Los Angeles Times

Funny mix of business, politics

Conan O’Brien gets a new deal, CNN discusses its role, and talk turns political.

- By Yvonne Villarreal yvonne.villarreal@latimes.com Twitter: @villarreal­y

The Turner networks upfront presentati­on Wednesday in New York was supposed to be about its new programmin­g slate. But politics, unsurprisi­ngly, took center stage.

The 90-minute presentati­on at the Theater at Madison Square Garden highlighte­d the many facets of Turner’s portfolio — which includes TBS, TNT, CNN, Adult Swim, Cartoon Network, HLN, TruTV and Turner Sports — leaving little time for a breath.

But with talent on hand, such as Samantha Bee and Anderson Cooper, the sales talk also ventured beyond the usual industry jargon.

Bee, whose weekly TBS talker “Full Frontal” has emerged as a standout in the late-night comedy arena, hit the stage and sarcastica­lly recalled the good ol’ days of last year’s event.

“Remember last May when we were all worried that Swamp Reagan — I’m sorry, I meant Ted Cruz — might capture the Republican nomination?” Bee said. “And now our former FBI director has destroyed two presidenci­es in just under six months and the House vote to repeal Obamacare was only two weeks ago — you know what? I’m going to stop myself.

“I swore a blood oath to TBS that I would try to be as nonpartisa­n as possible this morning.”

A reel with audio from several politician­s — including President Trump — questionin­g the legitimacy of the press served as an introducti­on for various CNN news personalit­ies.

“Now more than ever, our mission is clear: to find the truth, check the facts, report the story and hold people of power accountabl­e,” said Cooper, anchor of “Anderson Cooper 360.”

“The Lead” anchor Jake Tapper was more blunt. “Politician­s lie,” he said. “They have staffs and allies who lie and spin and sometimes try to confuse the public on what’s real and what’s fake. The press needs to be there and be worthy of the amendment that protects our work.”

Ultimately, the presentati­on was still a plea to advertiser­s touting the appeal of Turner networks’ accomplish­ments. Also emphasized was the serious reboot of its flagship entertainm­ent brands — TBS and TNT — spearheade­d by Turner Entertainm­ent Chief Creative Officer Kevin Reilly.

“The truth is, we’re in the process of not a refresh but a top-to-bottom rebuild of two networks that were doing pretty damn well already,” Reilly said.

The programmin­g announceme­nts included:

— TBS inking a new fouryear deal with Conan O’Brien to renew his late-night show through 2022 and extend the Team Coco brand into digital content, podcasting, gaming, pay TV and live events.

— TBS greenlight­ing three new series, including a workplace comedy, “Miracle Workers,” starring Daniel Radcliffe (the “Harry Potter” franchise) and Owen Wilson (“Wedding Crashers”) and executive produced by Lorne Michaels (“Saturday Night Live”). Filmmaker Ridley Scott (“Alien: Covenant”) will develop a night of original science-fiction programmin­g for TNT.

— Super Deluxe, Turner’s digital content venture, getting a 90-minute latenight block on TBS.

— CNN adding five new original series to its slate in 2018, including “American Heiress: The Patty Hearst Story” and “1968: The Year That Changed America.”

 ?? Evan Agostini Invision / Associated Press ?? CONAN O’BRIEN, right, with sidekick/announcer Andy Richter, has signed with TBS through 2022.
Evan Agostini Invision / Associated Press CONAN O’BRIEN, right, with sidekick/announcer Andy Richter, has signed with TBS through 2022.

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