The Fantastic Five of this Writer’s Life
July 21, 2011
When I started the CBS Diversity Writers Mentoring Program, we had to submit a little bio about ourselves. Mine started off like this: “Niceole Levy has watched more than 700 prime-time television shows in her lifetime and often jokes that her Master of Professional Writing degree from USC was simply a way to justify all that TV time as ‘advanced research.’ Now she also calls it work, her position as a closed captioning supervisor providing access to hours of drama and comedy programming for her viewing pleasure.”
A few clarification points:
1. The actual number of television shows has just hit 746.
2. I really do get paid to watch TV, so a lot of those shows were watched for income, though some of those were certainly enjoyable and a few became favorites.
3. I know it’s hard to believe after seeing how much TV I’ve watched, but I do not spend all my time sitting in front of a television. On top of the obvious — writing — I cook, bake (a lot), do Pilates and dance workouts, walk, shoe shop (more than I should), spend time with family and friends, and go to a lot of summer movies where pretty boys blow up lots of things. In other words, I actually have a life that doesn’t involve TV. So how do I manage to watch so much? I apparently sacrifice sleep over a chance to hang with my favorite characters.
So, yeah, there’s been a lot of TV. I love it… not a bad thing to love the industry you want to spend the rest of your life working in, right? But out of that 746 shows (Wow. That really starts to look like A LOT of TV when I keep typing it), there are 5 key shows that had the biggest impact on the writer I have become and the one I continue to strive to be. And clearly I’m about to tell you what they are and why, but with this note — your 5 is probably different, and more power to you. There are some amazing shows that I love that won’t make this list (“China Beach,” “The Unit,” “The Sopranos,” “Boston Legal,” and the single-season gem “Terriers” to name but a few.) But these are the ones that, as I sit down to craft pilots, I think back on in the hope of trying to create something that is even a fraction as well-drawn, moving, and memorable.
1. “Hill Street Blues.” One of the most striking things about Hill Street to me is that really, if you could CGI in modern clothes and switch out the giant hand-held portable phones for smart phones, the subject matter holds up remarkably well. But one of the best things about HSB was that they were never afraid to reveal awful things about characters you loved… recovering alcoholic J.D. LaRue seemed to always be one step away from self-destructing, and even Renko’s friendship with Bobby Hill couldn’t always keep his old-school racism at bay. The writers also didn’t hide from the emotional costs or the life-and-death realities of what it meant to live your life on a beat, and often delivered that message with a punch to the gut for viewers. In a spoiler-free world, I had no idea Ed Marino’s Joe Coffey was going to be gunned down, and it absolutely broke my heart.
And to top it off, Frank and Joyce… who were the first couple I saw on television that made me think about what a real relationship should look like outside of all the romance and perfection so many other shows put on display. What did it really mean for two strong adults to try to put their two lives together and make a marriage work? I’m not sure I’d ever thought about that before these two forced me to think about relationships in more grown-up terms.
2. “Homicide: Life on the Street.” The true testament to the power of this show in my life can be summed up with one episode title: “Three Men and Adena.” The episode is so brutal and so upsetting that I have barely been able to rewatch it more than once since I first saw it. Because if Frank and Tim are right? If they’re right, then their inability to bring Risley Tucker (played by the always amazing Moses Gunn) to justice is injustice at its worst. And if they’re wrong? They destroyed a man emotionally and still couldn’t close their case.
Those were the stakes the cops of “Homicide” faced every week, and they pulled no punches, not when one of their own committed suicide or faced losing a part of himself after a stroke on the job, and not when one of Baltimore’s finest becomes a murderer rather than let a murderer go free.
3. “NYPD Blue.” I know, another cop show! But while Blue yet again dealt with cops, it was the character arc of one Andy Sipowicz that made it one of the shows I cherish most. If anyone had told me in year one that I would come to care so much for Andy, I’d have laughed at them. He was everything you’d come to expect in the disillusioned depiction of a cop… a racist, a sexist, a bad husband and father, a drunk. And yet piece by piece, we watched Andy’s life be rebuilt… destroyed… and rebuilt again.
It’s hard to say which of the tragedies Andy suffered broke my heart more… the day he found his son was the victim in the murder he’d responded to, the loss of his best friend Bobby Simone, or the death of his beloved Sylvia. But there is no doubt what my favorite Andy moment of all was… the last one, with Andy, now a fully-realized, strong, sober, happy man, in charge of the squad he loved after putting in all the hard work it had taken to earn the job and the respect that went along with it. It was one of the most amazing journeys I’ve ever been on with a character, and hey, as you know from the TV show total, I’ve been on a lot of them.
4. “Once and Again.” Gone far before its time, this show’s depiction of the complexities of life post-divorce, of falling in love again, of blending families, and of growing older never failed to move me. There were no perfect people anywhere to be found in this tale, no white knights riding in on horses to save the damsel. But there was such a level of honesty in how they revealed each layer to their characters, some hidden so deep that even in the final episode, Rick and Lily were still realizing that after they’d said I do and supposedly set out on their happily ever after, there was still a chance that they might want different things out of life, and what did that mean for their family?
Even when I wanted to yell at them, because everyone on this show could be a jerk, (because seriously, who can’t?) I felt their confusion and their struggle with whatever was motivating the jerky behavior. Years after the final episode, I still think of how much I would’ve loved to see Rick and Lily have their baby and face squeezing one more person into their already bustling lives or what a joy it would’ve been to see Karen finally… finally allow herself to be happy with Henry Higgins or how amazing it would’ve been to see this extended family that always found a way to tell the truth, even if it took a few lies or omissions to get there, discover and accept Jessie’s sexuality.
5. “Friday Night Lights.” The most recent entry to my Fantastic Five, but no less beloved than the others, from the very first episode of FNL, I knew I’d love this show forever. Something about the way you felt everyone else’s reaction to Jason Street’s injury told you about what this show was and what you could expect from it, and even that one little misstep in season two (okay, not so little, but still, we all got over it, right?) did nothing to diminish my devotion. This show faced the task of replacing treasured characters as the originals “aged out” and graduated, and I remember being so worried that I’d never feel for Vince Howard the way I had about Matt Saracen. Who could touch my heart the way 7 had? And yet I went into the final season of the show worried sick that Vince’s past might come back to destroy him and hoping against hope that he would stay on the path Coach Taylor had set him on. And could I love any character more than Tim Riggins? He was every guy you’ve ever known who is good at heart and can’t seem to catch a break. And yet finally, even Tim Riggins seemed on the path to a good life because of the town that never forgot him and the people who loved him.
Much has been written about the Taylor marriage in FNL, and it is truly one of its finest aspects. I won’t belabor it by repeating everything great that’s been written about it except to say that it was inspiring at every turn. But one of the biggest things I will take away from FNL is the spirit of the show. Clear Eyes. Full Hearts. Can’t Lose. It wasn’t just Coach Taylor’s winning philosophy. It was a summation of what you can do when you write from your heart and tell a great damn story.
So as my latest pilot outline goes to script, many of the things I consider on the journey will be those I’ve mentioned here. How can my couples’ relationships be as meaningful and as important as the ones I loved so much? How can I write an episode that someone will remember years later and think, “and that’s when I knew I’d love this show”? Find the honesty, find the thing no one’s expecting, mine the layers to reveal something no one can see in the character until you peel back the skin, write an episode so powerful, it’s almost unwatchable… those will be my goals… and now, off to write I go.
P.S. If you haven’t seen any of the above — get thee DVDs! You won’t regret it. And, fellow writers, what are the shows that made you want to write? Hit the comments and share! I can always use new inspiration!