By Kate O'Hare on November 18, 2009 12:15 PM
|1 Comment
Today's cuppa: Newman's Own Royal Tea
This past Monday, I headed to a warehouse in downtown Los Angeles to visit the set of Spike TV's "Deadliest Warrior," in which fighting techniques are discussed and demonstrated, and different types of warriors square off each week.
New episodes don't start until Spring 2010, but here's a sneak peek at one episode (for larger, much larger images, right click and open the link in a new tab or window) ...
To start with, here's some broad looks at the set:
An unfortunate ballstic-gel body, when mixed-martial-artist Rashad Evans was done with it ...
Here's a ballistic-gel body that already had a bad day ...
I also visited the downstairs area where the weapons and costumes are created ...
There was also a skinned, headless dead pig that had as bad a day as the ballistic-gel body, but we'll save that one for the story itself ...
By Kate O'Hare on November 17, 2009 12:04 PM
|1 Comment
Today's cuppa: Newman's Own Royal Tea chased with office coffee
(Below: printing press and other memorabilia at the headquarters of the Los Angeles Times)
With Lou Dobbs' departure from CNN, there's a great deal of chatter about opinion journalism -- or advocacy journalism or commentary or the Op-Ed page of your local paper, whatever you want to call it -- and whether it's a hazard to the republic.
As a Founding Father might say, poppycock.
All our Founders wanted was a free press, and that means a press free to talk about whatever it deems fit, and believe you me, the press needled our early presidents just as much as it needles our recent ones.
Of course, that doesn't mean even the Founders liked it.
We got all the way to our second president before the battle began ...
John Adams on press regulation
"Ifthere is ever to be an ameliorationof the condition ofmankind, philosophers, theologians,
legislators, politicians and moralists will find that the regulation of the
press is the most difficult,dangerous
andimportant they have to resolve
".
So wrote John Adams, who had been the
second President of the USA, to his friend John Lloyd on 11 February 1815. The
quote was used as an epigraph to their 1947 report by the Commission on Freedom
of the Press, aka the Hutchins Commission.
So the fact that that an elected leader doesn't like the press is neither here nor there. Our right to a free press is enshrined in the First Amendment of the Constitution, which means it is a fundamental right, not given to us or able to be removed from us by a politician. The press doesn't exist by the leave of any politician, and it is not answerable to them.
Oh, it's answerable to a whole bunch of other people -- from publishers to advertisers to, most importantly, readers and viewers -- but not to the government (at least not yet, despite the specter of a newspaper bailout hovering around).
And if you think today's commentators or news organizations are slanted, you should look at what Adams had to deal with. The tradition of an impartial press is a recent invention -- but a noble goal.
I don't know if humans (and journalists are still humans) can ever be truly impartial. Probably the best we can hope for -- and the least we should demand from journalists who cover hard news -- is fairness and a willingness to follow the facts wherever they lead, whether or not the truth uncovered agrees with the the journalist's or the news organization's worldview.
But as for opinion commentary, as long as it's labeled as such, I have no issue with it. Nobody has any trouble understanding the distinction between Page One and the Op-Ed Page. TV is no different. There needs to be a bright line between news anchors and commentators, and as long as there is -- and unfortunately, that's not always the case -- I believe people are bright enough to figure it out.
Oh, but critics claim, people will get all their news from commentators! They won't listen to us! Well, that's the power of free will and choice. If you want people to listen to your news, make it interesting and compelling, produce it well, and give it the ring of truth and honesty. Just because someone watches opinion shows doesn't automatically mean they won't watch news shows.
But nobody wants to watch boring news shows, no matter how solid their reporting is. People have choices now in media. It's not just the daily newspaper and the nightly network news. If you want to be read or listened to, you just might have to work harder. One reason opinion shows are so popular is they're not boring.
And anyone who wants to squelch popular opinion commentators -- whether in print, online, on TV or on the radio -- to protect their own piece of the pie needs to reread that First Amendment.
There's a reason it's called the free marketplace of ideas, not the protected reserve of ideas.
But can opinion commentators report news? News is news, no matter whether it comes over the back fence, in a pennysaver paper or on television. Opinion commentators can break news, but if they are, that might mean that the actual news reporters are a little slow on the uptake.
When's the last time that the Op-Ed page scooped a print investigative journalist?
The media environment isn't going to get any less competitive or cutthroat. If anything, the choices will keep proliferating exponentially. For those news organizations who've spent a few decades with comfortable near-monopolies and now cry foul -- tough.
As one of my favorite quotes says: "If you don't like change, you're going to like irrelevance even less."
General Eric Shinseki, Chief of Staff, U.S. Army.
BTW, here's a test. If all opinion commentators agreed with your opinion, would you have an issue with the existence of opinion commentary?
Below find my story with Springfield from a little earlier in the month. It's part of a conversation we had -- with Springfield's rescued dog in attendance -- at the "Californication" sets in Culver City.
There's a lot more to our chat, including Springfield's days entertaining the troops (and sustaining mortar fire) in Vietnam.
Yeah, Vietnam. Dang, the boy still looks good, and you'll get to see that for yourselves when he flirts with nudity on Showtime, and hear more about his adventures before his next episode airs on Nov. 22.
Without further ado ...
Rick Springfield only plays Rick Springfield on TV By Kate O'HareSTV ONTV DR PAGES.n01
On the
current season of Showtime's racy comedy "Californication," airing Sundays, rock musician and actor Rick Springfield plays
rock musician Rick Springfield. While there's plenty of wild rocker behavior,
there's no actual rock.
"No," he
says, "it's just the acting thing. I don't touch a guitar.
"I've acted a
lot of different things in my life, but I used to be averse to playing a
musician, but now I think it's fine. You have an in there, just because you are
a musician, but it's still acting.
"There may be
some elements of it that refer to Rick Springfield's life, but the gig is
basically an acting gig. I have to say those lines; I have to be truthful in
them. I have to do certain things that I sure don't do in my real life."
Even though
the Australian-born Springfield, 60, has acted
for quite some time - including a long stint on "GeneralHospital"
- he's not often recognized as an actor.
"Occasionally,"
he says, "you'll get a person who goes, 'You're that soap opera guy!' but most
of them, it's because of music. Music goes deeper into people's psyches."
Asked who
yells out the title of Springfield's
1981 hit, "Jessie's Girl," he says, "Pretty much everybody. There are two songs
that bar bands in Vegas play to get the crowd up- one of them is 'Don't Stop
Believin',' the Journey song, and the other one is 'Jessie's Girl.'
"In a
backhanded compliment, Rolling Stone listed' Jessie's Girl' last year as the No.
1 karaoke song."
While Springfield calls his
"Californication" character a "perverse version" of himself, that doesn't mean
he was a choirboy in his younger days.
"I was a bad
boy, that whole thing," he says. "My fall from grace was the death of my dad. I
did drugs earlier. I was more of an acid guy. I was never into blow that much;
I smoked dope at times.
"But I've always been so driven and ambitious that when
I'd feel something taking over or I got into pot for a while, and acid ... I
almost OD'd. That got me off it forever.
"When I'd
feel it got to take over my real time for what I wanted to do, I could cut it
out, because I knew it was interfering."
But as to
whether he'd ever choose between acting and music, Springfield says, "I'll always write. I'll
always be a musician. I love performing onstage. We always surprise people with
the power of the live show.
"It's very
interactive; it's very personal. That's how I relate to people. That's really
why I perform. I'm pretty shy most of the time and can't be bothered."
Springfield
credits his wife, Barbara - with whom he has two sons - with his current happy
existence, but he did live the wild life.
"I was a
young guy who, in all his young life, wanted to have sex and hadn't got it," he
says. "I was never the handsome guy in school. I was always a loner, arty, kind
of dark, a loner. I was the one made fun of. If I got someone, I kept it really
quiet.
"here's
something that drives you into music and performing, and it's not that you're
that popular with the girls."
He's also
worked hard to avoid being a flash in the pan.
"The live
shows now are the best shows we've ever done, the band and me," he says. "I
never wanted to kind of die away. If you've got a lot of experience behind you,
that counts if you're still in shape and can deliver."
Springfield also never forgets that he's not
alone onstage, and for that he credits his father, a military officer.
"From my
dad," he says, "I've always tried to treat people with respect. The band's been
with me for 12 years, because I treat us like a band. They've certainly been
with artists who treat them like sidemen and give them s---.
"I learned
(from my dad) that I'd rather have friends out there than employees, because
it's much more fun."
Wait! Just because I like you, here's a little bit extra from Springfield ...
On finding his inner wild man:
"I have to say these lines. I have to be truthful in them. I have to do certain things that I sure don't do in my real life. I've had a long time at being a musician, so I have done a lot of things that I can certainly use, but that's the same with any part.
"You've never killed someone, but if you play a murderer, you use whatever part of your could kill someone. That guy on the highway who cuts you off, if you had a gun, you'd shoot him right in the head. That's the part you tap into.
"So I tap into whatever parts of me are wild and hedonistic. They're certainly still there in different guises, but that's what an actor does. The best ones I know are the great American actors who come from the Actors Studio and use the real sh-t of what's inside them.
"Certainly that's what I aspire to be, that type of actor."
On the boot camp of daytime TV:
"You're hitting marks; you're talking to somebody; you're doing a lot of dialogue. It's all about dialogue, because there's no action in soaps. It really is the hardest acting and writing gig in TV.
"This is something that is a great boot camp for beginning actors. It's probably nothing I'd want to retire into, because it is so much work."
By Kate O'Hare on November 10, 2009 10:45 AM
|No Comments
Today's cuppa: office coffee
ABC's remake of "V" hit big in the ratings when it premiered last Tuesday (a new episode airs tonight) and also stirred up a bit of controversy, with some claiming it's a veiled (or not so veiled, depending whom you ask) criticism of the current administration, and others claiming it's just a show about disguised aliens coming to Earth and promising hope, change and universal healthcare in exchange for unquestioning devotion.
As you can see from my poll on the subject, opinion is mixed.
And for two opposing views of of the actual or perceived intent behind the story, click here and here ...and for my original feature story plus extra comments from the producers, click here.
Whatever you think the show is really about, one thing's for sure -- it's really a TV show, and it got really good ratings, which is really good news for star Morena Baccarin, who plays Anna, the beguiling alien leader.
Here are the highlights of a brief chat we had after the "V" premiere:
Q: What did you think when you realized "V" was a hit? A: Wow, holy sh-t. I think it's great. It's a little bit surprising, but at the same time not, because people are really excited about it, and we are very excited about it.
Q: To what do you attribute the success?
A: The show being great. It's a story that people are fascinated by -- the alien invasion thing, the idea that there's something out there besides us. I think that the writers and everybody have done such a great job of embodying that, the fear and vulnerability, matching it to the sensibilities of today.
Q: You did generate controversy, which doesn't seem right now to be a negative.
A: You mean with the Obama stuff? It's really funny. We're not necessarily saying those things, but it's OK if people want to talk about it. It's par for the course when you put something out there. Q: After all, haven't people always have theories about what TV shows are really saying or what's really going on in the world? A: Of course. Isn't there an actual group of underground people who believe there are lizards among us?
(As it turns out, Baccarin is right about that. Click here.) Q: In the original, the aliens were seeking to eat our small furry animals -- and also us. Is that the agenda this time around?
A: You know, I wish I could answer that question, but they haven't told me, if you can believe it. I don't know a hundred percent why we're here, but you'll get to find out when you see episodes a little bit more. They answer the question a little bit more. We still want to keep that mystery going, but it'll be interesting to see how it develops.
It's a little more complicated than the original. I don't think we're just saying, "We're coming down here; we're going to eat you and take over the Earth." There's a lot more to it than that. Q: The show has undergone several changes behind the scenes, making some new fans nervous about prospects for the future. From your point of view, do the next three episodes -- which finish out the four that have been produced at this point -- hold up to the premiere?
A: They do, absolutely. I don't know, again, the politics of all of that, but the changes have been made in order to maintain the work that we've been doing, so I have confidence in that. People don't need to worry about that. Just watch the show. It's great.
Q: I hear you go back to work on the show in Vancouver, Canada, in January. Is that true?
A: I think we go back, Jan. 20, around then, and then we'll shoot a block of nine episodes. I'm not sure what the plan is on how we're going to air them (HCTV: click here for the last official word on that), but we'll be waiting a little bit. We only have four done, and a little suspense is good. That's the plan.
Q: What more have you -- or will we -- learn about Anna?
A: Anna is a very complicated character, so with every episode we get, we see a little side of her. I'm trying to think of things I can actually say. It's hard. I find it so difficult to do interviews, because I can't tell everybody what we're doing. You get to see more qualities and more emotions and more of her dealing with day-to-day stuff. There are some interesting plot and character turns there.
Q: Since we know that the Visitors are really reptilians under the skin, are you working on finding your inner lizard?
A: Definitely finding my inner lizard and moving on from there. I'm shying away from playing a lizard or playing an alien. That would be a trap to fall into, especially if she were robotic or different in that sense.
What I'm trying to do is be as human as possible, and when you try to do that, something happens, and it becomes a little odd, which is a quality that you can't really target. They always tell you in acting class that if you want to play drunk, just try to play sober. Q: The promos emphasize Anna's rapid eye blinks. Is that your way of hinting at her reptilian reality? A: (Laughs) I don't know what you're talking about.
Asked if he feels the weight of the responsibility of portraying an alumnus of one of America's elite military units, LL Cool J says, "Oh, Atlas cannot shrug, He can't shrug. He must keep the world up on his shoulders, and that's what I'm trying to do.
"Some Special Ops (agents) came by yesterday, actually, and they seemed to be really excited about how we're portraying them and how we are representing them, when we're out in the world, because the show is obviously showing in other countries.
"I'm happy that they are pleased, because ultimately these are some of the people who have to protect our freedom and protect democracy, so we want to represent them properly. That's another part of our responsibilities as actors, when we play these characters, to make sure these guys are seen in the right light.
"That's important to the future of our nation."
Reminded that some recent feature films have taken a more negative view of America's military, LL Cool J says, "You've got to be careful. At the end of the day, we have to be loyal to our values and the principles that built our country, especially if these characters are being seen by potentially millions and millions of people every week.
"We can have some fun and do some interesting stories, but they still need to represent our guys the right way. I think all of us agree that that is the right way to do it."
It's also part of LL Cool J's personal history.
"My family is very pro-American," he says. "My grandfather used to sit me in his lap, and we would watch all of the old World War II shows that used to come on, back in the day. I'm totally on it, totally into it, and I love it. My grandfather, even after we said grace, he would say, 'Chow!'
"Then my grandmother would chime in with the Cuban Missile Crisis and what that was about, So I grew up hearing that kind of stuff.
"My grandmother used to tell me, 'If a task is once begun, never leave it till it's done; be thy labor great or small, do it well or not at all.'"
"You know what," he says, "that's a good question, interesting question. My favorite Founding Father .. wow. Benjamin Franklin was brilliant. I think I will go with Benjamin Franklin first. I would go with Jefferson and then Adams, but I would go with Franklin.
"When he talked about wealth ... his 'Poor Richard's Almanack' was amazing. Him being a scientist; him being an author; him being a
businessman; him being an entrepreneur; him being a guy who understood
how important it was to be conservative when it came to a dollar, and
conserve your wealth. "I just thought he was a very wise guy. I would go with Franklin.
LL Cool J also admires another American entrepreneur.
"He's obviously not a Founding Father, but you could fast-forward to guys like (Thomas) Edison. These weren't necessarily the most (formally) educated guys, but he know how to put the right people in the right places and ask the right questions and get things going.
"But I think that's the beauty of our nation. That's part of the beauty of America and why it works, because it's not just about specialized knowledge. It's also about vision; it's also about ambition; it's also about your attitude and your ability to mobilize people.
"You can succeed whether or not you have that specialized knowledge. I think that makes a huge difference in this country."
And while most of LL Cool J's reading these days consists, he says, of "NCIS: Los Angeles" scripts, it's no accident that he made the reference to Atlas shrugging.
"I don't necessarily subscribe to all her beliefs," he says, "but I do like Ayn Rand. That's why I made the 'Atlas Shrugged' comment. I think she's interesting. I don't do the atheist thing; I believe in God. But some of it works for me.
"'The Fountainhead' was interesting, those characters, just the idea of you being the architect of your own fortune."
And he doesn't stop with Rand.
"I do a lot of reading," he says. "I read the Bible. That's great. I like Florence Scovel Shinn, 'The Game of Life,' I like her. I think she's very interesting as well. I do a lot of reading."
By Kate O'Hare on November 6, 2009 6:25 PM
|3 Comments
Recently, I attended the Los Angeles version of the 140 Characters Conference, which focused on ways disparate groups of people are using the microblogging service called Twitter.
That included some familiar TV faces, such as Billy Bush of "Access Hollywood," who has used Twitter to put out breaking news (and correct Perez Hilton, or so he says) and "Heroes" executive producer Tim Kring, who's really into something called "transmedia storytelling."
Speaking of 'Heroes," I sat down at the conference for an impromptu chat with the Puppetmaster himself, David H. Lawrence XVII (that's 17 for the Roman-numeral-challenged, like me).
More on that later, but first, some business -- as in big business.
Before my chance encounter with Lawrence -- who's become a bit of a Twitter-lebrity -- I sat down with Kodak CMO (Chief Marketing Officer) Jeffrey Hayzlett, a Twitter star in his own right, who was also one of the conference speakers (as you can see from my photo).
The venerable camera company was one of the sponsors of the event, which was held in its own Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, home to the Academy Awards.
Hayzlett has appeared on an earlier edition of NBC's "The Celebrity Apprentice" -- click here for the behind-the-scenes of it all -- and he'll be back in the new season of the show. He's also acquainted with its executive producer, reality guru Mark Burnett, and a big fan of his "Shark Tank" on ABC (as am I -- click here and here for proof of that).
Here's a sample of our conversation:
On why people are wrong not to think of Kodak when they think of social media like Twitter:
JH: We have changed it. When people say, "What company gets it?", they think of Kodak now, at least those in the Twitterati.
On what a camera company has to do with 140-character tweets:
JH: Seventy percent of our business is digital. I mentioned this to other folks earlier -- we've got our mojo back in that regard. When you think about Twitter, it says, "What am I doing? Where am I at? What am I up to?" Really, Kodak's always been about sharing those moments and sharing life, and to me they're one and the same.
Why Kodak has gone feet first into social media:
JH: Seriously, it's about connecting with people. You can't lose. Nothing's going to happen. You can't lose. The only resistance (in the company was) "What is it?"
On the risks of being transparent on Twitter:
JH: Have we made mistakes? Yeah. I've personally made mistakes, where I Twittered out something 12 hours before it was supposed to happen -- something where we'd worked a year and a half on it. I accidentally hit the button. I was able to regroup and get a couple of people to stop re-tweeting it.
You make those kind of mistakes, but nobody intentionally tries to do anything, and that's the key thing you want to remember. If you do it, you're only going to do it once inside of a big company, because we're going to make the changes.
On why Twitter and other social media does not substitute for traditional advertising and consumer outreach:
JH: You can't get to them all. They're not all on Twitter; they're not all on Facebook; they're not all on Kodak Gallery. It's not how people always want to get their information, so it's only reaching those people who want to get it in that manner. That's not your only source of information.
So there's not an absolute when it comes to social media, nor is there an absolute when it comes to normal media channels. You don't just watch television and not read the newspapers. Quite frankly, a lot of the people in the Twittersphere and online, they think everything else is nonexistent.
I then told Hayzlett that I was headed that afternoon over to the set of NBC's "Community," and it turns out he's a fan.
JH: It's a good show. It's a great show. I love Chevy Chase.
In past seasons of "The Celebrity Apprentice," some celebrities have had trouble with their work ethic. According to Hayzlett, that's not the case this time around.
JH: Actually, they worked pretty hard.
For more on the 140 Characters conference, click here for "The Spark: not just another Twitter conference," the latest film from eGuiders founder Marc Ostrick and fellow filmmaker Michael Sean Wright.
When you're done with that, you can check out "the new dial tone," the first film in the "Spark" series, shot at the recent BlogWorldExpo in Las Vegas.
By Kate O'Hare on November 6, 2009 6:14 PM
|No Comments
Today's cuppa: more Irish breakfast tea than one person should consume in a day
Click here for my regular Thursday appearance on Shaun Daily's TV Talk show on blogtalkradio.com, in which we talk about the TV coverage of the mass shooting at Fort Hood in Killeen, Texas -- which happened earlier in the day and was still, in many ways, an evolving story-- along with the big ratings for the premiere of "V" and more.
I come in at about the half-hour mark and yap just a leeetle over my usual 30 minutes.
By Kate O'Hare on November 4, 2009 4:58 PM
|No Comments
Tonight's cuppa: fast-food coffee
Deep in transcribing hell for a big week of features -- and probably some set visits -- next week, but couldn't resist tossing up a quick poll about last night's premiere of ABC's "V," which was a ratings and demo smash (some critics even liked it as well).
There's some controversy -- expressed here by my good pal Glenn Garvin -- about whether the drama was referring to the current administration.
As always, Cuppers, I leave that up to you. This poll is also on Twitter, but vote away here as well:
By Kate O'Hare on November 2, 2009 8:56 AM
|No Comments
Today's cuppa: Irish breakfast tea (contemplating a switch to chai ... Hmmmm)
On Tuesday night, ABC premieres "V," its remake of the 1980s science-fiction TV classic of the same name.
As it turns out, the new version is pretty darn good (at least the pilot, which is all I've seen).
Below find the full text of the feature story I wrote this week. As you'll discover when you read it, I was unable to talk to the producers (interviews were scheduled, then canceled).
The ABC publicist asked if I could go with what they said at press tour, but since that was back in early August, and a lot had changed with the show in the meantime, I just couldn't.
After the feature story, though, you'll find an exchange between yours truly and the producers at the Television Critics Association Press Tour, which touches on some of the most controversial aspects of "V" (and just how controversial they remain after the shutdown for "script issues," I confess, I have no idea. But, for what it's worth, I have a lot of respect for executive producers Scott Peters and Jeffrey Bell, so we'll see.).
So, read, watch and, as always, make up your own mind.
First up, the story:
'V' pours old foes into new
skins for sci-fi remake
Back in
1983, NBC aired the two-part science-fiction miniseries "V," written and
directed by Kenneth Johnson. In 1984, NBC followed with another hit miniseries,
"V: The Final Battle."
Despite
that title, the network forged on with "V: The Series" later in 1984, with most
of the original cast (but not Johnson). It was short-lived and just plain bad.
Normally,
this sort of a history would bode better for a miniseries remake than a series,
but on the other hand, "Battlestar Galactica" was a hit pilot that turned into
a flop series in the '70s, only to be revived in this decade as a critically
acclaimed miniseries and series.
So one
could forgive ABC and Warner Bros. Television for being a little confused over
exactly what to do with their "V" remake, premiering Tuesday, Nov. 3.
Layer on
top of that a byproduct of timing, partly caused by a strike-induced delay,
which lands the new "V" practically on top of the anniversary of last year's
presidential election with a pilot that contains such hot buzzwords as "hope,"
"change" and "universal health care."
As if that
wasn't enough, stir in a production hiatus for "script issues," followed by a
rollout schedule that calls for four initial episodes, with the rest held until
after the Winter Olympics in March.
It's enough
to give an executive producer fits, which may explain why executive
producers/writers Scott Peters ("The 4400") and Jeffrey Bell ("Angel," "Alias")
weren't available this fall to talk about the show.
But stars
Morena Baccarin and Scott Wolf were. Starring with them in "V" are Elizabeth
Mitchell ("Lost") as an FBI counterterrorism agent, Logan Huffman as her
teenage son, Joel Gretsch ("The 4400") as a worried priest and Morris Chestnut
("Boyz N the Hood") as a man with a secret who faces a life-altering decision.
Baccarin
("Firefly") plays Anna, the enigmatic leader of aliens calling themselves the
Visitors (or "Vs" for short), who hover gigantic spaceships over every major
city in the world, scaring the pants off everybody. Anna then appears and
offers a message of peace and advanced technology, just as long as the Vs get
the slavish devotion of every human being on Earth.
Wolf plays
ambitious news anchor Chad Decker, who lands an exclusive interview with Anna,
only to discover he's expected to play ball and make the Vs look good, or else
no chat.
Unfortunately for journalistic ethics everywhere, Decker folds like a
cheap suit.
"In that
moment," Wolf says, "obviously he's been put in a position where he's got two
very difficult choices to make. One is to be a real sucker, and the other is to
potentially give up the best opportunity he'll ever have.
"What Scott
thought of Chad
in that moment was that he's actually smart enough to believe, or to know, that
he'll find a way to make it right, that this opportunity won't come back again.
"He can
reclaim his integrity, but this opportunity is once in a lifetime."
If you haven't
seen the original "V," stop reading right now, because anyone who has knows
that the Visitors are only human on the surface, with a reptilian reality
lurking within. But we're not talking hulking crocodiles here; these lizards
can hold their own with higher primates.
"I like how
controlled and smart and calculating she is," Baccarin says of Anna, "that
she's able to learn from humans and manipulate them and be who she thinks they
want her to be, so she can get what she wants.
"I like the
nuances of that."
So as the
alien leader, Anna is a consummate politician.
"Exactly,"
Baccarin says. "It's all about getting people to trust you, so you have to
present yourself and do things that will get that, even if they're not entirely
true."
While she
says she didn't base Anna on any particular political figure, Baccarin did
learn from recent history.
"Obviously,"
she says, "we were all very captivated by the presidential election, so I
watched a lot of the debates and things in general. That, I'm sure, helped me
figure out what I wanted to do a little bit."
As for the
stops and starts of "V" so far, Wolf says, "Stay with us. I don't want to say I
know - because none of us ever knows anything really - but I believe people are
going to tune in to see this show, and I believe they are going to be excited.
"As
unnerving as any kinds of bumps in the road can get for all of us, I know that
every decision that's been made is in the long-term best interests of the show
and the story.
"So to me,
I've not veered from my excitement and belief in the show at all."
All that having been said, here are excerpts from the
press-tour session from Aug. 8, starting with my question and Scott Peters' answer:
KO: Some of the words in the pilot associated with the Visitor agenda are
"hope" and "change" and "universal health care." So was that intentional, or
are you just freakishly prescient?
SCOTT PETERS: Freakishly
prescient.
ELIZABETH MITCHELL: Wow.
KO: And now that you are
here and we are in this situation and you are airing it in November, are you going
to play off that, or how are you going to work with that?
SCOTT PETERS: You know,
because of the Writers' Guild strike, this show has been in development for a
long time, and I just felt, to me, it was, you know, certainly -- it wasn't sort
of -- we are not looking to put any sort of agenda onto the table, but I think
that anybody -- you know, I wake up in the morning and you look at the news, and
you see, you know, there's wars, there's new diseases being discovered, there's
old diseases that are still -- we are dealing with. There's -- the economy is in
the toilet. There are people losing their homes. Wouldn't it be awesome if 29
ships showed up and they all said, "We've got this. We'll take care of you.
Don't worry about it"? Wouldn't this be great? And so, I mean, that's really where hope and
change came from. It's just like the world -- Joel has a line in the pilot that
says, you know, "The world is in bad shape, Father. Who wouldn't welcome a
savior?" And I think that's a pretty interesting thesis statement. So that's kind
of where this whole thing sort of came from. And, listen, I think that shows
are open to interpretation. People have subjective -- bring subjective thoughts
to it. And if you want to ascribe, you know, those words to the Visitors or to
whatever is going on in our society, that's sort of up to the viewer, but there's
no particular agenda to, you know, hone in on those specific things.
Other
reporters picked up the thread a few minutes later, and here's Jeffrey Bell's
response to the issue:
JEFFREY
BELL: Look, there are always going to be people who will look for agendas in
everything. This show was conceived during the Bush administration. It got executed
in an Obama administration. There are people on either sides of the aisle who
can find things. You can say, "Yeah, look how stupid these people are for following
blindly and believing everything the government is saying," and you can have
people who are upset about that. And you can have other people saying, "Look at
these people who are promising everything at no cost, and look, they are
leading them to their own doom." And so, for us, both sides have strengths and
weaknesses. And if you want to talk about a fantastic -- let's get people to show
up and watch it and talk about it.
UPDATE: Showrunner shakeup announced today, Nov. 3 (premiere day), replacing Scott Peters in that position and likely resulting in Jeff Bell's departure. The guy coming in has good creds, but this stuff seldom turns out well. Fingers crossed.