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The Year in TV 2020: Delays, the ascent of streaming, and the Pandemmys

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Netflix(LOS ANGELES) — Like many other industries, the COVID-19 pandemic brought TV production to a halt in March, wreaking havoc with the complicated business of show scheduling. 

However, with millions of people locked down at home, 2020 is the year streaming came into its own.  Starting in March when the pandemic began, shows like Netflix’s Tiger King became more than must-see TV: it and other hit shows were a way to connect with others from whom we were socially distanced.

The pandemic threw a monkey wrench into networks’ plans for the new fall season, forcing delays in show launches or the outright cancellations of shows that had been renewed, like Stumptown on ABC, GLOW on Netflix, and Comedy Central’s Drunk History

David Boreanaz was directing a fall season episode of his CBS show SEAL Team back in March for the when he got news the show would be shut down. “It was very jarring for us,” he recalled to ABC Audio. “We had just finished we were shooting up on a mountaintop in Big Bear, a snow episode that I was directing, I had two days left and we came back that Thursday night and there was some rumor about it. And that’s when the NBA decided to stop its season.”

He added, “And we were all kind of like, ‘Oh, this is probably going to happen next week for us.’ We didn’t assume would happen so fast. And the next day we had planned to finish the two days that I had, and that was at the start of that Friday afterwards. And then by the end of the day, they just shut everything down.

With so many people locked onto their couches with nothing to do, streaming services saw their subscription numbers skyrocket.  So did the practice of mobile group-watching shows, and the social media buzz about hit series like Tiger KingThe Boys and The Queen’s Gambit.

In fact, a survey taken in the summer of 2020 revealed that one in five people credited Netflix with saving their relationships when all the one-on-one time with your significant other got to be too much. A poll in May suggested the average person who was locked down was watching streaming content on their TV eight hours a day.

As the year went on and the 2020 TV season finally began, art began to imitate life.  Talk shows resembled Zoom meetings, and some shows like Apple TV+’s Mythic Quest did remote-shot quarantine episodes.  Saturday Night Live went remote for a while with SNL at Home, using video sketches to fill the show before returning to Studio 8H in Rockefeller Center, while the CBS drama All Rise created shows that used a Zoom-like interface to dispense law and order.

Productions also observed pandemic protocols.  Not only were the casts and crews wearing masks on the set, characters in most shows were seen wearing them — everyone from the cops on Law & Order: SVU to the attorneys on Bull and were seen rocking masks, and acting behind Plexiglas barriers. 

The new rules led to some interesting changes.  Producers on The Bold and the Beautiful used mannequins for some scenes, and also hired living stunt smoochers in the form of the real-life spouses of the show’s stars, with help from costuming and camera angles. 

Sometimes the precautions were not enough.  As cases started to spike in the fall and testing cast and crew members for COVID-19 became commonplace, so too did halts in production.  Shows from Days of Our Lives, to the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills to the aforementioned Mythic Quest were halted over positive tests.  The latter show had two separate outbreaks of the virus, with a dozen production staffers infected.

While the awards show’s ratings ranked at an all-time low, September’s 72nd Annual Emmy Awards became an exercise in innovation. Jimmy Kimmel played to an empty Staples Center as the host of the ‘Pandemmys,’ with cardboard  cutouts standing in for the stars, except Jason Bateman, who appeared in person. All the nominees were outfitted with camera gear ahead of time at the homes or wherever they planned to be for the big night, should their name be called. 

In the case of the PopTV show Schitt’s Creek, it was called a lot: the series swept all the comedy categories, a first for any show, let alone the upstart TV network. It also broke a record for the most-awarded comedy in a single year, when you factor in the Creative Arts awards it won.

Other historic wins included Euphoria‘s Zendaya, who at age 24 became the youngest actress ever to snag the Best Actress in a Drama trophy, and the second Black actress to nab the award, following Viola Davis’ 2015 win for How to Get Away with Murder. In fact, the majority of the acting awards went to Black actors — 10 in total, including Regina King, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Uzo Aduba and Eddie Murphy. 

Although viewership numbers for streaming services are notoriously hard to pin down, here are the year’s most popular shows on various streaming services, based on data available

Netflix’s 2020 Top 10 according to Forbes:
1. Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness 
2. Locke & Key
3. Space Force
4. Outer Banks 
5. Love Is Blind 
6. The Queen’s Gambit
7. Never Have I Ever 
8. Ratched 
9. The Circle 
10. Sweet Magnolias 

Top 5 streaming shows on Disney+, Amazon Prime, Hulu, HBO Max, Peacock, and CBS All Access in 2020, according to The Observer.
Disney+
1. The Mandalorian
2. High School Musical: The Musical: The Series
3. One Day at Disney Shorts
4. The World According to Jeff Goldblum
5. Disney Gallery: The Mandalorian

Amazon Prime:
1. The Boys
2. Upload
3. The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
4. The Expanse
5. Hunters

Hulu:
1. Little Fires Everywhere
2. The Handmaid’s Tale
3. Marvel’s Runaways
4. The Great
5. Future Man

Apple TV+
1. Defending Jacob
2. The Morning Show
3. Ted Lasso
4. Servant
5. Mythic Quest: Raven’s Banquet

HBO Max
1. Raised by Wolves
2. Love Life
3. Search Party
4. Infinity Train
5. Close Enough

CBS All Access
1. Star Trek: Picard
2. Star Trek: Discovery
3. Tell Me a Story
4. The Good Fight
5. The Twilight Zone

Peacock
1. Brave New World
2. Connecting…
3. The Amber Ruffin Show
4. Wilmore
5. Lost Speedways

By Stephen Iervolino
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ken Jennings apologizes for past insensitive tweets: "I screwed up, and I'm truly sorry"

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ABC/Ron Batzdorff(LOS ANGELES) — Ken Jennings is addressing some of his past tweets.

In a series of posts on Wednesday, the Jeopardy! champion, who will be the show’s first guest host following the death of Alex Trebek, apologized for pass comments he’s posted on the social media platform.

“Hey, I just wanted to own up to the fact that over the years on Twitter, I’ve definitely tweeted some unartful and insensitive things,” Jennings wrote. “Sometimes they worked as jokes in my head and I was dismayed to see how they read on screen.”

Jennings went on to explain why he hasn’t deleted some of his past tweets that were deemed offensive.

“In the past, I’d usually leave bad tweets up just so they could be dunked on. At least that way they could lead to smart replies and even advocacy. Deleting them felt like whitewashing a mistake,” he tweeted. “But I think that practice may have given the impression I stand by every failed joke I’ve ever posted here. Not at all!”

One of the tweets he shared reportedly included a joke about a disabled person. Jennings apologized for the since-deleted 2018 tweet, which reportedly read, “Nothing sadder than a hot person in a wheelchair.”

Other Jennings tweets that many have called into question include a since-deleted remark about Barron Trump, and a joke about fans who had seen the 2015 film Star Wars: The Force Awakens early, which many connected to several terminally ill fans who saw the film before its premiere date.

In his posts Wednesday, Jennings said he is “truly sorry.”

“Sometimes I said dumb things in a dumb way and I want to apologize to people who were (rightfully!) offended,” he tweeted. “It wasn’t my intention to hurt anyone, but that doesn’t matter: I screwed up.”

By Hayley FitzPatrick
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

George Clooney says his film about 2020 would include COVID, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and "a lot of hope"

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Courtesy of Netflix(LOS ANGELES) — George Clooney isn’t complaining about saying goodbye to 2020, butif he had the opportunity to direct a film on this tumultuous year, the Oscar winner says he’d make sure to add “all of the things that we’ve had to bear.”

“Starting with COVID obviously,” Clooney tells ABC Audio. “Certainly then George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and all those things that would have been the lead story for the year if it weren’t for COVID along the way.”

“And then an election, and the divisiveness of an election,” he continues. “I would make a film about the idea that these are all manmade issues that man can fix.”

This may be a big undertaking considering Time magazine has declared 2020 “the worst year ever.” Still, Clooney is up for the challenge, adding that the issues we face “we did it to ourselves and so we can fix these things ourselves.”

Those fixes are what Clooney says will allow his proposed film to have a happy ending.

“And that by the end of 2020 there would be light at the end of the tunnel, which I do see,” he says. “And I feel that we’re pointing in the right direction now. I see it.”

“There’s a lot of hope with a vaccine. There’s a lot of hope with January 20th,” Clooney explains, referring to the inauguration date of President-elect Joe Biden. “There’s a lot of hope with what we’re able to do [and] how we’re able to move forward — as man can fix some of the things that man has destroyed.”

“So that would be the film,” he adds. 

Until that film comes to fruition, Clooney’s latest project, The Midnight Sky, is available on Netflix.

By Candice Williams
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

"I think it's important that we do bring the fun": Seacrest ready for this unprecedented "New Year's Rockin' Eve'

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ABC/Brian Bowen Smith(NEW YORK) — Despite the pandemic, Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest rolls on, live from New York’s Times Square Thursday night on ABC.  But even without a massive crowd, Ryan and his co-hosts Lucy Hale and Billy Porter will still bring up the energy through the broadcast.

“We will not pack in a million-people, obviously, but we will have the performances like we always do, we will have the stage built like we always have,” Ryan tells ABC Audio. “And I think it’s important that we do bring in fun and…this theme of celebration and this theme of moving forward and moving on from this year.”

And it’s not like Times Square will be completely empty: Essential and frontline workers and their families — who Lucy calls “the real heroes of 2020” — will be joining Ryan and company at the Crossroads of the World.

“It’ll be nice to have some people there and really be honoring them,” Lucy notes.

In addition to interviewing those workers, Ryan will be speaking to president-elect Joe Biden and his wife about “what’s to come in the new year, hope and unity.”

Also joining the party: Jennifer Lopez, who’ll be performing right before the ball drops. J-Lo, who last appeared on NYRE 10 years ago, “really felt it was important to come back as a local from the New York area to celebrate,” says Ryan, adding, “We’ll also have Billy Porter and Cyndi Lauper performing together, which is kind of special.”

And because folks won’t be out partying this year, Ryan is hoping “there’ll be more people watching than ever before.”

He says, “Our hope is that they turn the TV on, and even if it’s just the background for their very small gathering…we’ll be a part of it.”

By Andrea Dresdale
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Alison Brie recalls "peeing incident" while filming 'Mad Men'

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Mat Hayward/Getty Images for Netflix(LOS ANGELES) — They say “one day you’ll look back at this and laugh” and that’s exactly what Alison Brie is doing. 

While chatting with Justin Long on the Life Is Short podcast, the 38-year-old actress recalled a slight incident that occurred with her wardrobe while filming the first season of the highly acclaimed drama Mad Men. 

Brie, who played Trudy Vogel on the series, began, “On Mad Men once there was a peeing incident … because we wore girdles… it’s basically like biker shorts that go all the way up to our ribs, and it’s like time-period appropriate.”

She then elaborated that the girdles have a “small hole” to make it easier for people to urinate since the costume would be difficult to pull down, however, it wasn’t easier for her to use the restroom because of one simple mistake. 

“I didn’t know, for the first season of Mad Men, that you weren’t really supposed to wear underwear under them, because they are underwear,” the actress explained.

“So I was rushing to set … Mad Men was my first real job so I didn’t ever want to be the problem person…” she  said. “So I rushed to the bathroom … [I] tried to pull the hole open, but I didn’t pull my underwear to the side so I’m peeing and not hearing it hit the bowl and then I just feel warmth.”

In an attempt to remedy the situation she “just dabbed it with a bunch of toilet paper” and returned to set “because they’re waiting on me … I don’t want to lose my job.”

Fortunately, Brie did not lose her job and the costume designer was able to get her a new, dry girdle.

By Danielle Long
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.