Posts Tagged ‘arrested development’

“Which one’s Pink?” – The folly of company executives in creative industries

mattjones

by Matt Jones

In the first Futurama comeback movie, Bender’s Big Score, one of the best jokes is the recurring gag item, Torgo’s Executive Powder. A thinly veiled jab at Fox for its perceived mismanagement of Futurama, Torgo’s is made of ground-up executives, and is said to have “a-million-and-one uses.” That may be a-million-and-one more than non-ground-up executives.

What is an executive, anyway? We hear the term thrown around a lot, but all too often executive, producer and many other titles are all thrown together. Let’s agree on this: an executive is a management member of a company assigned to watch over a certain sector of said company. The lower executives answer to the chief executive officer (CEO), who is one of the highest authorities above the other executives.

Now, let’s not get bogged down with stereotypes and ignorance. There are probably many executives who are very well-suited to the work they do. There are probably many who do genuinely good work and reap positive results for both their superiors and their staff. But we never hear about those executives. Beyond a company newsletter, you’ll never see the headline, “Executive does great work.” What you will see are headlines about how executives, through their effect on creative talents, cause difficulties in the entertainment industry. And that is our focus today: executives in the entertainment and creative industries.

The biggest problem is this: executives care most and almost only about the bottom line; they care about how much money is being made. Being creative and artistic does not necessarily improve that bottom line, and similarly, focusing on the bottom line does not necessarily result in interesting or exciting art. An executive’s directive to alter creative work to make it more profitable can have disastrous effects.

NBC, The Tonight Show and the greatest comedy duo of all time, Zucker and Ebersol

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Ostensibly, NBC’s current problems are a result of low ratings for both Conan O’Brien’s The Tonight Show and Jay Leno’s prime time show — particularly Leno’s, which was hurting the lead-ins for local news shows. The executive solution: move Leno back to late night and move O’Brien back to late, late night. What the executives didn’t foresee, or didn’t care about, was that O’Brien would see this move as cutting the legs off The Tonight Show franchise, and he would not stand for it (so to speak). NBC and O’Brien have reached a settlement, and Leno is expected to return to The Tonight Show after the Olympics.

Dick Ebersol, NBC executive since time immemorial and currently in charge of sports, has been very vocal about O’Brien’s poor ratings, describing him as an “astounding failure.” Ebersol further declared that he had personally offered to help O’Brien increase his ratings, but was rebuked.

Can O’Brien really be blamed for not taking advice from Dick Ebersol?

Ebersol was one of the original creators of Saturday Night Live (SNL), but after Lorne Michaels left in 1980, the program entered into what some fans refer to as the Dark Ages of SNL. Ebersol soon took over the show and attempted to salvage it. After consistently low ratings and clashes with writers and cast members over the tone Ebersol wanted for the show, as well as accusations that he did not understand comedy (particularly the type of comedy that SNL produced), Michaels was brought back to save the franchise.

Ebersol has also been heavily criticized for his approach to Olympic Games coverage, and he presided over a period where NBC lost the rights to broadcast the NFL, MLB and NBA, among others. And, to top that off, he was also one of the driving forces behind the disastrous XFL, which produced record low ratings.

So in what way, precisely, is Dick Ebersol an expert on comedy or high ratings?

Ebersol’s comments did serve to take some of the heat off NBC CEO and President Jeff Zucker. The same Zucker who went to Harvard at the same time as O’Brien, and was the butt of numerous O’Brien-led Harvard Lampoon pranks. The same Zucker who has the final word at NBC.

Zucker, Ebersol and the rest of NBC’s executives appear to be consciously choosing to ignore the growing pains that come with any new show. It takes time to cultivate an audience, particularly when it’s going head-to-head with a seasoned competitor such as David Letterman (and especially so when that competitor is in the midst of a sex scandal that will draw eyes to his program). Let’s not forget that Letterman also trounced Leno in the ratings until Leno was able to capitalize on Hugh Grant’s 1995 adventure in previously unexplored Ugly Hookerland to pull ahead.

NBC had a problem where it had two shows with ratings that were less than it desired. Its solution has resulted in the departure of Conan O’Brien, reams of bad press for the network, and the vilification of Jay Leno. Accurate or not, Leno is now seen as a greedy attention whore who could not allow someone else to take the spotlight. This does not bode well for his ratings when he returns.

(As an aside, it’s interesting to note that NBC almost O’Brien-ed Leno back in 1992. There was a time after it had made its decision to go with Leno over Letterman that the network considered changing its mind and bringing back Letterman. So if nothing else, NBC has been consistent. Repugnantly so, but consistent.)

From pepperoni to piledrivers: the terrible tale of Jim Herd


The thing is, executives are all too often given too much power over subjects on which they may have only the most tenuous grasp. That’s what happened in the terrifying tale of Jim Herd. Yes, this example is from wrestling, but it’s a good one.

Herd was the manager of a St. Louis television station that aired National Wrestling Alliance shows. He then went on to serve in an executive capacity for Pizza Hut, which led to him getting a job with Turner Broadcasting. Since he had once managed a TV station that aired wrestling shows, it was decided that Jim Herd was the ideal person to run Turner’s World Championship Wrestling (WCW). If you think about it, that’s like Conrad Black becoming commissioner of the NBA because his newspapers covered basketball games.

It was a complete debacle. Herd had no understanding of the wrestling business, and made decisions that led to a series of high-profile catastrophes. Most notably, he drove out the company’s best-known performer (Ric Flair), which led to WCW events plagued with chants of “We want Flair!” from the audience. Wrestling legend Dusty Rhodes would (allegedly) go on to describe Herd as, “the most untalented motherfucker in the entire world.” Rhodes had, apparently, never met Dick Ebersol.

“The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There’s also a negative side.” – Hunter S. Thompson

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Unfortunately, Jim Herd is far from the only executive to have been given authority over things beyond his grasp. The Pink Floyd song, Have a Cigar, decries this, recounting the typical, two-faced bull that spews out of record company executives. Being asked “Which one’s Pink?” by executives who thought that Pink Floyd was the name of the band’s front man, showed that those who had so much power over the band’s future really didn’t know anything about them.

Currently, the music industry is in flux. Giant music companies still wield considerable power and are able to properly position, package and promote artists for success. However, the advent of the Internet has changed things. While some artists and labels are attempting to develop ways of doing business using the Internet (Radiohead, for example), most companies have simply dug in their heels and are attempting to shut down file-sharing websites. As with any industry, those in charge (that would be the executives) are used to a certain way of doing things, and the idea of venturing into the unknown is terrifying.

Follow the leader: why tread your own path when you could just follow the ass of another lemming?

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One of the biggest problems in every industry, but particularly in entertainment, is executive-follow-the-leader. It’s not hard to see the patterns.

In 1991, Nirvana shot to the top of the music charts, surprising record industry executives everywhere. In response, executives offered contracts to nearly every band that could play three chords and wear plaid flannel, regardless of talent, in an effort to find the next Nirvana (reports that several lumberjacks were mistaken for grunge rockers and offered contracts are unsubstantiated — but probably true).

Around that same time, television’s Seinfeld became a surprise hit, and would eventually go down as one of the most popular shows of all time. However, as a result of that popularity, television became plagued with programs about clever people who sat around and said clever things. As network executives searched for the next Seinfeld, original programming became increasingly rare.

This trend continues today. The massive success of The Dark Knight has apparently inspired Warner Brothers executives in all the wrong ways:

“[Warner Bros. Pictures Group President Jeff] Robinov wants his next pack of superhero movies to be bathed in the same brooding tone as The Dark Knight. Creatively, he sees exploring the evil side to characters as the key to unlocking some of Warner Bros.’ DC properties. ‘We’re going to try to go dark to the extent that the characters allow it,’ he says. ‘That goes for the company’s Superman franchise as well.’”

It’s a very narrow mind that sees the darkness of The Dark Knight as the reason it succeeded. Batman and the characters in his world are inherently dark; that tone suited them perfectly. Superman is not a dark character. Nor is Captain Marvel, who was set for an action-comedy treatment before this new dark (in both senses) initiative.

Making a dark Captain Marvel film is completely unnecessary, and a betrayal of the character. It would be comparable to making a James Bond movie into a road-trip comedy, or making Saw VI a love story with Sandra Bullock. It’s an affront to everything the characters stand for. Warner Brothers would have a better chance of replicating The Dark Knight’s success by murdering their supporting actors to try and recreate a Heath Ledger situation than by forcing characters to be “dark.”

Of course, Warner Brothers executives haven’t necessarily always been in touch with their DC Comics properties, as Kevin Smith will tell you.

Fox Television: Where promising shows go to never really live in the first place

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The most obvious victims of Fox have been the animated shows, Futurama and Family Guy. Obviously, we can only assume that the goal of Fox Broadcasting, as a television company, is to profit from its programs. As a result, it becomes difficult to understand the reasoning behind the way that both shows were treated, particularly in light of The Simpsons’ status as Fox’s certified merchandising cash cow.

Both Futurama and Family Guy were unveiled to much fanfare, but quickly found themselves without a regular timeslot and little advertising to promote those new slots as they came up. As a result, ratings suffered and both shows were cancelled. Clearly, these decisions did not reflect what the audience wanted, as both shows managed to resurrect themselves due to popular demand, DVD sales and high ratings for syndication.

Fox had two properties that have proven themselves to be so popular that they have escaped the grave, which is all but unheard of in television. It’s hard to understand why the shows were never given the support they deserved, particularly given the popularity of the lucrative Simpsons franchise, which proved the power of an animated property. Of course, Fox’s problems aren’t limited to animated programs.

Television has shown that while there are runaway smash hits, sometimes a show needs time to grow (Seinfeld, for example floundered for three seasons before becoming a monster). Fox has seen both of these phenomena first hand. While both The Simpsons and That 70’s Show were popular from the start, another long-running Fox hit, The X-Files, started as a poorly rated cult favourite before rising in the ratings and becoming a mainstream success.

The X-Files may be the only exception to a depressing and disheartening trend: Fox simply does not allow new shows time to increase their audience . Fox has cancelled a plethora of shows with great potential before they had a chance to become successful.

Another property that Fox has been accused of mismanaging is Arrested Development. Critically acclaimed, the show never gained a huge following, and was canceled after three seasons. However, producer Mitch Hurwitz has since said that, “I had taken it as far as I felt I could as a series. I told the story I wanted to tell, and we were getting to a point where I think a lot of the actors were ready to move on.”

Hurwitz’s comments raise an interesting point. It’s easy to point a finger at executives for bungling their management of a creative property. Sometimes, though, there simply isn’t a big enough audience to justify further investment. Arrested Development may be too smart for a mass audience, and the rabid fans who did love the show can rewatch them on DVDs and wait anxiously for the anticipated film version.

The office would like a word with you.…

General Electric CEO Jack Welch once said, “An overburdened, overstretched executive is the best executive, because he or she doesn’t have the time to meddle, to deal in trivia, to bother people.” And he may be right. He may be very right. Oh, hell, he is right!

But the fact is, we are a consumer society focused heavily on our entertainment. We tend to be very passionate about it, whether it is a band, show, film series, or anything else. Because of this, the interference of executives in the creative process is something at which we lash out. “How dare those brainless executives mess with the creative vision of (insert creative type here)?”

Certainly, there have been some (a few. Maybe.) good executive decisions made over the years, but there have been many more bad ones made by executives with an extremely limited knowledge of the projects for which they were responsible. They are never held accountable for the loss of culture and creativity, so we get less of both with each decision they make. They are held accountable only for the loss of revenue, which means that when they take no risks, they lose no revenue. Balls the size of peas seldom motivate anyone to take a chance on quality.

In 1209, Simon IV de Montfort, captain-general of the French forces in the Albigensian Crusade, was active at the siege of Beziers, where the entire population of 20,000 Cathars (heretics) and Catholics (the faithful) were slaughtered. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of those unfortunates sought refuge in two cathedrals. Those in one cathedral were burned alive when it was set on fire. When Montfort’s Crusaders wondered how to tell the difference between the heretics and the faithful in the other cathedral, the Cistercian abbot, Arnald-Amalric, responded, “Kill them all. God will recognize his own.” Those in the second cathedral were subsequently butchered, man, woman, child, and presumably pet, just in case. In the Vietnam War, Arnald-Amalric’s words were paraphrased by some anonymous soldier as, “Kill ‘em all. Let God sort ‘em out.”

“Kill them all. God will recognize his own.” Or, “Kill ‘em all. Let God sort ‘em out.” Whether your tastes run to the 13th-century philosophy or the less elegant 20th-century variety, it seems eminently reasonable to adopt one or the other where entertainment industry executives are concerned (sorry, Mitch Hurwitz). Their few creative successes are so thoroughly outweighed by their multitude of dreck and cannibalistic re-offerings that a thorough housecleaning could have nothing but benefits. And we’d have more risks like Arrested Development and fewer safe, bottom-liners like Everybody Loves Raymond.

And that could be bad, how, exactly?

(Special thanks to Augustine Funnell)

The Best in Television Since 2000

davebriggs

an idiot box list by Dave Briggs

1. The Wire

Obviously this is top choice for the list, and should be the top pick for every person writing a best of television list for the 2000s. I mean Harvard is going to be teaching a course on the awesomeness of The Wire. I shouldn’t have to get into much detail as to why it is the best show of the 2000s because if you’re reading a Top Ten TV list and haven’t watched the complete series, you’re doing it wrong. No other show even comes close to the grittiness, and realism the Wire does concerning police work, drug dealing, gangsta life, and the politics of a crime infested city, such as Baltimore. The Wire is a no brainer when it comes to the best of the best.

2. Arrested Development

Arrested Development

Another obvious choice. No other comedy that has come out in the last 10 years has had the sharp writing, brilliant acting, and overall attention to detail when it comes to story arcs. If you miss an episode, you’re shit out of luck when the next one comes on because you’ll only be able to get about half of the jokes. Again, if you’re reading a best of list, and you haven’t watched Arrested Development, you’re failing at life.

3. Curb Your Enthusiasm

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Being a massive Seinfeld fan, Curb is as good as it’s going to get. I realize the Larry David that is in Curb is not the real life Larry, but I like to think it’s not far off. I saw an interview with LD where he broke character and it was unsettling that he’s not a raging asshole. The brilliance of Curb is during Larry’s day-to-day argument you can see where he’s coming from. You can get behind his argument, just as easily as the people who he’s confronting. Another element of Curb that is interesting is that it shows a bastardized version of what it is like to be the creator of a highly successful television series, and what living the day to day life in Hollywood is like. Unlike Entourage, where it’s Maxim magazine’s version of Hollywood life, there is a point of realism within Larry and the company he keeps.

4. Dexter

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Something that makes Dexter so interesting is it’s a show that would never have been picked up by a network during the 80s or 90s. A show that showcases the human side of a serial killer. Not only do you see the ins and outs of what a murderer does everyday, but also you find yourself rooting for him. It has to be a very difficult show to write because the writers need to incorporate Dexter growing as a human while maintaining a stable outside of killing life, and of him brutally murdering people. Viewers should not find Dexter a sympathetic character at all but the writers are able to make him personable, funny, and just down right likeable. One fault in the show is how many fucking gruesome serial killers is Miami going to have?

5. The Colbert Report

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Now it’s not a sitcom, but it is the most consistently funny show on television. Colbert has created a character so perfect for his format that when the jokes are working there isn’t anyone better. The small things, such as him taking the applause from every guest he has is an example of how perfect the character is. I remember when Colbert first started, it was so weak compared to the Daily Show. Then just a few short months later he was on top of his game and was consistently funnier. The fact he is able to follow Jon Stewart, with the same formatted show, and not remain in the shadows is enough for the Colbert Report to be apart of anyone’s best of list.

6. The Shield

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The Shield is similar to Dexter where the lead character is such an awful example of a person but is still likeable. That’s pretty much where the similarities end. The writing on the Shield was predictable, and sometimes laughable. One thing that is for sure is its badassness. There are so many “holy fuck” moments in this show that is has to be considered one of the best. The story is simple: a badass gang cop in Los Angeles does whatever he wants to get his job done. Whether it is killing cops, framing gangsters, taking names and kicking ass, Vic Mackey isn’t to be fucked with. The Shield is over now and there wasn’t a weak season. Don’t expect the brilliance of the Wire while watching it, but there is no way to be disappointed. The head writer, Kurt Sutter, now works on Sons of Anarchy, which carries the same level of badassness.

7. It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia

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Another FX show, which in a way is nothing more than a modern day Seinfeld. The characters are horrible, selfish people, but are relatable, and hilarious. No issue is taboo for It’s Always Sunny. In many cases it crosses the line, which is what a good comedy needs to do. If the jokes or situations are dumbed down to reach a broader audience then it’s not going to work. There is subtlety to each character, which is what makes them work. Each of the 5 main characters are self-centered, but in their own specific manners. It’s not just a case of 5 people being jerks; they are all jerks in their own special ways.

8. Extras

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When Ricky Gervais has creative control he can do no wrong. Both The Office and Extras are brilliant. Each series had the sense to stop while they were ahead. Gervais doesn’t leave any questions unanswered and is able to wrap up two amazing shows with just 13 episodes. Extras noses out The Office because it is absolutely perfect. It focuses on an oblivious actor doing whatever he can to get screen time. When he does make it big, it’s a program that he doesn’t support and knows it’s not funny. The show has balls, and allows the viewer see why there are such shitty shows on major networks. The show within a show in Extras is aimed at a large demographic, and is so dumbed down that it’s unbearable. The Christmas special, where Gervais is a part of the Celebrity Edition of Big Brother is genius. If you haven’t watched this, get on it.

9. Six Feet Under

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Six Feet Under is special in a way that no other series has been able to do. It makes you care about every character in the show. To say it bluntly the show is depressing as fuck but its brilliant writing by Alan Ball helps level out the depressing shit with the quirky, and the funny. The show has a real feel to it like you are just looking in on the lives of the Fisher family. Six Feet Under is able to do the impossible: take a critically acclaimed show, and end it on a high note. Very few shows are able to end the same way they started. This show ends perfectly without anything being left unanswered.

10. 30 Rock

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While it’s starting to decline in quality, 30 Rock started off so strong that it deserves a spot on a top 10 list. 30 Rock does to an extent what Curb and the Larry Sanders show was able to do. It shows the backstage life of how your favourite show is created. Tina Fey is a great writer, and great comedic actors like Alec Baldwin and Tracy Morgan can bring her writing to the screen. Morgan specifically, who was barely used during his time on SNL, but when he was, he stole the show. 30 Rock is also bringing the life back to NBC’s Thursday night. The group of shows on right now is the best since Seinfeld was the 10 o’clock anchor. This show is hardly a surprise, and will likely be on many lists because it’s an Emmy magnet, and a critical darling. Sometimes those accolades are given to the right show.

Television: Not your grandpa’s idiot box.

Bored-to-Death

by Jason Wilson

We all watch television. Even if you don’t get cable or you avoid it like the plague, you watch clips or you download shows or you wait for DVD. For whatever reason, it wasn’t until the last decade or so where shows started to develop longer more consistent story arcs with regularity. Of course there have always been exceptions, but shows like Law and Order where nothing evolves from episode to episode have more or less been the norm.

Stations like HBO have helped pave the way for more in depth drama and comedy that breathes greater life into the show. The Sopranos and The Wire among others had season long and series long arcs creating a greater connection between the stories, characters therein and the audience watching. Comedies like Arrested Development (I know it was on Fox) and Curb Your Enthusiasm even rely on in jokes from previous episodes and references to earlier mishaps. The ongoing story is what makes television intriguing.

What I’d like to do with Unfiltered Smoke in regards to television is provide weekly reviews of shows we follow. It would have been nice to have started at the beginning of the fall season but I think it’s fine if we jump in now in the middle and nearly end of the first run of shows.

If you follow a show out there religiously and would like to provide a weekly commentary please let me know and we’ll post it. As of next week I’ll be reviewing the remaining episodes of HBO’s new show Bored to Death which I have become enamored with. The January season also sees the return of LOST on ABC, which I plan on doing but if someone else would like to instead I am open to the idea.

Drop me a line and we’ll figure something out.

Jason