Toronto Star

Hollywood snapping up hit podcasts

Industry betting big that storytelli­ng will carry over to an older medium

- JACLYN PEISER

Film mogul Darryl F. Zanuck was among the skeptics in the years before networks started broadcasti­ng shows seven nights a week. “Television won’t be able to hold on to any market it captures after the first six months,” he infamously predicted. “People will soon get tired of staring at a plywood box every night.”

To make sure that television sets would become something more than ungainly appliances, entertainm­ent executives of the late 1940s and early 1950s went in search of programmin­g. And they found it within earshot, in radio shows like The Lone Ranger, Our Miss Brooks and Dragnet, which were among the first TV hits.

With the rise of streaming, the entertainm­ent industry is going through a similar transforma­tion. Executives at Netflix, Amazon and Apple are spending wildly for content, which has created a sense of urgency among their rivals at broadcast networks and cable channels. And like their midcentury predecesso­rs, they have been aggressive about buying up readymade programmin­g to fill their expanding slates. These days, that means podcasts.

Homecoming, the Amazon series starring Julia Roberts, is based on a fictional podcast from Gimlet Media. Bravo’s

Dirty John, with Eric Bana in the role of con man John Meehan, is based on a true crime series from the Los Angeles Times and the podcast network Wondery.

Hernan Lopez, a former Fox executive who founded Wondery, has blurred distinctio­ns between the podcasting world and Hollywood by giving his shows tag lines, trailers and advertisin­g billboards. “I set out to create a company that could build on bringing to podcasting the skill set of television and movies, both in storytelli­ng and production, as well as marketing,” he said.

Amazon’s Lore, which was recently renewed for a second season, is another one that made the transition, having started as an anthology podcast of scary, real-life tales hosted by writer Aaron Mahnke. Up and Vanished, a special that aired in November on Oxygen, was based on a podcast hosted by documentar­y filmmaker Payne Lindsey about the disappeara­nce of Tara Grinstead, a Georgia beauty pageant queen and high school teacher. The independen­t production company Propagate helped bring it to the screen.

Ben Silverman, the co-chief executive of Propagate, said podcasts make for good source material partly because their fans are not passive. “It’s a very active process to download a podcast,” said Silverman, whose company is also working on an adaptation of Sword and

Scale, a true crime podcast from Wondery. “And so we hope that fans of the podcasts are likely to be active enough to come and watch the show, once it gets produced.”

Before the spate of narrative fare, talk and variety shows made the jump from audio to TV. Comedy Bang! Bang!, which started as a radio show before it became a much-downloaded podcast, had a five-year run on IFC. Following its leap from podcast to TV were 2 Dope Queens, a series of live specials on HBO starring Jessica Williams and Phoebe Robinson, and Pod Save America, the political show, also on HBO, hosted by writer and producer Jon Lovett and three men who worked under former U.S. president Barack Obama, Jon Favreau, Dan Pfeiffer and Tommy Vietor. As podcasts have become more elaborate, with complex stories complete with cliffhange­rs, narrative reversals and subplots, the main action in adaptation­s has shifted toward scripted series.

Mindful of the trend, Gimlet hired Jenny Wall, a former Hu- lu and Netflix executive, as chief marketing officer, to help the company better navigate Hollywood. “We created an I.P. factory,” Matt Lieber, the president of Gimlet, said. “We generate a lot of stories.”

Among other shows it has in the works, Gimlet has teamed with Blumhouse Television, an arm of the company that made the film Get Out, to create a TV version of its limited-run horror podcast, The Horror of Dolores Roach. Gladiator, a podcast made by Wondery and The Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigat­ive team that focused on New England Patriots football star Aaron Hernandez, who died by suicide after being convicted of murder, is in developmen­t at FX. Other Wondery shows in the works for TV are Dr. Death, about a neurosurge­on accused of malpractic­e, and Business Wars, a series centred on corporate rivalries. Janet Leahy, a Mad Men writer, has written the Business Wars pilot.

Facebook Watch has ordered 10 episodes of Limetown, based on a fictional podcast about the disappeara­nce of 300 people at a research facility in Tennessee. Jessica Biel has signed on as an executive producer and lead actor. The podcast’s creators, Zack Akers and Skip Bronkie, are on board writers.

Director and producer Sam Raimi is part of the team aiming to make a TV series out of Tanis, a fictional horror podcast created by Terry Miles. That one is being produced by Dark Horse Entertainm­ent and Universal Cable Production­s. The same two companies are at work on an adaptation of The Bright Sessions, a sci-fi podcast created by Lauren Shippen.

Not every podcast survives the move from the intimacy of audio to the brighter, broader medium of television. The ABC sitcom Alex, Inc., based on the Gimlet podcast Start Up, lasted all of 10 episodes. But in a time of expansion, with demand outstrippi­ng supply, executives at podcast companies know they have something the entertainm­ent industry needs.

“We’ve prepared most of the meal,” said Lieber, of Gimlet. “Now you just have to put it on the table and eat.”

“We hope that fans of the podcasts are likely to be active enough to come and watch the show, once it gets produced.” BEN SILVERMAN PROPAGATE

 ?? MICHAEL BECKER BRAVO/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Eric Bana plays con man John Meehan and Connie Britton portrays Debra Newell in the retelling of a real-life tragedy in Dirty John, a true crime podcast that has been adapted into a scripted television series for Bravo.
MICHAEL BECKER BRAVO/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Eric Bana plays con man John Meehan and Connie Britton portrays Debra Newell in the retelling of a real-life tragedy in Dirty John, a true crime podcast that has been adapted into a scripted television series for Bravo.

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