Friday, February 11, 2011

New Show "Bar Karma"

Current TV's 'Bar Karma' puts viewers in control
By FRAZIER MOORE, AP Television Writer Frazier Moore, Ap Television Writer Thu Feb 10, 9:08 am ET

NEW YORK – A man (or woman) walks into a bar.

Where the story goes from there has been a topic of interest for weeks among online video auteurs, as they help brainstorm Current TV's new user-generated scripted series, "Bar Karma."

Clearly, this isn't just any bar, nor is it just any TV show.

The live-action "Bar Karma" has been described as a blend of "Twilight Zone," "Twin Peaks" and "Cheers," with maybe a little "Lost" thrown in.

Meanwhile, its barroom setting is described by the network as "a mystical watering hole that travels through time and space." Its proprietors (series stars Matthew Humphreys, Cassie Howarth and William Sanderson) are poised to greet each lost soul who happens in the door.

Once there (wherever "there" is), the patron has a crack at changing his or her fate.

"Think of it as a karmic rest stop," says James, the 20,000-year-old barkeep (played by Sanderson, known from "True Blood," "Lost" and "Deadwood").

Happy hour arrives Friday at 10 p.m. EST with the premiere of "Bar Karma."

The series was the brainchild of executive producer Will Wright, the video-game guru who created Spore and the best-selling Sims franchise. His big idea was to rally an online community to do the creative heavy lifting. And it has, contributing series ideas, debating them and voting on the best. The sci-fi world of "Bar Karma" evolved through lively give-and-take among the thousand-member beta community he convened a year ago.

Then, when Current's online Creation Studios opened wide to the public last fall, everyone was welcome to register and take part in creating any aspect of a "Bar Karma" episode: characters, narrative, promotion, even the graffiti in the bar's bathroom.

Step by step, each episode met with the community's approval, in collaboration with a professional team headed up by executive producer Albie Hecht, a TV veteran who was formerly the entertainment president at Nickelodeon. It's a development process he has termed "user-generated meets Hollywood."

The episode then goes before the cameras. At a studio facility in Newark, N.J., a production crew and actors turn the collective vision into TV.

Story lines selected by the voting public for the second and third episodes have been announced:

Episode 2, submitted by Jason Lee Holm of Barberton, Ohio, is about an author who travels into the future, where he discovers the political fallout from his children's book is destined to cause a global meltdown.

Episode 3, submitted by Moses Silbiger of Austin, Texas, showcases a famous actress in her 60s who, after entering Bar Karma in a hospital gown, is forced to re-examine her relationship with her son.

Meanwhile, this innovative venture into media crowd-sourcing continues on the Current website. The fourth episode is now in production and "the fifth and a little bit of the sixth episode" have been scripted, Hecht said. The rest of the 12-episode season, he said, "is TBD" — to be determined by viewers.

Friday's premiere (with no fewer than 168 names scoring on-screen credit as developers) sets the stage for the series.

A man walks into the bar. He's in his briefs. He's Doug Jones (Humphreys), a dashing Internet mogul and perhaps the luckiest man alive who, only moments before, was in bed with a beautiful blonde.

"I get it," Doug says, trying to make sense of what's happening. "Naked ... bedroom turned into a bar ... I'm dreaming."

"There's a 500-year-old dress code here," replies sassy waitress Dayna (Howarth). "Put your pants on."

What Doug is about to be informed is that, the night before, he won the deed to Bar Karma in a poker game. Even more odd, the dealer in the game was bartender James.

"You have the opportunity to help a lot of people," Dayna tells Doug now. "And you have a chance to help yourself."

But how? That remains to be seen in future episodes. Everyone's invited to help decide.

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Current TV is owned by Current Media.

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Online:

http://current.com/shows/bar-karma/

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