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- <text id=94TT0080>
- <title>
- Jan. 24, 1994: The Arts & Media:Television
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 24, 1994 Ice Follies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 60
- Television
- Return Of The Slugger
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After a respite from Hollywood, programming whiz Brandon Tartikoff
- swings for the fences again
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--Reported by Jeffrey Ressner/Los Angeles and William Tynan/Orlando
- </p>
- <p> Don and Ann Ballinger have been married for 50 years. For 46
- of them, they haven't said a word to each other. That, at least,
- is the "true" story being re-enacted for the TV cameras on this
- particular afternoon in a rented house near Orlando, Florida.
- </p>
- <p> "Louis, will you please tell your father to pass the pastry?"
- says the actress playing Ann, seated at the dining-room table.
- Louis, their middle-age son, obliges: "Dad, will you please
- pass the pastries to Mom?" Dad picks up the pastry dish and,
- smiling, gently places it next to his wife.
- </p>
- <p> Brandon Tartikoff watches from a cramped seat against the window.
- Wearing Reeboks, an open sport shirt and a Boris-and-Natasha
- wristwatch, he is an easygoing but focused presence. After a
- few rehearsals of the scene, he huddles quietly with director
- Hannah Hempstead. For the next run-through, the husband picks
- up the pastry tray without a smile and drops it abruptly in
- front of his wife.
- </p>
- <p> "If he just plops it down," says Tartikoff, "we'll get a laugh."
- </p>
- <p> They'd better. The show, Weekly World News (based on the supermarket
- tabloid of the same name), teeters precariously between sensationalism
- and spoof. It is one of those high-concept, high-wire acts that
- Tartikoff was known for at NBC, like the "MTV Cops" that eventually
- became Miami Vice (big hit), or the crime fighter who could
- transform himself into a jungle beast in Manimal (big bomb).
- Weekly World News, a proposed series for CBS that will air for
- two episodes this spring, is as good a show as any to serve
- notice to the TV world that Brandon Tartikoff is back.
- </p>
- <p> Few doubted he would return. As NBC Entertainment president
- for 11 1/2 years, Tartikoff was probably the most influential
- and broadly successful TV programmer of the 1980s. He guided
- NBC from last to first in the ratings, overseeing such hits
- as The Cosby Show, The A-Team, Cheers and L.A. Law. Later he
- was named chairman of Paramount Pictures, but he abruptly resigned
- in October 1992 after just 18 months on the job. The reasons,
- he insists, were strictly personal: on New Year's Day 1991 he
- and his daughter had been severely injured in a car accident
- near Lake Tahoe. Tartikoff, who sustained a broken pelvis, recovered
- fully, but Calla, then 8, suffered brain damage. Tartikoff and
- his wife Lilly moved with her to New Orleans for rehabilitative
- therapy, and Tartikoff said he needed to be with the family
- full time.
- </p>
- <p> Away from the Hollywood power-breakfast scene, Tartikoff struck
- out on his own road to recovery. First he produced shows for
- New Orleans TV, among them a quiz program called N.O. It Alls,
- which he hopes to adapt for other cities. As his daughter's
- condition has improved, he has plunged back into his old world,
- this time as seller rather than buyer. "Anybody who has been
- in a position of power for 14 years," he observes, "says no
- far more often than he gets to say yes. And people remember
- those nos. I'm sure there are a lot of people who would be glad
- to see me under an overpass with a cardboard sign that says,
- WILL CREATE SHOWS FOR FOOD."
- </p>
- <p> Tartikoff, 45, won't exactly be panhandling next week at the
- annual convention of the National Association of Television
- Program Executives. He will be peddling Last Call, a new late-night
- talk show featuring a panel of journalists and critics (among
- them former Esquire editor Terry McDonell, entertainment critic
- Elvis Mitchell and London Times correspondent Sue Ellicott)
- discussing the day's news. Designed as a sort of hip McLaughlin
- Group, the pilot looks more like an MTV remedial class for the
- news-impaired (after trading quips about Michael Jackson, these
- hang-loose journalists scoot over to a pool table for a couple
- of shots before the commercial).
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the fate of Last Call, Tartikoff will be just about
- everywhere next season. "To use a baseball metaphor [as he
- does repeatedly], I have a slugging percentage of about .600,"
- he says. "For every 10 things I've brought to market, six of
- them will end up in homes." Some have unusual venues. He is
- developing two shows for PBS: a 13-week comedy series starring
- offbeat stage performer Steven Banks, and Under New Management,
- a Coronation Street-style serial with topical humor, set in
- a New Orleans restaurant-bar. For CBS he is producing Nashville
- X's and O's, a nighttime soap about the lives of ex-wives of
- country singers. ABC has ordered The Gospel According to St.
- Ann, a four-hour mini-series starring Ann-Margret as a self-made
- sports mogul. For NBC he is developing a Tom Clancy mini-series
- and several sitcoms, including a comic version of Hush Hush,
- Sweet Charlotte and a Love, American Style with animals.
- </p>
- <p> This eclectic slate has the Brandon brand: audacious, often
- innovative, sometimes tacky, always commercial. This was the
- man who could nurture a "quality" show such as Hill Street Blues
- while singing the praises of Punky Brewster. "He has an absolute
- disdain for anything intellectual," says one less-than-admiring
- colleague. "He'd rather eat hamburger than steak." Yet in a
- world of slick network suits, Tartikoff has always been one
- of the most articulate, thoughtful and candid programmers around.
- </p>
- <p> He is also one of the most tenacious. Tartikoff has survived
- two bouts of Hodgkin's disease; in 1982 he underwent a year
- of chemotherapy while continuing to run NBC programming. His
- car accident served merely to emphasize again where his priorities
- lay. "I don't know how many times a person has to be clobbered
- over the head to be reminded of what's important in life and
- what's not important," he says.
- </p>
- <p> At Paramount he had to face another jarring life experience:
- failure, or something very close to it. Both Tartikoff and his
- bosses insist his resignation was voluntary, but his record
- was mixed at best. Though his tenure was too short to judge
- definitively, many of the movies he was most associated with
- (Coneheads, Leap of Faith, the low-budget holiday comedy All
- I Want for Christmas) were box-office disappointments.
- </p>
- <p> Tartikoff admits that he occasionally clashed with his superiors
- at Paramount, Stanley Jaffe and Martin Davis. "I didn't realize
- just how spoiled I had been during my last six years at NBC.
- Nobody contested my decisions, my choices, the schemes that
- I was up to. It was a little unsettling ((at Paramount)) to
- have to go up the hall every time I had to spend what some might
- regard as a considerable amount of money."
- </p>
- <p> Tartikoff's latest career move was actually in the works three
- years ago. Just before his accident, Tartikoff says, he was
- making plans to leave NBC and form his own production company.
- First the accident and then the offer from Paramount delayed
- the scenario. Now he talks excitedly about creating a broad-based
- production company. Says he: "I want buyers to look at Brandon
- Tartikoff not as a producer but as a studio."
- </p>
- <p> "For the first time in his life, he can let his creative instincts
- lead him and show results," says CBS Entertainment president
- Jeff Sagansky, who worked under Tartikoff at NBC. "I haven't
- seen him this comfortable ever before." Another former protege,
- NBC Entertainment president Warren Littlefield, says Tartikoff
- seems "back in touch with the things he likes to do--roll
- up his sleeves and really have a voice in the creative process."
- </p>
- <p> He is also back in touch with the Hollywood hurly-burly he abandoned
- 13 months ago. Tartikoff plans to keep his New Orleans base
- but expects to spend about 10 days a month in Los Angeles. Except
- for occasional visits to his old Saturday-morning softball game
- at a high school field in Brentwood, his L.A. sojourns are practically
- all work. "I have triple breakfasts and 18-hour days," he says.
- "What I've learned is that if you're organized enough and you're
- compulsive enough, you can make your 10 days count for 25 days
- of a normal person." Tartikoff at double speed: Hollywood may
- be used to it, but this sounds like a story for Weekly World
- News.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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