ONTD

12:58 am - 01/31/2013

How Smash Became TV's Biggest Trainwreck


A year ago, Smash began its first season on NBC, critically praised and exceedingly hyped, with the well-funded backing of the network and its chairman, Robert Greenblatt, who considered the musical drama his pet project. Steven Spielberg had dreamed up the concept, and his DreamWorks TV was behind it.

But by the time the show had its finale in May, it had become an object of ritualistic ridicule: appointment television for hate-watchers, that new American sport created by social media. Smash's unsympathetic lead characters, oddly placed musical sequences, schizophrenic tonal shifts, cartoon-like villains who literally say, "You haven't heard the last of this," and strangely accessorized actors all became fodder for Twitter jokes. Comedian Julie Klausner even devoted a podcast to Smash, which she called "the best television of all time."

Along the way, Smash's creator/showrunner, Theresa Rebeck, was fired. Rebeck had made it clear that Smash was her vision, and when that vision turned out to be laughable, she was shown the door. Despite all of Smash's problems, it did well enough in the ratings to be renewed for a second season — it aired after hit The Voice, and benefited from that lead-in.

Now, new executive producer Joshua Safran, late of Gossip Girl, will attempt to turn Smash around in Season 2. It has a two-hour premiere on Tuesday.

How does a lovingly looked-after show with such high stakes for all involved become a joke? Smash is a case study: in how megalomania and television can clash unproductively; in how high expectations can crash immediately; and in how intense network and studio oversight can result in a paranoid show creator who causes workplace misery and, most importantly, a bad TV show.

NBC would not participate in this story. Instead, I spoke with more than a half-dozen people who worked on the first season — all of whom would talk to me only under the condition of anonymity out of fear of angering NBC, DreamWorks, and a number of other people — to try to figure out what went so horribly wrong with Smash.

You must read the rest of the piece in the SOURCE; it's some of the best TV journalism ever. Half the stuff blew my fucking mind, seriously. And it explains EVERYTHING.
ragechill 31st-Jan-2013 07:20 am (UTC)
Never watched it but it can't be worse than Gossip Girl or Glee so the title is a lie.
fwee_prower 31st-Jan-2013 07:26 am (UTC)
Not the title is true. Everyone had high expectations for it. Before it aired. NBC spent so much money on it.

Ad it was a huge disastah
arrowtoes 31st-Jan-2013 08:07 am (UTC)
I remember the ads for it that played before movies where they acted like a bunch of people outside singing Cheers (Drink to That) was an orgasmic, life-changing experience.

I thought it was going to be a cleaned up Glee in a fancy suit. But that was like six months before it aired and by then I forgot it existed until everyone was like, remember Smash and how it was supposed to change everything lol oops
microminiscrew 31st-Jan-2013 08:12 am (UTC)
I remember it being advertised like that, like glee but good! Except the mere premise of that chick being a golden star lol no
browneyedguuurl 31st-Jan-2013 12:29 pm (UTC)
Meanwhile the good shows like Community, Parks and Rec., Go On, Up All Night and others get shit. Good one NBC!
astrologee 31st-Jan-2013 01:40 pm (UTC)
Yep. Shaaaame on NBC.
microminiscrew 31st-Jan-2013 08:09 am (UTC)
well I know it has one of the problems glee does ie trying hard to get people to care about the most basic of whitebread bitches
if_musicbe 31st-Jan-2013 08:33 am (UTC)
I lol'd. I just. could. not. with them trying to convince me McPhee was anywhere near as talented as Megan Hilty. The cognitive dissonance was too much so I had to give up.
westamp 31st-Jan-2013 06:41 pm (UTC)
But Steven Spielberg hated Megan Hilty. He wanted her recast. I just think he didn't like it that she wasn't as willow thin as the McPheever.
glo_unit 31st-Jan-2013 08:51 am (UTC)
May not be worse, but it became a train wreck faster than Glee did.
firefox1490 31st-Jan-2013 09:40 am (UTC)
Naw lets be real Glee's been a train wreck since the really episode 5 but some people say episode 13 which I guess can pass. But Glee's didn't even make a season before it was a train wreck.
openmyminibar 31st-Jan-2013 10:48 am (UTC)
this show wrecked from the pilot tho. even the people working on it said it fucked up from ep 3
altho i personally think glee was never rlly good so let's call it a draw
firefox1490 31st-Jan-2013 10:52 am (UTC)
No you're totally right the first episode is flawless. Its the trap that lured everyone in. Then that long ass wait from the first episode to the second episode just laid the trap deeper so there was ANTICIPATION and shit. So people built it up to be awesome but really it was bad.

This is coming from someone who watched 2 and a half seasons of it because in your head you go that 1st episode was awesome obviously its going to get better. BUT IT NEVER DOES but by then its too fucking late and you've committed.

Then as it gets progressively WORST AND WORST you start comparing episodes going well episode 5 wasn't so bad so that makes up for the fact episode 9 is shit and so forth.

TRAP TRAP TRAP TRAP TRAP

I saw the light and even now I still can't stop myself from reading fanfic for it because IT HAD SO MUCH LIGHT AND POTENTIAL.
openmyminibar 31st-Jan-2013 07:52 pm (UTC)
yep exactly that. i think a lot of ppl still watch for that reason, mourning the potential & holding out hope for s1 glory days (that didn't exist). I always see comments like ~well tonight wasn't so bad maybe it's getting back on track!~ nope. there is no track. & they have 2 other shows rn so bye.
I skipped it during the time everyone was fawning over the pilot & started late so by then it was just like 'oh'.

weirdly i think glee would have a better shot at making a retool work than this show cuz smash's big problem is it's basic premise. there's no fixing that. idk if u read the article but they also admit they screwed up from like the 2nd episode.
both trainwrecks from day 1 but glee was good at hiding it, which ays trapped a lot of people
dumpyfledgling 31st-Jan-2013 03:27 pm (UTC)
Actually some of the non-Marilyn related numbers have been horrible like the one where the blonde girl is singing and dancing in her room and she's smizing directly at the camera. It was awkward.
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