Gulf News

HOW ‘TED LASSO’ BECAME A FEEL-GOOD FAVOURITE

Series became a hit years after Jason Sudeikis debuted the character in sports promos

- By Bethonie Butler

Ted Lasso, the beloved Apple TV Plus series about a plucky American football coach tapped to helm a different kind of football team across the pond, had a championsh­ip showing at the Emmy Awards last week.

The show’s freshman season won several major awards including best comedy series and best lead comedy actor, which went to star Jason Sudeikis.

Ted Lasso was nominated for a whopping 20 awards going into the Emmy ceremony but didn’t pull off the historic sweep that found Schitt’s Creek winning all seven major on-air comedy awards at last year’s Emmys. (The Television Academy also really liked ‘Hacks’, the critically acclaimed HBO series starring Jean Smart. It was Smart who took home the Emmy for best actress in a comedy, and Hacks also picked up this year’s comedy writing and directing awards.) But Hannah Waddingham, who plays the owner of the team Lasso takes on, won best supporting actress in a comedy, and Brett Goldstein, who plays potty-mouthed footballer Roy Kent, won the trophy for best supporting actor.

The accolades are fitting for Ted Lasso, itself an underdog of sorts, having become a fan (and critic) favourite after debuting to little fanfare on Apple TV Plus last year. The series arrived on the platform seven years after Sudeikis first debuted the character — in a series of NBC Sports promos.

Here’s everything you need to know about Ted Lasso’s journey to becoming a viral hit.

In 2013, NBC Sports tapped Sudeikis, fresh off a 10-year run on Saturday Night Live, to help the network promote its stateside coverage of England’s Premier League. The concept revolved around an American football coach hired to run an elite soccer, er, football team despite not knowing the basic rules of the game.

“Football is football no matter where you play it,” Sudeikis said in a news conference scene in the promo, which the New York Times noted had “been viewed nearly three million times on YouTube” ahead of the network’s coverage debut. That was around the same time that Eli and Peyton Manning garnered “two million views within 24 hours,” as reported by the Wall Street Journal, for an American football-themed rap video.

A year later, Lasso was out of a job — at least in the Premier League — as NBC Sports rolled out a promo featuring the charming coach recounting his experience in London and sharing footage of his new gig: the St. Catherine’s Fighting Owls (“Whooo? The fighting owls”), an all-girl Little League team.

Sudeikis teamed up with Scrubs creator Bill Lawrence to create Ted Lasso the series, which landed on Apple TV Plus nine months after the streaming service’s debut and — eventually — became the platform’s first real hit. In the series, Lasso coaches a team called AFC Richmond but his knowledge of soccer is as limited as it was in those NBC promos. At a news conference in the series pilot, Lasso mistakenly refers to the game’s “quarters” before a journalist reminds him that there are halves in soccer.

The show found early fans through the same type of word of mouth-following Schitt’s Creek enjoyed in its early Pop TV days, but it wasn’t until this year that the series lost its underdog status. The sweet show’s profile only grew amid widespread isolation and grief during the pandemic, and Sudeikis took home the best actor trophy at the Golden Globes in March. (And as it turns out, soccer players like the show, too.) Now in its second season, ‘Ted Lasso’ has already been renewed for a third. If you’ve heard nothing else about Ted Lasso, you’ve heard that he is super nice. Critics have both praised and debated the show’s earnest brand of humour, but there’s no denying its influence: The show won a Peabody Award last year for “offering the perfect counter to the enduring prevalence of toxic masculinit­y, both on-screen and off, in a moment when the nation truly needs inspiring models of kindness.”

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 ?? ?? From left: Nick Mohammed, Jason Sudeikis, and Brendan Hunt in ‘Ted Lasso.’
From left: Nick Mohammed, Jason Sudeikis, and Brendan Hunt in ‘Ted Lasso.’
 ?? ?? The cast and their crew of with awards in the virtual pressroom.
The cast and their crew of with awards in the virtual pressroom.

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