Exposing 'Northern Exposure'

When people find out I'm from Alaska, there are some expected questions that I can readily speak to -- Is it really light/dark all the time? Have you seen the northern lights? How cold does it get? -- but there's one question that has come up regularly for which I haven't had an answer: Is Alaska like the TV show "Northern Exposure?"

After watching the first few episodes of season one on DVD, I'm beginning to formulate an answer.

The Premise

The first task was to take on the show's premise. Joel Fleischman is a Jewish doctor from New York who agrees to work in Alaska because the state will repay his school loans.

Joel: I mean do you have any idea what it costs to go through medical school? I mean, a lot! I know what you're thinking, scholarship, right? Let's face it, Jewish doctors are not exactly an endangered species. ... So, seventy five scholarship applications later, seventy four turn-downs, only one comes through. Alaska... [T]he state agreed to finance my medical education to the tune of one hundred and twenty five thousand dollars, and in return? I agreed to be their indentured slave for the next four years.

Joel has signed a contract to practice medicine in Anchorage, Alaska's largest city. The state does have a student loan repayment program for medical personnel, but it looks like it is currently limited to students participating in the Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho (WWAMI) medical education program. The Alaska legislature considered a bill to establish loan repayment programs for a wider range of students, but it looks as though it died in committee.[1]

The National Health Service Corps, part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, has a loan repayment program for medical personnel who agree to work in under-served (mostly rural) communities. They have many opportunities in Alaska, but the few in Anchorage are scored low, meaning the loan repayment is less.[2]

Verdict: The show's writers appear to be ahead of their time. As of the show's air date, Alaska did not have a loan repayment program for med students outside the WWAMI program, but the state appears to be considering one. There is a federal program, which I assume existed as of the air date, so it's plausible that Joel's service in Alaska is tied to a med school loan repayment program.

Where is Cicely?

Now that it's been established that Joel's motive for going to Alaska is at least plausible, let's examine where he might be. Cicely, Alaska, is fictional, but through clues given throughout the show, we can try to locate where in the Last Frontier it may be located.

Our first clue is that it's a "bus ride from Anchorage." This may not seem very helpful for people outside Alaska, but since most of the state is inaccessible by road, it's actually very helpful.

When Joel gets off the bus, the road is paved, which is also helpful, as it eliminates pretty much everything north of Fairbanks as a possibility.

Later in the first episode, we get another important clue. Maurice mentions that folks traveled from Ninilchik, "300 miles away as the crow flies." Though Maurice is a former Astronaut who is presumably accustomed to precision measurements, I'm guessing this statement is a casual estimation, so we'll give him a 25-mile margin of error on either side. If the actual distance were beyond that, I think he would have rounded to 250 or 350 miles. This helps narrow it down, but not as much as one would think.

This region includes all of Highway 1 from Fairbanks to Tok, the northern half of the Richardson Highway as well as a good chunk of Highway 3 near Fairbanks. We're going to need a little more information.

The fictional town is located in Arrowhead County, which would be helpful in any other state but Alaska: There are no counties in Alaska. The state is divided into regions called "boroughs," and none of them are named "Arrowhead."[3] Not to mention about half of the land is outside any of the 16 boroughs.

In the DVD menu, Cicely's welcome sign places the elevation at 6,572 feet -- or about 1.25 miles. Unfortunately, in our range of possible locations, the highest elevation accessible by road is about 1,200 meters, or about 4,000 feet. So we'll ignore this criteria.

Other clues that might help pinpoint the possible location of Cicely have been scarce. I haven't watched beyond the sixth episode, though, so perhaps I'll run across some more clues. For now, I'm inclined to believe Cicely is somewhere between Tok and Delta Junction. Depending on how much credit you're willing to give the writers, this ambiguity may be intentional. If it were easy to pinpoint exactly where the town was, it would be easy to say there should/shouldn't be a mountain/river/lake/road/etc. Since we don't know exactly where the town is, it's a little easier to take those details on faith and focus on the story instead of the details.

Other items

Weather: In the first episode, Joel says "The median temperature [of Anchorage] is only five degrees lower than French Lick, Indiana." I'm not sure which almanac he was using, but he should consider buying a new one. The chart below shows the range between the average low and average high temperatures throughout the year for French Lick, Indiana, and Anchorage, Alaska. Even if you use the Celcius scale, Anchorage's temps are colder by more than five degrees.

Daylight: In episode two, Dr. Fleischman visits Maggie to give her some pain medication. It's 11 p.m., according to the dialogue, but the sky is pitch black. This doesn't track. If they are as far south as Tok, sunset in July is around 11 p.m. -- if they are closer to Delta Junction, sunset in July is 20-30 minutes later -- according to this sunrise/sunset calculator. (Note: We don't for sure that it's July, but we do know that it's summer. The days are a bit shorter in August, but longer in June, so I picked the middle.)


On the more accurate side, Joel is seen drinking an Alaskan Amber in the bar. Though most self-respecting bars would have it on draft, it's nice to see a local product included in the program.

Conclusion

Despite some inaccuracies and ambiguities, the overall feel of the show is right on. Northern Exposure is one of the best representations of Alaska life available in a fictional TV show or movie (that I've seen). We'll see if there are any changes as I watch more episodes.


[1] This summary of SB 32 says the bill would "establish a loan reimbursement program for registered nurses and doctors who are trained outside the WWAMI program." I take that to mean there is currently no state-sponsored reimbursement program for students outside the WWAMI program. Status of SB 32.

[2] Thanks, Fiona, for the NHSC links.

[3] This is a common factual error in movies and TV shows set in Alaska.

20 Comments

I LOVE this post. :-) Did you ever see that movie Insomnia, with Al Pacino and Hilary Swank? It was set in some podunk town in SE Alaska, but I'm pretty sure they filmed it in Canada somewhere (as per usual). It's cool when they set things in Alaska, but not so cool when they don't actually film there!

On a somewhat related note, a few scenes from the Steven Seagal movie "On Deadly Ground" was filmed near Worthington Glacier, in Valdez.

Posted by Sara on May 28, 2007

Oh, that reminds me: Northern Exposure was actually filmed in Roslyn, Washington.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Exposure

Posted by curt on May 28, 2007

This is epic Curt! Well done!

Posted by Mikey on May 29, 2007

This was a great post.

Posted by Ken on May 29, 2007

Great breakdown, Curt. Was planning on doing one myself one of these days. I recently got HDNet and they play Northern Exposure almost every single day.

There's some other references somewhere in the series about Cantwell not being far away. They also sometime in the series started calling it "Arrowhead County Borough" probably because of the angry responses they got from us Alaskans.

I love the scenes in the series where the entire town is covered, heck, saturated in snow and yet the hill behind it is clean.

"Insomnia" is hilarious. They stole a name from a town near Bethel and put it in the SE - then, in select scenes, you can see skyscrapers in the background. Can we say filmed in Vancouver?

Posted by Jason on June 12, 2007

Actually in one of the shark jumping episodes - season 4 or 5 (I don't know I wasn't counting). Joel leaves Cicely through some kind of space time thingie (he walks through the woods and ends up in Manhattan). The closing of that episode, Maggie gets a postcard from him addressed to Cicely with a zipcode. The zipcode is Cantwell.

Go figure.

But Bernie Karl up in Chena must have been inspired by the show. Maurice (the astronaut) sets up a bed and breakfast for Japanese tourist to come see the Northern Lights and conceive children.

Posted by Jim on June 27, 2007

Actually in one of the shark jumping episodes - season 4 or 5 (I don't know I wasn't counting). Joel leaves Cicely through some kind of space time thingie (he walks through the woods and ends up in Manhattan). The closing of that episode, Maggie gets a postcard from him addressed to Cicely with a zipcode. The zipcode is Cantwell.

Go figure.

Insomnia - work out the daylight for the season that it appears (late fall).

Did get a phone call today from someone in Georgia who assumed we still had snow.

But Bernie Karl up in Chena must have been inspired by the show. Maurice (the astronaut) sets up a bed and breakfast for Japanese tourist to come see the Northern Lights and conceive children.

Posted by Jim on June 27, 2007

I live in Homer and have been in Alaska for 30 years. I thought the physical area that Cicely looked just like was Seward away from the ocean. There was a show where Ruth went bird hunting in Homer. That would be a fairly easy drive from Seward. Also, there is a bus ride from Anchorage to Seward for the tourists.
I did go to Rosyln and the set was still there and fun to walk around!
Sometimes the clues from the series as to the location of Cicely are confusing and I believe it is because who ever created this town did it from the many flavors of many very small communities found in the state.
I did try to figure out where Cicely was based on where pilot Maggie said she was flying to or from.
Lee

Posted by Lee Mayhan on June 27, 2007

When Northern Exposure was being broadcast I was a huge fan and had never been to Alaska. However I had met my dad once, and he turned out to be a bush pilot who had never even heard of the show... Now I have lived in Alaska since '04, and many weeks of that spent out in "the bush" as well as some time in smaller towns/communities... I must say that except for the medical center and Prince William Sound, Cordova and the fictional Cicely are a lot alike! I live in Anchorage now, and I can say that there are times when even in this the largest city in Alaska, I feel like I'm in an episode of Northern Exposure... ESPecially when there's a moose walking across the road with its babies or there's a bear on my porch or I'm watching the 'taildraggers' in the sky... by all accounts, Northern Exposure gave a serious feel for Alaska life... especially the eccentricities of some of the 'sourdoughs' (long-time residents)... actually the tv show went kind of easy on the people here. You should see the pysch ward of the hospital I work at... it gets full mid-winter when the nights are twenty hours long and the snow seems like it will never leave...

Posted by Maria Linger on July 05, 2007

I spent several summers in the 80's working at Denali Nat'l Park. A couple of times I flew in and took the train up. Three times I drove up. Once on my way back I went to Roslyn, WA. I was fortunate enough to be there when the crews were filming Northern Exposure. I was behind the mock ups of the fishing village where "Ed" went to bring "Joel" back to "town". I watched them filming "Joel" & "Maggie" in town in front of the "bar".
I moved to Alaska in '99 and know that some of the things that happened in "Cicly" could happen "only in Alaska". When I first went to Anchorage in '80 you knew you were somewhere "different"... some of the old ways where still there. I miss Alaska but wouldn't want to live in the city anymore... it's too metropolitan now.

Posted by rae on July 06, 2007

I'm proud to say I've never watched Northern Exposure. But I do know they accidently killed their moose by feeding it oats. A moose needs lots of serious roughage, like birch bark. The poor animal got clogged up and died of an intestinal blockage. They got a new moose and fed it right.

Posted by James Mason on July 06, 2007

I've lived in Alaska all my life. Thought the show was alright. I was told that the setting is suposed to be Talkeetna. I have to say it really fits the feel and look of Talkeetna. The community is much the same. I don't know how the mileage is accounted for according to flights, but maybe they're not supposed to be. It reminds me of Talkeetna more than any other town in AK.

Posted by Charlene on July 11, 2007

I am a huge fan of Northern Exposure, we have all of the disc sets. I had watched it at my parents when it was on the air long ago, and then became hooked when we were being stationed at Eielson AFB near Fairbanks. Having just arrived and been shocked by the remoteness compared to where we are from (western KY), the summers, and were going crazy about Dec. of our first winter, we found solace and companionship in Joel's experiences! No one back home could understand what we were going through they thouht we had been given a dream assignment, although we kept assuring them the dream assignment we meant when he filled in AK was Elemendorf in Anchorage! Laughing with and at Joel was good medicine! So much of his thoughts, sad to say, were ours. We showed it to our fellow AF buddies who were also dragged here against their will.

We love it!! The carachters are eccentric individuals just like those we have met here. The mind set you get her, and that I have grown to love, is also represented. We just finished watching Season 6 in a marathon as we must leave Alaska in just a couple of weeks. We have seen much of the state in our three years here and do not want to leave now!

I agree it looks alot like Seward away from the harbor. This is the area J and I were thinking. We thought we had read in The Milepost that there is a town that NE was patterned after but can't find that passage. Anyone else know? I was thinking it was Talkeetna but after visiting there this summer, it must have been before it bacame so touristy?

There are few shows as brilliant and hillarious as this one! And it sure spoke to two cheechakos turned near sourdoughs!

Thanks for this blog we look forward to reading more!

Star

Posted by Star Hargrove on July 11, 2007

The show was actually filmed in Washington State! They show bits & pieces of Alaska through out the show. They used Native Americans instead of Alaska Natives for the show.

Posted by Allie on July 11, 2007

Yes, the show was filmed in a town called Roslyn, Washington. My husband and I visited the town and ate in the cafe. The town is small and you know you are on the main street when you see the mural for the Roslyn Cafe. You look around and suddenly you recognize, your surroundings are from the opening scene of Northern Exposure, where the moose is crossing the road. For more on Northern Exposure filming locations and facts go to www.moosefest.com and www.roslyncafe.com

Posted by Sonya on July 11, 2007

They managed to get a little bit of a lot of places into the show. In one, Maggie is flying off to Ketchikan, which would put her somewhere in SE, and Joel goes off to a medical conference in Juneau. They did show a real street scene of Juneau, with the Goldbelt Hotel in one.
A great show!

Posted by Donb on July 16, 2007

I loved Northern Exposure. And during the 5 yrs I lived in AK, I learned how often it was dead on, despite some "blenderizing" of the different regions. For example, yeah, it looks kind of like Seward, but it rarely rains on the show (not accurate if it was really on the Kenai). There are dozens of small towns off the Parks that look soooo much like Cicely. My personal votes would be Nenana, or Trapper Creek.

BTW, if you haven't seen the show in rerun or on VHS, you are really missing out. They yanked all the music for the DVDs, and the pilot is no where to be found.

Posted by Ariel on July 30, 2007

This is a well constructed Expose! Happy Birthday by the Way Curt.

Posted by Cory on August 01, 2007

i've been reliving n. ex days by reserving the whole series on love film. it's made me feel quite wistful and sad, especially listening to iris dements our town. ihave decided to visit roslyn wa. we have a roslyn near edinburgh, which is also a special place.

Posted by annie on September 02, 2007

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