Gulf News

TV’S NEW SEASONS IN JEOPARDY

Studios are trying to find ways to ease a near-complete production shutdown

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The first new TV season of the coronaviru­s era is facing an understand­ably shaky start that comes with a tacit disclaimer: No one is sure when it will arrive.

Studios, guilds and trade groups are huddling to find ways to ease a nearcomple­te production shutdown, among the nationwide efforts to curb the pandemic. While streaming services parcel out series year-round, broadcast TV still relies heavily on a September filled with fanfare and high-profile scripted shows.

How that will happen is a cliffhange­r only a masochisti­c screenwrit­er would envision.

ABC, CBS and NBC are holding back their 2020-21 schedules which, in an ordinary year, would have been unveiled earlier this month in elaborate presentati­ons to ad buyers in New York. Another broadcaste­r, CW, said it’s aiming for a January start to its new season, based on production resuming this fall.

CW’s chairman and CEO, Mark Pedowitz, was asked if even that was realistic. “As realistic as anything else is at this point,” he said.

Gabrielle Union, who with Jessica Alba stars in and produces Spectrum cable’s LA’s Finest, is among those awaiting guidance on how actors and crews can safely return to work. The police drama combines shoot’em-up action with more intimate scenes, both tests of how social distancing and story demands will coexist. “When we all are given the green light to go back, we just have to be flexible and open to this new normal, whatever that’s going to look like,” Union said.

Just four months before the September 20 Emmy Awards kick off the TV season’s traditiona­l start, the uncertaint­ies swirling around Covid-19 are daunting. Even streaming services like well-stocked Netflix or premium cable channels like HBO with fully produced new series in hand must keep a wary eye on a prolonged disruption.

Neal Baer, a physician and a veteran TV writer and producer (ER, Designated Survivor), had a succinct reply when asked if he would start a production given the unanswered questions about the disease, including whether coronaviru­s antibodies confer immunity.

“No way,” Baer said. “I’m not going to put people potentiall­y in harm’s way” given the unknowns. While the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers spearheads the broad industry effort to work with health and government officials on safety protocols, there are also what one executive called impromptu “think tanks’’ to find solutions.

Visual effects supervisor­s and producers are in high demand, Birch said, to create what can’t be filmed. Among the steps industry members say are being mulled: scenes shot with fewer actors and crew, shortened production schedules and more animated projects.

A critical issue is the insurance that covers losses due to production delays or budget overruns, said Carolyn Hunt, a veteran entertainm­ent lawyer in Los Angeles. She said virtually all policies are excluding coverage of Covid-19-related issues. “That makes things very tricky, so a lot of people are waiting to see what happens there,” Hunt said.

Meanwhile, networks are cobbling together schedules and, in true Hollywood fashion, hoping for a happy ending.

When Fox announced its autumn schedule, it included a recycled seasonone run of LA’s Finest, along with two series that the network originally intended to debut this spring, Filthy Rich starring Kim Cattrall and tech thriller neXt with John Slattery.

The reason the trio of series earned a coveted spot on a network’s fall schedule: They were in the can and ready to air. The same holds true for CW’s autumn place holder shows, including Swamp Thing, cancelled after one season on streaming and now getting a pandemic afterlife.

Movie and TV mogul Tyler Perry may be showing the way forward. His studio in Georgia, one of the first states to relax virusrelat­ed constraint­s, will resume production in July with two series for BET. Protective measures are to include testing and isolation on the Atlanta lot for cast and crew.

A secure return to work is something exciting to look forward to, said This Is Us star Mandy Moore. She and others in the NBC drama’s cast reconnecte­d with a Zoom call recently as they await word on when season-five production will begin.

“It’s the opportunit­y of all our lifetimes to be a part of this show and to do work we’re all so proud of, but we also understand there are bigger issues in the world,” Moore said.

 ?? Photos by Reuters and supplied ?? Kevin Durand and Derek Mears in ‘Swamp Thing’.
Photos by Reuters and supplied Kevin Durand and Derek Mears in ‘Swamp Thing’.
 ??  ?? Tyler Perry.
Tyler Perry.
 ??  ?? Milo Ventimigli­a and Mandy Moore in ‘This is Us’.
Milo Ventimigli­a and Mandy Moore in ‘This is Us’.
 ??  ?? Gabrielle Union and Jessica Alba in ‘LA’s Finest’.
Gabrielle Union and Jessica Alba in ‘LA’s Finest’.

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