HBO

The Larry Sanders Show

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

With all of the talk about the late night talk show wars during the past few months, one name has been left out of the discussion.

Larry Sanders.

From 1992 to 1998,
The Larry Sanders Show aired on HBO. It was a look at a fictional late night talk show hosted by Larry Sanders, played by Garry Shandling.

Occasionally, episodes featured scenes from the actual talk show hosted by Sanders in front of a television audience.

Stars played themselves.

Dana Delany. Sharon Stone. Dana Carvey.

For advice about navigating the shark-infested waters of the entertainment industry and his own staff, Larry frequently turned to veteran producer Artie for advice. Rip Torn played Artie while Jeffrey Tambor played sidekick announcer Hank Kingsley.

Jeremy Piven played Jerry, a young writer on Larry’s staff. Years later, a mini-reunion occurred when Jeffrey Tambor played himself on an episode of
Entourage while Piven played his agent, Ari Gold.

The Larry Sanders Show debuted in the firestorm of the early 1990’s when Johhny Carson left The Tonight Show, David Letterman started a late night franchise at CBS, and the audience split its loyalties between Jay Leno and David Letterman.

The area was ripe for exploration as the public became more aware of the business side of show business.

But
The Larry Sanders Show explored another side beyond advertisers, demographics, and ratings. This side features topics familiar to every industry -- insecurity, office politics, and the high pressure of job performance in an increasingly competitive atmosphere.

Long Gone

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Long Gone is a 1987 tv-movie that first appeared on HBO.

Based on a novel by Richard Hemphill, it’s a tale about baseball, corruption, and sex centered on a minor league baseball team in Florida in the late 1950’s.

At the heart of the Tampico Stogies baseball team is Cecil “Stud” Cantrell, a long-time minor-league pitcher, manager, and slugger who almost made the big leagues with the St. Louis Cardinals.

He competed with Stan Musial. Cantrell says that he hit the ball harder but Stan the Man had a prettier swing. It was at the dawn of World War II. Cantrell served his country, but war injuries prevented him from going farther than minor league ball.

William Petersen of
CSI fame plays Cantrell.

His protégé is Jamie Don Weeks, played by Dermot Mulroney. At first a naive player who simply wants to play baseball, Jamie transforms into a grown man and emulates Stud’s mannerisms.

He also gets his girlfriend pregnant -- Esther Wrenn, played by Katy Boyer.

Cantrell’s girlfriend is the young but world-wise Dixie Lee Boxx, played by Virginia Madsen.

Henry Gibson plays Hale Buchman, owner of the Stogies. Teller of Penn and Teller plays his son in a rare talking performance.

Larry Riley plays Joe Louis Brown, a catcher with tremendous power. In one scene, the KKK stops the Stogies’ team bus in the middle of the night. The Stogies chase off the Klan with baseball bats and Brown knocks a burning cross to the ground with a powerful swing.

The Stogies’ chief rival is the Dothan Cardinals. J. Harrell Smythe, the Cardinals’ owner, makes Cantrell and Riley an offer. Throw a decisive game against the Cardinals. Brown gets a brand new car. Cantrell gets a contract with the Dothan Cardinals. An enticing offer for Cantrell considering he never gave up his dream of working in the Cardinals’ organization after losing a spot to Musial.

To see how the story ends, check out
Long Gone if you can find it.

Long Gone may be long gone, but not forgotten.

Private Parts

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

The 1997 movie
Private Parts, based on Howard Stern's autobiography of the same title, has fairly rich television connections.

The shock jock plays himself in
Private Parts. His gang of Robin Quivers, Gary Dell'Abate, Fred Norris, and Jackie Martling also play themselves.

But
Private Parts does more than merely take Howard Stern's storybook rise to fame from the page to the silver screen.

The movie features future stars of the small screen.

Mary McCormack plays Alison Stern, the wife of the self-proclaimed King of All Media. She steadfastly supports her husband as he finds his unique broadcasting voice.

In the final years of
The West Wing, McCormack played Deputy National Security Advisor Kate Harper.

Currently, she stars in the USA drama
In Plain Sight where she plays Deputy US Marshal Mary Shannon. Shannon is responsible for shepherding federal witnesses through the Witness Protection Program in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Allison Janney also shares a
West Wing - Private Parts connection.

In
Private Parts, she plays Dee Dee, a radio executive.

In
The West Wing, she plays Press Secretary extraordinaire C.J. Cregg who later gets promoted to President Bartlet's Chief of Staff.

Kelly Bishop plays Howard Stern's mother in
Private Parts.

We also know her as the matriarch on the poignant, successful, and thoughtful mother-daughter drama
Gilmore Girls. Bishop played Emily Gilmore -- mother of Lorelai, grandmother of Rory, and wife of Richard.

Film is a director's medium.
Private Parts benefits from a television veteran who draws on her experience to create a definite realism in her productions.

Betty Thomas got her big break as Officer (later Sergeant) Lucy Bates on
Hill Street Blues, the highly acclaimed 1980's television drama. Thomas directed the HBO tv-movie The Late Shift based on the book of the same title by Bill Carter. The Late Shift recounts the controversy concerning who would ultimately succeed Johnny Carson as host of The Tonight Show. Thomas has also directed other movies with roots in television -- I Spy, The Brady Bunch Movie.

And lastly, Paul Giamatti.

This fine character actor has starred in
American Splendor, Sideways, and Cinderella Man.

In March - April 2008, Giamatti starred in the title role of the HBO miniseries
John Adams based on the book of the same title by David McCullough. Giamatti won an Emmy for his portrayal of the unsung founding father.

In
Private Parts, Giamatti plays Pig Vomit, Howard Stern's corporate nemesis during his days at WNBC-AM radio in New York City. Stern supplied the moniker.

Recount

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

HBO's 2008 tv-movie
Recount dramatizes the events surrounding the controversial Florida votes in the 2000 presidential election.

The docudrama faces an enormous challenge because we viewed the real-life drama day after day on 24-hour cable news channels.

Recount takes us behind-the-scenes of the respective Gore and Bush campaigns, showing us the conversations, strategies, and debates that emerged in the post-2000 presidential election confusion concerning Florida's electoral votes.

Tom Wilkinson plays Bush team leader, Bush family friend, and former Secretary of State James Baker, a street-smart, no-nonsense, bottom-line politician.

John Hurt plays his counterpart, Gore team leader Warren Christopher. Christopher was also Secretary of State.


At the center of the controversy is Katherine Harris, Florida's Secretary of State and Co-Chair of the Bush Presidential Campaign in Florida.

Laura Dern plays Harris, a woman who must navigate through the pressures of Republican politics, sudden media attention, and jokes about her hair and makeup.

At the heart of
Recount is Kevin Spacey, an acting force on stage, film, and television.

Spacey plays Ron Klain, a Gore insider once aced out of his pole position by an internal campaign competitor in the fast track world of presidential campaign politics. Now, Klain is back in the eye of the storm joined by Michael Whouley, a Democratic operative, genius political analyst, and brother-in-arms. Denis Leary plays Whouley.

Recount may take liberties with the behind-closed-doors conversations, but the subject matter is relevant.

And the factual scenario doesn't change.

Gore did concede to Bush, then called back to retract the concession.

And that's when things pretty much started to transition from a snowball to an avalanche.

Protests.

Lawsuits.

And pundits around the clock on CNN and the relatively fledgling cable news channels MSNBC and FOX News Channel. Both channels debuted in 1996, just four years prior to the Bush-Gore presidential contest.

Recount is somewhat nostalgic. Though the events in the story took place less than ten years ago, the time seems like another era.

Since the 2000 presidential election, we've seen...

...the horror of the September 11, 2001 attacks,

...the war in Iraq,

...new stadiums for the Mets and Yankees,

...Must See TV sitcoms losing exalted status to filmed comedies without a laugh track or studio audience --
My Name Is Earl, The Office,

...the first African-American President of the United States,

...and the last of a Clinton wanting to be President of the United States.

Well, maybe not everything changed.

Law & Order

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Last night,
Law & Order completed its 19th season.

The current detectives on NBC's long-running
Law & Order came to Manhattan's fictional 27th precinct with rich resumes.

Jeremy Sisto plays Cyrus Lupo. But fans of HBO's
Six Feet Under will recognize Sisto as the actor who plays Billy, brother of Brenda and sometimes bane of the existence of Brenda's significant other, Nate.

Sisto brings depth, pain, and reality to Billy, a truly three-dimensional character with three-dimensional mental issues.

He intrigued us and inspired our empathy.


He scared us and inspired our curiosity.

He welcomed us and inspired our interest in the causes, effects, and monitoring of mental illness.

Sisto's film career began with the 1991 film
Grand Canyon where he enjoys a stellar cast including Kevin Kline, Mary McDonnell, Steve Martin, Mary-Louise Parker, and Danny Glover.

In the film, Kline and McDonnell play the parents of Sisto's character, Roberto. Inspired by baseball great Roberto Clemente, Kline's character names his son after the Pittsburgh Pirates legend.


Although he plays a relatively small part, Sisto stays pace with the veteran actors/

In addition to
Law & Order, Sisto delves into another fictional crime fighting world with its own iconic status.

He voices Bruce Wayne and Batman in the 2008 direct-to-video offering
Justice League: The New Frontier.

Anthony Anderson plays Kevin Bernard in
Law & Order. Bernard is a recently transferred detective from Internal Affairs. Anderson has big gumshoes to fill as he succeeds Jesse Martin. Martin debuted as Ed Green in Season 10. He left in Season 18.

Martin's Ed Green left the NYPD after Bernard investigated him because of a shooting. At the time, Bernard worked for Internal Affairs.

Although the department dropped the charges, Green left the force rather than fight disciplinary action.

Anderson recently starred in
K-Ville where he paired with Cole Hauser. This buddy cop show on FOX was set in New Orleans. It incorporated the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina into the story line.

Anderson also played a significant, recurring role in
The Shield -- drug kingpin Antwon Mitchell.

Back in prison after enjoying a brief stay on the outside, Mitchell reinforces his status as a player. Indeed, when the cops from the fictional Farmington section of an unnamed southern California city need a favor on the inside, they must strike a deal with their sometimes nemesis, sometimes ally Antwon Mitchell.


Anderson's comedy roles include a part in
Malibu's Most Wanted, a hysterical, perhaps politically incorrect film starring Jaime Kennedy as a wannabe boy from the hood. Ryan O'Neal and Bo Derek play Kennedy's parents.

Anderson's film resume includes
King's Ransom, Big Momma's House, and Scary Movie 3.

Additionally, he had a short-lived sitcom on the WB --
All About the Andersons.

Boston TV

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Boston is a terrific site for television programs.

Where do you go when you want to be where you can see the troubles are all the same and everybody knows your name?

Cheers in Boston --
Cheers.

Where do you go when you want to hire Spenser, the private investigator?

A revamped firehouse turned living quarters in Boston --
Spenser: For Hire.

Where do you go when you need Dr. Marc Craig, an egotistical, egocentric, and egomaniacal heart surgeon who is also a leader in the field of cardiac care?

St. Eligius Hospital in Boston --
St. Elsewhere.

Goodnight Beantown is also set in Boston. This mid-1980's sitcom revolved around a male-female television news anchor team played by Bill Bixby and Mariette Hartley.

Boston Common enjoyed a coveted role on NBC's Thursday night Must See TV lineup in the mid-1990's. The show features stand up comedian Anthony Clark, familiar to fans of Yes, Dear as good-natured, hard-working, and fun-lacking Greg Warner.

Crossing Jordan stars Jill Hennessy of Law & Order fame as a coroner who goes beyond the obvious to solve crimes. The show exists in the same televerse as Las Vegas.

David Kelley's legal trifecta of
Ally McBeal, The Practice, and Boston Legal takes place in Kelley's old stomping grounds of Boston. One can trace Kelley's creative roots in the Boston law genre to his 1987 movie From the Hip starring Judd Nelson.

Kelley also created
Boston Public, a show about a high school that enjoyed a crossover with The Practice as did Ally McBeal.

George Peppard plays the title role in
Banacek, a 1970's show on NBC about an insurance investigator in Boston who receives a percentage of a property's value upon recovering it after a theft.

Two Guys, a Girl, and a Pizza Place, later simply named Two Guys and a Girl, centers around...well, the title says it all. Three platonic twentysomething friends share misadventures, advice, and problems, in college and thereafter.

For the younger set, the Disney Channel's
The Suite Life of Zack & Cody takes place in the fictional Tipton Hotel in Boston. Twin boys, Zack and Cody, live in a hotel because their mom is the headline singer and the residence is part of the contract.

HBO made a first in 2006 when it aired its first sitcom, the adult-themed, Boston-set
Lucky Louie featuring stand up comedian Louis C. K.

Beyond the racy language, adult themes, and spare apartment set lay a working-class basis that parallels
All in the Family and The Honeymooners.

Lucky Louie only aired six episodes in the summer of '06.

Boston is the setting for later episodes of
Dawson's Creek when the core characters attend college.

And even though we never saw Boston through his eyes, we certainly heard about it from his nostalgic recounts, the Boston revered by Major Charles Emerson Winchester III on
M*A*S*H.

Boston is a great sports town.

Boston is a great history town.

And Boston is a great television town.

John Stamos

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

John Stamos has a deep television resume indicative of an actor destined for television icon status enjoyed by the likes of Robert Urich and Tony Danza.

Starting in daytime television, Stamos earned his heartthrob stripes in the early 1980's as Blackie Parrish on
General Hospital.

In 1984, Stamos tackled prime time with Dreams, a short-lived CBS show about a rock and roll group trying to get its big break.

Later in the Reagan decade, Stamos partnered with veteran television actor Jack Klugman in
You Again?, an NBC sitcom about a teenager who moves into his father's home after a long estrangement.

You Again? lasted one season.

The third prime time's a charm.

Stamos struck gold with
Full House, an ABC sitcom that served as an anchor for the alphabet network's TGIF lineup.

The three father figures on
Full House present distinct personalities. Bob Saget plays Danny Tanner, the actual father of the three daughters on the show.

Danny is the practical one.

Dave Coulier plays Joey Gladstone.

Joey is the childlike one.

Stamos plays Uncle Jesse.

Jesse is the creative one. Following his musical background, Stamos infused his character with a musical bent.


Full House lasted eight years, from 1987 to 1995.

Stamos' post-
Full House television work includes the short-lived 2001 entry Thieves and Jake In Progress, a one hour drama with strong comedy elements that debuted in 2005.

Jake In Progress stars Stamos in the title role as a successful New York City publicist who reexamines his approach to women, that is to say, his womanizing.

Even a terrific supporting cast did not provide enough fuel to let Jake progress on his journey of finding his other half, his soulmate, his counterpart. Wendie Malick of
Just Shoot Me and Dream On plays Stamos' boss.

After a guest spot on
Friends in 2003, Stamos joined the cast of NBC's long-running drama ER as Tony Gates, Initially a recurring character, Gates became a fixture at Cook County General Hospital. Initially a paramedic, Gates became a doctor.

Stamos also appears in the 2007 HBO documentary
Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project. He joins a roster of legendary interviewees, including the Smothers Brothers, Robin Williams, Bob Newhart, Martin Scorsese, Regis Philbin, Jay Leno, Debbie Reynolds, Clint Eastwood, and Carl Reiner.

Stamos talks kindly about Rickles' impact on younger entertainers. He expands his comments to include others of Rickles' generation.

In a separate interview, Stamos'
Full House co-star Bob Saget also appears on the documentary. And the two separately square off with some choice comments about each other. In essence, Saget claims that Stamos simply kisses the ring of Rickles, to put the phrase euphemestically.

John Stamos has a resume that is synonymous with television. One major hit in the form of
Full House has not made him a one-hit wonder. Although his characters don't always know how to go about doing the right thing, they always want to do the right thing. They try. Which is just about all you can ask for.