Tag Archives: Mr. D

The Beaverton website heads to The Comedy Network for TV

Regardless of who the next President of the United States is, The Beaverton has got it covered. The televised adaptation of the satirical website The Beaverton debuts Wednesday night on The Comedy Network with two possible lead stories. In one? The end of the world. The other? Bill Clinton is the First Husband. [Update: Armageddon it is.]

We were one of the over 100 sitting in the audience watching The Beaverton record its second-to-last Season 1 episode last week and it made for a fun night. Each of the 13 episodes finds anchors Emma Hunter (Mr. D) and Miguel Rivas (Meet the Family) and correspondents in news reporter Aisha Alfa, provocateur Donavon Stinson, financial correspondent Laura Cilevitz and foreign correspondent Marilla Wex skewering world topics.

Co-created by Luke Gordon Field and Jeff Detsky as well as website editors Jacob Duarte Spiel and Alexander Saxton, Pier 21’s Lazlo Barna and Melissa Williamson are executive producers.

“TV was always the dream,” Field says of creating an offshoot of the website for television. “I grew up on satirical television shows like The Daily Show … they were always my favourite shows. When I started writing political satire comedy, it was always in the back of my mind that it would be fun to create a TV show. I didn’t know that The Beaverton was ever going to have that opportunity and wasn’t working towards it. We were just building our name.”

Enter Detsky (Orphan Black), who noticed his Facebook friends were posting Beaverton stories on their news feeds. He immediately recognized the unique voice the site had and its reach (more than six million views in 2016) and knew it was a natural transition to television. Production on Season 1 happened in a nondescript warehouse shared by a church and the upcoming Top Chef Canada All-Stars, with Field, Detsky and 16 writers—most recently Kurt Smeaton, Scott Montgomery and Rupinder Gill—creating, doing table reads, punching up scripts and filming external bits in the week leading up to Thursday night tapings and production that has been rolling since late spring.

This is not The Daily Show. The Beaverton isn’t reacting to what happened in America, Canada or globally the day before. That, Field says, forces them to create original content not necessarily based on a headline. That frees the team up to cover stories that are always on the peripheral, like the Loonie, at a 20-year low, being swapped out in favour of Canadian Tire money.

And while Hunter and Rivas have extensive experience in sketch comedy writing, neither contribute to The Beaverton room. Instead, they’ve focused on delivering the stories and creating their on-screen personas. Rivas is buttoned-up and stiff, so unlike his actual personality, and Hunter is arrogant and braggy, totally opposite her self-deprecating humour when cameras aren’t rolling.

“We both approached it as, ‘What would make the best dynamic behind the desk and what’s original?'” Hunter explains. “Stereotypically, the story is the guy is a goof and super-funny and the girl checks him. This organic thing happened [between us] from the audition where we had this wonderful rhythm of give and take of being the straight man or having a moment and the characters evolved from there.”

“As a man, I agree with everything she just said,” Rivas says with a laugh.

The Beaverton airs Wednesdays at 10:30 p.m. ET/PT on The Comedy Network.

Image via Bell Media.

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail

Gerry Dee discusses Mr. D going Orphan Black in Season 6

When we left Gerry Duncan (Gerry Dee) and Lisa Mason (Lauren Hammersley) on Mr. D at the end of Season 5, the pair had woken up from a drunken night on the town, next to each other in bed and—gulp!—married.

Season 6, returning with “Gerry Does It Again” on Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. on CBC, jumps back into bed with the pair, who are adjusting to life as a married couple. Those nuptials extend past Episode 1, presenting an interesting challenge not only for the characters but co-creator Gerry Dee and the writing team. We spoke to Dee ahead of Tuesday’s return, about where the show is headed, its guest stars, its Orphan Black moment, and an update on the Mr. D adaptation Will Arnett had planned for CBS.

I think it was a bold move to have Gerry and Lisa get married at the end of Season 5. Was that idea floated around before Season 5, or did it come to fruition while writing this past season?
Gerry Dee: You don’t know, in this business, if you’re going to be back year-to-year. You have to end your season with it being a season finale and possibly being a series finale. That’s just the nature of our business. Right now we don’t know if we have a Season 7, but my mind starts to think, ‘OK if we do have a Season 7, what are some storylines? What do we want to do to change it up?’

One season, we changed it up and had Lisa become principal and that was a big thing. This time, we had Lisa and Gerry get married. You might wonder why Lisa is single? She’s very attractive and has a great career. We didn’t want Lauren to play the typical sitcom girl. We wanted to throw her a curve ball. She doesn’t have a boyfriend or a ton of friends. Gerry is definitely in the same boat, and it was kind of out of nowhere the way we thought of it. We have such great writers, headed by Jessie Gabe, and you just start throwing ideas around. We tried to have Gerry in a relationship in Season 2 and it just didn’t feel right. We tried to just stay away from Gerry in a relationship and this idea came to us. We have a lot of fun with it in Season 6.

laurenh-dsc_0113-gallery
Lauren Hammersley

Their relationship continues for at least one more episode. Why did you choose to keep it going? Will it show Gerry’s evolution as a man?
Look, they’re both not getting any younger. We’ve always established that Gerry wants to have a wife and kids. He’s not a player and is trying to find true love. Maybe this is a great place for me. I don’t think Gerry has ever deviated from wanting to be married. Is this settling? Maybe, in his mind. Or maybe it’s more Lisa settling. Or maybe it’s a cute way of flirting.

Meanwhile, Nisha and Simon are continuing their relationship. You’ve thrown Steven into the mix as Simon’s nemesis … who is also played by Mark Little. Clearly, Mark was up to the task of playing two characters.
We’ve played this story all along that Simon has this weird dynamic with his mother. There is this hint of incestuousness between them. The suggestion came, ‘What if we had a guy that looked like Simon?’ And then we went one step further. We pulled an Orphan Black. Those two are so funny. Adding Emma Hunter to the cast was great. We have such a strong cast and coming in and fitting in that group isn’t an easy task. She’s done it.

And we have such a wonderful writers’ room and that’s a huge, important part of any show. People give me credit because my name is on the show but this cast and writing room makes the show. And the producers and the crew. We have camera operators who will throw a line in. Everyone weighs in.

Mark Little
Mark Little

Who did you have in the writers’ room with you in Season 6 in addition to Jessie Gabe?
We had a little bit of Anita Kapila in Season 6, though she was working on Kim’s Convenience, which I think is a very funny show and will do well. We had Shebli Zarghami, Dane Clark and Linsey Stewart, George Reinblatt and co-creator Mike Volpe and myself. It’s such a great group now; the cohesiveness of the writers’ room is so important.

What can you reveal regarding guest stars this season? I know Missy Peregrym from Rookie Blue stopped by.
Mike Dopud appears. He’s been in so many things and we co-starred together in Canada Russia ’72. Something that Mike and I have done over the years—I’ve done it in the past with comedians I know by bringing them into the writers’ room or on the show—using people you’ve worked with. Missy and I had always connected at award shows and told her I’d love to get her on the show and I knew Mike from Canada Russia. But we rely less on guest stars now because our cast is so big.

What’s the status of Will Arnett’s adaptation of Mr. D for CBS?
That kind of came and went pretty quick. I wasn’t involved and Mike wasn’t involved. They liked the idea and liked the show. They hired a showrunner and he wrote a script and, I guess, he submitted it and it was turned down and the show was passed on. Mike and I are still looking. We think the show would do well in any country and we don’t know why someone hasn’t picked up the episodes and put them on a network somewhere. I’m meeting with folks and eOne is shopping it around, but from what I understand comedy is a hard sell internationally and the U.S. has hundreds of shows.

Mr. D airs Tuesdays at 9:30 p.m. on CBC.

Images courtesy of CBC.

 

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail

Toronto Blue Jays wild card strikes out Kim’s Convenience debut for one week

The Toronto Blue Jays’ regular season thriller may have been a boon for fans, but it’s caused one major headache for the CBC. The Jays one-game wild card faceoff against the Baltimore Orioles goes Tuesday night … straight up against the highly-anticipated debut of Kim’s Convenience.

Knowing baseball will decimate everything else ratings-wise in primetime on Tuesday, the network decided to move Kim’s Convenience‘s debut to next Tuesday, Oct. 11, at 9 p.m. for two back-to-back episodes. The days of solely relying on overnight ratings is a thing of the past; live plus-7 is where it’s at in the numbers game, so I don’t totally understand the decision to do this, especially after all of the media coverage for Kim‘s touting this week’s bow.

The other show affected by this is Mr. D. Season 6 of Gerry Dee’s comedy was slated to return on Oct. 11 at 9:30 p.m. It will debut a week later on Tuesday, Oct. 18, at 9:30 p.m. on CBC.

Created by Ins Choi first as a play for Toronto’s Soulpepper Theatre, Kim’s Convenience tells the story of the Kims, a Korean-Canadian family who run a convenience store in downtown Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Kim immigrated to Toronto in the 80’s to set up shop near Regent Park and had two kids, Jung and Janet who are now young adults. However, when Jung was 16, he and Appa had a major falling out involving a physical fight, stolen money and Jung leaving home. Father and son have been estranged since.

Kim’s Convenience stars Paul Sun-Hyung Lee as Appa, Jean Yoon as Umma, Simu Liu as Jung, Andrea Bang as Janet and Andrew Phung as Kimchee.

Kim’s Convenience debuts Tuesday, Oct. 11, at 9 and 9:30 p.m. on CBC.

Mr. D returns Tuesday, Oct. 18, at 9:30 p.m. on CBC.

Image courtesy of CBC.

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail

Production underway on The Comedy Network’s The Beaverton

From a media release:

The Comedy Network announced today that production is underway on THE BEAVERTON, Canada’s hardest-hitting satire series covering the topics you didn’t know needed covering. As revealed last night in a first-look promo during the COMEDY CENTRAL ROAST OF ROB LOWE, THE BEAVERTON is set to premiere November on Comedy. Produced by Pier 21 Films in association with The Comedy Network, 13 episodes of the half-hour series are set to be filmed in front of a live studio audience in Toronto beginning Saturday, Sept. 24, with field production already in progress in Toronto and Hamilton. For those who would like to be a part of the live audience tapings, tickets are available at beavertonlive@gmail.com.

The first-look promo clip of THE BEAVERTON, introduces co-anchors Emma Hunter and Miguel Rivas as they prepare to helm the program that puts stories about news, on television. A so-called televised adaptation of the immensely popular online satirical site TheBeaverton.com, THE BEAVERTON files fake news stories of the utmost importance, informed by real events, the cultural zeitgeist, and national news media.

With nearly 6 million views in 2016 and averaging more than half a million unique visitors a month, TheBeaverton.com has become a go-to source for Canadian satire. Already known for its shareable content online, TheBeaverton.com has broken some of the decade’s most viral “news stories” including “Most Canadians can’t name all nine provinces”  and “PK Subban fined for swearing only in English”. Beginning today, the newly revamped website fuels a consistently refreshed digital experience featuring exclusive digital-only content in the form of podcasts, articles and for the first time ever, original video.

THE BEAVERTON is the brainchild of co-creators Luke Gordon Field and Jeff Detsky (CALL ME FITZ, SEED) of TheBeaverton.com, as well as website senior editors Jacob Duarte Spiel and Alexander Saxton. Directors are Henry Sarwer-Foner (THE RICK MERCER REPORT) and Shelagh O’Brien (JUST FOR LAUGHS GALAS). Pier 21 Film’s Laszlo Barna and Melissa Williamson serve as Executive Producers.

THE BEAVERTON is produced by Pier 21 Films in association with The Comedy Network, with the participation of Canadian Media Fund, and the Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit.

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail