Orlando Sentinel

Group thinks TV writers could help curb pandemic

- By Anousha Sakoui ABC

Neal Baer has experience changing audiences’ opinions.

The pediatrici­an turned TV writer wove public health storylines into shows like “ER” as part of a campaign to popularize the use of designated drivers to reduce drunken driving. Now, he and others in Hollywood have enlisted medical experts to help them persuade viewers to mask up and get vaccinated against COVID19. The aim is to encourage writers and showrunner­s to address the subject matter in their characters and storylines — without hitting viewers over the head with the message.

“That’s what we do as writers, we have our characters persuade each other all the time,” Baer said during a workshop for members of the Writers Guild of America.

The Harvard Medical School graduate moderated a discussion with health communicat­ions experts about research into the motivation­s of those resistant to masks and vaccines and how writers can best incorporat­e these messages in their shows.

“We don’t want to lose viewers because we’re seen as preaching something or telling them what to do. We want to integrate it into our stories like it’s natural, like life,” he said.

TV shows such as “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Chicago Med” have already addressed the pandemic in their storylines. In one clip of ABC’s “black-ish” shown during the Zoom-based WGA discussion, Tracee Ellis Ross’ character comedicall­y tries to stop her neighbors gathering and hugging outside her home. “They don’t believe it’s real,” she says, banging on

Writers on ABC’s “black-ish” integrated scenes that addressed the pandemic. her window. Baer cited these as successful examples of how the pandemic can be integrated into shows.

The pro bono campaign, titled “Be a Protector,” is organized by USC Annenberg’s Hollywood Health & Society program, health experts from the University of Michigan and Yale and the Los Angeles entertainm­ent industry consulting firm Cultique. It is targeting showrunner­s, writers, agents, performers and TV industry executives.

It is not the first time Hollywood has had a role in spreading public safety messages to film and TV watchers. In the 1980s shows such as “The Cosby Show” and “Cheers” were used to convey safety tips as part of a national campaign to prevent drunken driving. TV writers have previously been enlisted to stop glamorizin­g smoking.

And in the political arena, NBC’s “Will & Grace” has been credited with shifting public approval of gay marriage.

The film and television industry itself has been hard-hit by the pandemic, with hundreds of thousands losing work due to production shutdowns and closures of theaters and theme parks.

“There has been a huge investment financiall­y into COVID-19 protocols,” said Linda Ong, CEO of consultanc­y Cultique, which helped launch the initiative. “That investment is only going to pay off if we pay attention to what is going on the screen. If people want to get back to production faster and stay in production ... then it is in our best interests to normalize this behavior.

“We are not looking for a very special episode, we are looking to normalize it.”

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