I wrote a post a while
ago entitled “Staffing Season.” The
following Facebook comment was forwarded to me in response. And I am passing it along.
(Note: The upcoming content is going to look different. It derived from an e-mail and I do not know
how to make it smaller.)
Friends
of mine, more mature, saner friends of mine, have told me to let this go, but
it's hard to read Earl Pomerantz's blog about how his foot still hurts 30 years
after he kicked me in the balls and not want to tell the testicle side of the
story. We're writers, we feel shit deeply and then we go off into dark rooms
and try to make sense of it. This one hasn't made sense until yesterday, so
it's been on my mind and what's Facebook for if not to work through stuff like
this?
1) First,
let's put this in context. Earl Pomerantz was a hero of mine (as was pretty
much anybody who had written for "TAXI" or "CHEERS".) Even
though mentioning his name gives me abdominal pain today, good writing is good
writing. I still have several of his "Taxi" episodes that I bought
from Samuel French back in the day. It had to be said.
2) Let's
get racism and bias off the table. Earl's a smart man. I'm sure he'll sort that
out for himself. If he says race didn't play a part in his decision, I'll take
him at his word. What stays on the table is this. It's just plain mean to
dangle a job worth hundreds of thousands of dollars in the face of a
25-year-old and then yank it away long after every show in television had been
staffed. Can we all agree on that? After the many shows I've run, and the many
writers I've hired since then, that thought would never have even crossed my
mind!
3) The
script that had gotten Earl's attention was an episode I had written for Dennis
Klein's Carol Kane vehicle "Let's Get Mom!". There was a lot of buzz
around town about this young, black stand up comedian with a hot sample who had
studied under Dennis Klein (the creator of "Larry Sanders"), Thad
Mumford, Sam Simon, Ken Levine & David Isaacs. I had a wide selection of job offers that year but
I chose to work with the great Earl Pomerantz. When Dennis played Earl's phone
message swooning about my writing, I was on a cloud. Knowing what I know now, I
still think I made the right decision then.
4) I
found out that he'd pulled my deal on the morning of what I thought would be my
first day of work. I was told we were going for a research trip to a local
military base and, when I called to find out the address, I was told to call my
agent. No call from Earl. No nothing. In fact, his assistant eventually told me
to just stop calling and I never knew why until yesterday.
5) By the
time I got the final word from business affairs that there was no hope in
closing the deal, staffing season was over and my "new car smell" was
gone. For years everybody thought I was insane to turn down all of the
prestigious offers I'd gotten only to end up working on "Full House"
(which was a late pick up). Sure, it looks like a brilliant decision today but,
back then, it had me punching the pillows at night.
6) As I
made a flurry of calls trying to figure out what had gone wrong, a friend of
mine who worked in Universal business affairs, told me that my agent and
friend, Robb Rothman, had held up my deal in order to get another one of his
clients onto the show. He was wrong. It changed my relationship with Robb and I
didn't stay with him for long after that. Robb wasn't just an agent. We were
the team of Rob and Robb. I'd been to Vegas with the guy. I played with his
kids. I shared more dinners with him than I did with my own brother who lived
in Santa Monica. We both cried when I left and I'm an ugly crier. Ugly. To find
out decades later that I'd tried, convicted and executed the wrong man is
devastating. I'll be calling Robb today to apologize... and probably do some
ugly crying.
7)There's
a stinger in the post that I can't let slide. Earl says that he was afraid I'd
write "unusable" material. Quick story. A crew member once pulled me
aside during "Fresh Prince" to tell me that the crew looked forward
to seeing my scripts because they didn't change much from the table read to the
shooting draft. "Rob weeks are easy weeks," he said. I'm not saying
that to boast -- well, I kinda am -- but I'm also saying it because I take a
lot of pride in the quality of my work and I don't want Earl's blog to be the last
word on it.
Anyway, my
head's clear now. Thanks Facebook! As for Earl, if this episode has truly been
haunting him for 30 years, he can always buy me a drink. He's still a legend
and I'm still a fan. But, if he truly wants to explore the issues he brings up
in his post, I'll offer these questions for him to explore. If he really felt
bad about the confines of only being able to hire Lisa or me, why didn't he
hire Lisa and offer me an assignment like I've done for the many writers I've
given breaks to over the years? When he got picked up for 3 seasons, and had
staff positions open, why didn't he hire me then? If he truly felt bad about
the racial implications of his decision, why didn't he hire a different black
writer? And, why, on a show about the United States military, where people of
color are a greater percentage of the population than they are in civilian
life, was "Major Dad"... Okay. I'll stop there. I guess I'm not over
it yet. The world's a little different from the ball side, but I hope Earl's
foot feels better soon.
Okay. (Look at
that. Regular-sized print.)
My first reaction upon reading the preceding was well… I did
something that hurt somebody. Not only
hurt them but that hurt has stayed with them for an extended period of
time.
For that reaction, and my responsibility for it, I am sorry
and I am sad.
Ken Levine’s blog post about staffing season triggered personal
memories of my own and I decided to write about them. It is very rare that the people involved in
my posts – who I almost never identify beyond their first names – connect with
what I have written. Having a miniscule
readership lulls me into the mistaken belief that I am essentially talking to
myself.
But this time, a person involved read it, and they reacted. (For only the third time in almost
eight-and-a-half years of blogging. I am
currently “one-for-three” in “positive reactions”, the “one”, frankly, being
less positive than “I have no opinion on the matter.”)
Summary: I
made a last-minute decision to hire a writer whom I had just met and who had totally
bowled me over, replacing a writer I had previously determined to hire. The writer I took on was named Lisa. The writer I did not was named Rob. I had troubling qualms about that “Eleventh-Hour”
decision, augmented by the fact that the writer I was not hiring was
black. But I went with my gut, and I did
what I did.
I just sighed. (Not
looking for sympathy. That is just what
just happened.)
Okay.
Looking back… and in view of the response… not necessarily
in order, and writing from the heart…
It’s a business. (A
heartless observation, but what are you gonna do?)
It was a difficult call.
I was doing what I thought best for the situation and for the
show.
I used the word “unusable” in my post not in reference to my evaluation of Rob’s writing but in the
context of Rob’s stylistic identification with a writer-friend I had previously
worked with named Dennis, a non-traditional writer whose script for Best of the West was literally “unusable” – not “not funny,” but
incompatible with the show – and I was concerned about experiencing an
identical letdown with Rob. Rob’s
submitted “writing sample” from a series Dennis
created was simultaneously surprising and cautionary. By contrast, Lisa wrote more reassuringly
like I did. That’s why she got the job.
One quibbling rebuttal to Rob’s Facebook reaction.
I was involved with Major
Dad during its initial season only. I then left the show, and was subsequently
barred by my replacement from any further participation. Therefore, there was no possibility of my
hiring anyone after “Season One”. Also,
since the first season’s production was chaotic in the extreme leaving virtually
no opportunity for “outside scripts” to
be assigned, that avenue of employment was unavailable as well. Besides, I was too crazed to even think about
it.
One more thing. No,
two more things.
With the arrival of Major
Dad, I had had literally no experience as a series show runner. Best of
the West was run exclusively by Ed. Weinberger and Stan Daniels. Family
Man ran seven episodes, the scripts for which were exclusively written by
me. No outside writers, minimal writing
staff.
The situation could have undoubtedly been handled better. More honestly. And more sensitively. But my experience in these matters was
minimal. As were – and still are – my unenviable
“people skills.”
Second, black or white, I would have made the same ultimate
decision.
Those are the specifics as I remember them.
I made a work-related decision, and a person got hurt. Publishing that story, a delicate wound was
reopened, hurting that person again.
What do I do about that?
I don’t know.
It would be nice if some good came from it.
I am open for suggestions.
6 comments:
Call him.
wg
Give him the equivalent of what his salary would've been back then, only in "today's" dollars...then he'll probably be glad to buy the drinks.
And never post anything even remotely similar to that again!
Everybody should put on their big boy pants
I know you feel bad about this and, obviously, so does Rob. It's a terrible situation which probably would have gone a little better if Rob had heard it from you back then. I have to admit, though, that if I was in your position and had someone who would handle it for me (as your Business Affairs office did), I would have let them do it. I hate disappointing people or giving them bad news. And in your original post, you asked them, "...to abandon the “Rob” negotiations and instead make an immediate deal for Lisa." It sounds like you didn't know a final deal had been reached. You thought (I think) that there had been no final offer. In that case, and in my case a couple of times, the withdrawal of the offer was an option.
Another bad aspect to this was (from Rob's post), "...a friend of mine who worked in Universal business affairs, told me that my agent and friend, Robb Rothman, had held up my deal in order to get another one of his clients onto the show. He was wrong. It changed my relationship with Robb and I didn't stay with him for long after that." Here it was Rob that should have called Mr. Rothman back then. It's too bad that he inaccurately accused Mr. Rothman of causing the problem. At least he is going to call to work things out with Robb.
I think Wendy G is right (as usual). It's never too late to call and try to work things out. And Wendy was able to get this all across in two words.
You're still my hero, too,
Jim Dodd
Don't call! Meet him face to face, it's the right thing to do! I think you owe him that much.
Apologize.
"It's a business" is beneath you.
It's one thing to withdraw a deal, it's another to have underlings do it for you. If you didn't think you did something wrong, why would you have posted the original blog entry?
You are a mensch, and mensches apologize.
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