Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA hard-drinking New York tabloid reporter enlists journalism students to aid his investigations, using resourceful but sometimes unethical methods to get scoops.A hard-drinking New York tabloid reporter enlists journalism students to aid his investigations, using resourceful but sometimes unethical methods to get scoops.A hard-drinking New York tabloid reporter enlists journalism students to aid his investigations, using resourceful but sometimes unethical methods to get scoops.
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Oliver Platt is a genius. One could simply repeat that for 100 lines and sum up this series - and anything else in which this rotund brilliant actor appears. He became Porthos in the bouncy Three Musketeers; he was amazing as Hector in the sadly under-rated Lake Placid; he was the perfect barrister in West Wing. Platt shares an ineffable star quality with Orson Welles and that enviable talent with which Roger Ebert described M. Emmet Walsh which I hereby paraphrase: "No motion picture featuring Olliver Platt can be all bad." In this he joins the company of the great Ian Holm and very very few others. As the star of this sadly-missed series Platt had the chance, for far too short a time, chew the scenery in his own series as a talented, irritating, self-centred, brilliant human being. How much of this is Platt and how much acting is irrelevant. It is simply a pity that the show was so quickly cancelled because, to say it once more, Oliver Platt is a genius.
Does anybody still read a newspaper, anymore? I mean, yes, you can go to the websites of just about every printed press still in business and, depending on if they demand you become a subscriber, look at today's top stories, read about the latest entertainment news... even get in a game of Wordle!
But I'm talking about going to a kiosk, plopping down your folding green and your silver, picking up a physical stack of printed paper and reading it.
The fact that we collectively don't do that much anymore, makes this series seem even more quaint than it otherwise might have been.
This is kind of a spinoff series from the "Law & Order" franchise. Series creator Dick Wolf wanted to produce a show that tackled the kinds of stories that were actually seen in the New York papers. Does that fact, in the year 2000, when this show aired, make this the first program that featured stories that were "RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES!" Maybe not, but perhaps it was the first to admit it, even as they ran the boilerplate disclaimer that "this story is fiction."
Oliver Platt, always moody, glib and intense, got to use his complete acting palette in the character of Wallace Benton, (he prefers "Wally," thank you very much) a journalist for a tabloid rag called The New York Ledger, which, if you get a good look at the newspaper's masthead, is clearly modeled after The New York Post.
I think they wanted to make Platt's character a kind of Jimmy Breslin type: a hardnosed, hard drinking honcho, who wrote hard hitting pieces with a bit of a hard head. Jimmy Breslin... Wally Benton... I'm not saying, I'm just saying.
There's plenty of reasons for Platt's writer to want to hit the bar. His wife, played by Hope Davis, is divorcing him but she's lingering around, because she continues to work at the Ledger. His editor, played by Bebe Neuwirth, is always against everything he says before he says it. And the the wealthy owner and publisher, played by Tom Conti (and obviously aping Rupert Murdoch - except he's Scottish, not Australian), has higher ideals for the paper, which maybe puts him in line with "Citizen Kane?" Suffice it to say, they didn't get THAT right!
New York is all over this series, top to bottom, and the stories were, like most of Dick Wolf's work, pretty worthwhile, if not a little far-fetched... Like the fact that Benton was also teaching a course on Journalism at Columbia University. He ropes his young interns into helping him investigate his latest story, including cub reporter Lili Taylor.
Even though this would have existed in the L&O Universe (The Ledger was referenced multiple times as a source for info and copies of the paper itself appeared on episodes in that group), this absolutely was a stand alone show and it featured a bit more humor than you would find in those other shows, even as the format of the program followed the standards of all of the other shows in that canon. But maybe that's why it didn't make the cut? If they added in more crossovers (and those would have been completely natural in the course of this series) it could have helped anchor the audience a bit more, early in the run, so they might have had a more solid foundation. A few years before, David E. Kelley did his infamous crossover with "Ally McBeal" and "The Practice" on two different networks, so there was precedence.
Finally, the message of the show might have put off some viewers - that being: print journalists are good-hearted seekers of the truth, wherever it leads them, and are working hard to get the story right. That seems difficult to deal with now, with so many newspapers shuttering their offices and fewer and fewer resources dedicated to that element of news gathering. Where have you gone, Wally Benton... our nation turns its lonely eyes to you. Woo-woo-woo.
But I'm talking about going to a kiosk, plopping down your folding green and your silver, picking up a physical stack of printed paper and reading it.
The fact that we collectively don't do that much anymore, makes this series seem even more quaint than it otherwise might have been.
This is kind of a spinoff series from the "Law & Order" franchise. Series creator Dick Wolf wanted to produce a show that tackled the kinds of stories that were actually seen in the New York papers. Does that fact, in the year 2000, when this show aired, make this the first program that featured stories that were "RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES!" Maybe not, but perhaps it was the first to admit it, even as they ran the boilerplate disclaimer that "this story is fiction."
Oliver Platt, always moody, glib and intense, got to use his complete acting palette in the character of Wallace Benton, (he prefers "Wally," thank you very much) a journalist for a tabloid rag called The New York Ledger, which, if you get a good look at the newspaper's masthead, is clearly modeled after The New York Post.
I think they wanted to make Platt's character a kind of Jimmy Breslin type: a hardnosed, hard drinking honcho, who wrote hard hitting pieces with a bit of a hard head. Jimmy Breslin... Wally Benton... I'm not saying, I'm just saying.
There's plenty of reasons for Platt's writer to want to hit the bar. His wife, played by Hope Davis, is divorcing him but she's lingering around, because she continues to work at the Ledger. His editor, played by Bebe Neuwirth, is always against everything he says before he says it. And the the wealthy owner and publisher, played by Tom Conti (and obviously aping Rupert Murdoch - except he's Scottish, not Australian), has higher ideals for the paper, which maybe puts him in line with "Citizen Kane?" Suffice it to say, they didn't get THAT right!
New York is all over this series, top to bottom, and the stories were, like most of Dick Wolf's work, pretty worthwhile, if not a little far-fetched... Like the fact that Benton was also teaching a course on Journalism at Columbia University. He ropes his young interns into helping him investigate his latest story, including cub reporter Lili Taylor.
Even though this would have existed in the L&O Universe (The Ledger was referenced multiple times as a source for info and copies of the paper itself appeared on episodes in that group), this absolutely was a stand alone show and it featured a bit more humor than you would find in those other shows, even as the format of the program followed the standards of all of the other shows in that canon. But maybe that's why it didn't make the cut? If they added in more crossovers (and those would have been completely natural in the course of this series) it could have helped anchor the audience a bit more, early in the run, so they might have had a more solid foundation. A few years before, David E. Kelley did his infamous crossover with "Ally McBeal" and "The Practice" on two different networks, so there was precedence.
Finally, the message of the show might have put off some viewers - that being: print journalists are good-hearted seekers of the truth, wherever it leads them, and are working hard to get the story right. That seems difficult to deal with now, with so many newspapers shuttering their offices and fewer and fewer resources dedicated to that element of news gathering. Where have you gone, Wally Benton... our nation turns its lonely eyes to you. Woo-woo-woo.
Why NBC had to cut this show? Because of the rating? They don't know yet that sometimes, a show needs time to grow? They don't remember that Seinfeld was not a very successful show the first year? It reminds me of an episode of The Simpsons where Homer is the coach of a young football team and has the need to cut everybody off!
It was a good show, not the best ever but a good show. I personally think that it's good enough to keep it on the air, at least for an entire season.
It was a good show, not the best ever but a good show. I personally think that it's good enough to keep it on the air, at least for an entire season.
I think this show is great. I didn't watch it when it was actually on NBC, but when Bravo played a few of the episodes last week I fell in love with it. I think that it had amazing actors and actresses, and it was quite funny at times. It was interesting.
Only one episode of Deadline has aired, and I'm already a fan. I must admit, I was looking forward to this show way before it premiered, but now that I have seen it, I love it. The show stars Oliver Platt as Wallace Benton, a journalist for a New York tabloid paper called the Ledger. He always gets this information he needs for his stories no matter what it takes.
Wallace works at the same paper as his wife, and they seem to be in the middle of a divorce/separation, tho they're clearly still on really good terms. Benton, along with his journalism, teaches a group of journalism grad students. He uses one of his students, a female-I forget her name, to help him research stories, and she's one of the main characters. He has other students who are in the show less, but they also help him get information for his stories. I love Platt in general, and I think he is perfect in this role. He's passionate about what he does, he works hard, and it looks as tho he's a kind of guy who is always going to try to do the right thing. I like that in a character. Platt is also very funny in this show. I think overall, the show is great. Great characters, perfect casting, and a thrilling plot. I think this show has a bright future.
Wallace works at the same paper as his wife, and they seem to be in the middle of a divorce/separation, tho they're clearly still on really good terms. Benton, along with his journalism, teaches a group of journalism grad students. He uses one of his students, a female-I forget her name, to help him research stories, and she's one of the main characters. He has other students who are in the show less, but they also help him get information for his stories. I love Platt in general, and I think he is perfect in this role. He's passionate about what he does, he works hard, and it looks as tho he's a kind of guy who is always going to try to do the right thing. I like that in a character. Platt is also very funny in this show. I think overall, the show is great. Great characters, perfect casting, and a thrilling plot. I think this show has a bright future.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesIn the same "universe" as the Law & Order franchises.
- ConexõesSpin-off from Lei & Ordem (1990)
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