Reply
Super Contributor
Posts: 1,365
Registered: ‎12-22-2010

THE NEWSROOM Returns Sunday, Nov. 9th - HBO 9/8c

Newsroom's Jeff Daniels on the Rigors and Rewards of Sitting in the Anchor Chair: 'I Was Glad It Was Done'

By Kimberly Roots / November 7 2014, 9:53 AM PST tvline.com

The Newsroom Season 3 Preview Jeff Daniels

This Sunday, when HBO’s The Newsroom returns for a shortened final season (9/8c), Will McAvoy’s self-proclaimed “Mission to Civilize” begins the march toward its inevitable end.

While fans may lamentthat there are only six more episodes of Aaron Sorkin’s fictionalized cable-news drama left, at least one person is really OK with the saga reaching its conclusion.

And that person is star Jeff Daniels.

“Even though it was only three seasons, I was glad for it to be done, and I was glad to have done it,” Daniels says of the part that won him an Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series Emmy in 2013.

Like pretty much any actor who’s ever been in an Aaron Sorkin series, Daniels cites Newsroom’s full-tilt pace and verbal saturation as the reasons he was happy to sign off as the caustic news anchor for the last time.

“It was a huge challenge, but it was also a he~ll of a lot of work for [Sorkin] — and for us. And at some point, you wonder if it’s going to deteriorate,” Daniels tells TVLine.

From its first episode, viewers either praised Newsroom’s impassioned examination of contemporary newsgathering or mocked its preachy indictment of the 24/7 news cycle. (The 2013-set third season, for example, sees the good and bad in topics like the Boston Marathon bombing and the existence of pay-for-clicks news sites.)

But Daniels doesn’t seem to put much stock in either opinion.

“Three seasons with Aaron is three more than I had before the show,” he says simply.

Read on as Daniels divulges whether he’ll pine for his acerbic alter ego, which Newsroom props now reside in his Michigan home and exactly how it feels when one is “Sorkinized.”

TVLINE | Will you miss Will?
Yeah, a little bit. I feel happier just not being him. Happiness was an acquired taste for him. Mac certainly helped. He had a lot of issues. A lot of issues. Insecurity, vanity, ego, too smart for the room — until Mac told him otherwise — and then he realized what an idiot he was. It was great fun to do, and I will miss the people. I will miss the family that was the cast and crew of The Newsroom.

TVLINE | After viewing the first three episodes of the season, it struck me how much calmer Will seems in general.
He’s happy! He’s got the love of his life back. He’s gotten over the betrayal thing, which he realized at the end of two was his problem. And now things are good. Sunshine, meadows of flowers for Will. [Laughs] But then, right off the bat in the first episode, [Mac] wants nine bridesmaids, which means he has to come up with nine friends. He doesn’t have nine people in his life that even like him.

The Newsroom Season 3 Preview

TVLINE | In the season premiere, ABC’s Diane Sawyer and NBC’s Brian Williams are mentioned as possible members of Will and Mac’s bridal party. Does that mean we’re going to see cameos by them at some point during the season?
No. [They’re] mentioned, but not seen.

TVLINE | You’ve got some great guest-stars this go-around: 2 Broke Girls’ Kat Dennings, The Office’s B.J. Novak and Paul Lieberstein. Any counsel you give people who are new to the Newsroom set?
From the acting end, it’s a challenge. The amount of dialogue and the speed and the pace at which these people say these things, and the challenge of making it look like its falling out of your head versus memorized and coming off a page. That’s hard. It’s kind of like: Only good actors need apply… It’s not like any other show. You can’t kind of wing it or work your way into it. Our little mantra on the show was, “Know it and know what you’re going to do with it at 6 in the morning.”

…I remember the first season, about Episode 5, I just — it was like I needed more memory in my hard drive. In the middle of a scene, I just took a knee in the middle of the newsroom and said, “What’s the line? What’s the line?” And the script supervisor yells it, and I can’t repeat it. She told me three times, and I couldn’t repeat it. And they said, “OK, Jeff. Why don’t you go home?” They gave me the afternoon off. and they said, “Just get some rest.” It became known around the cast. And everyone went through it: getting Sorkinized. It’s where you just hit a wall, and you can’t remember anything. And then you come back the next day, and you remember everything. We all, at some point, took a knee.

TVLINE | And Marcia G~ay Harden is back as CAN’s legal counsel, Rebecca Halliday. You two, in particular, have a lot of verbal sparring at the beginning of the season.
She’s a joy. Marcia and I did God of Carnage together on Broadway. And that play was similar in speed and pace, and so it was great to be with a friend who knew how to do that kind of thing. We just fell right back in to being on Broadway together. It was great fun.

newsroom_s3_preview_daniels_waterston

TVLINE | Without giving away a major plot, ACN finds itself in a really tough position very early in the season. Charlie is central to that storyline, but does Will come into it later?
It’s really Charlie’s show. Will’s aware. It’s really — without saying anything about what happens — it’s a great season for Sam Waterston. It really is. The second half, in particular. He’s got some incredible scenes that have to deal with that… B.J. [Novak, who also is involved in the storyline] did a great job. It was great fun. That’s what Aaron does a lot: He gets these very, very smart people and puts them in situations where we get knocked down. We get thrown off where we don’t know what to do, getting out-smarted. That’s fun to play.

TVLINE | After filming wrapped, did you keep anything from the set?
I did. A couple of pictures, but also I was able to get the chair in Will’s office. I’m very happy about that. That’s at home in Michigan

TVLINE | What were the pictures of?
I think there’s one Photoshopped of me and O~bama.

TVLINE | One thing that has always bugged me was that we didn’t find out who wanted to kill Will in that death-threat storyline from Season 1.
Yeah, that kind of went away. That was a storyline that didn’t get picked back up. Aaron moved on to other things. I don’t know. I’m the king of justification. Between Season 1 and Season 2, they caught the guy. He went to jail. [Laughs] We just didn’t shoot those scenes.

Honored Contributor
Posts: 30,239
Registered: ‎03-12-2010

Re: THE NEWSROOM Returns Sunday, Nov. 9th - HBO 9/8c

I tried to watch this but it is another show where you have to pay attention and it is a lot of talking.

I know a lot of people like it.

Respected Contributor
Posts: 2,348
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: THE NEWSROOM Returns Sunday, Nov. 9th - HBO 9/8c

I'm sad that this is the last season. I have really enjoyed this show. You are right, Annabellethecat, you have to pay attention or you can lose track I have to stop trying to multitask when this show is on. I thought they did a good job last night.
Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,912
Registered: ‎03-12-2010

Re: THE NEWSROOM Returns Sunday, Nov. 9th - HBO 9/8c

I hope that since it is the last season, HBO will release the digital version earlier than they normally do and at a reasonable price. I understand their desire to draw subscribers with exclusivity, but why do they think the draw remains over a year later?

Super Contributor
Posts: 1,365
Registered: ‎12-22-2010

Re: THE NEWSROOM Returns Sunday, Nov. 9th - HBO 9/8c

Sorkin Says He's Done Writing For TV

By Matt Wayt Nov 10, 2014 9:29 AMA.V. Club

Aaron Sorkin, poet for the enlightened masses and penman of rhetorical derring-do, has had just about enough of writing for television. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, he set a record for Sorkin-speak by summing up his feelings in only three sentences:

“I’ve loved every minute I’ve spent in television. And I’ve had much more failure, as traditionally measured, than success in television. I’ve done four shows, and only one of them was The West Wing.”

Sorkin spoke of bowing out while preparing the final three episodes of The Newsroom, which is signing off after three seasons. The HBO series has been criticized for smugly lecturing journalists on how to do a better job by relying on the benefit of hindsight to examine real-life news events. The show also has been roasted for portraying its female characters as irrational and incompetent in the workplace. Sorkin has apologized for the first thing, but the second issue is merely an extension of all those times Allison Janney slipped and fell in The West Wing—which was always just a gas.

Sorkin’s exeunt from TV might be a gradual one, as NBC wants him to take all the F-words out of A Few Good Men so the network can broadcast a live staging of his breakout play. Also on the horizon is Sorkin’s Steve Jobs movie, which will be directed by Danny Boyle and might star Michael Fassbender. Sorkin has found great success in film writing as of late, boasting screenplay credits for the critically acclaimed The Social Network and Moneyball, so a more permanent move to that format makes sense. Besides, not writing for TV anymore doesn’t mean you can’t write about TV anymore—and a Sports Night movie isn’t going to walk and talk by itself.


Super Contributor
Posts: 2,589
Registered: ‎12-16-2012

Re: THE NEWSROOM Returns Sunday, Nov. 9th - HBO 9/8c

I am sad to see that this is the last season. There were some really great episodes in the past and some powerful statements made. What I really like about the series is they deal with events that actually happened, like the Boston Marathon bombings and the bumbling by the media outlets who were all trying to get the jump on a scoop and often report inaccurate or just plain false information. Jeff Daniels is wonderful in this role, so I was kind of disappointed when he announced he is in a sequel to Dumb and Dumber now. Talk about the sublime to the ridiculous.