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Aaron Sorkin Opens Up About The Demise Of 'Studio 60'

With the final episodes of ill-fated sociopolitical drama Studio 60 on The Sunset Strip now all ignominiously burned off by the network that renounced its onetime anointed Nielsen Messiah, showrunner Aaron Sorkin is ready to reflect upon the possible reasons that his much-hyped peak behind the scenes at a curiously humorless late night sketch comedy show failed. (In case you missed it, our recap of the series finale is here to help you get some closure.) While Sorkin is willing to admit to making "too many mistakes for it to survive," he posits that Our Obsession With Hugely Successful, Famously Troubled Man Behind The Curtain might have gotten in the way of the public's enjoyment of his characters' lively banter about the ethics of employing hostage-reclaiming mercenaries in Afghanistan or concerning potentially fatal pregnancy complications. Reports the LAT's Patrick Goldstein after a sit-down with Sorkin:

"I don't know how to emphasize this enough that I'm not disappointed or upset with anyone but myself," Sorkin says over lunch at Nate 'n Al's last week where he is repeatedly interrupted by fans wanting to share how much they enjoyed his work.
"There are only two possible reasons for 'Studio 60' failing — it was either my fault or it was just one of those things. On some shows, you can make mistakes and still survive. But with this one, I made too many mistakes for it to survive." [...]

Every failure in Hollywood gets blamed on something else, from movies that bomb (freak snowstorms back East) to anemic album sales (illegal file sharing by snotty college kids). But Sorkin sees a more insidious villain — a triviality-obsessed media no longer willing to separate gossip and idle speculation from reporting and criticism. "When all everyone does is try to draw personal connections between your characters and real people, you're not really watching a play or a TV show anymore," he says. "It becomes a tabloid experience."

This gossipy guesswork pervaded much of the media coverage of "Studio 60," in which much was made of the supposed similarities between "Studio 60" characters and real-life counterparts. It wasn't an entirely unreasonable assumption, since one of the show's lead characters — a TV writer with a history of drug problems — was written by Sorkin, a TV writer with a history of drug problems.

What clearly bugs Sorkin is that for whatever matrix of reasons — his messy private life, his brash willingness to publicly trash Internet bloggers or just his star power as a writer — he became a target for all sorts of gossipy buzz that doesn't haunt similarly successful writers like "Everybody Loves Raymond's" Phil Rosenthal or "Curb Your Enthusiasm's" Larry David.

"I can flat-out guarantee that Phil was writing autobiographical stories in his show, but for some reason people just aren't caught up in the gossip of his life," Sorkin says. "It's just unhealthy. 'After the Fall' is a better play if you don't know that Arthur Miller and Marilyn Monroe were married. It doesn't enhance the experience of seeing the play if you're being a detective, always looking for clues. You only see the writing through a filter that takes you out of the actual story."

Indeed, our own experience of the show was colored by exactly these kinds of unhealthy pursuits, where we became obsessed with sleuthing out alleged parallels between Jordan McDeere and TV exec Jamie Tarses, The Christian One Whose Name We Can Never Remember to Sorkin ex Kristen Chenowith, and Lobster Boy and the psilocybin-induced demonic hallucination who first pitched the idea of Studio 60 to Sorkin during a particularly vivid "development session." Now that our prejudices have been exposed, we promise to approach the celebrated writer's next project with a mind uncluttered by such peripheral obsessions.

10:31 AM on Tue Jul 17 2007
By Mark
5,109 views
11 comments

Comments

  • Who knew NBC had such a generous mental health policy? Up next, Wade from Accounting will produce a show about the trials, tribulations and of becoming a CPA and being a lady panty wearer.

  • Image of nojo nojo at 11:50 AM on 07/17/07 *

    Damn, I missed the part about John Goodman being Bert Fields.


  • Dear Aaron:

    "There are only two possible reasons for 'Studio 60' failing"

    I posit the existence of a third heat, namely:

    STUDIO 60 FAILED BECAUSE IT WAS AWFUL.

  • Fourth possible reason:
    Not enough Dolphin Girl!

  • So, he's not disappointed with anyone other than himself... and the goddamn illiterate media whoredom that took down his show. Gotcha.

  • but in the end, isn't it all worth it if they're going to give us 90 minutes of 'the biggest loser' every week. at this point nbc is half a network at best...and who'd have thought that charlie from the west wing would have a longer lasting second show than aaron sorkin, brad whitford, and matt perry combined. at least there's still entourage...lol

  • There is also a chance the show might have survived if each episode had not contained a lengthy screed about how middle America is full of tasteless, ignorant buffoons who use blogs to DESTROY THE UNIVERSE.

  • Well, if it wasn't about Sorkin, then why the fuck was it so solipsistic?

  • 'Studio 60' could make even the most self-righteous Hollywood Liberal start to think the Republicans might have a point. Truly insufferable.

  • There was a possibility I could have dealt with the screeds if the show-within-a-show were, you know, funny. Studio 60 was supposed to be about a comedy sketch program, and yet it turned out to be about a animal costume show whose actors fulfilled Affirmative Action requirements: the Either Angry or Oppressed Black One, the Christian One, the Pretty One, the One with the Brother in the Army, etc. (Or are those the names of Friends episodes? Now I've confused myself.)

    And seeing Mark McKinney do his weekly walk-ons just made wish I had kept Slings and Arrows on my TiVo.

  • From: WWW.FIMOCULOUS.COM: TRACKBACK at 10:09 PM on 07/18/07

    The noble Sorkin blames himself for the demise of Studio 60. [via]

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