Daily Pilot makes its prime time debut
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S.J. Cahn
The clock is ticking. Time left: about 13 1/2 minutes.
Those few -- it seems like a few, really, in Newport-Mesa --
watching the NBC drama “The West Wing” on Wednesday night know whose
15 minutes of fame is dropping grain by grain through the hourglass.
It’s ours.
For those many (really, as strange as it sounds, not many in this
conservatively minded area seem avid viewers of the leftish show) who
did not see the program, a quick recap.
White House Deputy Director of Communications Sam Seaborn (played
by Rob Lowe) is running for a Congressional seat in the 47th
District, a fictionalized amalgamation of Rep. Chris Cox’s home turf.
To help his campaign, which is sputtering just a bit, President
Bartlet (played by Martin Sheen) and company make a swing out to
Orange County.
Now, imagine the reception Bill Clinton would have received had he
come to Newport Beach to pitch one of his White House staffers.
And then multiply it by “Hollywood” and you have the negative
response Bartlet gets when he arrives.
Early the next morning, the staffers are grousing about the
reception, including the coverage by the media. Then comes the
moment: In the middle of the complaining, “the Daily Pilot” gets
mentioned on the airwaves as one of the local papers.
Shocking, no? Maybe not. But realistic, yes, and that was the
intent of including the local paper, one of the show’s writing
assistants said.
“They do their research and figure out who will be covering these
events,” Stephen Hootstein said.
It was one of many details the show has incorporated into episodes
to root them in reality, he added.
But it is hard to say who, exactly, brought the Pilot to the
writing table, he pointed out.
Newport Beach Mayor Steve Bromberg, one of the few who do -- yes
indeed -- watch the show, has this compelling explanation --
conjecture might be more accurate.
“Personally, I think they’re probably doing it because someone who
works on it lives here,” Bromberg said, adding as proof that he heard
on Wednesday’s episode the name of a local person he recognized.
Trouble was, the mayor couldn’t recall the name.
Bromberg, who described himself as a fan of the show, reacted to
hearing Newport Beach and the Daily Pilot in a typically fan-like
way.
“My rear-end just about hit the couch,” he said.
The episode wasn’t the first time Newport Beach has been a locale
for the show, but this week’s show, which included a local couple
berating a pregnant and unwed congresswoman for being a bad example
and pointing out the president’s African-American aide as the one who
had been dating his daughter, “got a little heavy-handed,” Bromberg
said.
Orange County as conservative, socially and economically is how
the rest of the country (Hollywood included) imagines this area,
Newport Beach probably more so than any other part.
A way to change that, politically speaking (given this is all
about a White House show, after all), is to have good Democratic
candidates, said Jim Toledano, a Costa Mesa resident, former head of
the county Democrats and -- believe it or not -- a man who does not
own a television.
“The way you’d fight that image would be to have a functioning
Democratic Party,” he said, which would include fund-raising and
organizational strength, as well as a candidate.
Would a good candidate be one like Lowe’s character, who has White
House connections and the ability to tag along with the president?
Those connections worked for Reps. Cox and Dana Rohrabacher,
Toledano pointed out (which might just give away next week’s episode,
which appears to be election night for the congressional race).
To be fair, the Pilot wasn’t alone in getting a little air time.
The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce got a quick mention -- as did
the Newport Beach Police Department, which was involved in an
altercation that was part of the story line, and a certain other
Orange County newspaper.
The police department did not help out with the production, though
they were contacted about the use of official department patches,
Sgt. Steve Shulman said.
“We wouldn’t do that unless we had some control over the script or
in some way felt it would benefit the department,” he said.
Still, for those watching, including Newport Deputy Fire Chief Tom
Arnold, the police patches looked remarkably familiar.
“It did look very real,” said Arnold, another fan who points to
the quality of the writing and the interesting situations as the
reason he tunes in.
Shulman also had this tidbit (again, for those handful of fans):
He received a fax on Feb. 11 asking for help, and the show was being
done on Feb. 13, which makes for quick turnaround.
The chamber did not get any pre-warning or pleas for aid, said
spokesman Doug Stuckey, who also provided a bit of circumstantial
support to Bromberg’s contention that a writer of the show must live
in Newport.
The rumor Stuckey has heard has the writer living on the Balboa
Peninsula.
But, seeing how there can’t be more than 12 minutes left of this
fame, back to the paper’s story.
“It blew me away,” Arnold said of hearing the Pilot’s being
mentioned.
After the show, calls came into the Pilot offices from former
employees and family members. There was even one e-mail from a former
Orange County resident now living in Minneapolis.
“I have often thought that no matter where this 47th District is,
the HQ won’t be in Newport Beach. It would be in Irvine, or Costa
Mesa, or Laguna Beach, but not in Newport Beach,” Hanna Hill wrote.
Lucky for this paper, it was.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He can be reached at (949)
574-4233 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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