The Telegram (St. John's)

Space Force lifts off

And creator Greg Daniels is over the moon

- GREG KNIGHTS

Most creators of television would be happy to get one show to air. This month, Greg Daniels has two.

The man behind King of the Hill, the American reboot of The Office and the political satire Parks and Recreation is also creator, producer and occasional director of Upload, an Amazon series in which a terminally injured man uploads his consciousn­ess into a virtual afterlife. Its 10 episodes debuted May 1, and it’s already been picked up for a second season.

Daniels’ other new release is Space Force, the highly anticipate­d Netflix comedy starring Steve Carell as General Mark Naird, tapped to head the new, sixth branch of the U.S. armed forces that the president created, seemingly on a whim, in March of 2018. The cast includes John Malkovich as a Strangelov­ian scientist, Ben Schwartz from Parks & Rec as the force’s social media director, and Diana Silvers as the general’s daughter. The first 10 episodes are available on May 29.

“I’ve been working on Upload since 2014,” Daniels says when asked about the coincidenc­e of storming two streaming services at once. “They both happened to come out in the same month, which is crazy.”

Space Force, like its realworld namesake, came together rather more quickly. Daniels and Carell had been kicking around ideas for a workplace comedy when Netflix producer Blair Fetter suggested something around Space Force.

“Immediatel­y I was picturing him as a general,” Daniels recalls. “And it felt good because he’s a person of great integrity but also who sees the humorous side of things. And he’s the most gifted comic actor you could ever ask for. We started pitching out very funny backstorie­s and scenes immediatel­y, and the ideas flowed very easily.”

With little else to go on but a name – the actual Space Force wasn’t officially founded until December 2019 – Daniels neverthele­ss dove into research. “I got the Air Force handbook and we read that. We visited Spacex a couple of times and talked to their engineers and the president of that company.”

They also hired Peter Marquez, former Space Policy Director in the Bush and Obama administra­tions, as their space advisor. Bobby Telatovich, a former Navy officer, joined the crew as a writers’ assistant, and also got a character named after him – Alex Sparrow plays Yuri “Bobby” Telatovich, a dodgy Russian “observer” at the base.

Daniels didn’t let the possible activities of the real Space Force concern him. “We’re treating it like we had the same jumping-off point, but this is the slightly parallel universe version of Space Force,” he says. “The point of our show is character comedy, and kind of a what-if situation of trying to imagine what it would be like for the general who has taken on this very audacious and implausibl­e goal of boots on the moon by 2024. It seemed like he would be a character who was over his depth, outside his comfort zone, and that would be funny for Steve to play.”

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