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Photo: CBS
The second of a back-to-back set of new episodes, “Reality Shock” gives us scarcely any forward motion for Elsbeth’s DOJ-mandated investigation of potential corruption in her assigned precinct, but a bit like Hansel and Gretel following the path of stones in the moonlight, Elsbeth’s eye for shiny and tenaciously clinging glitter eventually leads her where she really needs to go.
Our murder victim of the week is Wendy Wexler (Nadia Dajani), electrocuted in her tub with one of her own personally-branded blenders (Wendy’s Blendies!) after trying to blackmail Skip Mason, her (fake) friend and (actual) executive producer on the super-successful reality series Lavish Ladies. The blackmail gambit was a bridge too far for Skip, especially after Wendy portentously name-dropped Katricia, who is as yet unseen, but let’s remember her name. In the end, Wendy’s reach exceeded her grasp, and Skip turned Wendy’s Blendies against her. He’d told her to knock off the constant impromptu product placement, but would she listen? No! The over-the-top version of Chekov’s gun that results is somehow both grim and delightful.
For clarity and legal reasons, Lavish Ladies is absolutely positively 100% not Real Housewives of New York. Skip — Jesse Tyler Ferguson, expertly delivering an increasingly high-strung and indignant man on the verge of a nervous breakdown — proudly displays framed posters for all of the Lavish Ladies franchises he’s spun off over the years in his office. His ratings-crushing brainchild is Skip’s pride and joy, and as God is his witness, he was not about to let the likes of Wendy and her threats of blackmail endanger the flow of money and power he’s grown so used to enjoying.
I can’t help thinking that if this guy had gotten out of the Lavish Ladies game just after it hit big, he could have enjoyed a long, luxurious, residuals-fueled retirement entirely free of these women who he spends the rest of the episode describing as spoiled, silly, untrustworthy fame whores and lushes, each of whom he also (privately) claims is his favorite. He probably would not have turned to murder, which would have been a better outcome for everyone! Instead, he’s stuck on a gilded hamster wheel of his own creation, applying his editing skills, excellent memory for details, and technological know-how to create an alibi-furnishing voicemail using a snippet of Tracy (Rebecca Creskoff), a chronically late Lavish Lady, celebrating being almost on time for once.
Thinking that his editing prowess has done the job of deflecting any suspicion that could have been heading his way, Skip isn’t as vigilant as he should be once Elsbeth and Officer Kaya are on the scene. Like crows and ravens, Elsbeth is drawn to shiny things, and also like those brilliant corvids, she’s very good at problem-solving. Skip is simply no match for Elsbeth’s sparkle-fixated tenacity, particularly when paired with Officer Kaya’s encyclopedic knowledge of Lavish Ladies.
This peek into Officer Kaya’s interests outside of work continues the development of her investigative partnership and friendship with Elsbeth. After being a little bit miffed at Elsbeth for outing her at work as a Lavish Ladies superfan, Officer Kaya softens her stance, inviting Elsbeth to her place in Queens for a crash course in Lavish Ladies lore. The evening gives Elsbeth the opportunity to appreciate Officer Kaya’s eye for interior design and proves crucial for Elsbeth’s dogged assembly of the many, varied details she needs to break Skip’s alibi, a process she starts on her own, and later continues at Captain Wagner’s request. There’s definitely a grudging admiration thing going on for him now.
The first detail Elsbeth chases down is the role of glitter in this murder, and it’s ubiquitous — in Wendy’s tub, courtesy of the bath bombs she flogged via Cameo; on sloppily cleaned wine glasses in her kitchen cupboards; on Skip’s hands as he sat for an on-set manicure the morning after Wendy’s death. The second piece falls into place as Elsbeth catches Tracy’s memorable comment about being on time, complete with an exuberant “yay for me!”, during her binge watch at Officer Kaya’s home. What are the chances that she’d say the exact same words, with the exact same intonation, on TV and by chance on a voicemail?
Once they begin, Elsbeth and Officer Kaya pick at thread after loose thread in the overall narrative Skip has been weaving. He repeatedly describes Wendy’s drinking as sad, but her autopsy reveals that she wasn’t drunk or high at the time of her death, decreasing the likelihood that she knocked the blender into the tub in a stupor. Besides, margaritas are a party drink. It just doesn’t add up! Skip’s editing of Lavish Ladies seems to prove that Wendy and Tracy were big rivals, but a sincerely stricken Tracy reveals that they were actually sincere besties who planned their fake fights in advance to let Skip hold onto his fantasy of being a drama mastermind.
Skip’s delusions of puppet master grandeur extend to his editing prowess, as he boasts/tells on himself, “I can make anyone seem the way I want, given enough footage.” He thinks that his villain’s edit of Wendy’s long-suffering paid intern Valencia (Tavia Hunt) will capture and hold Detective Donnelly’s investigative eye long enough for him to wriggle free of any scrutiny, but one brief follow-up interview with Officer Kaya and Elsbeth puts paid to that little scheme. Wendy drove Valencia up the wall, but she’d never have killed a boss it was so easy to steal from. The NYPD thanks you for the refreshing candor, Valencia. Meanwhile, Skip does himself no favors by clinging to his original edit. Why is he being persecuted like this? He’s very busy, he made these women into a cultural phenomenon, and by the way: he has an alibi! The Max Fischer screaming “I wrote a hit play!!” energy here is so funny and so telling.
Finally, Officer Kaya and Elsbeth get to the bottom of the Katricia (Julie Ann Emery) question. She had been an original Lavish Lady but left the show under a heavy cloud of scandal known as the Montauk Meltdown. Drunk and perhaps also high, Katricia had lost it on camera, eventually stripping entirely. It was great TV, but it was a cruel trick; during a conversation at Katricia’s Chelsea hideaway (a detail furnished by Officer Kaya, thanks to a brief mention of it on a podcast), Katricia reveals that a remorseful Wendy had eventually confessed to helping Skip drug her, and had sufficient evidence to either get him back or go to prison. Hm!
For a woman who got shoved out of a reality series rooted in pettiness and messy for being too sober and level-headed to be good TV, Katricia sure knows how to bring the drama. She turns up at Wendy’s memorial service in a Ferrari-red ensemble (including a black-and-red fascinator festooned with feathers and tulle) and tricks Skip into confessing while unknowingly being on-mic. Narrative symmetry! We love to see it.
• Another week, another detective in need of Elsbeth’s fresh eye. As Detective Donnelly, Molly Price delivers some of the episode’s funniest lines, including my favorite, “Why do people insist on mixing frozen cocktails in the bathroom?!” It’s nonsensical, but she sells it beautifully.
• If you, too, harbor a fascination with the sinister sparkliness of glitter, Caity Weaver’s 2018 deep dive into its origins, uses, and secrets should be at the top of your to-read list.
• If Elsbeth’s Captain Wagner Corruption-Watch strikes you as odd in this episode — why is Elsbeth acting like this is the first time she’s heard about Wally and his propensity to do foolish things? Just recall, it’s a blip caused by the schedule change that swapped the airing order for the season’s second and third episodes. After being cautioned by Wagner to forget she even heard Wally’s name, she asks Lieutenant Noonan (Fredric Lehne) about it, but he brushes her off, saying he and Captain Wagner have known each other since their days at the Police Academy and he’s got more integrity than anyone else Noonan knows.
• Costume of the Week: a very tough call, but I’m giving this honor to the fiery pepper-red-orange blazer and polka dot pussy-bow blouse paired with black cigarette pants ensemble Elsbeth wears down at the NYPD precinct.
• One of the framed Lavish Ladies posters in Skip’s office has a typo, referring to a “season premier”, rather than the correct spelling, “premiere.” My headcanon is that Skip actually thinks that’s the correct spelling and that he threw a big tantrum about it, followed by being unbearably smug once everyone else decided it wasn’t worth arguing over. In retrospect, they’re all glad they dropped it because what if they’d wound him up enough that he’d killed them, too?
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The owners of Television City have scaled back their plans to enlarge and modernize the landmark Los Angeles studio where CBS began making shows to broadcast nationwide at the dawn of the television age.
Formerly known as CBS Television City, the studio sits next to popular tourist attractions the Original Farmers Market and the Grove shopping center in the Fairfax district where it has been operating since 1952 as a factory for such hit shows as “All in the Family,” “Sonny and Cher” and “American Idol.”
CBS sold the famous studio for $750 million in 2019 to Hackman Capital Partners, one of the world’s largest movie lot owners and operators. CBS continues to occupy Television City as a tenant.
An architect’s rendering of the planned office and production space at Television City, an entertainment studio in the Fairfax district of Los Angeles.
(Courtesy of Foster + Partners and Television City)
Hackman Capital announced a $1.25-billion plan two years ago to expand and upgrade facilities on the lot at Beverly Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue in hopes of harnessing strong demand in the region for soundstages, production facilities and offices for rent on studio lots.
Hackman Capital on Friday will update its application to the city to enhance the studio, saying it is responding to feedback about the project from nearby residents, stakeholders and city officials. If approved, the new project is expected to be completed by 2028.
The studio owners also brought in a new design architect, Foster + Partners. The London-based firm is led by Norman Foster, a prominent architect whose designs include the pickle-shaped Gherkin skyscraper in London and the master plan for the $2-billion One Beverly Hills condominium and hotel complex under construction in Beverly Hills.
Hackman Capital, which operates studios in the U.S., Canada and U.K., is also responding to changing conditions in the office rental market, which has contracted since the COVID-19 pandemic drove many companies to work remotely at least some of the time. Plans still call for creating new offices, but there would be fewer of them.
Foster’s new design eliminates a 15-story office tower on the west side of the lot, cutting 150,000 square feet of offices to rent to entertainment-related firms. Another 15-story office tower remains in the plan, but other building heights have been lowered, particularly along the perimeters, Hackman Capital said.
An architect’s rendering of plans for Television City.
(Courtesy of Foster + Partners and Television City)
The plan still represents an addition of more than 980,000 square feet to the 25-acre site at Beverly Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue that retains a suburban-style low-density appearance with soundstages, low-rise offices and support facilities flanked by asphalt parking lots.
The company’s proposal calls for combining old and new space to create 700,000 square feet of offices to support production on the lot and an additional 550,000 square feet of offices for rent to entertainment and media companies, the company said.
Office space behind studio gates is in high demand in the Los Angeles area and has been snapped up at other studios by such big Hollywood players as Netflix and Amazon.
“The industry wants to have a location where they can do production and have offices in a self-contained campus environment,” said real estate broker Jeff Pion of CBRE, who represents Hackman Capital. “Having all of the different components that make up production in one location is very attractive to the industry.”
Plans for Television City also call for a new commissary and more than four acres for production base camps. The streetscapes would be improved to be more visually appealing to passersby, with wider sidewalks.
On Fairfax Avenue, where pedestrians now pass by a fenced parking lot, there would be shops and restaurants serving the public on the ground floor of office buildings that could be reached only from inside the lot.
The separation is part of the balancing act Hackman Capital is attempting to make Television City feel more friendly to the neighborhood while retaining the security and exclusivity of a closed campus that appeals to celebrities and others who make movies and television shows.
Landlords can also charge a premium for office space on movie lots because they are close to the action for independent production companies and offer the cachet prized by many in the entertainment industry.
Filming activity in Los Angeles has fallen off substantially in the wake of strikes by writers and actors last year, according to FilmLA, a nonprofit organization that tracks on-location shoot days and filming permits in the region. The downward trend compounded a dip that emerged in late 2022 as on-location filming in Los Angeles took a dive as studios pared back movie and TV production that surged during the COVID-19 pandemic.
A rendering of the entrance to the planned mobility hub on Fairfax Avenue where shuttle buses from a nearby subway station would come and go.
(Courtesy of Foster + Partners and Television City)
California is finding it particularly hard to rebound from the strikes because it’s more expensive to shoot here, multiple production executives told The Times. That makes Los Angeles less attractive to studios looking to cut costs after major industry disruption.
To Hackman Capital Chief Executive Michael Hackman, the downturn and filming pullback from California suggest that regulators and studio operators should further support production companies.
“Our actual customers tell us all of them want to stay in Los Angeles,” he said. “We have the best crews in the world here, but we don’t have enough modern soundstages in premier locations. We also have to push the state on tax incentives so that we don’t lose business outside of the city.
“The entertainment industry is our city signature industry and if we don’t invest in the future, we’re really at risk of losing it,” Hackman said. “We’re still emerging from a once-in-a-generation dual strike. And the production stoppage cost Angelenos approximately $6.5 billion or more in lost wages and economic activity, which makes it clear how important this industry is to our city, and especially the people who work in entertainment every day.”
Hackman Capital’s proposal calls for raising the number of Television City stages to at least 15, from 8, along with production support facilities.
To make room for the planned additions, parking would be converted from surface lots to garage structures and underground spaces capable of parking 4,930 vehicles.
Two stages built in the 1990s on the east side of the lot would be demolished as part of a planned reconfiguration of the site.
The four original stages built by CBS in 1952 would be preserved along with other historical design elements created by Los Angeles architect William Pereira, who also designed such noteworthy structures as the futuristic Theme Building in the middle of Los Angeles International Airport and the Transamerica Pyramid office tower in San Francisco.
Pereira’s long-range plan for Television City conceived in the 1950s was expansive, said Bob Hale, creative director of Rios, the master plan architect of Hackman Capital’s proposed makeover. Hale said Pereira’s original concept called for the complex to grow to 24 stages and 2.5 million square feet of production space, including several multistory office buildings.
“It was built in a way that it could be disassembled and incrementally extended,” Hale said. “For a number of reasons, that didn’t happen.”
In an effort to make it happen now, Hackman Capital set out to get the support of Councilwoman Katy Yaroslavsky and the surrounding community. Over five years, the company met with nearly 3,000 neighbors, Hackman Capital said.
Among the groups supporting the project are the Holocaust Museum LA, Los Angeles Conservancy, Los Angeles/Orange Counties Building and Construction Trades Council, Mid City West Neighborhood Council and FilmLA, Hackman Capital said.
The first proposal drew fire from neighboring businesses the Grove and Farmers Market, which sent letters to residents in 2022 calling the Television City project a “massively scaled, speculative development which, if approved, would overwhelm, disrupt, and forever transform the community.”
In July 2022, an executive representing Grove owner Rick Caruso appeared before a committee of the Mid City West Neighborhood Council and said the Television City project would create “complex” issues for the neighborhood, including traffic, parking and construction. Caruso himself has said he does not oppose the redevelopment of Television City.
The Beverly Fairfax Community Alliance, which was founded by the Grove and Farmers Market, has been more blunt, warning that the expanded site would clog Fairfax Avenue, Beverly Boulevard, La Brea Avenue and 3rd Street with traffic.
The signature red awning at Television City as seen from Beverly Boulevard.
(Courtesy of Foster + Partners and Television City)
“Even those accustomed to living with L.A. traffic and parking nightmares will be shocked at how much worse it can be,” the group said on its website.
To address such concerns, Hackman Capital said the new plan will reduce the number of estimated daily car trips to Television City by 5,000 to 8,700. The landlord also plans to move its “mobility hub” from The Grove Drive on the east side to Fairfax at 1st Street on the west side of the lot. The mobility hub would serve public transit, rideshares and other passenger drop-offs as well as employee shuttle buses to the subway stop being built at Fairfax and Wilshire Boulevard.
“Our goal with Television City, particularly along the perimeter on our public edges, was to find a really great interface with the community. So it wasn’t just a studio with a blank wall, but we were active and engaged,” said Brian Glodney, a development executive for Hackman Capital.
Community members told Hackman Capital said they want the streets outside the studio to have a sense of connection between mom-and-pop businesses on Fairfax, the Farmers Market, the Grove and Pan Pacific Park, Glodney said.
Outlets on the edge of the lot such as shops and restaurants will be limited to a total of 20,000 square feet, he said, “just enough to help activate the streets but not compete with our neighbors.”
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