The Mercury News

Streaming services bring comfort with old TV faves

- By CNN

Nick Offerman never knew he was part of a TV juggernaut.

“We were never a hit; it’s one of the huge misconcept­ions about the show,” he tells CNN, reflecting on his seven years playing curmudgeon­ly government official Ron Swanson on the NBC comedy “Parks and Recreation.”

“We were a critical darling ... but for some reason we didn’t catch on with the fast food crowd,” Offerman adds of the show, which is returning next week for a one-off special to benefit COVID-19 relief efforts. “We remained a Reuben sandwich. We never crossed over and became a Mcdonald cheeseburg­er.”

But long after it aired, the show’s become a Big Mac.

“Across history, we know a great many artists in every field who died penniless and uncelebrat­ed, and then later on people said, ‘Oh, this Beethoven stuff is not half bad,’” he said. “It’s just wonderful that the advent of streaming services have allowed our show, which was more of a culty sensation, to reach a much wider audience.”

Old TV has never been more fashionabl­e, and “Parks and Rec” is one of a small clutch of shows from the 2000s and early 2010s to achieve levels of success unthinkabl­e during their original runs.

Despite a wealth of new, expensive original programmin­g to compete with, it was the ninth most-watched show on Netflix at the end of 2019, according to an image shared by media strategist Scott Lazerson at October’s Wall Street Journal Tech Live conference. (Netflix is known to guard its viewing figures).

Topping the list was one if its contempora­ries, “The Office,” which also came from the minds of creators Michael Schur and Greg Daniels. “Friends” was in second place, a full 15 years after its final episode aired, and other mature programs, such as “Grey’s Anatomy” and “NCIS,” were in the top five.

Many of those shows are in the process of being pried away by new upstart streaming services; “The Office,” which was streamed for about 52 billion minutes in 2018 according to Nielsen data referenced by NBC in a news release, will move to that network’s own service next year, while the rights to “Friends” and an accompanyi­ng reunion special are the crown jewel of HBO Max, which launches next month.

Meanwhile, there are popular podcasts dedicated to “The Office” and “Scrubs,” hosted by their stars, while other cast members from the group of shows are stalwarts in Hollywood summer blockbuste­rs.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The hits keep coming for old TV shows and their actors, including Jennifer Aniston (“Friends”), left, Nick Offerman and Amy Poehler (“Parks and Recreation”) and Steve Carell (“The Office”). Some of the reruns are outperform­ing current big-money projects.
GETTY IMAGES The hits keep coming for old TV shows and their actors, including Jennifer Aniston (“Friends”), left, Nick Offerman and Amy Poehler (“Parks and Recreation”) and Steve Carell (“The Office”). Some of the reruns are outperform­ing current big-money projects.

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