Deep down, I have always harbored…
Wait. I won’t make
this about me.
“You won’t?”
I know. “Alert the
media!”
Lemme start this another way.
Twice in the recent past, I have heard stories about
exemplary veteran television writers – one of them created a long-running hit
comedy series – who, after eschewing “day-to-day” employment to, I don’t know,
stop and smell the juice oranges, or quietly develop projects of their own, whatever
it was, in order to keep their creative hands in – and also to have fun – committed
to part-time participation in rewrite rooms of currently ongoing productions. They did not solicit these assignments.
They were eagerly recruited to do so.
It’s not like,
“Who’s that?”
“I don’t know. I walked
in, and they were already sitting in the room.”
Somebody asked them to show up. And, seeking an available “outlet”, they did.
The striking – and disturbing – similarity in those two
stories I heard was that, after a relatively short period of time, the veteran
writers both abruptly dropped out. Despite
the sensible idea of having a seasoned professional in the room so the relative
“Newbies” could partake of their recognized wisdom, the “Grand Experiment” had fizzlingly
failed.
Wanting to know why, I (politely) grilled one of those
excellent writers to find out what specifically went wrong.
It seemed like a promising idea. You take a new generation of talented
writers, burdened or blessed – depending on your perspective – with a television
series to produce, you drop in a gifted practitioner whose been through the
punishing or invigorating process – again,
depending on your perspective – that should
be be a recipe for collaborative pay
dirt. It works in baseball. Why not half-hour comedy?
And yet, instead ,it was…
“Oil and water.”
And the elder participant had to go home.
Possibly forever.
Why didn’t it work out?
Well – and this is specifically about comedy, though it
could apply equally to drama as well – it seemed like every idea the longtime
writers proposed met with the rejecting reaction of,
“It sounds a little ‘too jokey’.”
Or
“It feels like we’ve seen that before.”
Or
“You’re old!”
Rendered subliminally, if not actually out loud.
In a way, their negative response is entirely understandable. New writers want to “bust out of the mold”,
the prevailing rationale being, “Who wants to do something that has already
been done?”
(Putting the most benign interpretation on the issue, rather
than “Don’t tell me what to do, Mother!”
Or “Father!”
depending on the gender of the “interloping consultant.”)
Dismissing anything suspiciously “passé” today’s writers want
to put a revitalizing stamp on the traditional format, delivering a shiningly rebooted
“Sitcom 2.0.”
Which was precisely my
impulse, when I originally started out.
Till I quickly learned they actually wanted
“passé.” (Which they interpreted as “Doing it right.”) I tried my best to comply because the unwanted
alternative meant “Hello, Toronto, I’m back.”
The bizarre, confusing and disconcerting thing – because why
use one word when you can redundantly use three – is that, to the experienced practitioners,
it felt innately like their proposed “pitches” were right.
And yet, from the head-shaking responses they were getting,
They weren’t.
Being repeatedly – and, to them, inexplicably – “shot down”,
it was like, “What’s going on?”
“You mean 5 plus four is not 9?”
“It used to be 9.”
“Well, what is it now?”
“We’re not sure. But
we will know it when we hear it.”
Ergo, the inevitable
impasse, where what would have previously been joyfully embraced “Bull’s Eyes”
were now consistently turned down.
Conversely, in the name of ‘”Doing things different”, like avoiding the
classically recognized “joke structures” and reliable comedic “turns” in the
narrative, what was made it into the
script was perceived, by the “Outside Observers” as disorientingly “less
funny.”
Which is, arguably, debatable. Statistically less debatable, however, is that from the “Recent ‘Big Hits’ in
Network Comedy” perspective, the desired “upgrade” has produced downgraded
results.
So, “Hm.”
Or is it “So there!”
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