Posted on 09/21/2007 7:02:47 AM PDT by Watershed
Howard Gordon, executive producer of FOX's thriller "24," says actor Carlos Bernard acted "very cool about it" when Gordon called him in his car to tell him that his character, Counter Terrorist Unit operative Tony Almeida, was not dead after all and would be returning for the show's 7th season on Sunday, Jan. 13.
"But I know," Gordon says, "when I hung up the phone, I'm sure he did one of those 'Jerry Maguire' screams in the car."
The most frequently seen character in "24" aside from its hero, CTU super-agent Jack Bauer (Keifer Sutherland), Tony was introduced in season one and continued through season five, suffering personal, physical and professional ups and downs, culminating in being left for dead after a rogue former CTU agent (Peter Weller) gave him what appears now to have been a non-fatal drug overdose.
"That's something, obviously, we're going to have to explain away," Gordon says. "Hopefully, in the spirit of creating a good show and creating an interesting season, people will allow the fun [of '24']."
Gordon also sees Tony's resilience as the key to his return.
"It really ranks among Tony's other resurrections," he says. "I mean, he was blown up in a blast and was supposed to die there. He was shot in the neck in the third episode of season three, shot in the aorta at point-blank range, and he was basically back at the controls eight hours later.
"So in the nine lives of Tony Almeida, this is just another chapter, hopefully the most interesting of them."
Without spilling the beans about the details, Gordon says, "It's not the what of it, but the how, that's interesting."
But, as for Tony's apparently deceased ex-wife, CTU operative Michelle Dessler (Reiko Aylesworth), Gordon says, "No, she's definitely six feet under. Believe me, I know. We thought about that, too. Then we thought that everybody's dead except for Jack, and he's seeing ghosts."
This season, the show moves beyond the Los Angeles-based CTU to Washington, D.C, where Bauer is facing trial for his extreme actions in the pursuit of justice.
Although the show's primary shooting location remains a former pencil factory in Chatsworth, Calif., Gordon says, "We're also going to go to D.C. and shoot there, somewhere around the mid-October area."
Asked if he plans to get the usual D.C. exteriors with the Capitol and the Washington Monument looming in the background, Gordon says, "No, I thought we'd shoot a Wal-Mart in Maryland. What do you think it's going to be?"
In his writing career, Gordon has worked on many shows, including "The X-Files" -- during which he split with writing partner Alex Gansa, who has now joined the "24" team -- and "Buffy the Vampire Slayer."
Like those two shows, "24" has moved beyond being just a TV phenomenon into being a genuine cultural phenomenon, from inspiring college courses to having Jack Bauer's name invoked by pundits, politicians and presidential candidates.
"In many ways," Gordon says, "we never set out to do that. That said, we certainly enjoyed that access and that kind of influence, but it's something, in a way, that was thrust upon us. It's one, also, that bit us in the ass."
In particular, Gordon is referring to allegations that the show promotes torture (frequently used as a plot device) and/or a right-wing political philosophy.
"Anybody who's a reasonable person," Gordon says, "would really be insane to imagine that this show posits any sort of political point of view. It's utterly insane. You could draw equally from both sides of the aisle."
He continues, "We've always obfuscated the parties and, in fact, contradicted ourselves probably multiple times, willfully. This thing is more metaphor. It's not a documentary.
"It plays with a compressed version of reality, clearly, on so many fronts. Ultimately, its only agenda is to tell a good story."
But in February 2007, a New Yorker magazine profile of show co-creator (with Bob Cochran) Joel Surnow had him referring jokingly to himself as a "right-wing nut job" and talking about his conservative politics.
"When Joel came out," Gordon says, "and declared his politics, or allowed his politics to be declared, suddenly our show became this propaganda machine. And I do think it hurt us."
Asked if the reaction might have been different if the declared politics had leaned in the opposite direction, Gordon says, "Great question. I don't know the answer to that. I don't know. When, obviously, the clear irony is that there's Evan [executive producer Evan Katz] on the far left, and me somewhere in the middle, and Joel on the right.
"It's like a spectrum of views shared by the writers who work on the show. Didn't seem to help."
Lame. I absolutely HATE IT when writers cave into fan rantings.
As I understood it, the plot will have nothing to do with global warming. The production company is trying to be green and with LA smog it's not a bad idea.
It’s true ... I left last season, too much BS not enough suspense — The writing was absolutely terrible. The wife likes the dancing shows anyway :-(
THIS IS THE BEST NEWS EVER!!!!!!!!!
So happy, I have such a crush on Tony! And you knew he was coming back because his death was so lamearse...no silent clock or anything.
I guess they’re desperate to fix last season.
Shark
Jumped
I bet Garofalo will be the new Nina. She will be up to something bad. She will end up being arrested inside CTU when they find out.
24 has been ridiculous since the first season. By the 6th episode, it already had too many stupidities for any thinking person to stand.
Example - the ‘Dad’ who searched for the kid, only to have him turn out to be a bad guy trying to kidnap Jack’s family...why wouldn’t he just take a gun, go to their house and take them while Jack was at work?
Or the person who blew up the 747 in one of the first episodes - why? Isn’t that just about the hardest way possible to enter the country illegally?
24 has been a stupid show from the very beginning.
But you watched it anyway?!
While in Afghanistan, I watched about 3/4 of the first season on DVD...but I also watched about 1/2 of the first season of Lost, so one can assume my standards were pretty low.
I can only hope they portray the woman president as what hillary would be like; shrill, shrieking voice, throwing stuff around, and cussing out the Secret Service. Then they could portray the pompous swimmer and other dems spewing all their anti-American venom in hearings.
At the trial, have some wacked out protesters and touchy-feely ACLU lawyers demanding more rights for criminals than for Jack Bauer. That would seem realistic.
Yep... Potsie is warming up the ski boat right now.
So, this is what he thinks led to lower ratings, not the plot.
I don't care about her joining the cast - just as long as the season doesn't suck (last year's did), and she keeps her politics out of it.
I watch 24 for entertainment, not politics. When I want my politics, I'll read a political source.
>> Not sure Im gonna be able to handle this seasons global warming slant.
According to Rush, who is friends with many of the cast members and producers of 24, the “24 going green” stories had to do with production, not the plot. The 24 production is going “carbon-neutral” ... the plot will have nothing to do with environmentalism or global warming.
H
>> By the 6th episode, it already had too many stupidities for any thinking person to stand.
Obnoxious and condescending at the same time ... a double-threat guy!
Plenty of “thinking people” enjoy 24.
H
>> Or the person who blew up the 747 in one of the first episodes - why? Isnt that just about the hardest way possible to enter the country illegally?
She wasn’t entering illegally ... she was an American assassin. She stole a White House photographer ID, from a passenger, so that a look-alike could enter a fundraiser to assassinate Palmer. She blew up the plane to kill the photographer - whose death specifically wasn’t noticed by CTU, the media, or the Secret Service because of the chaos of the 747 explosion.
H
It's okay. They'll just have Chloe roll her eyes whenever JG says anything.
So you never saw S2 through S6. Ok.
Btw, it DID get better. And there's a reason S1 was strange. Fox ordered 13 eps. Originally, the last ep was the one with the whole family in the chopper, safe. It was picked up to be aired and the writers were called in to add the rest of the season after the fact in order to make 24 eps.
I had tried to forget the episode. I suspect there are easier ways to get an ID - her method had a high potential for failure, with little upside. Much easier to shoot the guy, then conceal the crime in a car crash. She only needed to delay discovery by a few hours.
The only way a thinking person could like 24 is to watch it with a half-finished bottle of Jim Beam...
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