home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1266>
- <title>
- Mar. 29, 1993: The Fact-to-Film Frenzy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 29, 1993 Yeltsin's Last Stand
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 56
- The Fact-to-Film Frenzy
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Producers and agents are moving faster than ever to turn
- sensational news stories into TV movies
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--With reporting by Joni H. Blackman/Denver,
- Georgia Harbison, William Tynan/New York and Richard
- Woodbury/Waco
- </p>
- <p> One week after the bloody federal assault on cult leader
- David Koresh's fortress in Waco, Texas, Hollywood came calling
- at the Bethesda Boys Ranch in Mounds, Oklahoma. A set man from
- Patchett Kaufman Entertainment, a TV production company, drove
- by to scout out the 160-acre ranch as a possible location.
- Three days later, a deal was struck, and last week workmen were
- at the ranch constructing a replica of Koresh's peach-colored
- compound. Soon federal agents will be surrounding the fortress
- again, staging another ill-fated assault, retreating once more
- for a long waiting game--this time for the TV-movie cameras.
- </p>
- <p> The networks' frenetic pursuit of movies-of-the-week based
- on real-life news events has ascended into the surrealistic
- stratosphere. The Koresh saga wasn't even over before its
- TV-movie doppelganger began taking shape on a movie set 300
- miles away. Casting is under way (Timothy Daly of Wings will
- play Koresh), shooting could begin in as little as two weeks,
- and NBC hopes to have the finished film on the air in May. If
- the real-life standoff is still going on, Koresh may even be
- able to watch it from his fortress to see how the story comes
- out.
- </p>
- <p> Blame it on Amy Fisher. The tabloids' favorite teen
- temptress was the subject of three network movies in December
- and January. Critics hooted in derision, but the networks had
- the last laugh: ratings for all three ranged from good to great.
- Since then, the scramble to turn sensational news events into
- juicy TV drama has gone into overdrive. In May, along with the
- Waco cult story, NBC has announced plans to air a movie based
- on the World Trade Center bombing--less than three months
- after the disaster.
- </p>
- <p> As the time lag shrinks, the money being paid for these
- stories mounts. Jim and Jennifer Stolpa, who were rescued in
- January with their infant son after eight days in a Nevada
- snowstorm, met with producers while still recovering in a
- hospital from the partial amputation of their feet. They got a
- reported $650,000 to tell their story for a CBS movie.
- </p>
- <p> The drill has become depressingly routine. A news story
- hits the evening news or one of the TV tabloid shows; then the
- agents and producers descend. Sometimes there is a bidding war
- to lock up the rights for the participants' stories. Other
- times, the public record--press accounts or court transcripts--will suffice. The point is to get something on screen fast,
- while the story is fresh in viewers' minds.
- </p>
- <p> Madelon Rosenfeld, a former criminal lawyer now working as
- an independent producer in New York City, was on the phone to
- Wilshire Court Productions in Los Angeles just hours after the
- World Trade Center bombing. Her proposal: How about a TV movie
- based on the heroic deeds performed by everyday folks caught in
- the disaster? On Saturday, one day after the explosion, she
- started meeting with people: two Brooklyn teachers whose
- kindergarten students were caught in the blast; a telephone
- repairman who set up a triage area for the injured; a mechanic
- who led six people to safety from the bowels of the towers.
- "They were on it real quick," says Fred Ferby, the mechanic.
- "She had everything together. She gave me something in my hand
- I could have a lawyer look at." Within three days, NBC
- executives gave Wilshire Court the go-ahead, and the race was
- on.
- </p>
- <p> The life-to-TV transformation doesn't always work so
- smoothly. The five lost skiers who were dramatically rescued
- near Aspen, Colorado, in late February had what seemed like the
- ideal TV-movie story. Rob Dubin, one of the last skiers found,
- returned home after his rescue to find 50 phone messages from
- the media (reporters as well as movie producers). The next day
- there were balloons, flowers and 35 proposals shipped by
- overnight mail. A week later, to make their formal pitches,
- three of the most serious bidders came to the hospital where
- Dubin's wife and a companion, Brigitte Schluger, were
- recuperating.
- </p>
- <p> The Dubins and one other skier have signed with the
- William Morris talent agency, which has had talks with a dozen
- production companies interested in the story. Though all the
- skiers have agreed to use the money to pay leftover medical
- bills and rescue costs before dividing it, some in the group are
- grumbling that the proposed film will focus too much on the
- Dubins. Schluger has publicly complained that the Dubins treated
- her like a "little Roman slave girl" during their ordeal and has
- retained her own lawyer. Says Ken Torp, the group's leader: "I
- wouldn't wish this aftermath on my worst enemy."
- </p>
- <p> At least the Aspen story, if it makes it to the screen,
- will have breathtaking Rocky Mountain vistas. The story of
- Katie Beers, the Long Island, New York, girl who was kidnapped
- and kept in a dungeon for 16 days, might seem a bit tougher to
- turn into an uplifting TV experience. But that hasn't stopped
- producers from contacting Katie's mother (who has been accused
- by the county of neglecting the child) and the man charged with
- the crime (who will most probably plead insanity). Katie
- herself is being shielded from the onslaught by attorney Donald
- Novick, appointed to be temporary guardian of her property
- rights. He is currently weighing four offers to buy Katie's
- story.
- </p>
- <p> In this climate, Koresh and his band of religious zealots
- are being terribly uncooperative: they stubbornly refuse to
- step aside so TV can get on with the business of dramatizing
- their story. NBC's May quickie, a segment of its In the Line of
- Duty movie series, will doubtless not be TV's last word on the
- affair. One producer has reportedly paid $75,000 for the rights
- to Koresh's mother's story. Two Waco Tribune-Herald reporters,
- whose expose of the cult set the stage for the current siege,
- have hired a lawyer to sift through their TV-movie offers.
- Agents salivating for Koresh's own story have badgered his
- former attorney, Gary Coker, for help. When nothing
- materialized, one producer inquired about doing a movie on
- Coker.
- </p>
- <p> Is there a frenzy going on? Without a doubt," says Rob
- Lee, a senior vice president at William Morris, which has
- packaged many of these docudramas. "It's been brought on to a
- great extent by the shows dealing with sensational true-crime
- stories like Hard Copy and Inside Edition." The networks are
- attracted to these stories because they are easy to promote:
- viewers are already presold on the story. Not that this always
- translates into big audiences. Though many
- ripped-from-the-headlines dramas, like ABC's Willing to Kill:
- The Texas Cheerleader Story, have been ratings hits, other major
- stories, like the Oakland fire and the San Francisco earthquake,
- have fizzled in their network-movie incarnations.
- </p>
- <p> Participants in the fact-to-film free-for-all are having
- qualms even as they continue to play the game. "Frankly I'm just
- worn out," says Judd Parkin, ABC's senior vice president for
- movies and mini-series. "There's a point where you have to sit
- back and examine whether the returns are truly worth the amount
- of energy and the expenditure of money." Since the networks pay a
- low, relatively fixed amount for TV movies (usually about $2.75
- million), shelling out mid-six-figure amounts on rights fees is
- an extravagance that producers can ill afford.
- </p>
- <p> Then, oh yes, there's the ethical matter of paying these
- sums to people who are accused or even convicted of crimes.
- (Many states have laws that forbid such payments to indicted or
- convicted criminals, though after New York's Son of Sam law was
- declared unconstitutional, the validity of such laws has been
- in question.) A number of producers and network executives say
- they deplore the practice, and some are showing signs of
- restraint. ABC's Parkin says the network refused to negotiate
- for Amy Fisher's own story, opting instead for a film based on
- public records, and mercifully no network has unveiled a
- first-person account of Jeffrey Dahmer's grisly murder spree.
- At least not yet.
- </p>
- <p> Can the networks go any farther? A docudrama daydream:
- it's 1996 and the networks each maintain a rapid-deployment
- TV-movie squad. It springs into action the minute a news event
- reaches A Current Affair or the front page of USA Today. No
- lengthy preproduction, no complicated rights negotiations. Each
- day's events are simply re-enacted as they happen. Instant
- docudrama--a new segment every night, just after the evening
- news.
- </p>
- <p> Better yet, instead of the evening news. Then all the feds
- would have to do is move from Waco to the Oklahoma movie set and
- negotiate with Koresh's stand-in.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-