Newport Beach gets another 15 minutes
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Lolita Harper
Newport Beach residents will get a chance to see how it’s really done
in the O.C. tonight.
Just in case you were curious about life in Newport Beach, the new
Fox TV show, “The O.C.,” will quench that thirst for knowledge when
the highly anticipated new teen drama debuts at 9 p.m. on Channel 11.
The show revolves around bad boy Ryan Atwood -- played by Benjamin
McKenzie -- a kid from the “wrong side of the tracks” who is
mercifully taken in by his bleeding-heart public defender from
Newport Beach. Sandy Cohen -- played by Peter Gallagher -- is
assigned to defend Atwood in a car theft case and winds up adopting
him. Atwood is thrust into a culture of luxury where he must learn to
relate to filthy rich people he has nothing in common with.
“The O.C.” stands for Orange County, described on the show’s Web
site as “an idyllic paradise -- a harbor-front community where
everything and everyone appears to be perfect.” But the show focuses
on the underbelly of the town, depicting teenagers with dangerous
drug habits, flippant sexual morals and too much money.
Atwood is an outcast. A brooding bad boy who apparently catches
the interest of his beautiful next door neighbor and the wrath of the
“Newport crew.”
“Throughout the series, Ryan’s outsider status will continue to
set him apart from the O.C. elite, but his continued presence in
their community ultimately shines like a bright light on the fact
that everyone, no matter how rich or powerful, feels like an outsider
at heart,” the Web site reads.
Although the show is said to take place in the breezy, beach town
of Newport, it was shot on Los Angeles County beaches and in L.A.
County cities. The show’s director, McG, director of music videos and
“Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle,” is from Newport Beach and was
known to his teachers at Corona del Mar High School as Joseph
McGinty.
Newport Beach Mayor Steve Bromberg said he heard about the show,
but only third-hand. Bromberg said he understands it to be a “soap
opera-type” show that will fit the stereotype of the city formed by
those who are not familiar with it.
“I guess it’s what they think Newport Beach might be if you lived
in New York or something,” Bromberg said. “I heard that it’s not
going to be very complimentary.”
But that won’t keep Bromberg away. The mayor said he will tune in
tonight out of curiosity.
“I’m sure I’ll have a reaction after I see it,” Bromberg said.
“The last hot thing that happened was ‘[The] West Wing,’ so we’ll see
what these guys do.”
Newport Beach was highlighted on several episodes of “The West
Wing” last season as one of the regular characters unsuccessfully
vied for a congressional seat in the city.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or
by e-mail at [email protected].
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