Ken’s tribute and loving memories of working with the wonderful, talented, and somewhat kooky Kirstie Alley for six years on CHEERS.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
Ken’s tribute and loving memories of working with the wonderful, talented, and somewhat kooky Kirstie Alley for six years on CHEERS.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
More with the writing/husband and wife team of Annie Levine & Jonathon Emerson. This week focuses on topics such as the writers room — in person and on Zoom — the current state of comedy, working for Netflix, the enduring popularity of Golden Girls and much more.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
Ken chats with Annie Levine & Jonathon Emerson, the Executive Producers of THE UPSHAWS — the hit Netflix comedy starring Wanda Sykes, Mike Epps, and Kim Fields, going into its third season. Lots of topics on the table including how to break into the business and nepotism (Annie is Ken’s daughter). It’s an informative and very fun discussion.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
Celebrate the beginning of the holiday season with some of the worst, cringe worthiest, hilarious songs ever unleashed upon the world. Enjoy if you can!
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
Ken and his longtime writing partner, David Isaacs discuss breaking into the business, the dynamics of a good partnership, and tips for making you a better staff writer.
Use code: Ken15 during checkout at https://www.zenviahemp.com to get 15% off your order!
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
In this special episode Ken reunites with his longtime writing partner, David Isaacs, to discuss the future of comedy.
Use code: Ken15 during checkout to get 15% off your order at https://www.zenviahemp.com
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
As an experiment, Ken and his writing partner, David Isaacs once wrote a short one-person play. Writing a 20 minute monologue is quite an exercise. Hear the result and hopefully get some laughs.
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Ken Levine & David Isaacs once wrote a script that the studio president hated so much he tried to get them booted off the lot. Another delightful feel-good Hollywood story.
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From the new FRASIER reboot, to curing the common cold, old movies, and selling a pilot CBS had no intention of making — Ken starts off with one topic and just begins free associating. God knows what else is in this episode. Find out.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
Ken continues his discussion with author/filmmaker, David Leaf on the amazing life of musical genius, Brian Wilson. Lots of good and bad vibrations. If you heard part one I guarantee you’ll listen to part two.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
Brian Wilson, the creative musical genius of the Beach Boys has led a rollercoaster of a life. One of his closest friends, David Leaf, offers a fascinating and candid portrait of this brilliant but troubled musician.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
Since the royal family has been front page news these days, Ken discusses his various brushes with royalty and other distinguished world leaders. If there’s a theme it might be irreverence.
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More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
More advice for actors on just what it takes to get that job, and the process of casting several iconic television series. Learn what the business is really like in this fun and informative episode.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
John Levey is an award-winning casting director of such iconic shows as THE WEST WING and ER. With great insight and candor he discusses the state of casting today — what producers are looking for, what actors can do to maximize their chances. If you’re an actor this is the episode you can not miss.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
More on the making of documentary films. Getting music clearances, enlisting celebrities, and other assorted stories and tips from award winning filmmaker, John Scheinfeld.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
I have decided to finally end the blog. This will be my last post. After doing this almost daily for close to 16 years it is not a decision I made lightly. To be honest, I had been contemplating it for about a year.
There have been 6,850 posts, 188, 330 comments, more than 3,000 Friday Questions answered, and over 42,000,000 visitors over that stretch (of course it could just be 42 people who came back a million times).
Why am I stepping away? Well, first of all, I’ve outlived blogs. Mine may be the last one on the internet. When I started and blogs were the thing, I figured this would be fun to do for a couple of years. Other bloggers advised I post something new every day as a way to build an audience. That was a little more work than I had planned but okay. Eventually the blog took on a life of its own and I found myself posting daily for well over ten years. I can’t believe I didn’t run out of things to write by 2010.
But what was once fun has become a chore. I think I have run out of things to write about, or at least they’re getting much harder to come up with. I began reducing my schedule hoping that would help, but it hasn’t. I just feel it’s time.
I’m also involved in a number of other creative pursuits and really want to focus more on those. The podcast will continue. I’ve been doing that for six years and nearing 300 weekly episodes. I thought initially a lot of my blog readers would subscribe to the podcast, but that hasn’t been the case. I seem to have a largely separate audience for the podcast. But it’s still out there if you wish to follow me. I’m also on Twitter (@KenLevine), Instagram (Hollywood and Levine), and from time to time my cartoons will pop up in The New Yorker. So I’m not David Letterman growing a ZZ Top beard and disappearing into the Ozarks somewhere.
What I will miss most is you. I’ve made a number of good friends and have really enjoyed the little community that has formed via the comments section. Often times I found the comments more interesting than my posts. So I will miss the daily interaction and your contribution.
Beyond that, I sincerely hope you got some value out of this sixteen-year labor of love. You were entertained, maybe learned a writing tip, enjoyed the assorted adventures of my various careers, and looked forward to the occasional photo of Natalie Wood.
It’s certainly been a fun and rewarding ride; a much longer ride than expected.
The blog will remain up. I’ll still post weekly links to new podcast episodes. And you’re welcome to dive into the archives. Among the 6,850 posts there are at least 20 that are really good.
Some people to thank: Howard Hoffman, Lee Goldberg, Cynthia Furey, Mark Evanier, Dan O’Day, Doug McEwan, Larry Gelbart, and all my guest bloggers (that ranged from Aaron Sorkin to Babe Ruth).
Thank you for your support. Thank you for allowing some old guy TV writer to be a part of your life. I wish you all much success, good health, happiness, and projects that bring you as much joy and satisfaction as this blog has provided me.
As hard as it’s been to write this, ending it is even harder. So I’ve decided to just leave a teddy bear on the bunk and move on, hoping we meet again.
Thanks again.
Ken
John Scheinfeld has been producing, writing, and directing documentaries for twenty years. Learn about the fascinating world of documentary films along with some great stories.
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Tourism is always big in Los Angeles, especially during the summer. Local residents on the Westside are used to seeing kids stand out on Sunset Blvd. selling maps to the stars’ homes. Hollywood locals take it for granted that a thousand nimrods in Bermuda shorts will be milling about Grauman’s Chinese Theater and getting selfies with Spiderman or a guy dressed like Marilyn Monroe. And double-decked tour buses clogging up left hand lanes is a city staple.
Finally, from Rappin' Rodney:
Ken, what's your take on shows/movies that have long, slow parts? When they linger on a scene or image for far too long without anything further in it that moves the plot forward. What is the writer/director trying to tell us? Is it just to add atmosphere? Is it ever just trying to pad screentime? I think what bugs me most about those parts is not just the slow scene itself, but the implication that as the viewer there's something wrong with me if I don't want to sit through it: that I'm some ADD-addled teen that can't appreciate "art." But if there's a chance that's true, what art am I missing?
For the most part I think it’s indulgent and pretentious. BREAKING BAD established that and it was fine and somewhat unique for the first few times. But I didn’t tune in to see the New Mexico desert. One or two quick establishing shots and I’m like “I’ve got it. Get to the story.”
That’s one of the reasons I can’t stand Terrance Malick movies. They’re just filled with long atmospheric beauty shots that mean nothing. It seems stupid to have to pay to be bored.
What’s your Friday Question?
This week Ken replays his interview with Earl Pomerantz from 2018. Earl was an Emmy winning comedy writer who sadly passed away in 2020. He was insightful, very funny, with a unique voice. With appreciation — here again is Earl Pomerantz.
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One night last week I went on DEADLINE, the Hollywood trade site. And here’s what I learned.
It was a programming move that paid off handsomely.
And finally, from Kendall Rivers:
Regarding the character of Frank Burns. How did you go about writing for such a let's face it pretty one dimensional character while making him still interesting and funny enough to still get laughs despite being so unlikable?
I only wrote three episodes with Frank Burns, and I have to say it was great fun to write such a cartoonish character. We tried to portray him as being somewhat pathetic to make him more sympathetic. But to be honest, we were basing his likability on laughs. If he was really funny we felt that might take the curse of the character.
Still, when he left we saw it as an opportunity to fill that spot with someone smarter and more formidable. Boy, did we get lucky with David Ogden Stiers.
What’s your Friday Question?
There have been many tributes to Vin Scully, arguably the greatest sportscaster of all-time, who passed away on August 2nd. Ken was blessed to know him and work with him for many years. In this extended episode, Ken shares his personal stories. It’s a tribute unlike any other.
More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426
As a longtime radio freak this breaks my heart.
Here's some recommended comedy reading for those last few beach weeks of the summer.
Required Reading---
Neil Simon – Odd Couple (play)
John Kennedy Toole - Confederacy of Dunces (novel)
Recommended Reading --
John Vorhaus – The Comic Toolbox
Ken Levine – Must Kill TV
Woody Allen – Without Feathers
Woody Allen – Getting Even
Tad Friend - “What’s So Funny?”
John Morreall – “Historical Theories of Laughter”
Henri Bergson – Laughter, An Essay on the Meaning of the Comic
Steve Martin – Born Standing Up
Douglas McEwan -- My Lush Life
Tina Fey – Bossypants
Marc Maron – Attempting Normal
Andy Goldberg – Improv Comedy
Mike Sacks – Poking a Dead Frog
I want a ten page paper on one of these books from all of you by Friday.
No matter how successful you are, there are always jobs you didn’t get for one reason or another. The takeaway is not to be discouraged. It turns out not getting the all-night DJ shift on a radio station in Fresno wasn’t the end of the world. These are the jobs that Ken didn’t get.
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Cape May Stage in Cape May, N.J.: Home of my play, AMERICA'S SEXIEST COUPLE. When you look at the theatre in just the right light it almost resembles a church. Or is it just me? |
I don't usually take pictures of food, but -- $35. In LA the same dinner is $75. And you don't get applesauce. |
I was kinda hoping they'd join the "Sea Level Club." |
Line for Tommy's hot dog stand. Where's Joey Chestnut? |
Kind of unusual. Not many places take cash these days. |
Lovely Victorian homes grace Cape May. Pretty classy for a beach resort. |
Why do I kill myself writing original jokes? |
Notice they advertise everything but pizza. |
Police activity right under our window at 4 am one morning. |
You can't swing a dead cat without hitting a miniature golf course. |
Cast, director, and some guy. |
Bill Tatum & Karen Ziemba starring in my play. This is a scene from the play. I didn't go into their home. |
You see as many of these as Tesla's. |
Here’s a Friday Question that became an entire post.
Merril Markoe
Anne Flett-Giordano
Regina Hicks
Robin Schiff
Cheri Steinkellner
Jane Wagner
Susan Harris
Linda Teverbaugh
Jen Crittenton
Heidi Perlman
Eileen Heisler
DeAnn Heline
Alexa Junge
Nancy Steen
Doris Hess
Wendy Cutler
Lynne Stewart
Wendy Goldman
Jenny Bicks
Wanda Sykes
Korby Siamis
Rachel Sweet
Janis Hirsch
Lissa Kapstein
Ellen Byron
Joyce Gittlin
Pam Fryman
Katy Garretson
Tracy Newman
Kate Angelo
Charlotte Brown
Pat Nardo
Gloria Banta
Karen Hall
and… Annie Levine
This is not a baseball post (even though baseball is involved. It’s a real life version of that nightmare we all have. You know the one – it’s the day of your final and you were never in class and you woke up late and forgot your bluebook, etc. Or you’re on stage and know none of your lines and your costume is falling apart and your throat is parched so you can’t speak. For a baseball announcer, the equivalent would be you’re on the air, you’re totally unprepared, and you have no idea what’s going on in the game. I had that happen to me. In REAL LIFE. And to make matters worse, it was my first game ever in the major leagues. So this is not really a baseball story; it's a "why I'm still in therapy" story.