Christians In Hollywood — It's Not About the Shows
Mary
23, 2002
(http://www.CatholicExchange.com) by
Stan Williams
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Christians continue to make headway as cultural influencers in
Hollywood and consequently the world. That's true because more Hollywood
executives are recognizing that morally true and uplifting television shows
and motion pictures consistently rise to the top of the revenue pile. |
Thrilled and
Thankful
Making that
happen is a group of talented producer-writers who take their faith seriously.
They see themselves as missionaries who labor as hard over their projects as
they do over their faith.
One such
producer-writer is David Alan Johnson. Born of sturdy Iowa stock, David, after
college, worked as an actor in Los Angeles for eight years. But his
writing-producing credits were his long suit. Soon he and his partners were
creating television series such as Jack's Place (ABC with Hal Lindon and John Dye), Against
the Grain (NBC with Ben
Affleck), The Client
(CBS with JoBeth Williams), and High Incident with Steven Spielberg for ABC/DreamWorks.
Most recently,
David and his partner-brother Gary Johnson, created DOC, a one-hour drama-comedy for PAX, about
a handsome country doctor from
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Montana, Clint
Cassidy (Billy Ray Cyrus), who finds himself in the Big Apple working at an
HMO hospital. While keeping close tabs on his Godly values and common sense,
Clint confronts the contradictions of our culture with a gentle bedside
manner that endears him to patients and viewers alike. DOC airs Sundays at 8PM ET and Tuesdays at
9PM ET on PAX.
Link to the PAX-TV DOC page
(http://www.pax.tv/shows/doc/).
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The Cast of DOC
produced by Dave & Gary Johnson |
DOC premiered on March 11, 2001. By the end
of this season they will have finished 44 episodes and already have a contract
for 22 more for next season. While PAX covers only 80% of the top 50 TV
markets, DOC
occasionally beats out its head to head competition on WB, NBC, and CBS who all
have 100% coverage. Says, David, "We're thrilled. And we're thankful. We
know that it's not us, but God doing it and we're glad to be a part of
it."
Recently I had
the opportunity to talk with David. He had just come from an editing session
for Episode 37. Here are some of his comments about being a Christian producer
in Hollywood.
God Wants Us
To Listen
Williams: How
did you marry your faith with your career?
Johnson: It was
at a very specific point. My old partner and I had created Against the Grain. It was one of the most critically
acclaimed shows of 1993. People loved it and we got rave attention. I thought,
this is good, it's a God-honoring show and it's a critical hit and we got
better reviews than NYPD Blue. But it didn't last very long; the show became a political
football. When it was cancelled I didn't understand. But, it was through that
process that I began to understand something important. I had been taking it on
myself about what I thought would work for God. I learned and realized that God
doesn't want us to do,
God wants us to listen,
be a vessel of service and be obedient to him.
I truly don't
think God wants us to wake up every morning and ask, "Okay, what can I do
for God today?" I think he wants us to wake up and say, "God, use me
however you want." While those don't sound very different, I think they're
hugely different. That was a big learning point in my life.
It's About
Obedience
Johnson: At the
same time as that went down, I created the first TV show for DreamWorks (High
Incident, 1996) with my
old partner and Steven Spielberg, whom I worked with everyday for close to a
year. In that process we were at the pinnacle of the industry. We had two
network shows on at the same time, people loved our work, we were making a ton
of money, and everything was going great. But in Hollywood, people cheat, steal
and lie to you, even when it would be easier for them to tell the truth; it's
engrained into the fabric of the way things work. You're constantly fighting
those things, its tough work, and I was getting fed up with it.
One particularly
tough day I came home and said to my wife Diane, "You know what? I just
want to forget all this. Let's just go be a missionary someplace." This
was a defining moment in my life. The truth is I didn't want to be a
missionary. I had never thought about being a missionary. I am not a missionary
type. Diane looked at me very compassionately. She knew what I was going
through. Then she said to me, "Name me one place that needs missionaries
more than where you are right now." That moment changed my life. I
realized why I was here. I realized why I had been given the gifts I had been given.
I understood that it wasn't about me. It wasn't about the product. It was about
obedience. So, from then on I had a whole different view about what I did.
Williams:
What do you mean, it wasn't about the product?
Johnson: Every
day 150 people work for me. And every day they see me. I suddenly came to
understand that over the years I was living that old cliche, "I may be the
only Bible some people ever read." So, I was thankful that I had not acted
like an idiot or an ogre. Movies and TV shows are going to come and go, but if
you work in this industry as a Christian, you may be the only Christian that
passes through that person's life. I'm here for a specific reason in their
life. I have an ability to touch them and talk to them and have a relationship
with them. I realized that was the most important thing we were doing.
© Copyright
2002 Stan Williams