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| The O.C. | |
|---|---|
The O.C. intertitle |
|
| Format | Teen drama |
| Created by | Josh Schwartz |
| Starring | Peter Gallagher Kelly Rowan Benjamin McKenzie Mischa Barton Adam Brody Rachel Bilson Melinda Clarke Tate Donovan Autumn Reeser Willa Holland Alan Dale Chris Carmack |
| Theme music composer | Phantom Planet |
| Opening theme | "California" |
| Country of origin | United States |
| No. of seasons | 4 |
| No. of episodes | 92 (List of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) |
Dave Bartis (season 1) Bob DeLaurentis Doug Liman (season 1) McG Stephanie Savage (season 4; co-executive producer seasons 1–3) Josh Schwartz |
| Location(s) | Orange County, California |
| Running time | 42 minutes |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | FOX |
| Picture format | 480i (SDTV) 720p (HDTV) |
| Original run | August 5, 2003 – February 22, 2007 |
| External links | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
The O.C. was an American teen drama television series that originally aired on FOX in the United States and on CTV Television Network in Canada from August 5, 2003, to February 22, 2007, running a total of four seasons. The series, created by Josh Schwartz, portrays the fictional lives of a group of teenagers and their families residing in Newport Beach in Orange County, California. The O.C. has been broadcast in more than 50 countries worldwide and was one of the most popular new dramas of 2003. The final episode of The O.C. was broadcast on February 22, 2007.[1] The O.C. went out with ratings similar to the seasons two and three, attracting an audience of 6.7 million. After the series concluded, the fourth and final season became available on iTunes, along with its animated spinoff series "Atomic County." The complete series has been made available on DVD in the United States, Belgium, The Netherlands, Brazil, Germany, Austria, Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Italy, Portugal, Norway and Taiwan.
The show focuses on the life of Ryan Atwood, a troubled teenager from a broken home who is adopted by the wealthy and philanthropic Sandy and Kirsten Cohen. Ryan and his surrogate brother Seth deal with life as outsiders in the wild high-class world of Orange County, California and their often troubled and always dramatic relationships, most notably with Marissa Cooper, Summer Roberts, and Taylor Townsend.
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Josh Schwartz, The O.C.'s creator who based the school and characters on his alma mater, The Wheeler School, in Rhode Island, used a "trojan horse" strategy to get FOX's attention. He was a fan of quirky character-driven shows like Freaks and Geeks, Undeclared, and My So-Called Life, but those shows had short runs and FOX was "looking for their next 90210". He met with producers McG and Stephanie Savage and developed the story of Ryan Atwood, a young teenager who finds himself living among the "rich and beautiful people" of Orange County. Schwartz recalls that they hoped the characters were "a little bit funnier and more soulful, different, and specific than the kinds you usually see in (the) genre."[2] In an interview, Schwartz stated, "I think, maybe from the early ads, people thought they were going to get a kind of melodrama. What we've done instead is something a little bit different, something that has a little bit more irony and a little bit more self-awareness and maybe is a little more successful because of that."[3]
Adam Brody originally auditioned for the part of Ryan Atwood, but did not bother learning the script and just ad-libbed the whole audition. Schwartz wanted nothing to do with him after this, but Brody returned later in the auditions at the producers' request to audition for the role of Seth. Chad Michael Murray was originally offered the role of Luke Ward's best friend, but chose One Tree Hill instead. The secondary character was later scrapped by Schwartz.
Melinda Clarke, who plays the role of Julie Cooper-Nichol, actually read for the part of the perfect mother, Kirsten Cohen. In the pilot, there just wasn't enough material for her to read as Julie, so she was brought in to read for Kirsten.[4] The role of Kirsten eventually went to Kelly Rowan.
Due to labor union salary rules about filming outside of the studio zone in Los Angeles County, The O.C. was actually filmed in several southern California Beach Cities (40 miles away from the actual Newport Beach) to reduce costs. Most interior shots of homes and offices, including the Cohen household, were shot at Raleigh Studios in Manhattan Beach,[5] while most exterior shots (e.g. the pier, diner, and "the Bait Shop") were filmed in neighboring Redondo Beach[6] and Hermosa Beach.[7] The Cohen's pool is only four feet deep, so the cast do the pool scenes on their knees. The Newport Group was represented in The O.C. by the same building used for the Miami-Dade Police HQ in CSI: Miami.[8] The UCLA campus - particularly Schoenberg Hall - was used in lieu of UC Berkeley in an episode where Ryan visits college. USC was used in lieu of Brown University when Summer and Seth visit.
The first season of The O.C. premiered on FOX in the United States on August 5, 2003 at 9:00pm ET. The series finale of The O.C. aired on February 22, 2007. The O.C. has also premiered in other countries around the world including non-English speaking countries.
On January 3, 2007, FOX officially decided to end the series. [9] There were conflicting reports as to whether The O.C. would be picked up for a fifth season by The CW Television Network. Creator Josh Schwartz seemed to be sending mixed signals about the move. In an email to Annie Barrett at Entertainment Weekly, Josh Schwartz reportedly told Ms. Barrett that: "Yeah, this season will indeed be the last. There was some speculation about a Season 5 on another network but we are having a really fun, great run and I feel like better to go out now than stay too long at the party...and after 4 seasons of the O.C., I know a lot about parties..."[10] After being questioned on the move in a separate interview with Michael Ausiello from TV Guide, Schwartz replied, "I don’t want to ever say never, because at a certain point… At this moment? No. Secretly, I would love a Julie-Kaitlin anti-Gilmore Girls show".[11] On January 19, 2007 at the Television Critic's Association tour, President of Entertainment of The CW Television Network Dawn Ostroff stated the series would not move to the CW. "Obviously, it came up but we really didn't think it made sense for us for several reasons."[12] Peter Gallagher, Rachel Bilson, Benjamin McKenzie and Adam Brody[13] shared their thoughts on the show's ending. The series finale, titled "The End's Not Near, It's Here", was written by creator Josh Schwartz and aired on February 22, 2007.
The U.S. cable network SOAPnet purchased the syndication rights to The O.C., and as of April 9, 2007 the channel has been airing reruns of the show. It is part of the afternoon high school drama line up, together with Beverly Hills, 90210 and One Tree Hill.[14]
Beginning in late August 2007, the Canadian channel MuchMusic began syndication. OMNI.1, another Canadian mainstream channel, also began syndication of The O.C. in early September 2007. Both channels began with the first season and will broadcast the entire series in episodic order. The O.C. airs at 11:00AM for OMNI.14:00PM and 7:00PM for MuchMusic, EST. The show was also syndicated by another French-Canadian channel, VRAK.TV.
In Australia where the show became very popular, the Nine Network aired the pilot but dropped the show due to low ratings. The show was then picked up by Network Ten and the entire series was aired. Currently, the show airs every day on the Foxtel cable channel Arena. The entire series is also available on DVD.
In New Zealand, recently launched SKY Television channel Vibe will begin syndication of the first season beginning October, 2007. In the United Kingdom, The O.C. is syndicated on E4. Two episodes are shown daily in chronological order. In Norway, the series is syndicated on TV3 with one episode aired daily from Monday to Friday in chronological order. In Denmark it was TV Danmark(Now called Kanal 5) who aired the show. In Brazil, The O.C. is syndicated on SBT, dubbed in portuguese language. All the first three seasons were shown and, as of February 2008, the fourth season was being aired.
See The O.C. (season 1), The O.C. (season 2), The O.C. (season 3), and The O.C. (season 4) for plot descriptions.
Seasonal rankings (based on average total viewers per episode) of The O.C. on FOX.
| Season | Timeslot (EDT) | Premiere | Finale | Rank | Viewers (m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tuesday 9:00PM (August 5, 2003 - September 16, 2003) | August 5, 2003 | May 5, 2004 | #53 | 9.7[15] |
| Wednesday 9:00PM (October 29, 2003 - May 5, 2004) | |||||
| 2 | Thursday 8:00PM | November 4, 2004 | May 19, 2005 | #85 | 7.0[16] |
| 3 | Thursday 8:00PM (September 8, 2005 - December 15, 2005) | September 8, 2005 | May 18, 2006 | #105 | 5.68[17] |
| Thursday 9:00PM (January 12, 2006 - May 18, 2006) | |||||
| 4 | Thursday 9:00PM | November 2, 2006 | February 22, 2007 | #123 | 4.3[18] |
According to The Futon Critic, "for its seven-week summer [of 2003] run, The O.C. averaged 8.43 million viewers and increased its viewership by more than 17% from its premiere by the end of the summer."[19] However, its viewership numbers from the summer were not factored into their 2003-2004 season average because it aired before the start of the 2003-2004 U.S. television season.
The FOX soap's audience perked up, starting from February 2004, when it started airing directly after episodes of the third season of American Idol. An example of this was when the show earned a series high of 12.7 million viewers for the episode, The Rivals.
The FOX network gave the show a vote of confidence when it moved The O.C. to Thursdays at 8:00 during the fall of 2004 to boost Thursday night ratings. The move resulted in some small success by improving the 8:00-9:00 (Eastern & Pacific time) timeslot, yet the network was unable to find a program in the 9:00-10:00 (Eastern & Pacific time) time slot to hold on to The O.C.'s audience.
The show's overall audience declined sharply in its third season. An example of this decline was shown when it attracted 7.36 million viewers[20] for the March 9, 2006 episode, which aired after a special Thursday night results show during the fifth season of American Idol. Although these numbers were a small improvement of its third season average, it retained just 28% of Idol's audience,[21] which is well below the rate earned by most programs that air following hit shows and especially well below its post-Idol retention rate in the spring of 2004.
The fourth season of The O.C. faced stiff competition in the form of Grey's Anatomy and CSI on Thursdays at 9:00. To boost ratings, FOX network launched a "Save The O.C." webpage, containing a petition to be signed by viewers who wanted to keep the show alive.
Despite The O.C. continuing to suffer from decreased ratings in its fourth season, critics reacted positively to the quality of the show, noting that it managed to become "fresh" and closer to the quality of the first season of The O.C. Schwartz had admitted being more involved in the writing during the fourth season. Many fans, however, criticized the show after writing off the popular character Marissa Cooper, and some fans cite that as the reason for the ratings drop during season four.
The series finale of The O.C., titled "The End's Not Near, It's Here", received a ratings surge with a total 6.676 million viewers, with a peak of 7.6 million viewers. This is in contrast to the penultimate episode of The O.C., titled "The Night Moves", which only received 3.63 million viewers.
The O.C. has also been referred to on several TV shows and books:
One of the reasons The O.C. gained a cult following was the constant flow of references to musicians, films and comic books below the mainstream cultural radar, mainly coming from the character Seth Cohen. One prime example would be in the episode entitled The Best Chrismukkah Ever in which Seth creates the 'Seth Cohen Starter Pack' as a Christmas gift to give to Anna and Summer.[22] This starter pack consisted of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, The Goonies, and CDs by Bright Eyes, Death Cab for Cutie and The Shins. Bright Eyes and Death Cab for Cutie are also referenced in a handful of other episodes, more so than any other bands. Seth and friends have attended shows by The Walkmen,[23] Death Cab for Cutie,[24] The Killers,[25] Modest Mouse,[26] The Thrills[27] Tom Vek and The Subways at their local music venue, the Bait Shop. Films referenced include The Goonies, Risky Business, Akira, Ghost in the Shell, Blade, House of Flying Daggers, Hellboy and a set of scenes loosely parodying Spider-Man in the episode The Rainy Day Women.[28] Seth also has a large Ben Folds Five poster above his bed, as well as posters for various other bands including Death Cab for Cutie, The Ramones and Nirvana and a Rockstar North poster, creators of the Grand Theft Auto game. Additionally in one scene there is a close-up of him reading the book Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto and the writer Chuck Klosterman was also mentioned quite subtly in one episode,[29] as was Jack Kerouac's novel On the Road.[30] Additionally, Seth plays a variety of games on his PlayStation 2 console. The most frequent example comes from season one, which includes a handful of scenes showing Seth and various other characters playing a game from the Dynasty Warriors series and Grand Theft Auto in the Pilot episode.[31] He makes numerous references to various comic books throughout the series, including X-Men and L.E.G.I.O.N., and cited Brian Michael Bendis as one of the greatest comic book authors of all time.[23]
Seth's tastes were backed up by other characters - Anna Stern shared Seth's love of comic books and Death Cab for Cutie,[32] and in one episode she gets the two of them tickets to see Bright Eyes as a surprise.[33] In the second season, the character Zach is introduced into the show and shares Seth's love of comic books and superhero movies. Marissa spends most of one episode listening to Interpol in her room and in the second ever episode she mentions that she likes punk because she's angry, specifically The Sex Pistols, The Clash, Stiff Little Fingers and The Cramps.[30] Seth is extremely surprised to find out that he and Marissa share an extremely similar taste in music and literature, sharing an interest in the aforementioned punk bands and Jack Kerouac novel. Alex has a concert poster of The Postal Service on the wall of her living room. In season three, Taylor Townsend eventually bonds with Seth over a mutual love of Japanese anime. And Julie Cooper occasionally recalls a youth spent listening to Poison, Whitesnake, Bob Seger and Mötley Crüe.
This side of the show was spoofed on a few occasions - firstly, when Ryan developed a passion for the band Journey, going against the hip references made by Seth Cohen.[34] In The Rainy Day Women episode, Seth decides to dwell on his troubled love life not by listening to his usual obscure indie tastes, but with Boyz II Men's song "End of the Road".[28] Paris Hilton made a guest appearance in an episode, playing an ironic parody of herself – . Seth met her and expected her to be as she is on TV, but instead she started a conversation about cult author Thomas Pynchon, stating that "Gravity's Rainbow is his masterpiece!"[29] Seth was suitably stunned. The writers also invented a fictional film called Yakuza Prep which is based on the Japanese movie Battles Without Honor and Humanity, in the third season, perhaps to wind up people becoming interested in certain bands and films just because The O.C. mentioned them; for example, when a song by Imogen Heap shot up the download charts the day after it was used in The O.C.s season three finale, "The Graduates".
The writers also created a fictional show called The Valley, which was basically the in-show equivalent of The O.C. Characters will frequently make ironic (and perhaps self-mocking) comments about The Valley and its fictional reality TV counterpart, Sherman Oaks: The Real Valley obviously referring back to the show Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County and its bold claim to be real. Comedic group The Lonely Island did a parody of The O.C. called The 'Bu. At Boston College, students created and produced a parody titled "The BC" that received nationwide acclaim and features in The New York Times and CBS Evening News.
The restaurant dubbed the Crab Shack on the show is actually local landmark The Crab Cooker.[35] Scenes from the show were also shot at the landmark Wattles Mansion located in Hollywood.[36]
Towards the end of 2006, FOX inserted a webpage on their website entitled Save The OC, asking people to sign an OC loyalty oath.[37] It was stated on the webpage that "not enough people out there have come back to Newport this season". On the webpage, fans were able to send the oath to a friend, sign up for the OC newsletter, and they were also asked to send an email to lovetheoc@gmail.com explaining why they loved the show. According to the webpage, "a very important and powerful person" would be reading the emails. The oath reads as follows:
| “ | I PROMISE to cancel dinner dates, skip night school classes, trade shifts with a co-worker, walk the dog after dinner and do whatever else is necessary to ensure that I am on my couch each and every Thursday night at 9pm. Or 8 central. And when I am on that couch at that time, I will do nothing but watch The OC. I vow to do this every week to show my support for Ryan, Seth, Summer, Sandy, Kirsten, Julie and all of those new people that I love. With my humble effort each week, I will help build a groundswell of support for one of the best shows on television, The OC. With this virtual signature, I THEE WATCH.[38] | ” |
Although the oath had a humorous tone to it, few of the fans were laughing after the show was actually canceled. At the time of the cancellation, the webpage had received tens of thousands of signatures on a daily basis. Soon after the cancellation though, the number of daily signatures steadily began to decline, eventually leveling off at between roughly 1,500 and 5,500 per day. Slight increases in daily signatures were noticeable around the airing of each week's episode. This trend was broken on the air date of the final episode, when more than 18,000 signatures were brought in. FOX closed the SaveTheOC webpage on 11 July 2007; it had a total of 740,000 signatures just before closure.
In 2006, Gameloft released a mobile game based on the show.
The O.C. has been noted for its music selections, which led to some hitherto unknown bands (such as alternative band Phantom Planet who performed the theme song to the show, "California") gaining exposure, so much so that the show's producers have released six compilation albums featuring highlighted performers. Indie rock and other related genres were the most popular, mixed and supervised by Alexandra Patsavas. Patsavas comments that the emotional enhancement that music gives to a scene branches from Josh Schwartz's initial intention that music be a character on the show.[39]
The Beastie Boys single "Ch-Check It Out" debuted on the show in the episode "The Strip" that aired April 28, 2004.[40]Gwen Stefani debuted her single "Cool" on the show. Imogen Heap, a former member of Frou Frou, had her single "Hide and Seek" debut on the show, being featured twice in the episode The Dearly Beloved. The Shins also featured their song "Turn on Me" before their album was released during the episode The French Connection.
During the first season series co-producer McG organised a video of the cast singing the 1979 old school punk classic "California" (not the Phantom Planet song), originally released on the Beach Blvd. album released on Posh Boy Records. Intended as a secret bonus feature for Music from the OC: Mix 1, the recording was pulled at the last minute and remains shelved.
Many popular indie artists have also guest-starred on the show, the majority playing at the venue, 'The Bait Shop' that was introduced in the second season and became a regular hangout (although was featured less in the third season and only mentioned in season four) purposely to showcase indie rock bands on the show, following the success of Rooney in the first season. The most notorious example of success afterward was that of Imogen Heap, whose song "Hide and Seek" immediately soared on the Download Charts after premiering in the US and UK.
| The Complete First Season | ||||
| Set Details | Special Features | |||
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| Release Dates | ||||
| United States Canada | United Kingdom | Australia | ||
| October 26, 2004 | October 18, 2004 | February 2, 2005 | ||
| The Complete Second Season | ||||
| Set Details | Special Features | |||
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| Release Dates | ||||
| United States Canada | United Kingdom | Australia | ||
| August 23, 2005 | August 8, 2005 | September 7, 2005 | ||
| The Complete Third Season | ||||
| Set Details | Special Features | |||
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| Release Dates | ||||
| United States Canada | United Kingdom | Australia | ||
| October 24, 2006 | September 4, 2006 | September 6, 2006 | ||
| The Complete Fourth Season | ||||
| Set Details | Special Features | |||
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| Release Dates | ||||
| United States Canada | United Kingdom | Australia | ||
| May 22, 2007 | May 28, 2007 | July 4, 2007 | ||
| The Complete Series[41] | ||||
| Set Details | Special Features | |||
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| Release Dates | ||||
| United States Canada | United Kingdom | |||
| November 27, 2007 | November 19, 2007 | |||
* Region 1 Release Only
| The O.C. | ||
| Episodes | Website | ||
| Primary characters |
Ryan Atwood | Marissa Cooper | Seth Cohen | Summer Roberts Sandy Cohen | Kirsten Cohen | Julie Cooper | Jimmy Cooper Taylor Townsend | Kaitlin Cooper | Caleb Nichol | Luke Ward |
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| Secondary characters |
Alex Kelly | Anna Stern | Dawn Atwood | Frank Atwood | Trey Atwood | Carter Buckley | Gordon Bullit | Sophie Cohen | Theresa Diaz Holly Fischer | Lindsay Gardner | Johnny Harper | Charlotte Morgan | Hailey Nichol | Neil Roberts |Kevin Volchok Zach Stevens | Veronica Townsend | Oliver Trask | Rebecca Bloom |
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| Locations | Newport | Orange County | Chino | Berkeley | Brown | |
| Music | Mix 1 | Mix 2 | Mix 3 | Mix 4 | Mix 5 | Mix 6 | |
| Related | Chrismukkah | |
| Key producers | Josh Schwartz | McG | Stephanie Savage | Allan Heinberg | |
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