It's
'Criminal' what CBS is doing after the Super Bowl
published: Saturday | February 3, 2007
published: Saturday | February 3, 2007
If your network's chiefs give you the slot immediately after the
Super Bowl, they like you. They really like you.
And CBS has every reason to like Criminal Minds This season, the Wednesday series has scored a number of ratings victories over ABC's much-heralded Lost. As a reward, the crime drama gets the plum position following CBS's broadcast of the NFL championship game Sunday.
The episode launches a story that concludes in the show's usual slot February 7, with FBI profiler Spencer Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler) at the mercy of a deeply troubled felon (guest star James Van Der Beek). As Reid tries to psych out his captor, literally, his colleagues (Mandy Patinkin, Thomas Gibson, Paget Brewster, Shemar Moore, A.J. Cook, Kirsten Vangsness) search for him.
"I'm really kind of naive about all these matters, but I'm slowly realising what a vote of confidence this is," Gubler says of the show's post-Super Bowl showcase. "Reid is the 'damsel in distress' in this particular two-parter. It seems he's frequently taken hostage or beaten up or put into situations that steer the team toward saving him, which I enjoy. I feel like the equivalent of a horror-movie heroine."
It actually goes deeper in the newest tale. Gubler says Van Der Beek's character "decides it might be more kind if he were to shoot (Reid) up with drugs. Not only is he being held captive by a psychopath, he's being forced to take an opiate of some sort. It's laced with a hallucinogen, causing Reid to have flashbacks that give insight into his past and what made him a profiler."
Lively presence
While Gubler brings some lightness to Criminal Minds with his quirky portrayal of Reid, recent cast addition Brewster ('Huff') also is a lively presence as new team member Emily Prentiss.
"I've always read about profiling and psychopaths," she says, "so this show is right up my alley. I had been watching it, and when I joined, they asked if I wanted to read FBI textbooks. I said, 'Give me everything you have.' The FBI books are a lot rougher than anything a civilian can purchase at the airport; there are lots of photographs of victims.
"I went through about three weeks of reading and having a really hard time sleeping at night," Brewster adds. "I got scared closing my eyes in the shower, so I took out the existing curtain and put in a clear one. I also installed a lot of locks, and I had some work done on my house that the real FBI guys have told me not to comment on. It was scary stuff, but I've sort of metabolised it now."
A former model who went to New York University's film school and "assumed I'd be making movies instead of being in them," Gubler "can neither confirm nor deny my involvement" in comical short subjects about the making of Criminal Minds on the popular website YouTube (search Matthew Gray Gubler: The Unauthorised Documentary). He may bite the hand that feeds him, but make no mistake: He's grateful for where he is.
"None of us ever anticipated the success we've had, especially in this climate of thousands of crime shows," he says. "From the very outset, everybody was saying, 'Don't worry. You're up against Lost. You'll be off the air in, like, a week.' Then every Thursday morning, we just kept posting those (ratings) numbers, and I don't think they ever stopped climbing. Everyone's incredibly proud."
- Jay Bobbin, Zap2it
And CBS has every reason to like Criminal Minds This season, the Wednesday series has scored a number of ratings victories over ABC's much-heralded Lost. As a reward, the crime drama gets the plum position following CBS's broadcast of the NFL championship game Sunday.
The episode launches a story that concludes in the show's usual slot February 7, with FBI profiler Spencer Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler) at the mercy of a deeply troubled felon (guest star James Van Der Beek). As Reid tries to psych out his captor, literally, his colleagues (Mandy Patinkin, Thomas Gibson, Paget Brewster, Shemar Moore, A.J. Cook, Kirsten Vangsness) search for him.
"I'm really kind of naive about all these matters, but I'm slowly realising what a vote of confidence this is," Gubler says of the show's post-Super Bowl showcase. "Reid is the 'damsel in distress' in this particular two-parter. It seems he's frequently taken hostage or beaten up or put into situations that steer the team toward saving him, which I enjoy. I feel like the equivalent of a horror-movie heroine."
It actually goes deeper in the newest tale. Gubler says Van Der Beek's character "decides it might be more kind if he were to shoot (Reid) up with drugs. Not only is he being held captive by a psychopath, he's being forced to take an opiate of some sort. It's laced with a hallucinogen, causing Reid to have flashbacks that give insight into his past and what made him a profiler."
Lively presence
While Gubler brings some lightness to Criminal Minds with his quirky portrayal of Reid, recent cast addition Brewster ('Huff') also is a lively presence as new team member Emily Prentiss.
"I've always read about profiling and psychopaths," she says, "so this show is right up my alley. I had been watching it, and when I joined, they asked if I wanted to read FBI textbooks. I said, 'Give me everything you have.' The FBI books are a lot rougher than anything a civilian can purchase at the airport; there are lots of photographs of victims.
"I went through about three weeks of reading and having a really hard time sleeping at night," Brewster adds. "I got scared closing my eyes in the shower, so I took out the existing curtain and put in a clear one. I also installed a lot of locks, and I had some work done on my house that the real FBI guys have told me not to comment on. It was scary stuff, but I've sort of metabolised it now."
A former model who went to New York University's film school and "assumed I'd be making movies instead of being in them," Gubler "can neither confirm nor deny my involvement" in comical short subjects about the making of Criminal Minds on the popular website YouTube (search Matthew Gray Gubler: The Unauthorised Documentary). He may bite the hand that feeds him, but make no mistake: He's grateful for where he is.
"None of us ever anticipated the success we've had, especially in this climate of thousands of crime shows," he says. "From the very outset, everybody was saying, 'Don't worry. You're up against Lost. You'll be off the air in, like, a week.' Then every Thursday morning, we just kept posting those (ratings) numbers, and I don't think they ever stopped climbing. Everyone's incredibly proud."
- Jay Bobbin, Zap2it
Las Vegas Reviews Journal
http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2007/Jan-29-Mon-2007/living/12200440.html
Matthew sent this to me today! Great article!
Jan. 29, 2007
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
LIFE ON THE COUCH: Las Vegan Gubler enjoying his accidental acting career
But when he finally phoned recently, after more than a week of missed calls, he had an excuse that was better than most: He'd spent the past six days in the woods, tied to a chair, being tortured and shot full of heroin by James van der Beek.
It has been a busy couple of weeks for Gubler, the 26-year-old graduate of the Las Vegas Academy of International Studies, Performing and Visual Arts, as he put the finishing touches on his biggest project: the two-part episode of the out-of-nowhere smash "Criminal Minds" that will begin immediately following the Super Bowl (Sunday on KLAS-TV, Channel 8).
In the special episode, which Gubler calls "incredibly crazy," his character, awkward genius Dr. Spencer Reid, and fellow FBI profilers -- played by, among others, Mandy Patinkin, Thomas Gibson and Shemar Moore -- are called in when a wealthy couple is murdered following, naturally, a Super Bowl party. (Part two, airing next week in the show's regular 9 p.m. Wednesday home, finds Dr. Reid kidnapped by the multiple-personalitied killer, played by the former "Dawson's Creek" star.)
"I didn't know it was such a big deal," Gubler says of the most coveted time slot on television, the post-Big Game hour that launched "The A-Team," "The Wonder Years" and "Family Guy" and helped make "Friends" and "Grey's Anatomy" the most talked about shows on TV. "I don't really know much about sports. But someone finally sat me down and explained it to me. ... I'm just happy the network is finally acknowledging our existence."
"Criminal Minds" was largely ignored, not just by CBS but by viewers as well, when it debuted in the fall of 2005. It was too dark for some, too much like all the other crime procedurals for others. And it was pitted against the water-cooler show of the moment: "Lost."
"Everyone was like 'Oh, don't even unpack your bags,' " Gubler says. " 'You're going to be canceled in a week and a half.' "
The series finished that first season in 30th place. But something -- probably the show's stand-alone nature that lends itself to repeats -- began to click with viewers. In November, just before "Lost" left for its fall break, "Criminal Minds" overtook it in the weekly ratings and it's now TV's 11th most popular series. (When "Lost" returns next week, it will move back an hour to 10 p.m., having conceded the time slot.)
But it's still The Series The Media Forgot.
"No one I know has even heard of the show," Gubler says. "People think I'm making it up when I tell them I'm on TV."
But get him to a Red State -- say, Texas or parts of the Midwest and South, where he went on a recent press tour -- and he's treated like a rock star. "These are, like, real Americans watching it," he says, as opposed to "the pretentious idiots in New York or Los Angeles."
Las Vegans also seem to get the show, something he has noticed during his frequent visits. The actor -- the son of attorney John Gubler and Marilyn Gubler, a ranch owner and former chairwoman of the Nevada Republican Party -- says he comes home at least once a month. "I work in L.A., but I live in Nevada."
Since he moved to New York to attend film school, Gubler's life has followed a Forrest Gump-like trajectory. He fell into a successful modeling career after being "discovered" on the street. Being cast in "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou," as what he calls a joke, led to the beginnings of a promising acting career, something else he never sought. Now, he finds himself in a movie with Mr. Gump himself. (The upcoming film, "The Great Buck Howard," in which he plays an assistant to John Malkovich's magician character, co-stars Tom Hanks.)
"It was all a total accident," Gubler says of his acting career, and he feels a little guilty about his success-to-struggle ratio. "But I couldn't be happier."
He wasn't completely unprepared to be an actor -- he majored in the craft at the Las Vegas Academy, but only because the school didn't offer his true passion: filmmaking. And it's that initial calling that helps him block out some of the twisted crimes, many of which he says come from true stories, that "Criminal Minds" portrays.
To keep things loose on the set, he has been making short films, featuring co-stars and members of the crew, that cast him as a pampered diva who yells at children and sexually harasses co-workers.
"I'm incredibly proud of those," Gubler says, and he lights up when you mention you've seen them on YouTube.
"Sadly, I focus more attention, I think, on those fake documentaries than on the actual show. But having that is a real nice safety blanket, I think, to keep you from going crazy."
Also helping to keep him sane is his art, which he has exhibited in the Czech Republic and on his handwritten Web site, www.matthewgraygubler. com. He also has taken up photography and is an aspiring children's author and illustrator. And, he says, "I want to get better at badminton. That's my goal for this year."
He has even reached that level of fame where he's the subject of a growing Internet rumor: that he's the basis for the Killers' song "Mr. Brightside," in which frontman Brandon Flowers sings about watching another man seduce his girl. Gubler, who's working with a mutual friend on a small project for the band, says that claim "blew my mind," but it's not true.
"I don't think so, anyway. I haven't really asked Brandon about it," he says. "I think I'd rather not ask him about it."
"But," he adds in closing, "I am Roxanne from the Sting song."
Christopher Lawrence's Life on the Couch column appears on Mondays. E-mail him at clawrence@reviewjournal.com.
Matthew sent this to me today! Great article!
Jan. 29, 2007
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
LIFE ON THE COUCH: Las Vegan Gubler enjoying his accidental acting career
But when he finally phoned recently, after more than a week of missed calls, he had an excuse that was better than most: He'd spent the past six days in the woods, tied to a chair, being tortured and shot full of heroin by James van der Beek.
It has been a busy couple of weeks for Gubler, the 26-year-old graduate of the Las Vegas Academy of International Studies, Performing and Visual Arts, as he put the finishing touches on his biggest project: the two-part episode of the out-of-nowhere smash "Criminal Minds" that will begin immediately following the Super Bowl (Sunday on KLAS-TV, Channel 8).
In the special episode, which Gubler calls "incredibly crazy," his character, awkward genius Dr. Spencer Reid, and fellow FBI profilers -- played by, among others, Mandy Patinkin, Thomas Gibson and Shemar Moore -- are called in when a wealthy couple is murdered following, naturally, a Super Bowl party. (Part two, airing next week in the show's regular 9 p.m. Wednesday home, finds Dr. Reid kidnapped by the multiple-personalitied killer, played by the former "Dawson's Creek" star.)
"I didn't know it was such a big deal," Gubler says of the most coveted time slot on television, the post-Big Game hour that launched "The A-Team," "The Wonder Years" and "Family Guy" and helped make "Friends" and "Grey's Anatomy" the most talked about shows on TV. "I don't really know much about sports. But someone finally sat me down and explained it to me. ... I'm just happy the network is finally acknowledging our existence."
"Criminal Minds" was largely ignored, not just by CBS but by viewers as well, when it debuted in the fall of 2005. It was too dark for some, too much like all the other crime procedurals for others. And it was pitted against the water-cooler show of the moment: "Lost."
"Everyone was like 'Oh, don't even unpack your bags,' " Gubler says. " 'You're going to be canceled in a week and a half.' "
The series finished that first season in 30th place. But something -- probably the show's stand-alone nature that lends itself to repeats -- began to click with viewers. In November, just before "Lost" left for its fall break, "Criminal Minds" overtook it in the weekly ratings and it's now TV's 11th most popular series. (When "Lost" returns next week, it will move back an hour to 10 p.m., having conceded the time slot.)
But it's still The Series The Media Forgot.
"No one I know has even heard of the show," Gubler says. "People think I'm making it up when I tell them I'm on TV."
But get him to a Red State -- say, Texas or parts of the Midwest and South, where he went on a recent press tour -- and he's treated like a rock star. "These are, like, real Americans watching it," he says, as opposed to "the pretentious idiots in New York or Los Angeles."
Las Vegans also seem to get the show, something he has noticed during his frequent visits. The actor -- the son of attorney John Gubler and Marilyn Gubler, a ranch owner and former chairwoman of the Nevada Republican Party -- says he comes home at least once a month. "I work in L.A., but I live in Nevada."
Since he moved to New York to attend film school, Gubler's life has followed a Forrest Gump-like trajectory. He fell into a successful modeling career after being "discovered" on the street. Being cast in "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou," as what he calls a joke, led to the beginnings of a promising acting career, something else he never sought. Now, he finds himself in a movie with Mr. Gump himself. (The upcoming film, "The Great Buck Howard," in which he plays an assistant to John Malkovich's magician character, co-stars Tom Hanks.)
"It was all a total accident," Gubler says of his acting career, and he feels a little guilty about his success-to-struggle ratio. "But I couldn't be happier."
He wasn't completely unprepared to be an actor -- he majored in the craft at the Las Vegas Academy, but only because the school didn't offer his true passion: filmmaking. And it's that initial calling that helps him block out some of the twisted crimes, many of which he says come from true stories, that "Criminal Minds" portrays.
To keep things loose on the set, he has been making short films, featuring co-stars and members of the crew, that cast him as a pampered diva who yells at children and sexually harasses co-workers.
"I'm incredibly proud of those," Gubler says, and he lights up when you mention you've seen them on YouTube.
"Sadly, I focus more attention, I think, on those fake documentaries than on the actual show. But having that is a real nice safety blanket, I think, to keep you from going crazy."
Also helping to keep him sane is his art, which he has exhibited in the Czech Republic and on his handwritten Web site, www.matthewgraygubler. com. He also has taken up photography and is an aspiring children's author and illustrator. And, he says, "I want to get better at badminton. That's my goal for this year."
He has even reached that level of fame where he's the subject of a growing Internet rumor: that he's the basis for the Killers' song "Mr. Brightside," in which frontman Brandon Flowers sings about watching another man seduce his girl. Gubler, who's working with a mutual friend on a small project for the band, says that claim "blew my mind," but it's not true.
"I don't think so, anyway. I haven't really asked Brandon about it," he says. "I think I'd rather not ask him about it."
"But," he adds in closing, "I am Roxanne from the Sting song."
Christopher Lawrence's Life on the Couch column appears on Mondays. E-mail him at clawrence@reviewjournal.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment