I saw it coming. And
I predicted it “on the record.”
I was invited to speak on a panel. Major
Dad was on the air and doing commendably well. I was (comparatively) riding high. Hence, the invitation to participate on this
panel.
The topic for discussion was “The Runaway Costs of
Production In Television Programming.” I
was the only “creative” of the five speakers on the dais. The other four participants were studio and
network executives, two of whom were Les Moonves, then President of Warner Brothers Television, now head of CBS (and reputedly the highest paid
executive in traditional media) and the legendary Freddy Silverman, programming head at
one time or another of all three major television networks. (Only in show business do you find one of their
most powerful executives “Freddy.”)
That was the panel – four executive heavyweights…
And me.
The executives delivered their introductory remarks before I
did. And each of them said virtually
precisely the same thing: The reason television
production costs were skyrocketing was because the series’ creators (Read:
writers) were demanding (and receiving) increasingly exorbitantly inflated
contracts. To bring costs under control,
the executives asserted, the writers’ overpriced “Development Deals” needed to
be resisted and reversed.
Finally, it was my turn to speak. I began my entirely unprepared remarks with (more
or less) the following opening sentence:
“I have been listening
to the words of some of television’s most highly respected executives, and
these men appear to be in complete agreement:
The surest way, they say, to bring television production costs under
control is by cutting my salary.”
I got a big laugh.
Except from the executives. (Actually,
they might been laughing too, but I was afraid to look.)
That’s not what I was prescient about. (I just enjoy telling that story.) I have been told, however, that with the
exception of the heaviest “creative” hitters, lucrative “Development Deals”
have virtually disappeared, and overall writers’ compensations have been
substantially reduced. Proving that no
matter how hilarious you are on a panel, the last laugh inevitably goes to the
“suits.” I hate that. But it all evens out. The “suits” hate that they’re not
creative.
I like to believe.
At some point, the discussion took a turn. And that’s when the non-biblical prophet E.
Raymond Pomerantz parted the seas of ignorance, leading the skeptical and
unknowing into the illuminated Promised Land.
I no longer remember the specifics, but I recall some
bewailing about how competition from the recently-arrived cable outlets was
severely cutting into the networks’ profits, the revised “paying field” requiring
the networks to “tighten their belts.” Although
there was no talk of the executives taking a cut in their salaries.
It was then I floated the idea that perhaps the major
networks did not really matter so much anymore, going on to explain that to my
daughter Anna, who at the time was less than ten, Nickelodeon was a major television network.
Aside from their financial worries, the executives on the
panel and in the audience otherwise jocularly derided upstart cable TV, confident
that the best talent would always go where the most money was being paid –
network television.
It is indeed true that, to this day, the richest writer-producers
ply their trades on network T.V. rather than on cable. Chuck Lorre (Two and a Half Men, The Big
Bang Theory, etc., aired on CBS),
for example, is considerably wealthier than Matt Weiner (Mad Men, playing on AMC.)
However – and keep in mind that when I made my prediction, The Sopranos would not air on HBO for a half-a-dozen or more years –
my voice quivering as only a Teller of
the Truth’s voice can quiver, I spoke of a time when the best talent… how exactly
did I put it (more of less)? Oh yeah.
“The time will come –and
it is not far off – when, given the alternative between a big payday but with
network interference and a smaller payday but with creative control, writers
committed passionately to their projects will invariably choose the
latter.”
And lo, how the gathering assemblage mocked me, heaping
scorn mightily upon my prophesy. (As, of
course, all prophets are mocked and
mightily scorned.)
But so was it prophesied.
And so did it verily come to pass.
I am certain – though without specific evidence – that
agents insist – and always have – that their clients at least try to sell their shows to the networks first, because, all things being equal,
why not take the big money? The problem
is, all things on television are not
equal. The networks are, have been, and always will be hamstrung by
commercial exigencies (meaning, in practical terms, highly organized and easily
offended “pressure groups”, the ignoring of whom could seriously impoverish the
networks’ “bottom lines.”)
As a result of the proffered “free hand”, more and more of
the top tier “creatives” migrated to cable.
Cable television, whose business is selling subscriptions rather than
ads, promotes itself by offering precisely what the commercial networks cannot.
“Look what we’re showing you.”
And they don’t just mean nakedness. Although…there is definitely some of that.
(I’m not certain, but there may have
to be some of that.) What the cable
networks were offering, attracting both a premium audience and the top creative
talent at the same time, was television programming, infused – and you could
recognize it in the content – by the unique and uncensored visions of its
creators.
The best talent used
to work for the networks. Because there
wasn’t anyplace else to work. Now there
are options, including Netflix and the
Internet, and who knows what’s
next? The writers may not make as much
money working there, but they have a considerably better shot at realizing
their creative intentions.
And for some people – arguably the most gifted in the
creative community – that’s better.
I was unable to do it myself.
Those know it all tv executives would now be laughing all the way to the Yahoo Bitcoin bank if they listened.
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