LOS ANGELES (thefutoncritic.com) -- "I am, as you can
probably guess, super unprepared," incoming ABC Entertainment Group President Paul Lee told reporters at the network's executive session at the TCA Summer Press Tour. "I've been in the
job for 36 hours. I apologize in advance if I don't
have all the answers to all the questions."
Not surprisingly, the bulk of those unanswered questions revolved around his predecessor, Steve McPherson. "I don't want to
talk about Steve," he confessed, a standard line throughout the day thus far.
With no programming announcements or schedule changes, the session ultimately became a discussion of Lee's philosophy going forward. A self-professed fan of "Modern Family," "Desperate Housewives" and "Grey's Anatomy," Lee called ABC "one, in my view, of the premier,
iconic American storytelling brands. I grew up
watching this on far-off shores, and it's a great
honor to be a part of that."
As far as his pedigree, having come from BBC America and most recently ABC Family, Lee said, "They're very, very different
networks. It was a very different job to get my
brain around what the BBC would be like in America,
because it wasn't what it looked like in London. We
felt it was a very different job to say what would a
millennial brand look like? We're optimistic and
within Walt Disney Company. This is a whole new
challenge, and I certainly don't want to say I'm
going to be doing the same thing here as we did
there."
He would later add, "But if I do get the chance here, as we did in the
last couple of jobs, to take some risks, make some
great shows, have some surprises and still do it to
a defined target audience, hopefully it's going to
be a lot of fun."
It's not an entirely new audience to Lee though. "We went out of our way to really
identify and target a millennial audience [at ABC Family, whereas] this is
a core 18-49 channel. But there are similarities in
that particular demographic, because this is the
first year... when the 18-49 demographic has
actually dominated. 51 percent of that is
millennial."
Lee in general didn't reveal any preferences in terms of procedurals versus serialized dramas, multi-camera versus single-camera comedies and so forth, nor any particular reliance to make decisions: "I remember when we tested the British 'Office.' It
was the worse-tested show I had ever tested in my
life as an executive. And that's because it broke
rules. We never tested 'Secret Life of the American
Teenager.' That may have been the same thing.
So sometimes you get a counterintuitive response
from testing. On the other hand, ignore testing at
your peril, because it will often tell you
weaknesses that you are too self-deceptive to
realize yourself."
Additionally, Lee presented himself as fully aware of the hard decisions one ultimately makes in his job. "I was still getting e-mails about
"Middleman," which got a terrible rating... and we only gave it the
first run. In the end, it's about will the show
over time not only grow creatively, match the
network, and hopefully, have you got the patience to
do that? And they're very, very difficult
decisions. Even on the smaller cable networks that
I've lived on, there were shows I was passionate
about that we knew would never reach enough of a
rating point, and they're tough. They're the worst
parts of this job, because you're calling out people
you love that you worked with to say, 'You know
what? I think it would work on Syfy.' They're
tough moments, even on cable."
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