Masters of Scale by Reid Hoffman & June Cohen & Deron Triff
Author:Reid Hoffman & June Cohen & Deron Triff [Hoffman, Reid & Cohen, June & Triff, Deron]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Crown
Published: 2021-09-07T00:00:00+00:00
Venture into unfamiliar territory
Itâs an old Hollywood story: Ambitious kid gets a job in the mailroom, works hard, schmoozes his way up and down the halls, catches the eye of a bigwig, and begins his ascentâ¦.
But thatâs not exactly how it played out for Barry Diller. He did start in the mailroomâat the William Morris Agency. But while everyone else in the mailroom was, in Barryâs words, âsucking up to the agents,â Barry snuck off to the file room to study. Within those file cabinets was the entire history of the entertainment business. âAnd so,â Barry says, âI spent three years reading about the business, from A to Zâ¦. It was my school.â
When Barry emerged, he was ready to apply what he had learnedâand to move on from the agency. A friend introduced him to a rising TV executive at ABC, who asked Barry to be his assistant. Barry wasnât particularly interested in making photocopies and answering phones, but he took the job, because, as he puts it, âIâve always believed whatever youâre interested in, get on the widest road. And television was a pretty wide road.â
The network was struggling, and that was actually good news for Barry. âABC was the third network, the hip-shooting network. It would try almost anything,â Barry recalls. âIt was also like a candy store. If you wanted responsibility, you just took it.â
Barry seized the opportunity to pitch a big idea.
âAll television at that time was series, either comedies or dramas,â Barry says. âAnd in both forms, everything was present-day. Those series would go on for seven years, Lucy still lived in her same apartment. She never moved. There was all middleâno beginning, no end. And I thought, Why donât we tell stories on TV that have a beginning, middle, and end, like they do in movies?â
So Barry pitched the then-radical idea of a âMovie of the Weekââa movie made specifically for TV. His colleagues balked. It just wasnât television, the naysayers said. Thatâs not what we do. But having studied seventy-five years of entertainment history back in the William Morris file room, Barry knew there was a precedent for movie-like storytelling, with decades-ago series like Playhouse 90 and Studio One.
Barry fought and prevailedâor, to put it another way, the ABC execs gave him just enough rope to hang himself. âIf anybody thought it would work, why would they give responsibility to a twenty-three-year-old?â he says. âEveryone thought it would fail, and theyâd get rid of this aggressive kid in the process.â
And so the TV movie was born, and became such a permanent fixture in the television landscape that it even earned an Emmy category of its own. Among ABCâs more memorable productions: Duel, directed by a young Steven Spielberg, and the classic tearjerker Brianâs Song.
But Barry soon ran up against the limitations of his own format. When he tried to adapt novels for the small screen, he wasnât able to do the storylines justice. âYou canât do it in two hours, much less ninety minutes.
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