, debuted huge before mostly sinking without a trace, though ABC aired every episode, hoping against hope that it could find an audience for the expensive series. The series’ studio, Sony Pictures Television, did find an audience for the show. It was just in Europe, where Pan Am performed incredibly well and won the Best Series award at the prestigious Rose d’Or festival in Switzerland. (The only other American series that’s won a prize? The short-lived reality show I Survived A Japanese Game Show.) For a time, the Hollywood rumor mill suggested Sony might sell the show into a second season through Amazon, which doesn’t need to worry about domestic ratings to turn a profit, but those rumors seem to have died down. At the very least, it suggests continental Europe has been watching a very different “Golden Age of TV” from the rest of us.