Windsor Star

Glenn Gordon Caron’s on the case

New showrunner wants viewers to get to know Bull’s characters better

- MELISSA HANK

Talk about a trial by fire. When Glenn Gordon Caron was tapped as a showrunner for TV’s crime drama Bull, the series was already establishe­d as a hit.

After it debuted, it became one of the top new series of the 2016-17 season. Michael Weatherly, a fan-favourite on CBS’s drama NCIS, was successful­ly reinventin­g himself on Bull as a trial consultant loosely based on Phil McGraw, before he became Dr. Phil.

What’s more, in an act of faith, CBS renewed the show just after it brought in Caron as a consultant, with only a couple of months of new episodes left before he officially became the showrunner in season 2. His job was simply to avoid messing things up. Ahead of Tuesday’s première on Global and CBS, Caron spoke about making the show his own, the big-name guest stars ahead and his signature series, Moonlighti­ng.

Q Have you ever served on a jury yourself ?

A No, I’ve come awfully close — it seems like they call me every year.

Q It seems you would shake things up on a jury, seeing behind all the mind games and psychology.

A Not at all! I’m learning along with everyone else, but I have excellent help. Dr. Phil owned a trial science company and pretty much invented the whole idea of trial science, and he has all sorts of amazing stories to tell and theories of human behaviour.

Q How will season 2 compare to season 1?

A My marching orders were to make it more character driven. Perhaps a slightly different relationsh­ip between the case and the people. I think early on, because trial science was so new and different, the instinct was let’s do a procedural kind of story, and obviously it worked. The show’s wildly popular. But then people started to wonder could it be even richer and better if we spent some of that time getting to know the people who work at Trial Analysis Corporatio­n better?

The first three episodes that I worked on coincided with an arc that had been sketched in, involving a woman named J.P. Nunnelly (Eliza Dushku), an attorney who seeks out Bull’s help, and it’s a three-episode relationsh­ip. My giant fear was that people would look at those three and say “Well, this is just a different show.” But they didn’t. So we’re doing more of that this year — using the stories and trials to help us explore the lives of the people who work at TAC.

Q Who are some of the guest stars coming up?

A On the season première, we’re bringing back Diana (Jill Flint), who was kind of a fan favourite. Minka Kelly joins us as well in the première.

We have a big guest star on our fourth episode, Brad Garrett. And then a little further down the road, we just closed the deal to have Archie Panjabi, from The Good Wife. We’ve got a lot to be excited about.

Q You created Moonlighti­ng, which is known for the romantic tension between the leads. With that in mind, how will Bull and J.P.’s relationsh­ip progress romantical­ly?

A When you watch the last episode from the first season, there’s that sense of two people saying, “We need to take a break.” She’s incapable of trusting him, and the relationsh­ip dissolves. He’s sitting and reading the paper and she takes off. That isn’t to say she won’t be back. But I don’t think we’ll see her in the near future.

 ?? CBS ?? Michael Weatherly, left, and Eliza Dushku star in Bull, the top-rated CBS series currently being helmed by showrunner Glenn Gordon Caron.
CBS Michael Weatherly, left, and Eliza Dushku star in Bull, the top-rated CBS series currently being helmed by showrunner Glenn Gordon Caron.
 ??  ?? Glenn Gordon Caron
Glenn Gordon Caron

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