Author Archives: Jason Lynch

#TBT: ‘Come Home to NBC’ With Michael J. Fox and Betty White in These ‘80s Promos

come home to NBC

I always have a blast pulling together the #TBT promos for Adweek, but this week’s entry was particularly entertaining, as I delved into the “Come Home to NBC” ‘80s promos back when NBC ruled the airwaves with The Cosby Show, Cheers and The Golden Girls. Here’s a one of the four promos I discuss, which is a must-see if only for the shot of Tom Brokaw wearing Bright. Yellow. Pants.

And much like everyone else who was partying hard in the ‘80s, NBC saw no end to its good fortune: “Where the magic never seems to end! Where the good times keep you coming back again.” (Well, at least until Jeff Zucker took over…)

All four promos are worth watching, including one that made the unfortunate choice to open with a shot of (yikes) Bill Cosby inviting you into his abode.

#TBT: ‘Come Home to NBC’ With Michael J. Fox and Betty White in These ‘80s Promos

The Future of TV is Here: Netflix and Amazon Will Face Off for a Golden Globe

The marquee of United Artists theater is seen during Amazon's premiere screening of "Transparent" at the Ace Hotel in downtown Los Angeles

It was a very good morning for Amazon, which received 2 Golden Globe nominations for Transparent, its first great series. As I wrote at Quartz, it’s the first major award nominations ever for Amazon, and something that the company — and Amazon Studios director Roy Price — have been pursuing for a long while:

It represents an important step forward for the upstart content provider, in its quest to join the ranks of television’s most respected outlets.

While insisting that he wasn’t solely competing with Netflix, Amazon Studios director Roy Price told me last summer that receiving recognition from a major awards body (as Netflix had been doing since last year’s Emmys) was very important to the company. “It could be great for us, and it gives the part of the audience that hasn’t tried the shows yet an idea that people are responding well to these shows,” Price said. “So, we’d love to see some love from the Emmys or the [Golden] Globes.”

Even better, the streaming outlet will be facing off directly against Netflix, as both are nominated in the best musical/comedy series category, for Transparent and Orange is the New Black. In the story, I also explain why Transparent and/or Tambor have a very good chance to go home with a Golden Globe on Jan. 11.

The future of TV is here: Netflix and Amazon will face off for a Golden Globe

Another Chance to Enchant? It’s ‘Galavant’

Menken

It’s been a few months since I’ve seen my name in print, and I’m excited to make my debut in Emmy Magazine (which is distributed to Academy of Television Arts & Sciences members) with a feature on Alan Menken in the new December issue. Menken is composing songs — 31 in all! — for ABC’s upcoming eight-episode musical comedy series Galavant, which debuts Jan. 4. As I wrote,

It’s been a rewarding, but daunting challenge. Instead of composing three- or four-minute songs, as Menken is used to, he’s lucky to get two minutes on TV, give Galavant‘s twenty-one-and-a-half-minute running time. “You hone your skill in a different way,” he observes. “You learn to be more concise and figure out what’s going to work for the medium.”

Menken also discussed his early success with Little Shop of Horrors and the “mixed blessing” of being synonymous with “Disney music” after The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin. And yes, he talks about how he is only an Emmy short of the coveted EGOT (he has 11 Grammys, eight Oscars and a Tony under his belt). I also spoke with Galavant creator Dan Fogelman and Menken’s lyricist partner Glenn Slater about the legendary composer.

Here’s the whole profile (click to enlarge):

Menken Emmy mag

I really enjoyed my first Emmy Magazine feature, and I’ve already lined up several more stories in the coming months. You can read (and buy) Emmy‘s entire December issue here.

Surprise! ‘Peter Pan Live!’ Soared, Except for — Gasp! — Christopher Walken

Get out the Hook!

Give him the Hook! (Virginia Sherwood/NBC)

I really thought I was prepared for all of Peter Pan Live!’s possible outcomes: It could have ended up a complete disaster (as many in the Twitterverse had hoped it would), or (more likely) a largely mediocre production on par with last year’s The Sound of Music Live!, or turned out to be a tour de force for Christopher Walken’s Captain Hook, as he steamrolled over everything in his path, especially poor Allison Williams as Peter Pan.

But I never saw this coming: a Peter Pan Live! that was quite good — much better than its promos indicated, and certainly a marked improvement on all fronts from Sound of Music Live! — save for one confounding performance: Walken’s.

I knew Walken would be the night’s wild card, but usually he’s the one who saves shows, not sabotages them. Not this time. The actor seemed to have skipped most of his rehearsals, opting instead to simply wing his way through the performance. Save for a few vintage Walken moments — tap dancing during “Vengeance,” snarling “Hoist up the children!” late in the production and finally showing some verve during “Captain Hook’s Waltz” — he was in a completely different show than his costars. At times he seemed lost in his own world, mouthing his lines and marking his steps, as if not realizing this was the actual performance, and not just a run-though. During his climatic swordfight with Peter, he could barely be bothered to lift his saber.

What a waste of Walken. Where was the performance we all expected from the man who spectacularly danced — and flew, Peter Pan-like — his way through “Weapon of Choice”?

Instead, in the night’s biggest surprise, Williams was the one who took charge and carried Peter Pan on her elevated shoulders. She was an immediate upgrade from last year’s non-actress lead, Carrie Underwood, and deftly handled the technically grueling role — at times, she was singing, flying and flipping head over heels, all at once. And unlike her Girls counterpart Marnie, she sang with gusto. (Sadly, her bizarre fishnet and spandex costume was never explained.)

The cast’s other standouts included Christian Borle, as Hook’s sidekick Smee, who helped camouflage Walken’s fogginess while pulling double duty as the Darling clan’s father, George. If only he had played Hook instead! And Kelli O’Hara was her usual powerhouse self as Mrs. Darling (sorry, no first name for you!).

Aside from Williams, the real star of the evening was the production’s ambitious, superior technical design. The set was a marvel, and showcased lovingly with confident camera movement that was a substantial improvement over the previous year’s pedestrian work. (As an added bonus, the sound issues that plagued The Sound of Music were also eradicated.) Cameras swooped and soared like Peter himself, and even got right in the center of some numbers to interact with the cast. Equally impressive were the live CGI effects, notably Tinkerbell. And the flying scenes were executed without a hitch.

Yet there are still more improvements to be made before next year’s live special. The awkward, abrupt cuts to commercial (and particularly in the last hour, there were a lot of them) made AMC’s Mad Men transitions look downright professional.

The cast (Walken aside) and crew’s outstanding work exposed the production’s biggest flaw: its problematic book. While producers rewrote and excised Peter Pan’s most cringeworthy sections (involving the Indians on the island, who were reconceived into a “tribe” that appeared to be refugees from Duran Duran’s “Rio” video), they didn’t do enough cutting and trimming.

The show dragged at three hours, easily one hour too long. Much of Peter Pan’s story is just plain weird: a stranger abducts three children and forces one of them to mother him and his friends, Wendy keeps coming on to Peter (she can’t take the hint that he’s just not into her), Hook spanks Peter, and the least menacing pirates in history are too busy incessantly dancing with one other to accomplish anything even remotely dastardly. Then in the end, Peter ditches Wendy for a younger model. He is all grown up, after all!

Still, the show somehow pulled it off. I believed a boy could fly, I believed in fairies, I believed that Allison Williams did better than anyone would have expected and I believed that NBC learned its lessons from last year’s production. Congratulations, NBC, you have plenty to crow about.

#TBT: Long Before Peter Pan, TV Promos Were Promising ‘Anything Can Happen’ on Live Shows

er-live

It’s Thursday, which means that it’s time for my weekly Adweek Throwback Thursday column. In honor of tonight’s Peter Pan Live! (which could turn out to be as big of a disaster as the fishnet and spandex that makes up Allison Williams’ Peter Pan costume), I revisited promos from various live programs, including my favorite “live” promo, for ER’s live episode in 1997.

As I wrote,

The show was at its creative peak, and this fantastic promo captured all its glory. Old episode footage was filmed as it played on a monitor, setting a dramatic, nail-biting tone punctuated by ace voiceover work from maestro Don LaFontaine.

See, “anything can happen. Anything!” (Quick question: Is the “Oh My God!” you hear in this clip the same one used in every single ER promo, or did they actually record a new one each time?) Alas, the episode itself was a dramatic dud, but the promo had more than done its job.

I also unearthed promos from 30 Rock’s (second) live episode, a long-forgotten Jon Lovitz Fox special from 1992, and 2008’s so-awful-it-can-never-be-forgotten Rosie Live.

#TBT: Long Before Peter Pan, TV Promos Were Promising ‘Anything Can Happen’ on Live Shows

Nielsen: Audiences are Moving Away From Traditional TV

Total_Audience-Report

Nielsen has a lump of coal for the Christmas stockings of each network: it released new data today showing that consumers are continuing to move away from traditional TV viewing in favor of increased time-shifting, streaming video and sites like Netflix.

In its latest quarterly Total Audience Report, which examines viewing statistics among US audiences in the third quarter, Nielsen revealed that the average adult now spends 141:19 (all times in hours: minutes) per month watching traditional TV, down 5:42 from Q3 last year (147:01). Meanwhile, the time spent watching time-shifted TV has increased to 14:20, from 13:12 last year.

“While we are not seeing a departure from media content consumption, we do see a shift in consumer behavior and today we see a resounding growth in consumption on digital platforms,” wrote Dounia Turrill, Nielsen’s senior vice president of insights.

But the biggest growth in the past year was Internet video viewing, a category which includes Netflix and YouTube. That jumped just over four minutes per month, to 10:42 (from 6:41 in Q3 2013). Video consumption via smartphone was on the rise as well, increasing 21 minutes per month to 1:46 (from last year’s 1:25).

Nielsen also broke down how the average adult spends their day (all times in hours: minutes).

Total_Audience-Report Q3 2014

In total, adults now spend 10:50 per day engaging with some kind of media, up from 10:28 in Q3 2013 and 10:20 in Q3 2012. In other words, if you make the content, we will make the time to consume it.

Combined with this summer’s revelations about how we watch TV now and how we watch TV on the internet, these Nielsen statistics are the latest evidence of how rapidly our viewing habits have shifted.

“The growing penetration of new devices and the popularity of subscription- based streaming services, time-shifted and over-the-top viewing — as well as cord-cutting and cord shaving — are fundamentally changing the TV industry,” wrote Turrill.

So much, in fact, that Nielsen can’t keep up. “Media companies, digital players and measurement are at a crossroad,” wrote Turrill. “Content remains king and consumers are steering their own content discovery experience.”

Can NBC Create Another Real-Time Sensation With Peter Pan Live?

peter-pan-live

At Adweek, I had a terrific chat with NBC Entertainment chairman Robert Greenblatt, who admitted that he went to bed last Dec. 5, after watching The Sound of Music Live!, he was steeling himself for low ratings the next morning.

“I was thinking, ‘I’m praying for a 2 rating, because I could defend a 2,'” he told Adweek. “And then I thought, ‘Oh God, I could probably spin a 1.7 or 1.8 to probably being almost a 2.’ I really was hoping it would be a 2.”

Instead, the final 18-49 rating was almost triple that number, which is why Greenblatt is doubling down this year, with Peter Pan Live! Greenblatt talked with me about why Sound of Music ended up being so success, his other plans for live TV on NBC and which musicals he is — and isn’t — considering putting on the air going forward.

Can NBC Create Another Real-Time Sensation With Peter Pan Live? 

Welcome to TV & Not TV!

logo-just-phone

Hello, and thanks for finding me! I’m Jason Lynch, and welcome to my new site, TV & Not TV.

I write about television for so many outlets — sometimes four different ones in a single week (these days, you’re most likely to find my work at Adweek, Quartz and The Daily Beast, though I’ve previously written for Parade, The A.V. Club and several others). But unless you follow me on Twitter, there hasn’t been a way to keep track of all my stories.

Until now. I created TV & Not TV to compile my coverage of all things TV — and more — from my various outlets. Here you’ll find all my television and entertainment stories from the past two years. No matter how you watch/stream TV these days, here’s everything you need to know.

I expect that the majority of content here will be summarizing (and linking to) my stories for other outlets, but there will be some original pieces here as well. Be sure to follow me on Twitter, as well as the TV & Not TV Twitter feed and Facebook page, to make sure you don’t miss a thing!

I know it seems strange to be welcoming you to a site that already has almost 200 posts stretching back to last year, but I’ve been busy writing and backdating posts so you can now sort all of my stories and media appearances by outlet and topic. I’ve even compiled my favorite pieces. While I think I’ve caught almost all of the glitches, if you notice anything that needs fixing, please let me know.

Also, a big thank you goes out to Bill Kalpakoglou at VisionSpark for doing such a terrific job designing the site.

We now return you to your regularly scheduled programming….

#TBT: A Look Back at TV’s Must-Watch Thanksgiving Promo Leftovers

deniro-crystal-turkey

I put Throwback Thursday on hold this week for something more holiday-appropriate: Throwback Thanksgiving! I reached beyond the usual TV promos for this week’s Adweek #TBT column, because this 2001 ad with Robert De Niro dressed as a pilgrim and Billy Crystal as a turkey was too good to resist:

I unearthed plenty of other bizarre Thanksgiving promos from over the years, including ones featuring Jay Leno and “Weird Al” Yankovic. Happy Thanksgiving!

#TBT: A Look Back at TV’s Must-Watch Thanksgiving Promo Leftovers

Why Broadcast TV is So Thankful for Thanksgiving

macy-parade

No matter what your Thanksgiving plans are tomorrow, chances are you’ll be spending at least part of the day in front of a TV. As I wrote at Adweek,

Macy’s iconic parade and three Turkey Day football games ranked among the 30 most-watched network programs last fall. The whole holiday has become a testament to the drawing power of live TV—and captive audiences—as friends and families gather for the meal and end up riveted to their TV sets all day long.

I also spoke with Brad Lachman, who is executive producing his 21st Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, about the program’s enduring appeal, and why it had its highest ratings ever last year.

Why Broadcast TV is So Thankful for Thanksgiving