The Niagara Falls Review

A beaming 50 Cent and tough questions from the TV critics

Reporter delighted rapper by calling him a new Quincy Jones

- LYNN ELBER

BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. — After the TV industry unveils its newseason schedules and series to advertiser­s in New York each May, it takes the show on the road.

Destinatio­n: A swank Southern California hotel ballroom.

The aim: To coax attention from television-centric news reporters and critics.

The annual summer meeting of the Television Critics Associatio­n, with series screenings and more than 100 Q&A sessions held over the past two weeks with platoons of stars, producers and executives, is akin to a crash course in upcoming small screen fare.

Here are highlights from the event held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, famous as home to the Golden Globes ceremony but doing less glamorous duty as a makeshift conference room.

Stars, unscripted

Some actors get by very well on their own wits, even when faced with a roomful of some 200 occasional­ly grumpy reporters and a barrage of unpredicta­ble questions.

Make that actresses, in particular.

“As you’re working with the kids, did it inspire you to write any new material?” was a query directed to Tiffany Haddish, host of ABC’s reality show reboot, “Kids Say the Darndest Things.”

“Yes. And take my birth control,” replied Haddish.

Sitcom veteran Patricia Heaton (“The Middle,” “Everybody Loves Raymond”) was charmingly self-deprecatin­g about her role as a late-in-life medical intern on CBS’s new “Carol’s Second Act.”

“I kept saying to (the producers), ‘I don’t think people will really believe I’m in my 50s, right? Do I need to do grey in my hair?’ They’re like, ‘No. You don’t need to do anything,’” said Heaton, after cheerfully pegging her age as 61.

Tracee Ellis Ross, producer of a “Black-ish” prequel about her character, Bow, and her unconventi­onal parents, was asked what elements of ABC’s new “Mixed-ish” reflect her own life. “None,” she replied. “Not a single thing?” probed the questioner.

“I did not grow up on a commune,” replied Ross. “I have way more siblings than Bow Johnson has. I am not a doctor. My mom is not a lawyer.”

At that point, “Mixed-ish” cast member Tika Sumpter jumped in to play foil, asking, “Who’s your mom?”

“Mariah Carey,” shot back Ross, daughter of Diana Ross. (Carey, however, does the “Mixed-ish” theme song.)

A compliment for 50 Cent

“There is no end to this,” rapper, actor and “Power” executive producer Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson said when asked what he wants to accomplish next.

That inspired one reporter to label him this generation’s Quincy Jones, the legendary musician and producer.

Jackson promptly stepped away from his fellow panellists and made a beeline toward the journalist.

“That is a really big compliment. Take a picture of me and her,” a delighted Jackson commanded a photograph­er.

“I’ve heard a lot of things about myself. I’ve never heard ‘the new Quincy Jones.’ That was a good one.”

Courtney Kemp, “Power” creator and executive producer, couldn’t resist teasing Jackson.

“That’s great. We’ll see how Quincy Jones feels about it,” she said, smiling.

Getting serious

Most outlets were willing to put their programmin­g chiefs in front of reporters — NBC was an exception — and they did their best to stick to touting past successes and next season’s hopedfor hits.

But they were pressed on substantiv­e offscreen issues as well, including misconduct claims that loom especially large in the #MeToo era.

Executives’ responses fell within carefully scripted boundaries but proved revealing nonetheles­s.

Asked about sexual misconduct and racism allegation­s levelled by “The Rookie” co-star Afton Williams at crew members, ABC Entertainm­ent president Karey Burke said the network was withholdin­g judgment until an investigat­or, retained by series producer Entertainm­ent One, had completed its work.

Could waiting for the findings allow potential problems on other shows to go unchecked?

Burke’s answer was to reiterate that ABC doesn’t produce “The Rookie,” and to highlight a safeguard apparently already in place when the misconduct alleged by Williamson occurred.

“We have an HR partner that is available to every one of our shows, and I would hope that if there were any ongoing situations that someone on that set would feel comfortabl­e going to the HR partner on that show,” she said.

CBS executives were asked about their renewal of “Bull” despite actress Eliza Dusku’s claim that she was openly harassed by star Michael Weatherly on the set and then fired by executive producer Glenn Gordon Caron after complainin­g. She received a $9.5 million settlement.

Weatherly and Caron are receiving “leadership coaching,” CBS Entertainm­ent president Kelly Kahl replied, without expanding on what that meant.

He later cited Weatherly’s continued audience appeal despite the allegation­s, and the show’s success.

“It’s a popular show that we want to keep on our air ... and it’s a very good show, as well,” Kahl said.

Ratings, so old school

Broadcaste­rs and cable channels dependent on commercial sales routinely make their audience numbers public.

Streaming services don’t operate that way.

Some selectivel­y release viewership tallies, such as Netflix’s impressive (if not independen­tly verified) claim in July that 40 million people watched the season-three opener of “Stranger Things” over four days.

Amazon Studios head Jennifer Salke isn’t following suit for her platform’s series, including the Emmy-winning “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”

It wouldn’t be germane to the business model, she said, with its focus on the roughly 100 million Amazon Prime “customers.”

“We have a very unique business in the sense that our entire north star is to entertain and delight Prime customers all over the world ... We’re not in the volume business. We’re in the curated business,” Salke said.

 ?? RICH FURY GETTY IMAGES ?? Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson of ‘Power’ speaks during the Starz segment of the Summer 2019 Television Critics Associatio­n Press Tour on July 26.
RICH FURY GETTY IMAGES Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson of ‘Power’ speaks during the Starz segment of the Summer 2019 Television Critics Associatio­n Press Tour on July 26.
 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO THE ASSOCIAATE­D PRESS ?? Patricia Heaton and Kyle MacLachlan, cast members in the CBS series “Carol’s Second Act,” share the stage during the Summer 2019 Television Critics Associatio­n Press Tour.
CHRIS PIZZELLO THE ASSOCIAATE­D PRESS Patricia Heaton and Kyle MacLachlan, cast members in the CBS series “Carol’s Second Act,” share the stage during the Summer 2019 Television Critics Associatio­n Press Tour.

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