Thursday, December 15, 2022

REVIEW: YELLOWSTONE ONE-FIFTY - CELEBRATING THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK

 


Yellowstone One-Fifty is one of the finest documentary series on television this year. Dare I say, it is one of the best of any season. As a lover of nature shows, this spectacular four part series is mesmerizing. Scene after scene. Shot after shot. You just sit there entranced by the sheer majesty of God's creation. Bison, Wolves, Grizzly Bears, Badgers, Birds, Rabbits, Turtles (yes, turtles), Deer, Big Horn Sheep! The long list of mammal and bird biodiversity is extensive and it is all here in one absolutely sensational series.

Much of the drama is delivered by the downright poetic Kevin Costner. Costner, of course is one of the last living actual movie stars. He is currently starring in television's most popular dramatic series (Yellowstone), but his credibility in the arena of loving the land and everything good on it goes way back. Like Robert Redford before him, Costner has a significant history of loving on the land. This time around he hosts and narrates this four part photo journal reflecting back on the 150 years since Yellowstone's founding as a National Park. Famously, Yellowstone became America's first National Park and it remains to this day the most formidable of all the Parks in the system. If you have had the luxury and gift of travelling extensively in life you would have trekked across many of them and Yellowstone manages to be even more fanciful than even Yosemite and that's making a statement. 

Costner takes us on a wild yet subdued journey along the path of history and wildlife for the 150th anniversary of the National Park.  He retraces the steps of the Hayden expedition. Initially, this expedition was sent forth to try to figure out how to capitalize and exploit the park's riches. Once the team arrived in Yellowstone and started their exploration they became lovers of the land, the fauna, the flora and the amazing geological displays along the way. Yes, Old Faithful goes off like clockwork. It did then, it does now and it did so at the creation of it all. 

The series delivers scene after scene of stunning beauty and life in the wild, but no shot is more breathtaking than the one of the young deer hiding from a hungry Grizzly Bear. We know predators have to eat, but the sustained and long close-up of the fawn's one eye as it hides from the bear is a near ache for the viewer. You want this baby to survive. You can almost feel the emotions of the baby deer. Then, in a win for the soul you see and hear the mom calling out for her calf. A mother and child reunion for the ages.  Better drama will not be seen in any fictional storytelling. 

The four part series delivers one of the best on-screen adventures you will witness in a lifetime. This series ranks up there with the great nature specials of the last twenty years. Yes, it is as amazing as Planet Earth, Planet Earth II, Blue Planet, Dynasties, and Life In Color

David Attenborough has hosted most of the best of the nature series in the last forty or so years, but he is 96 years old at this writing. Costner, who is 67 years old as of this writing will hopefully continue down the road of exploring our green and blue worlds. 

We are losing our biodiversity. We are losing our land. We are losing our wildlife. With each passing year, more mammals, birds, reptiles, fish and amphibians go extinct. The bottom line is we have too many people on planet earth. The earth now has eight billion people. Where will we get our food and water? Where will wildlife get its water? The current illegal immigration situation is troubling on many levels, but public welfare and open borders are not sustainable. We have allowed over five million to enter the nation illegally since January 2021. Can you imagine what the country's population will be like in ten years? Do the numbers. Bye bye to our national parks and forests. So long to our state parks and state forests. Farewell to public lands and forest preserves. Everyone will not be living in apartments in New York City and Los Angeles. We are projected to go from 333 million in 2022 to 400 million in the next thirty years.       

The episode titles are as follows: Magical Place, Rebirth Winter's Majesty, An Enduring Legacy 

I cannot recommend a documentary with a higher rating than this one. Five Stars are not enough.

Thank you to Kevin Costner for putting your heart, your power, your clout and your influence behind such a gigantic and admirable endeavor.


Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022 

              

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

More Classic and Modern TV Happy Birthdays --- December 14th - 12/14

Celebrating birthdays of some famous people who have appeared on our television screens over the years. Today, we focus on the birthdates for people born on December 14th.

Frances Bavier - An iconic figure from one of the greatest shows of all-time. Bavier played Andy's aunt and Opie's great-aunt on the The Andy Griffith Show. She was born in 1902 and passed away in 1989.  A wonderful actor who represented the very best of a loving family member. The Andy Griffith Show still works. It is one of the few series from another time that resonates with viewers. It's timeless and so is Aunt Bee. 


Natascha McElhone - British actress, Natascha McElhone was born this day in 1971. McElhone has worked consistently for the last 30 years. McElhone was recently in The Crown.


 Matthew McNulty - The British actor was born in 1982. He's got a killer smile and a downright perfectly featured face.  His meticulously superb performance in The Musketeers Season Three is epic. 


Vanessa Hudgens was born in 1988. Talk about time going by quickly. It seems like yesterday she was in Disney's High School Musical


Tori Kelly was born this day in 1992. Did she really annoy Simon Cowell? We may never know. What we do know is she is a terrific singer. Oh, and she has that sensational head of hair!

 

Morey Amsterdam - Morey Amsterdam was a comic actor who gained fame on the The Dick Van Dyke Show. He was born in 1908 and passed away in 1996. Trivia: He was a talented cellist! 


June Taylor - One of the most significant choreographers of the 20th century who had her own dance clan on television. Her dancers were featured on various shows, including the 1960's variety series starring Jackie Gleason.  She was born in 1917 and passed in 2004.

                    Taylor (second from left) directing from the control room.  

Don Hewitt - A legendary name in news. Hewitt gained fame as the long-standing executive producer of the longest running series on television, 60 Minutes. Hewitt was born in 1922 and passed away in 2009. 


Charlie Rich- "Hey, did you happen to see the most beautiful girl in the world?" What a line! What romance! Rich was a massive country star who crossed over on to the pop charts with several songs in the 1970's. Cool as ice! Rich was born in 1932 and died in 1995. 


Lee Remick - Remick was a lovely woman and a highly underrated actress. She starred in multiple films and television roles throughout the 1950's, 1960's and 1970's. She was born in 1935 and passed away in 1991.


Patty Duke - Patty Duke was a young Academy Award winner with her superb performance as Helen Keller in 1962's The Miracle Worker. She went on to star in her own series during the 1960's and then placed her talents in many telefilms until her death. 


Happy birthday to everyone born on the 14th of December!

Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022


Sunday, November 27, 2022

THE CALLING - ONE OF THE BEST SHOWS OF 2022 - MUST WATCH TV - PEACOCK ORIGINAL


 I've written in the past that all of the content currently being produced is not sustainable. I stand by that thesis. You cannot have close to 600 series produced per year (that's domestic) and expect to have filmed entertainment survive this way. I'm not even counting what passes for a description of a movie. I repeat - series alone stands at a near 600 per year. 

To find what you may want to watch is difficult and in the "old days" one would rely on word of mouth and promotional trailers/ads/spots. That went out the proverbial window. Try going to lunch with a few people. None of the people you are breaking bread with have ever even heard of what you are watching and you haven't heard of anything they are watching. 

The best series of the year is Dark Winds on AMC and AMC+. Absolutely outstanding series. One of the few times this year or even in recent years where I sat back and thought I am looking forward to a second season. Dark Winds is great television and I write that knowing some of the acting was pretty second rate, but the writing and story were so good you let a few subpar performances go by the wayside. The question becomes - how many people have seen this great series? AMC+ only has eleven million subscribers and they all aren't watching Dark Winds.  

The other series that is so entertaining is the PBS mystery series, Miss Scarlet & The Duke. The first season premiered in 2021, but the second season just finished its run on Masterpiece Mystery and it is delightful. Kate Phillips (Peaky Blinders, The Crown, The Aftermath) and Stuart Martin (Medici, Jamestown) are both terrific actors and in an earlier era they both would have become big stars. With all of the content today, no one becomes a big star. Not enough people view these series to catapult an actor to big stardom. Having written that, Miss Scarlet & The Duke is a big hit based on our current standards of what a big hit is. It managed to get nearly nine million viewers in the U.S alone and that is a near phenom in today's marketplace.

NOW WE GET TO THE CALLING...

The Calling is a Peacock original. Unfortunately, that is bad right out of the gate, since Peacock (Owned by Comcast/NBC Universal) is one of the weakest streaming services. Few covet having it, but Peacock managed to produce one of the best series of the year. 

Season One has eight episodes, but they are split into two separate stories with one of those stories hanging around for the back four. The first four episodes are epic. Superb writing and acting. The series has several executive producers and these aren't lightweights. David E. Kelley (Big Little Lies, The Practice, Boston Legal) is clearly one of the best scriptwriters of the last 30 years. Barry Levinson (Donnie Brasco, Rain Man, The Natural, Avalon, Diner) is one of the most gifted filmmakers of the last 40 years. Jonathan Shapiro, Peter Traugott and Avi Nir round out the EP team and all of them have worthy backgrounds, so it is no surprise they would all gather together to make one of the best series of 2022.

This is a surprisingly intelligent series, since much of what is available today is not in the least bit smart. The cast is terrific with the four leads all doing magnificent work. Jeff Wilbusch plays Avraham Avraham (that is correct, first and last name are the same). Avraham is a detective with the NYPD. He's a distinctively original character. He is a practicing Orthodox Jew who reads from the Torah, prays in Hebrew, mentions Job, Cain and Jesus in his musings. Wilbusch (Keep Breathing, Oslo) is absolutely fantastic in the lead role. Charming without trying and totally believable even in situations that seem out-of-place. Juliana Canfield portrays his partner (he never had one before). The always terrific Michael Mosley plays Detective Earl Malzone and Karen Robinson is Captain Helen Davies. Robinson, as always, just shines in the role of their boss. 

The Calling deserves a shot of airing on the big network in the Comcast/NBC Universal world. Hopefully, NBC (the original Peacock) will give The Calling a broadcast network try. If this show had a wider world opened for them, the audience would grow and this show deserves to grow! Network television isn't dead yet. We see with the wide popularity of ABC's Alaska Daily that network television still thrives if you provide a show people want to watch. 

Must see TV. Watch The Calling

Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022    

     

            

Saturday, November 5, 2022

AMERICA SAYS - TRIBUTE TO A GREAT AMERICAN GAME SHOW

 


This is my opinion...

America Says premiered on the Game Show Network in the summer of 2018 and the delightful and always entertaining game/quiz show is currently in its fifth season. It has become a huge hit for GSN and its distributor Sony. Fortunately, the show is now a mainstay on GSN. America Says is hosted by John Michael Higgins. Higgins is certainly one of the most talented and downright wittiest of people in all of television and film. Higgins has appeared in dozens of television series in both starring and guest-starring roles, along with many roles in feature films and of course, he is well employed by major advertisers.

By nature, I am not a game show/quiz show watcher, but I thoroughly enjoy watching this series which pits two teams against one another in attempting to figure out the answers to a particular question. Admittedly, some of the questions are far easier than others, so one team at times seems highly disadvantaged, but that is the nature of the proverbial beast. Also, in the final round the questions often seem way too difficult for the average team (well, most of the teams are average) and why after five seasons is the grand prize still sitting at $15,000? Okay, so I've criticized the series, but I actually enjoy the series and set it on the DVR for all new episodes. Oh, one more criticism before I return to applauding the series. If you don't win the $15,000 you get stuck with a $1000 victory for four people. I'm not quite sure it is worth going on for a split of $250 per player.

Back to the merits of the series. I stopped watching Jeopardy after Alex Trebeck passed away. I managed to view a few of the early guest hosts and I gave up completely after the Aaron Rodgers (quarterback of the Green Bay Packers who had at one point won a celebrity Jeopardy) run. I stopped watching because I thought Rodgers was a perfect host and I knew he wasn't coming back. Obviously, he is a future Hall of Fame NFL player who was about to sign one of the largest athlete deals in history, but his talent on the field meant we weren't going to get him as a host of Jeopardy.  

After much fanfare of who would be named the permanent host (quasi scandals included), the powers that be selected the historic Jeopardy champion, Ken Jennings. Jennings clearly has a mind filled with lots of information, but he is as dull as the dirt that surrounds the marigold plants in the garden. He's a knowledge based wunderkind, but he is not a host of any show, let alone the legendary Jeopardy. The current executive producer of the series is Michael Davies. In fairness, I once worked with Michael Davies and Davies is a delightful and smart guy. If I were at Sony, I'd give him a shot at hosting Jeopardy

This takes me back to America Says. America Says is not a mind bending think tank like Jeopardy (even though Jeopardy used to be a much more difficult show to win than it is today); and it is not like you need to be a brainiac, but you have to have a mind stored with lots of information to win and you better be kind of/sort of charming while doing it. 

America Says is one of the more entertaining diversions in a television landscape filled with 560 series per year. Imagine that. All of that television and most of it is awful. I watch some high brow series, some news, some nature shows and a few films here and there, but I DVR America Says and I am thoroughly entertained. 

John Michael Higgins should have been selected to host Jeopardy. He's smart, witty, clever, quick and wildly entertaining.

Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022    

    



Monday, September 12, 2022

Miss Scarlet, The Duke and Executive Producer Harvey Myman - Interview with Harvey Myman


Harvey Myman has had a long and distinguished career in both the print press and television. After leading his team at the Orange County Register to a Pulitzer Prize he changed directions and became an executive in television and then a producer. He is currently one of the managing partners at Element 8 Entertainment based in Los Angeles. The company works with international partners and they are currently in production on Clean Sweep being filmed in Ireland. 

Harvey and his partners at Element 8 Entertainment worked on all aspects of developing Miss Scarlet & The Duke. They were involved in casting, hiring the director, and they worked closely with creator/writer Rachael New. 

Miss Scarlet & the Duke is a sophisticated, elegant and charming series, and fits in beautifully with some of the glorious past achievements of Masterpiece Mystery on PBS. The series is set in 1880's Victorian London and features the first female detective in British history, Eliza Scarlet. Eliza must work closely with Scotland Yard's Detective Inspector, William Wellington (The Duke). 

The stars of the series, Kate Phillips (The Crown, Peaky Blinders) and Stuart Martin (Jamestown, Medici) are potent together as an on-screen crime fighting duo. The lifelong friendship of Eliza and William has brought them together, and their emotional bond not only provides for a lovely romantic set-up, but these two actors have more electrical chemistry than any other two actors currently working together. There is tension between them, but it is pleasant tension. They are each clever and formidable in their own respective ways, but together they prove to be a perfect match. Phillips and Martin have been perfectly cast. I literally haven't enjoyed watching two actors spar and connect in this manner in a long time. Needless to say, I'm looking forward to seeing these two work together for many seasons. If we get lucky, really lucky, hopefully, they will work together on other projects as well. Tracy/Hepburn, Hanks/Ryan...I'm not embellishing their on-screen abilities.

It is a pleasure to interview one of the executive producers of this series. I worked with Harvey Myman in the past; and one thing almost every single person that ever worked with Harvey would say is - he's such a gentleman. Fitting that he would be associated with a series that boils over with style and class.                      

J: Harvey, you started your career in journalism and eventually made your way to the Orange County Register. Going from the world of the print press to the entertainment industry seems like a leap few would or could make. What was the moment that made you realize you wanted or needed to alter your professional future? 

Harvey: Moving from print journalism to television entertainment seems a large leap, but for me it was in many ways an organic one, as it used many of the same skills. That said, when I decided to leave newspapers, I was not interested in going into television news. I felt television was at its best as an entertainment medium, and that was the lure. In fact, when I began my exploration of Hollywood, I was looking at feature work as well as television, and realized I preferred the faster pace of television.

I had reached a point where I could see that we had accomplished what we could at the Register, and, because of our success, several opportunities came along to move to that top tier of newspapers.  Remember, this was when print was thriving.  There were those who saw me as the canary in the mine shaft, but I did not see the drastic changes that lay ahead. The move to television was driven by a personal desire for fresh challenges. Though I had begun my newspaper career as a writer, I did not feel I had the discipline to write spec scripts and enter that way.  So I focused on my skills as a person who could read and write, who understood storytelling and could work with people in large organizations.

J: At any point did you regret the move from journalism to filmed entertainment?

Harvey: The only time I miss journalism is when I feel a story is being missed, or badly covered. 

J: Your first move into television was at the ABC Television Network working in the entertainment division. Again, a big jump from one industry to another. As a writer, you clearly had a unique insight into what was being developed at ABC. Can you share a bit about how a classic newspaper writer/editor goes into comedy?

Harvey: Over the course of a few months, I would drive from Orange County up to Los Angeles for meetings, usually generals and not for specific positions, but learning how the business worked. My background was certainly different from the usual candidates who began their careers at entry level jobs in the industry. My specific trajectory began with a general meeting with Grant Tinker, who had recently formed a new production company. While he had no openings, he took a genuine interest. He thought ABC was the up and coming network and got me an interview with Brandon Stoddard (President, ABC Entertainment).  As my resume was moving down rather than up, Brandon had me meet with John Barber, the head of current series programming, who offered me a job.  Seems simple, looking back.

I was pretty much hired as someone who would be a good and useful fit. In fact, I was not hired specifically for comedy or drama. A few months later they were making another hire, and gave me my choice of comedy or drama, and I chose comedy. My thinking was that dramas were attenuated features, whereas the multi-camera sitcom was its own form—a curious adaptation of a play that lived its life in the second act. I liked the idea of learning something completely new.

J: You were instrumental as an executive in two of the most successful comedies in television history - Roseanne and Home Improvement. Reflecting back on that time can you share a couple of memories from that period?

Harvey: Among the many shows I worked on at ABC were Roseanne and Home Improvement. Both great shows, but dramatically different experiences.  I was the current executive on Roseanne, and it was always about problem solving in the ongoing production.  On Home Improvement, I was the development exec, so I was present from the start, and the creators were just a dream to work with—smart, talented and creative writers. It was, in fact, the only show I ever worked on that I was pretty sure would be a hit. It was the right concept with the right talent at the right time. In the 1990's, time slots played a role as well.

I was given shows with difficult showrunners, and this continued into development when I moved over a year or so later.  These were the management skills I already had, and it made for an easy transition.  I always saw the role, in current or development, as helping the writers make the best possible version of their show.

It is the nature of the business that I was put in the comedy bucket. That was not how I looked at it, so when I shifted to drama in recent years, it was not that radical a change. As a viewer, I enjoy comedies and dramas.  As a producer, I happily work on both. Ideally, there is always some overlap, as there is in life. Certainly, there is considerable humor in Miss Scarlet & The Duke, and the best comedies have moments of drama, and honest emotion.

J: How much of your writing background came into play in your television career?

Harvey: The challenge in having been a writer and an editor is to understand and appreciate the roles.  The editor’s role is to make the writer’s work better—not to recreate it in his own image.  I made that transition while in newspapers, and carried it over to television. The result was that I could build strong bonds with writers, and not operate from an adversarial position, which too many television executives do. The trick is to park your ego at the door.

J: Parking your ego at the door. Many people are not capable of that, particularly those that rise to high levels in the entertainment realm. You left the network world right around the time the broadcast networks were beginning to be nibbled to death. The wisest people on the planet never would have thought in 2022 there would be 559 series on television. Twenty years ago there were less than 200 series on television. You left ABC to go to The Carsey Werner Company. Eventually you became an executive producer on several series. You remained in comedy for much of that time. How did you end up going down the path of drama? Most people have a difficult time with one major transition, let alone several.

Harvey: My move to Carsey Werner from development at ABC was the first move I made, and it was a wonderful company to be a part of.  While there, and in a desire to keep learning and get closer to the product, I made a shift into being an executive producer. That is pretty much the path I have been on, with detours here and there as an executive at Sony and at HBO.  I’ve always been fortunate to work for and with smart and good executives.

J: It goes without saying I enjoy Miss Scarlet & The Duke. It's entertaining and I appreciate the Victorian era mystery elements. The chief reason I am looking forward to season two is to watch the ongoing relationship and verbal back-and-forth between the two lead characters, Eliza and William (The Duke). How did you get involved with the series? 

Harvey: I love this show, and my appreciation, as we have wrapped seasons two and three and look forward to more, only grows.  Ours has always been a scrappy operation, and we have generally risen to the challenges, even without deep pockets to throw money at problems.

Miss Scarlet has its roots in the very best of this sort of show, with satisfying mysteries, but ultimately great characters.  The series has a special and consistent tone. The ancestors are films like The Thin Man, and certainly Moonlighting.  Like Scarlet, the jeopardy is real, but the tone is often cheeky, and the emotion, certainly in the case of Eliza and Duke, is earned. We love these people and hope they will end up together.

Kate Phillips as Eliza Scarlet and Stuart Martin as William Wellington 

J: As a fan, they better end up together! The character of Eliza is in a tough situation when the series begins. Her father who ran a successful detective agency has passed. William (The Duke) was mentored by her father and the two leads have a relationship which dates back to their childhood. The series is a compelling and charming drama laced with a tremendous amount of chemistry between the two leads. How did the elements all come together on the series?

Harvey: I will turn the light on the creator, Rachael New, whose fingerprints are everywhere, and she is now directing episodes in addition to writing.  If I can take a bit of credit for doing something smart, it was just before the start of production in Ireland in 2019.  In the British system, writers are pretty much done before the start of production.  Rachael came over for the first week, just to see it all become real, but I told her she was going to have to stay.

We turned her into an American style showrunner, and she responded brilliantly, rewriting on the fly, consulting with the director and actors, and doing everything possible to ensure that the series would work.

A brief history of the series and how came to be:  A literary agent in London gave us the script to read as a spec, as our company is focused on international co-production. We loved it—the characters, the tone, the historical accuracy with subtle contemporary edges -- and took it on as a project.  It was initially a hard sell—no one wanted period dramas at the time, but our faith in it was undiminished, and we kept on it. One of my partners, Patty Lenahan Ishimoto, is particularly relentless in this way.  At one point we considered turning it into a French project, as they seemed more open to period, but eventually it fell into place.

J: It's rare for PBS to pick up a British series that didn't have its start on BBC, ITV or Sky. In the U.K., Miss Scarlet & The Duke airs on the Alibi Channel. How did the PBS relationship happen for the series?

Harvey: Masterpiece/PBS came in early and has been a wonderful partner.  In every way, they have been supportive of the show, and their input has been truly invaluable.  They are smart executives who know their audience.  It is a rare group, and I say this as someone who has worked at HBO and other well-regarded companies, and we are fortunate to be working with them. 

J: Even though the series takes place in Victorian era London you shot the first season in Dublin and the second and third seasons were filmed in Belgrade. What led to the decision to shoot in Ireland and then make a hard turn southbound to Serbia?  

Harvey: As noted, we shot the first season in Ireland, and it was all practical locations, which is easy enough to do there. Then, for COVID and other reasons, we moved to Serbia for seasons two and three. Belgrade is not exactly a hotbed of Victorian architecture, so we built our world on sound stages and back lots, which makes many aspects of production easier. The crews in Serbia have been truly wonderful.

Our production moves at a fast pace, so the demands are considerable. It was very much a team, and everyone pulled together to make it work. The results, which will be available to viewers in the U.S. soon, are exceptional.  The series only gets better, because everything gets deeper and more complex as viewers get to know the characters and the world.  So, we can’t wait for the audience to get to see season two.

J: The production company you are with Element 8 Entertainment has several other projects already set up and running. Can you share a bit on what the future looks like with your company? 

Harvey: We are currently shooting a contemporary thriller in Ireland, Clean Sweep, starring Charlene McKenna. It's written by American Gary Tieche, and it is going very well.  It will be carried in the US on Sundance Now.

All projects have their journey to becoming real, and we have a few others that are moving along.  Among these are The Bronte Girls, by playwright Caroline Kelly Franklin, with director Darcia Martin attached. It is about that summer at the parsonage in 1853, the last time all the remarkable Brontes lived together.  It is a fresh and fascinating take on perhaps the greatest literary family ever.

Other projects moving along are in India, Jordan, France, Belgium and even the U.S. Each of these projects has their own journey.  We resist falling into boxes, like the period producers because of Miss Scarlet & The Duke, or the mystery producers.  Each project brings its own challenges and its own satisfactions.   

None of our projects have massive budgets, so we remain scrappy and resourceful, and make sure what we do spend ends up on the screen.

J: I love scrappy. Some of the best material in film and television rises up out of smaller budgets, but creative minds. As a viewer, what are you currently enjoying on television?

Harvey: On television, the recently completed Better Call Saul was brilliant; and I am awaiting a new season of Babylon Berlin.  I still love great comedies, but not particularly of the broadcast network sort. I like things that get closer to the heart of the human condition.

J: As a lifelong and serious reader I always want to know what other people are reading. What are you currently reading? 

Harvey: As a reader, and as a viewer of television and films, I am fairly promiscuous. The result of being an English major, I suppose. My bedside table has books ranging from Dreiser's Sister Carrie to books by Dorothy B. Hughes. I've even been dipping into ancient Norse legends. I like to be able to read without always thinking about whether something could be a series. 

Thank you to Harvey Myman for sharing some of his time and the treasure of that time with us. 


Miss Scarlet & The Duke will have its second season premiere on PBS in the U.S. on Sunday, October 16, 2022. It has already been announced that season three will premiere in January, 2023. 

The series airs on Alibi in the U.K., Seven in Australia, CBC in Canada, Lightbox in New Zealand. It also airs in multiple other countries. 

  

Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022




Tuesday, August 30, 2022

THE GREATEST SONGS BY CHICAGO - CHICAGO'S TOP TEN GREATEST SONGS OF ALL-TIME


The iconic Chicago logo 

This blog is mostly devoted to television, but we write about music from time to time and particularly about musicians, singers and songwriters who have appeared on television over the course of their career. Chicago made many appearances over the last 50+ years on television, so since I've assembled the greatest songs by Queen and The Doors I only thought it right as a born and raised Chicago woman to write about the band that "borrowed" its name from the city of big shoulders. 

To say Chicago is one of the great rock bands of all-time would be a wild understatement. Their career started in 1967 and in one way or another they are still around. If one had the good fortune to see Chicago during their heyday one could honestly look in the mirror and say to self they were one of the best live acts ever. In my own checklist, Chicago would be on that list with Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney and Little Feat. I never saw Elvis Presley live on stage. I'm a bit too young, but I gather I missed one of the greatest live performers there ever was.   

Chicago was an original. No band in the rock era had ever attempted to top the charts with a horn section and in their case, a horn section that could have provided their craftsmanship and their artistry to the great acts of  those cherished artists from the Depression era/World War II period. Chicago took that brass and turned it into a rock solid moneymaker, but far more importantly a hit making machine with loads of talent from every member of the band. 

There is a great deal of history to the band and I will certainly not detail their biographical chart. To sum up their fame in the proverbial nutshell of one paragraph, they famously were the first rock act to sell out Carnegie Hall for an entire week back in 1971. Other musicians respected their work. That's always the compliment one would want to hear or read about. Their first album, Chicago Transit Authority was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame (their original name was Chicago Transit Authority, but the notorious CTA made them change it - what idiots - the CTA, not the band). They were rewarded with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2020; and they finally got voted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016. By the way, this was 24 years after they were first eligible. Imagine doing this to one of the most critically acclaimed, at least in the first decade of their career and certainly one of the most commercially successful acts of all time (over 100 million records sold). 

Since I am a purist, I only mention the names of the original and magnificent seven. Peter Cetera, Terry Kath, Robert Lamm, Lee Loughnane, James Pankow, Walt Parazaider and Danny Seraphine. These men were Chicago and from the perspective of 50+ years of history, will always be Chicago. This was the formation for those songs that mattered. When I say I'm a purist, I mean to define pure regarding music. Only Jesus Christ is completely pure, but as far as music goes -- According to the Collins English Dictionary, "If you describe something as pure, you mean that it is very clear and represents a perfect example of its type." Chicago - the original band members represented a perfect example of its type.  

This post is dedicated to clarinet/flute master, Walt Parazaider who announced in 2021 he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease. My beloved dad lived with the dreaded disease for 12 years and succumbed to it eventually. Some numbers indicate there are some 40 million people currently living on planet earth with Alzheimer's. Those numbers include 14 million Americans. That would be close to 5% of the U.S. population. When you listen to Colour My World, stop and hear Walt's beautiful flute playing on the track.  

Chicago: L to R: Robert Lamm, Peter Cetera, James Pankow, Lee Loughnane, Walt Parazaider, Terry Kath, Danny Seraphine 

Here are the top ten greatest songs by Chicago.

1) Beginnings - Robert Lamm composed this illustrious and timeless piece of music. The melody is superb, the lyrics are romantic (what on earth do people fall in love to today?) and his lead vocal is like listening to a modern day Mr. Darcy singing to his Elizabeth Bennett. How does one not admire the creativity behind the line " the color of chills all over my body." Robert Lamm was either totally stoned or his creativity levels were creeping up at a high tilt. Just for the sheer benefit of the doubt I will say the latter as opposed to the former. Robert Lamm, who looked like he just stepped out of a Jane Austen novel was a wildly underrated musician/singer, but he was even more undervalued as a songwriter. In the early years of Chicago the band was blessed with three excellent lead vocalists, Lamm, Terry Kath and Peter Cetera. Why Lamm stopped singing lead as the band progressed beyond the 1970's is beyond my guess.  

Beginnings is joyful, energetic and proves within the confines of even one song what superb musicians each of the band members were. These were a group of consequentially gifted guys. Listen to Cetera's bass line. Danny Seraphine's drumming was flashy at times, but more importantly he was significantly credible. Seraphine didn't just keep time. He was musical. I love this song! I could play it on a daily basis and never tire of its sheer dripping with joy! A thousand different feelings. 

2) Make Me Smile - James Pankow wrote what would become Chicago's first top ten single. It was released way back in early 1970 and it is one song of many that highlights their absolutely outstanding musicianship. Chicago was for all intents and purposes the first real rock band to use horns, even though The Beatles (of course, they did) used horns sporadically on some tracks and most notably on Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. The Doors even came in to use horns on their 1969 smash hit Touch Me, but Chicago utilized brass on nearly every track and nobody did it better. They were unique. No one sounded like Chicago. A rock/jazz band filled with musicians who literally could have played with Glenn Miller, Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey and Artie Shaw. Needless to say, the big band giants of the Depression/World War II era produced some milestone musical pieces and their musicians were among the best musicians of the twentieth century. Members of Chicago would have fit in just fine.

Terry Kath was surely one of the best rock vocalists the era produced. He rises high in the annals of great rock singers. He's up there with Paul Rodgers, Lou Gramm, Freddie Mercury, Steve Perry, Stephen Stills, Elvis Presley and Lennon and McCartney. Kath rarely gets credited this way, but wow what a talent was lost with his early death. 

The introduction on Make Me Smile and then that absolutely brilliant (a word used too often, but applicable here) ending are moments to savor.  I hear young people listening to the same noise over and over again. It's not even music. It's just noise. Music is played by musicians. Chicago were musicians. Make Me Smile is a complicated piece of music. If you play you will know what I mean.   

3) Dialogue (Part 1 & 2) - Robert Lamm wrote this song and it appears on Chicago V (in hindsight, it would have been nice to have taken all of their creativity and used it to name their albums in a more memorable way). The song was released in 1972 during a chaotic period including involvement in the Vietnam War. It is rare to have an actual dialogue in a song outside of a feature film or Broadway score. The late Terry Kath sings the first person dialogue and his character is caught up in the sadness and  madness of the world. Peter Cetera comes in to do the latter half of the back and forth and he's a happy camper not caught up in the world. The song goes in to a Part 2 and it is the band singing en masse and it completely comes to a close a capella. Their diverse worldviews are accentuated throughout. Looking back on the song more than five decades later you actually get both sides which attests to the brilliance and even the prophetic aspects of the song.    

Dialogue (Part 1 & 2) is a masterpiece. I will repeat that, it is a masterpiece. Chicago (I write on reflection of the original seven members during this entire post) not only was filled with superb musicians, but they were intelligent. These guys harnessed their formal educations at DePaul University and Roosevelt University to mastermind one of the most prolific acts in modern musical history. This song was released during a time when attending university/college actually meant something. Imagine coming up with the dialogue and then making it challenge the intellect, the worldview, the thoughts of the day. Don't hate people because they don't agree with you. 

Terry Kath was a virtuoso guitar player. His solos are worth the songs in many cases. We Can Make It Happen! Oh yes, they could and so can we, but we have to get off of our phones and do something!

4) Feelin' Stronger Every Day - This song should be a jolt used in locations where people are not having a good day. I dare anyone to listen to this song and not feel good even if it only lasts for as long as the song. Based on how much airplay it continues to receive I am going to assume it is the most popular track by the band. Peter Cetera and James Pankow composed this track. Even though Pankow cowrote the song the horns are pretty much laid to rest on this track. 

These were tight musicians who knew their way around the concept and reality of a melody. Chicago, in their heyday were one of the best live acts ever. Even as they aged they still delivered enviable performances, but if you saw them back in "the day" you will remember vividly what their stage performances were capable of.  

Not exactly a rousing intellectual feat lyrically, but if you can carry a tune, wow what fun can be had belting this one out at a Karaoke bar. Of course, I've only done this once, but I still remember quite vividly what it felt like to sing such get out of the seat happiness via a song! Time signatures. Study up!

5) Hard To Say I'm Sorry/Get Away - Cetera wrote this song with David Foster. That sentence pains me, but this is one superb song. It is also one of the last songs powered by the band that is still what made Chicago, Chicago. Cetera began steering the band away from their traditional path and took them down the pansy path of pop. Having said that, Cetera had a memorable and gifted voice, but obviously he was not looking to stay and he sure wasn't going to say he was sorry.  The latter half of this musical composition is Get Away written by the always reliable Robert Lamm. Radio stations always remove Get Away from their airplay. I have wonderful memories of that summer in 1982 and if you were alive at the time you quite literally couldn't escape hearing this song. Roll down the window and blast that song. You will feel good. Once again, like Feelin' Stronger Every Day before it, Chicago knew how to amp up a few minutes of pure fulfillment by the joy of music. 

Cetera was capable of delivering emotional lines without sounding over the top. In videos he looked at times strained, but vocally he was all truthful and meaningful emotion.   

6) Colour My World - First off, I love the British spelling of the world Colour. I have no idea why James Pankow did this, but it doesn't matter. Looking at it in print form all these years later it just makes it sound more poetic and this song is poetry in lyrical motion.  

In the 1970's there wasn't a prom, school dance, homecoming event or wedding that didn't have this song on the top of the play list. It became an all consuming musical moment to say the least. Pankow wrote it and and Terry Kath sang it with all the passion and longing any vocalist could possibly provide. That flute solo by Walt Parazaider is a stunner. Oddly, there is only one verse in this song. We needed more.   

"As time goes on I realize just what you mean to me." That is the opening line to the song. Romance in music doesn't come any more beautifully than that line. Well, Paul McCartney's Here, There and Everywhere tops it (written for his beautiful Titian haired fiancee, Jane Asher).   

7) I've Been Searchin' So Long - James Pankow wrote this dream-like, almost haunting piece of music. No one would accuse Pankow of being a talented lyricist, but melodically he was one of the best tunesmiths that an American rock band gifted us with. In addition to the band, there is an entire orchestra that joins in as the music escalates to take us to another place. The best music always takes us somewhere and this song certainly fits that tradition. Cetera's vocal is powerful on this song. He intensifies the spirit of the lyrics with absolutely fantastic backing by his musical comrades.  

One of the key elements in music is the arrangement. Few bands could touch the arranging skills of the members of Chicago. Listening to the music sometimes would mean sitting down and listening to the music. If you love music it isn't just background filler. Pankow and Lamm in particular were mesmerizing in their ability to craft a song with their arrangements. Pankow, in particular could have done horns for some master class in classical music.    

8) Mongonucleosis - My eldest brother would play this song everyday for about three months. No exaggeration. He'd get ready for the day with this hyper display of jazzy, Latin American music. Certainly no other "rock" band would have recorded and released Mongonucleosis. Well, maybe Santana, but Carlos is Latin-American. It is so different and downright fun it had to be added to the list.

Once again, kudos to Terry Kath who was a full-body guitar player without a single hint of strutting his musical gifts. Clearly, this was who he was and what he was. This song is in many ways, the one song on this list that is all about the brass section. It was what separated this band from all other bands. 

9) Happy Man - Peter Cetera wrote this lovely ballad and what makes it a significant song is that it is not a cookie cutter style romantic ballad. It is an adult song loaded with depth and maturity. Cetera was a graciously good singer who had perfect pitch. If you are a Chicago fan you will end this post by noting of the ten songs on this list, four of them come from Chicago VII. Chicago VII was a double album and their finest achievement in recording. Call on Me is also on that album and that illustrious tune didn't make the cut.      

10) Skinny Boy - Robert Lamm composed this song for his first solo album. When that effort failed this song was used on Chicago VII. Once again, Lamm proves to be not only the best lyricist in the band, but also a stylized tunesmith who was able to drift off in various directions. No one in their right mind would peg this as a Chicago song. That was another reason why they were so good. Chicago was undervalued every which way you turned. 

The lyrics here sound like a significantly older man reflecting back on his life. When Lamm composed this song he was still in his 20's. Note the backing singers are the Pointer Sisters. A nice addition to the track and this song holds up well under the fog of many years having passed. None of their songs are dated. Amazing when you think of it.

Chicago was comprised of seven men with special abilities. Thank you to Peter Cetera, Terry Kath, Robert Lamm, Lee Loughnane, James Pankow, Walt Parazaider, Danny Seraphine 

The original and magnificent seven. One of the greatest bands of all-time!

Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022

Monday, July 11, 2022

Interview with Laurie Burrows Grad - Sharing Grief with Humor

 

Laurie Burrows Grad is in an author, blogger and fundraiser. Her family ties run deep in the annals of entertainment industry history. Her father Abe Burrows was a Tony and Pulitzer Prize winner (Guys and Dolls, How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying). Her brother James co-created the iconic series Cheers; and her son Nick is the President of Original Programming at FX. She has authored  several books; and her most recent book is The Joke's Over, You Can Come Back Now: How This Widow Plowed Through Grief and Survived. Since her husband Peter Grad passed in 2015, she has written extensively on grief. Laurie and Peter were married for 47 years. Laurie has said that "one minute he was laughing and the next minute he was gone."  

She was the overseer of the annual A Night At Sardi's which served as a high-profile fundraising event for the Los Angeles chapter of the Alzheimer's Association. Several years back I wanted to get involved and have purpose with an organization that was serving to benefit the life ravaging disease of Alzheimer's. My father had been diagnosed with the disease and Laurie's father died from the disease. Little did I know that doing some volunteer work would lead to an off and on and back and forth with Laurie all of these successive years.  

Laurie is one of the most elegant, engaging, caring and compassionate people I have had the fine pleasure of encountering in life. In an industry that often relegates relationships to the "what can you do for me" arena, Laurie defies that way of thinking. She's gracious, completely unflustered and genuinely concerned. When she first met my parents I watched her with them and it was as though she had known them for decades. Having gone through watching her own dad's debilitating period with Alzheimer's she instinctively knew how to chat with my beloved dad.       

Albert Camus once wrote "There are two or three great love stories in a century. Everything else is vanity or boredom." Since my mom and dad had one of those love stories and Laurie and Peter Grad had one - there is another great love story out there. Claim it as your own! 

JT: Laurie, your book The Joke's Over, You Can Come Back Now - How This Widow Plowed Through Grief and Survived was about your coping and surviving after your husband Peter's death. I knew you and Peter shared a consequential love story. My parents had a great love story, so I am conscious of couples who love one another so fully. 

Laurie Burrows Grad: Peter was my best friend. Losing a spouse is like losing a limb. It is hard to cope alone especially since we were married so young. I had never really functioned on my own, so I had to adapt and find a way through the loneliness.


JT: Without going through all of the points of your book what were the key components of plowing through grief and then surviving?

Laurie Burrows Grad: I used humor. Other people use other methods, but humor was what worked in my marriage and humor got me through my pain. I have heard that the sixth stage of grief is finding meaning. I have found meaning by helping other widows cope with their pain. I often get notes saying: “it is as if you are in my head.”  I say all the stuff that people are afraid to talk about. My first blog: Demoted to Lunch on HuffPost went viral, because it addressed the issue of people not knowing what to say.  I could do lunch by myself.  Now, dinner was another story and I needed others to surround me and help me through the tough times.

JT: The biggest mistake of my life was not marrying and having children. I never thought about what my life might be like as I got older. Most people don't. No one cares if I've been to Malaysia. I don't care that I've been to Malaysia! My surviving siblings and I were with my mom when she went to her eternal home. Being with loved ones at the end is vital. My mom and dad had a significant love story and friendship. There were times when I realized their great strength was that they liked one another as much as they loved one another - which at times is harder to do. I got to witness the bond between you and Peter on multiple occasions. Another significant love story. What were the elements of your marriage that made it work and work so well?

Laurie Burrows Grad: We were each other’s best friend. That is a rarity these days and I haven’t been able to find anyone who could walk in Peter’s shoes. They were comfortable and warm shoes and I miss them all the time.

JT: You discussed dating after the death of your husband. At some point, you referred to it as dumpster diving. Any stories you can share without giving away too much of your life? 

Laurie Burrows Grad: One guy drove past the valet parking. I said "we need to park here.”  He said, “I never pay for parking.” Now I knew I was dealing with a cheapskate. When he turned to me and said: “your roots are a little dark, when are you having your color done,” I nearly fainted. He followed that with “you must have been too busty to have modeled,” I said: “the editor has left the building," and I walked out of the restaurant.

JT: That's memorable and not in a good way! I only walked out of one date in my life. It was a date with a music industry guy many years ago. Worst date of my life! I had fun walking out.  I love to journal (that bad date made it into the journal) and I've been doing it most of my life. I don't look back, but it's there if I ever want to. Out of curiosity, did you keep journals after Peter passed?

                               Laurie Burrows Grad and Peter Grad 

Laurie Burrows Grad: I journalized on my blogs on Huffington Post. I discussed finances, “who will zip up your dress,” and all the other aspects of widowhood that people sweep under the rug.

JT: I had to zip up my own dress! My mom passed away two years ago. She lived with me the last 12 years of her life. I miss her deeply. The single best relationship in my life. I knew my life was never going to be the same again and I was right. Obviously, it is a different relationship, but this has been difficult for me. What advice would you pass on to people struggling with loss, even beyond loss of a spouse?

Laurie Burrows Grad: Get help. I joined a group after Peter died at Our House Grief Support Center.  It helped me immeasurably.  I went to the group feeling “why me.”  After I was in the group, I said “why not me?”  I also used a grief therapist.  There are many organizations that help people adjust to grief.  Many are free and Our House charged the minimum.  I joined the board after I left the group and help them as much as I can.

JT: You and I met when I started volunteering on A Night at Sardi's for the Alzheimer's Association in Los Angeles. You lost your dad to the disease and eventually I lost my dad to the disease. I recently interviewed an author on his book regarding the disease; and over the last few years I've reviewed three documentaries on the disease. The numbers of people being diagnosed with the disease are growing. Clinically where do you see the future of this disease - short haul and long haul?

Laurie Burrows Grad: I watch my brother in law descend into that scary place of Alzheimer’s. It is the worst possible disease. To see my father, a wordsmith, not able to speak made both Peter and me want to help and raise money.  I am sorry to say they are no further along with research in this dreadful disease that robs the mind.

JT: What happened to A Night at Sardi's? I was attending two events per week throughout my career and A Night at Sardi's was definitely one of the best of the Hollywood fundraising events. Quite honestly, the only event that bested your event was the Carousel of Hope Ball (they gave out Hermes scarves!). A Night at Sardi's was a notable night on the town while serving as an important fundraising operation. 

Laurie Burrows Grad:  It was the most fun event.  We got celebrities to sing Broadway tunes. We handed over the reins to Seth Rogen and his wife Lauren Miller who are committed to helping Home Instead.  

JT: Your dad was a famed Broadway legend and your brother was the creator of one of my all-time favorite series (Cheers). Both your dad and your brother are show business legends and clearly you were surrounded by funny people. 

Laurie Burrows Grad: I come from funny. My brother just wrote a book called Directed by James Burrows and he talks about his career. My father always cracked us up at the dinner table. Hence the humor gene. After you’ve dumpster dived dating, you too would want to laugh!

JT: Your son is the President of FX scripted series. FX is known for its high quality series. I loved Black Narcissus that aired in the fall of 2020. I reviewed it at the time. Just fantastic mini-series and you most likely wouldn't see that production anywhere other than on FX. I'm sure you are a proud mom.  

Laurie Burrows Grad:  Nick has fostered some wonderful hits - The Shield, Sunny in Philadelphia, and so many other series. Yes, I am proud of his work.

JT: You are a gifted writer and you've written multiple books, including several cookbooks. Did you come to writing later in life and if so, why did it take you so long?

Laurie Burrows Grad: I wrote four cookbooks but until Peter died, I didn’t use my prose. Now that he has died, I believe he would be thrilled with my writing. The writing I do now helps me to help others.

JT: I cannot let Laurie Burrows Grad not share some of her favorites? What are your favorite films?

Laurie Burrows Grad: The Philadelphia Story is my absolute favorite movie and  I am a fan of Sandra Bullock. I am about to sell my book to a movie company and I can’t think of anyone better to play me!

JT: Favorite theater production of all-time? 

Laurie Burrows Grad: Guys and Dolls. A classic!

JT: Favorite television series?

Laurie Burrows Grad: Fawlty TowersDownton Abbey. I love a great British mystery!

JT: Last question. Who is your all-time favorite actor?

Laurie Burrows Grad: Cary Grant!  Does that date me too much?  LOL!


                  Laurie Burrows Grad with brother James and son Nick 


Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022

     


 


Wednesday, June 29, 2022

AMERICAN MASTERS - BRIAN WILSON: LONG PROMISED ROAD


The PBS series American Masters has been around since its debut in 1986. Season 36: Episode 5 features BRIAN WILSON: LONG PROMISED ROAD. The series is clear in how it wants to celebrate an artist and it does so with tremendous gusto. If you are going to have a series celebrating the arts and artists you certainly want to throw every laurel at their feet. There are times when the viewer doesn't understand the decision to laud over some of the people defined by American Masters and then there are times you practically find yourself weeping with joy over the complete and total brilliance of an artist. The American Masters on one of the founding members of the iconic band The Beach Boys is one of those times. Brian Wilson is one of the most celebrated songwriters of the latter half of the 20th century and deservedly so. The man who never learned to surf created, designed and mastered so many outstanding melodies that it is even all these years later difficult to comprehend. One must keep in mind that Brian Wilson was a man verbally abused by one of the bad dads of the last century, but Wilson didn't grow bitter, angry, miserable or mean-spirited. He became a gentle giant. A man full of a sweet spirit and a tender heart. 

Wilson is and this is no embellishment - the single most humble public figure I have ever witnessed. You see it in the interviews, but I had the good fortune to meet Mr. Wilson on a couple of occasions. He really is that guy! The American Masters special finds much of the 90 minutes with Brian Wilson driving around various locations in the L.A. basin with Rolling Stone reporter, Jason Fine. They are going from one Wilson moment to the next. Visiting the house he and his brothers, Dennis and Carl grew up in (I met their mom when I first moved to SoCal to begin a career in the entertainment industry - she happened to be a good friend to a local family friend) is a fun throwback to another era. They visit various recording studios and other homes Brian lived in. It's a delightful and free-wheeling chatfest that is compelling conversation. 

We hear many of the melodic whirlwinds Wilson crafted from his gifted brain and wow a boatload of gigantic tunes. Wouldn't It Be Nice, Good Vibrations, California Girls and many more, but nothing and I mean nothing comes close to the most definitive of all harmony achievements in the rock era - God Only Knows. God Only Knows sounds as good, if not better in 2022 than it did upon its release back in 1966. Since the special aired I have listened to this remarkable song a dozen or so times. I look forward to it each and every time. We learn during the special that Wilson actually wrote some songs in a sandbox. He may be the only person ever to do that. 

God Only Knows was recorded while every musician and singer was in the same room at the same time! They can't and won't do that today! The piano, harmonica, banjo. Baby brother Carl Wilson was blessed to get the opportunity to sing lead on the vocal; and that gorgeous double-back harmony by Bruce Johnston still kind of takes my breath away. 

Brian Wilson has suffered severely from mental illness since the mid to late 1960's, but his memory has not faded one bit. He is now 80 years old (I'm writing this in 2022) and his amazing memory is fascinating. Talk about having significantly strong cognitive abilities well into these late years in life. 

In these documentaries one always gets to see and hear a variety of talking heads, but this go-round you listen to talking heads who obviously wanted to do this. Elton John (he inducted the Beach Boys into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame) waxes beautifully on Brian's talents, skills and abilities. Bruce Springsteen, as usual is a stand-out in his reminiscing. Springsteen himself is a great writer of words and in my opinion second only to Bob Dylan as a lyricist in the rock era. Springsteen's use of words is on full display in this documentary. Springsteen digs in with discussing the joy of his youth and all these years later the sadness of the autumn and maybe even the winter of his years. Springsteen can and usually does bring a tear to the eye.  Fellow Beach Boy Al Jardine is featured, along with producer/musician Don Was, Jakob Dylan and Nick Jonas. 

Goodness, sweetness, tenderness, positivity and innocence - who in their right mind would have thought all those years ago that one of the most accomplished and successful songwriters of the 1960's would be described that way.

American Masters: Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road recently premiered on PBS. Watch it and watch it now. Absolutely glorious in its every single second. 

Original Beach Boys: Al Jardine, Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson, Brian Wilson, Mike Love


Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022  

       

             

       

Monday, June 27, 2022

DOMINA - THE WORST TELEVISION SERIES CURRENTLY ON IN THE ENTIRE WORLD!

This is my opinion...

I rarely write negative reviews. I prefer to offer up positive perspectives and hopefully motivate people to watch programming that is to varying degrees worth watching. Every once in awhile I run across something that is just so significantly awful that I will weigh in with an opinion. I think so poorly of this disgusting piece of junk I will not even upload any images. DOMINA is not worth one single image. 

The Roman Empire is a fascinating and long period of history and much of it is covered in blood, (Jesus Christ's crucifixion is the most life transforming example) corruption and evil. Eventually, the empire would wear itself out with of all things, laziness. There are few times in filmed entertainment that have gotten anything right about the Roman Empire, but DOMINA is the single worst piece of garbage to ever pretend to be based in some sort of historical period. 

DOMINA which airs on the EPIX channel in the United States (it was a SKY presentation out of the U.K.) may very well be the single worst series not only currently on television, but it may be the worst television series of all-time; and all of this is saying a whole lot. Imagine being the worst series of the nearly 600 series on television in the U.S. at the moment? Imagine being the worst series of all-time? Well, this is it.  EPIX will soon be rebranded as MGM+.  The once iconic MGM brand soiled. 

The best casting directors in the world aren't capable of knowing every single actor currently working on some format of a series that airs on television. We have the broadcast networks, the cable networks, the premium services and the ever expanding number of streaming services.

The television people (we have all worked or continue to work in executive roles in television or film) that write for this blog watch a great deal of programming and this writer wants to shout it from the housetops that DOMINA is the worst television series in the world. I literally couldn't loathe anything more than this piece of cheap trash. By the way, sometimes cheap trashy programming can at least be mildly entertaining, but this isn't even close to the most minor of entertainment moments.   

First off, it is a series set in the early days of the Roman Empire. The Roman Empire as we know it from a historical perspective lasted around 500 years. It was led by a wide variety of emperors and assorted other leaders with different titles - some of those leaders were profoundly influential and others were blips on the radar of human time. Julius Caesar and Constantine were clearly the two who were the most influential as we peer back into the history of the Roman Empire. DOMINA picks up right after the death of Julius Caesar. Julius Caesar's life has been written about and filmed before, but no one has made a consequential film about Julius Caesar.  

The Roman Empire was the most notable of all historical leading empires and that would include the British Empire which lasted for a couple of hundred years and the empire of the United States. The U.S. empire has been in decline for the last 20 to 30 years and it is continuing to slide into irrelevance with an ever growing debt and a complete lack of leadership. 

Having studied the Roman Empire in some detail through formal education and by reading more than forty books on the subject matter I know I am qualified to state that DOMINA is the single most ridiculous attempt at bringing the Roman Empire to your television screens. 

First off, it's cheap looking and I mean cheap looking. They shoot at the Cinecitta Studios in Rome. Famed film directors, Sergio Leone, Bernardo Bertolucci and Italian-American Martin Scorcese have all filmed at Cinecitta Studios, but for some wildly bizarre reason this piece of mayhem doesn't look anything like the film classics used by the masters just mentioned. This series is similar to a stunned teenager whose incompetence and recklessness just totally demolished the family car. It's the old symptom of upheaval and collapse - nothing works and I mean nothing works in DOMINA. 

It looks like it was shot in an unused mechanic garage and from 1932 to boot. Even the exteriors look cheap. You would get a better backdrop of the out-of-doors in almost any forest preserve in a suburban location.  EPIX couldn't deliver a second season of BELGRAVIA, but they have managed to greenlight a second season of DOMINA.       

DOMINA means lord and/or master. The only lord and master in this production is post-feminist character of Livia. Livia gives women a bad name. A reputation for bad is all the way around for this character, including lots of bad acting. Beyond the despicable (and, not in a morbidly fun way) lead character, the viewer doesn't like a single character and you don't care for anyone either. The first two episodes you see the younger versions of the lead characters and they were better than the adult versions, but that isn't saying a great deal. Kasia Smutniak plays Livia. Plays is an odd word to use here. Smutniak is not a good actor. I hate to use the word actor in conjunction with whatever she is doing here, but acting is not a word that should be used.  

Overall, the acting, if one can call this acting, is absolutely horrific. There are way too many people working in an industry that needs some level of craft and art; and this series has no art and/or craft. I have seen better performances at high school presentations. The writing is even worse than the acting and that's another loaded moment of thought.  It is predictable and sometimes predictable is good. At times, I like predictable. I find comfort in predictable, but this AIN'T that type of predictable. The silliness and the non-historic elements of the dialog and the narrative drive is absurd. To even say narrative drive in conjunction with DOMINA is an overreach of any of one's critical thinking skills. By the way, the use of the F BOMB scattered throughout is not only ridiculous, it is loathsome. The F BOMB was not used during the Roman Empire. Note, even John Milius used the F Bomb in his famed HBO drama on Rome, but the rest of it was masterminded by John Milius, so it gets off the hook a bit! More importantly, it is used repeatedly and none of these people are exactly characters out of a gangster film (or are they?). Right about now, you can use a good gangster film.     

Keep in mind, the Roman Empire contributed some good to the societal norms of the world and obviously a whole lot of bad. They created the most heinous form of death ever conjured up with crucifixion, but with Constantine's conversion to Christianity they actually destroyed crucifixion. Without the Roman Empire we would have waited a whole lot longer for relatively safe drinking water! The concept of roads - give credit to the Romans!  Make note: you would never know anything good about the Roman Empire by watching this madcap (and I don't mean madcap in any humorous way) awfulness of a series. 

One more time with the bad acting. If some financing company said "hey, find me some of the worst actors out there" then you would conjure up this mishmash of an ensemble. One is worse than the other, but the proverbial holy grail of this solidly bad ensemble is the lead female actor. Of course, the worst actor in the entire outing happens to be the person in the series with the most screen time. Not one moment of instinctive acting. There isn't one single shred of credibility or skill in this performance. It is a weird vibe of a performance. I repeat, I do not like giving bad reviews, but somehow, someway the hired actors need to know how to act. Then, I ask why is Matthew McNulty in this drivel? McNulty has given some wonderfully interesting performances (Deadwater Fall, The Musketeers) and seeing him languish in this drizzled mess of a bad storm is disappointing.   

Everyone is awkward and seemingly uncomfortable. By the way, you hate everyone in it and you are uncomfortable watching it. 

I started this post out by saying I rarely write anything negative and I sure hope nothing this bad will motivate me again to take to the keyboard. I sure hope there will not be a season three. This type of bad programming gives television a bad name and EPIX (again, soon to be MGM+)  should be embarrassed by this mess of a series. It is unforgivably stupid and the awful and awkward dialogue is incomprehensible. EPIX (distributing in the U.S.) should be beyond embarrassed by this cheap looking silliness.  

I believe in God. May He in all of His wisdom not allow a third season of this junk.


Copyright The Flaming Nose 2022  

  

 

    

 

Thursday, May 12, 2022

INTERVIEW WITH JIM JANICEK


Jim Janicek is the creative/collaborative force behind multiple media brands. This includes being the creator of one of the most famous brands in television history - the ABC TGIF brand. He also has been at the forefront of launching three major television networks. 

Jim founded and leads Janicek Media (JMC) an entrepreneurial production company that develops branded entertainment programming and innovative 360 media messaging campaigns. 

He recently completed three family films; Adeline, The Engagement Plot and The Happy Camper. The latter two films were produced with Brian Bird (Creator and Executive Producer) of the Hallmark Channel's number one franchise, When Calls the Heart

Jim also produces content with The Walt Disney Company. He recently completed a project with two time Academy Award winning actor, Tom Hanks. The project was for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Museum.   

Over his long career Jim has worked on projects for The Muppets, Baby Einstein, Winnie the Pooh and multiple ABC and NBC specials. 

I had the pleasure and privilege to interview Jim Janicek recently.

J: Jim, you have had a long and storied career in media, but you only recently started producing films. How did The Engagement Plot come about for you and your production company?  

Jim: I had actually just completed a film partnering with fellow producer Myrrha Satow and close friend Becky Daugherty (former Executive Vice President at Disney/ABC) in Ohio called Adeline about a miracle equine therapy horse.  I met Brian Bird, who is the Executive Producer of Hallmark’s When Calls The Heart through a friend who felt we should meet and possibly collaborate.  He was encouraging and he also happens to call Colorado his home. I recently moved back to my home state of Colorado, so this was a common bond for us.  Funny story; Brian was a writer on one of the ABC TGIF shows called Step By Step during the time I was at ABC. We instantly had a connection and a number of mutual friends.  I appreciate Brian’s talents and we both share the same goal of producing family entertainment without fear of including a few faith based messages.  We also believe in building a production business model that gives all an opportunity to thrive.  There’s room in this genre for lots of new faces. We discussed our mutual vision of working more in our home state.  I have done a lot of my productions and post in Colorado, so I was confident we could mount a film production team that was capable of working on multiple projects.  I have a longstanding relationship with the Colorado Governor’s Office Of Film and approached them for support.  We were granted a 20% film incentive if we brought the productions to Colorado.  It was an easy decision as Colorado has great locations, support crew, creative and post already in place.  


J: Wow. What a great backstory to the working relationship with Brian Bird. I love the business plan of working in Colorado as well as finding and developing new talent. Do you have plans for another film?

Jim: I am in discussions on a few projects.  I’m always open to what crosses my path.  If an opportunity is financed, I’ve learned to say yes if it’s a good fit in my schedule and it’s a good message. 

J: You created the ABC Television Network's TGIF campaign which ultimately became one of the most famous of all on-air television promotional campaigns. Can you share how this campaign was created? 

Jim: It’s a fun story.  Back in 1987, I was a Writer/Producer for the ABC Television Network's On Air Promotions department.  We were sometimes invited to the ABC Executive Towers to participate in creative think groups with the top executives.  I’ll never forget sitting around this massive conference table with the likes of several Capital Cities/ABC Television Network legends (this was before The Walt Disney Company buyout of Capital Cities/ABC).  We were discussing the impact cable TV was having on our audiences and I spoke up suggesting we consider “narrow casting to a specific demo on specific nights.”  One of the executives (whom shall remain nameless) looked at me with anger and said, “Young man, we are the American BROADCASTING company.  We will never do that!”    Needless to say, I didn’t get invited back to one of those meetings for some time! 

Later, Bob Iger was just coming on board as President of ABC Entertainment and my supervisors Mark Zakarin and Stu Brower gave me the job of promoting Friday nights during the summer.  Back then, Friday night was considered the death slot for most shows as everyone thought families were out on the town.  I didn’t feel the same way and wanted to try and create a fond experience from my childhood.  Every Sunday night my family would gather and watch Mutual Of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom and The Disney Sunday Movie.  It was always a great night of dinner with family and some TV time, complete with Walt Disney himself hosting.  This was the genesis of the plan for Friday Night.  I learned early in the business that it’s not that people know what they like, they like what they know.   I wanted to create something I knew other families shared and had fond memories about. 

I started promoting Friday nights using stock footage, claiming all kinds of odd comedic stories about Friday night having profound effects on people when they watch.  “Bob shaved 32 strokes off his golf game!"  Mark Zakarin who was the Executive Vice President for Marketing and On-Air Promotions  called me saying, “I don’t know what kind of crazy you’re on, but because it’s summer, keep it up, they are funny and different!”  When it came time for fall TV premieres, I was given a budget to do more and that’s when the second part of my plan went into play.  I wanted to create our own Walt Disney style hosts for the night.  I hired a music team I’d worked with for years to generate a main title, and we approached each of the show runners for the new season of comedies with the idea that each Friday, I’d come to the set and we’d record host segments with their cast after taping their shows.  The idea was that each show would support the other and together we’d generate America’s first case of FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out).  The whole was greater than the sum of its parts.  No one had done anything like that before, but thankfully the Warner Bros. and Disney studio teams involved were willing to give it a try.  Being one of the youngest producers at ABC at the time, I didn’t know better.  All I knew was this was going to be a great way to be on set each week with our shows.  There was another major snag we faced; the network was only allowed a limited amount of time for promo every hour.  The FCC would step in if we violated that rule.  My boss Stu Brower and I put our heads together and came up with a wild plan to ask each show to cut their original program down by 20 seconds so we could take that as “entertainment programming time” for the host segments.  A few friendly phone calls with producers Bob Boyett and Tom Miller and we had a deal. The other producers followed suit.  The name TGIF came together with Stu Brower, myself and Bob Iger.  We had generated a long list of candidates with everything from Friday Fun Club to Friday Night Funnies.

Writing and filming the hosted segments each week was no easy ordeal.  It took a huge amount of coordination with programming, each show, and our own teams.  It literally was a balancing act every week, but some amazing dedicated cohorts helped make it happen every week for nearly 10 years, even during summer hiatus.  It was an amazing experience that launched multiple new opportunities for me with ABC Kids, NBC, Fox, The Muppets and Disney.  We didn’t really know we had a hit until about 12 months in. This is where I owe a debt a gratitude to Bob Iger.  There was a meeting in Century City with the research department and they were discussing “Q” ratings (cast recognizability) with the executive team.  Research was alarmed because when they’d show pictures of Friday night’s cast like Ashley & Mary Kate to focus groups, they’d hear “Oh those are the girls from TGIF.”   Research wanted to kill the TGIF name so people would recognize the show name.  Thankfully, Bob Iger saw this very differently.  He was thrilled that we had clearly created a brand that was working.  Our budget and horsepower was increased! Warner Bros. studios joined forces, assigning a gifted producer, Karen K. Miller to help us coordinate with each cast. ABC advertising eventually capitalized on the idea of selling ad time at higher rates across the entire night vs. a particular time slot.  At nearly the same time, I found out my mom was suffering from Parkinson's disease and the prognosis was not good.  I made a difficult decision to possibly move back to Colorado to help care for her. Mark Zakarin put me in a meeting with Bob Iger to suggest that I continue my work and commute.  Bob welcomed the idea and even picked up an idea for a primetime special I wanted to do. ABC helped me set up Janicek Entertainment in 1990 and was my first major contract outside of the network.   I continue to work with ABC/Disney to this day on select projects.  They are a fond part of my work family. 

J: Great and memorable stories from that period of your career. I know all of these people from the old ABC team, so it was great to hear their names again in conjunction with your memories.  Jumping to 2022... The Engagement Plot takes place in Colorado. You are from Colorado and now you are back in your home state. What was behind the move?  

Jim: I work a lot in Colorado and sometimes film in California. With technology today, it’s possible to work from almost anywhere.  We do all our post production at my company offices.  I feel very blessed and could never have planned this ideal life.  I think networks and studios are more open to working in alternate locations as it certainly helps with budgets and a variety of locations. There are so many ways to generate creative content and the film incentive in Colorado certainly helps.


J: What moment in life got you interested in working in the entertainment industry?

Jim: When I was in 8th grade I had a science teacher who got me interested in Ham Radio.  He helped me get my license as a radio operator.  It was exciting to speak with people all over the world. There was a national Saturday Morning TV show called Kids World that came to film a classmate and I about our radio experiences.  When they showed up with a crew, I was hooked.  Then to see it on air, I was amazed at the idea I could speak to people all over the world via broadcast television. 

J: What's the wildest/wackiest/craziest story that happened to you during your career? One that you can share here?  

Jim: It's tough to remember all of them. I spent a night with my crew in the Tower Of Terror at Disneyworld!  I’ve been comedically insulted by Ms. Piggy and the Baby on Dinosaurs who didn’t take direction well “NOT THE MAMA!”   Ernie Anderson, the famous The Love Boat voice liked to rip up my scripts.  We did a Home Improvement special that went like clockwork and my producer even said, “Hey, we not only hit our budget, we got great stuff and are out right on time!”  Then our prop truck promptly tore the entire roof off the guard gate house of the mansion we were filming at.  We were filming a spooky Halloween special for Fox at a Van Nuys mansion and our black cat escaped and ran under the house.  We had to crawl through 100 years of spider webs underneath the house to rescue him. I got to sit in the cockpit of the Space Shuttle Atlantis before it was being prepped for its next mission. Danielle Fishel (Topanga on Boy Meets World) and I had to wing an entire night of TGIF LIVE from the stands of a U2 POP Tour Concert in Las Vegas. Bono and The Edge were going to join us, but canceled at the last minute.  Ryan Reynolds tried to get me fired one time when he claimed I was a difficult director.  In fact nothing bad ever happened on set.  It turned out he was mad that the network program executive hadn’t come to the taping so he was making waves. Thankfully, I wasn’t fired! While working with Jamie Foxx, I did steal a presidential fax paper cover sheet from the set of White House Down so I could send spoof faxes to a few of my friends.  

J: I've got some memorable moments, but you definitely win the war of the wackier side of things.  What is your most memorable moment from your years in the entertainment industry?

Jim: I’ve enjoyed so many amazing things. 3500 hours of TV makes it very hard to choose.  I do really take heart to the idea of making audiences enjoy a laugh together, or take pause for a moment.  I didn’t really know TGIF made such a huge impact on people’s lives until much later.  It’s a nice feeling when fans tell me how much it was a part of their family.  Mission accomplished.  

I find myself continually amazed at my life path.  I’m very entrepreneurial and love to spot trends and opportunities for creative ways to build a business or audience, but can never predict what’s next.  I had a chance meeting with a Disney executive one time that years later led to me taking over production on Baby Einstein right after my wife and I had twins. How odd is that. The brand grew to over 100 million dollars after we did 12 titles.  I would have never even understood the brand until we had twins! I had a chance meeting with an executive at Comcast in 2012 and pitched him an idea for a new network dedicated to helping the Latino audiences engage with their entertainment offerings.  We launched and operated Xfinity Latino to 22 million homes for 8 years. I always believe “The Best Is Yet To Come.”  This is a saying I barrowed from my friend John Sie.  

Years ago I helped launch and brand Starz network. I did a special for the president John Sie on his life story that revealed much of his rough childhood and even a few business failures.  He was against it at first, but I convinced him that he needed to share the flaws. It gives young people hope that they too can achieve great things.  John didn’t get to be where he was without incredible life challenges.  The story was used for a huge network event.  He was so touched by it and we became friends. His entire industry had a new perspective and respect for him.   

J: Jim, if you weren't doing what you do, what would you be doing?

Jim: I love cars, entrepreneurial business, and home designs. So probably designing new technology or working on design and builds. So many opportunities… so little time!  I also love to travel and with our kids now mid college, my wife and I want to spend more time together exploring.  We actually bought a cool van so we could take driving trips with our dogs and easily transport them between Denver and San Clemente! We have a little beach getaway we simply love.  I want to partner on a few more projects with some of my favorite cohorts.  Becky Daugherty (another long-time former ABC Executive) and I occasionally do projects together.  I also hope to do some guest teaching at Chapman Dodge College of Film & TV in Orange, California. 

J: How do overcome the dreaded creative blocks?

Jim: Wine!  Ha ha. No, I’ve learned that I will always be my own worst critic.  I don’t think there’s one thing I’ve done that I feel isn’t flawed in some way.  I think it's important to step away when blocked.  I often go work on a car or in the garden doing something with my hands or something that requires me to create with my hands.  For some reason that unlocks new perspectives. 

J: Which artists have inspired your work? Who has influenced your work the most?

Jim: As I think about it, probably some of the bigger names are: Walt Disney, Jim Henson, Tom Hanks, Kenneth Branagh, Jamie Foxx…. The list is long.  I think the world of Carol Burnett,  Ron Howard, Mark Lynn Baker….. That’s just top of mind… and there’s so many new talents coming to light right now.

I recently worked with Tom Hanks on a special for the new Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences Museum in Los Angeles.  He is genuine, funny and not affected at all. He drove himself to the filming and stayed way past his call time.  Helpful and fun two work with.  I think I’m constantly struck by great work that influences my thinking.   

I’m impressed when artists can tell a story with impact, without the crutch of cuss words, and edgy adult situations just to be current or hip.  To me, that’s playing to the lowest common denominator just to create hype in hopes an audience will watch.  That doesn’t take talent. It also deteriorates our industry to something lacking in responsibility to the viewing audience. 

J: Do you have one big ultimate dream project you would love to get produced?

Jim: I do hope to help find financing and build out a large LED Studio at Chapman Dodge College that becomes a working operation within the industry.  It’s going to take 5-7million to complete. My vision is to form an alliance with a distribution partner.  Together with several highly experienced cohorts from the industry we’d create content there which includes using film students as Production Assistants or in other entry level positions.  The business model works:  The production company team is making short and long form content made for a client to use on their platform. The production costs are lower.  We are using the newest technology at the only film school in the country with such a stage, and each student enters the work place from college already having real world credits with significant mentors.  The fellow mentors are continuing to make the kind of content they are known for at a pro level, while also feeling like their helping guide the next generation of filmmakers. 

J: We all have them! Who are your favorite actors, writers, directors from the last fifty years?

Jim: I tend to find myself being a fan of many different talents on any given day depending on what I’ve recently seen. While I’ve met and worked with many, I think the one person I’d simply fall on the floor with respect for is Carol Burnett. She had a huge impact on my childhood and desire to be in comedy.  Tim Conway, Harvey Korman and Carol would have us laughing until it hurt. What I wouldn’t give to be a part of a variety show that had the world laughing like that.  What fun that would be to create again. 

J: What keeps you up at night?

Jim: I’m excited and worry that our industry and the current technology that’s at hand gives a great deal of power to anyone who desires to put something out into the world on media. Perhaps I’m being naive about the past. Today, it seems the moral obligation of being truthful or balanced in news has all gone away and been replaced by spectacle. Young filmmakers need to respect the incredible power they have to create perception and good in the world, and with that comes responsibility.  

J: So after a life in the entertainment industry are your children following in your footsteps?

Jim: Like it or not,  yes, they are.  Our daughter is at Chapman Dodge College in Orange studying screenwriting. Our son is at Gonzaga studying Broadcast and Business. We hope they will always bring light to the world.  


COPYRIGHT THE FLAMING NOSE 2022