‘The OC’ awarded with key to the city
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Deepa Bharath
They already have the key to prime-time television success.
Tonight, cast members and producers of the Fox network’s “The OC”
will get a key to Newport Beach, the city that has provided the show
with a backdrop, richly woven with drama and mystique.
The show has lent fame and notoriety to this city, enhancing its
image as a popular tourist destination, said Gail Ossipoff,
spokeswoman for the Newport Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau.
“This show has brought a lot of positive attention to the city,”
she said. “I was in New York City recently, and everybody was asking
about this show. It’s not just around here. It’s across the country.”
The bureau is realistic about the content of the show, which
portrays the action-packed lives of pretty, young, rich Newport Beach
men and women, complete with sex, drugs, revenge and betrayal,
Ossipoff said.
“It’s not a reality show,” she said. “It’s entertainment. You take
it with a grain of salt just like ‘Dallas’ or ‘Beverly Hills 90210.’”
Newport Beach Mayor Tod Ridgeway, who has previously said the show
is entertaining but an exaggerated version of the city, will present
the key to cast members.
Tonight’s event, starting at 6:30 p.m., will also feature a
“cement ceremony,” where “The OC” will be immortalized on Newport’s
newly created Walk of Fame at the Balboa Pavilion, Ossipoff said. To
top it off, the mayor will make a proclamation in appreciation of “OC
Thursdays,” drawing attention to the fact that the show will now air
Thursdays instead of Tuesdays. The Balboa Fun Zone will be open from
7 to 9 p.m. courtesy of the show. The show’s season premiere will be
Nov. 4.
Ridgeway was not available for comment on Wednesday, but his wife
Kay said that as parents of a freshman in high school, they sense the
show’s popularity among local high school students.
“A lot of local high school students watch the show and find it
entertaining, on the cutting edge and very cool,” she said.
Her son and his friends are excited that the city is strengthening
its relationship with the show, Kay Ridgeway said.
Councilman Steve Bromberg said he feels almost neutral on the
issue. He declined an offer last year, when he was mayor, to go on
the “Sharon Osborne Show” and present “The OC” with a key to the
city, Bromberg said.
“At the time, I thought it wasn’t representative of the city,” he
said. “I thought the show put us in a bad light.”
But since then, he has heard that the show had “gotten better,”
Bromberg said.
“I haven’t been watching,” he added. “But if the Conference and
Visitors Bureau thinks this is a positive things for the city, that’s
good.”
He won’t be attending the event because of another commitment,
Bromberg said.
“I’m not boycotting it or anything though,” he added with a laugh.
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (714) 966-4625 or by e-mail at
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