2006 could be the summer of Surf City on MTV
Dave Brooks
Doug Traub wants his MTV.
The Huntington Beach Conference and Visitor’s Bureau president and
chief executive is pushing a proposal by the popular cable music
station to broadcast in Huntington Beach during the summer of 2006.
Originally, MTV wanted to set up shop in May and shoot six hours
of footage a day, five days a week for 15 weeks through the summer.
That wasn’t enough time for a public debate or for City Council
approval, Traub said, so producers at the New York City-based station
changed their request to 2006.
“I thought it was a fantastic idea right off the bat,” Traub said.
The proposal was formally submitted to City Administrator Penny
Culbreth-Graft on Friday, the same day a five-person film crew with
the station taped several segments along Main Street with VJ Susie
Castillo.
MTV producers are asking for approval to set up a “beach house”
studio on a concrete pad north of the pier commonly referred to as
“The Boneyard.” The site is often used as a staging area for events
such as the U.S. Open of Surfing and the paintball competition.
Few details of the beach house proposal are available, but a memo
to Traub from station producer Lorrie Baranek said the studio would
be used to film popular shows, such as Total Request Live and special
concerts held on a stage built for the beach house. MTV has televised
from a beach house every summer for the past 10 years, filming in San
Diego, Long Beach, the New Jersey shore and the Bahamas. The
station’s primary audience for the programming are kids “at home with
nothing to do but sleep late and veg out,” a company media kit reads.
This isn’t the first time MTV has tried to come to Huntington
Beach. Producers first approached the city in January 2004 with a
similar plan to set up shop for the upcoming summer, but the proposal
didn’t fair well because the city that had just gone through several
rounds of budget cuts and police layoffs.
Police Chief Ken Small said he is amicable to the current MTV
request, but would like to see more details.
“We’re not saying no,” he said. “We want to meet with them and see
what they have to say.”
MTV producers have offered to provide their own security for the
beach house, which at times would include 50 to 70 crew members and
production staff, and another 200 to 500 cast extras, according to a
memo from Baranek.
That many people could create a logistical problem for the police
department, which is already operating at a reduced staffing level.
Traub said bringing MTV to town would be a great opportunity to
market Huntington Beach as an overnight destination on national
television, five days a week. It’s also a chance for the city to
secure its market brand of “Surf City U.S.A.,” a phrase Traub’s group
recently trademarked and plans to license on beach clothes and
accessories.
“We’ve estimated that this is worth over $15 million in
advertising value,” said Traub, “This could be the biggest marketing
event that has ever occurred to us.”
The MTV proposal got a mixed response from Huntington Beach
residents. Huntington Beach High School sophomore Sean Ruhlind said
he would like to see MTV come to town, but some beachgoers might not
like the idea of having their image broadcast out over national
television. He said a camera already installed underneath the pier by
the Hollister Jean Company gives some people the heebie-jeebies.
“It might be weird if you were standing there in a swimsuit and
people from all over the world were checking you out,” he said.
Pier frequenter Averil Phillips said she supported the plan if it
would bring more people downtown.
“I think the question is, ‘What kind of people are we going to
get?’” she said.
Traub said that the public shouldn’t judge the station’s proposal
on the type of music it plays but on the overall effect it will have
on the community.
“There’s always been a natural aversion to the music young people
listen to,” he said. “But if we truly are getting ready to tell the
world what we are, we need to give this a fair hearing.”
* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
966-4609 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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