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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
02.02.2008
Jack Bauer In Africa...Almost

Even for those of us who are not '24' watchers, The Wall Street Journal's amusing front page story on the show is well worth a read. Concerned that Jack Bauer was becoming too closely identified with torture and the Bush administration's foreign policy, the producers sought to reinvent their hero. This (eventually ditched) idea was particularly hilarious:

On May 31, the show's head writers went in for a meeting at the studio to present their first big idea: sending Jack to Africa. In various incarnations, Jack would begin the season digging ditches, building houses, tending to orphans, providing security for an embassy or escorting around a visiting dignitary. "One of the themes we discussed was penance, that Africa was a place Jack had gone to seek some kind of penance. Some sanctuary too, but also penance for things he's done in his life," Mr. Gordon says.

Ms. Walden and Gary Newman, chairmen of 20th Century Fox Television, were receptive but believed it was too much of a departure. "It felt like we were throwing the baby out with the bathwater," says Ms. Walden. The Africa plot also had several glaring problems, the first of which was that at some point Jack would have to fly back to the U.S. The writers proposed that for the first time ever, "24" would break from its real-time conceit; the show would skip the period when Jack was on his 14-hour flight.

The writers agreed to work on the plot. Just three weeks before they were due to start shooting the first episodes, Messrs. Gordon and Surnow joined fellow head writers Bob Cochran and Manny Coto for a pancake breakfast at an IHOP to talk through the elements of Jack-in-Africa that still weren't working. Jack was too far away, they felt, both from the immediacy of domestic terror and from the character he had been in prior seasons.

For more, be sure to check out Jane Mayer's great New Yorker piece on creator Joel Surnow. 

--Isaac Chotiner 

Posted: Saturday, February 02, 2008 11:22 AM with 5 comment(s)

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clumsymohel said:

"24" is an incredibly damaging piece of garbage that has poisoned the national discourse on the morality of "enhanced interrogation," or as the Gestapo used to say, "Verschärfte Vernehmung." In addition to those named in the article as fans of the show (Cheney, Rove, etc.), and those that cite it in defending torture (John Yoo), should be added Justice Scalia.

andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/.../scalia_and_tort.html

One of the few benefits of the writer's strike is that it is keeping this idiocy off the air.

February 2, 2008 2:15 PM

lymon1 said:

With one caveat: 24 presents a way out of the "ticking bomb" torture justification scenario: civil disobedience.  Bauer has consistently been willing to take whatever punishment is coming his way and step outside "official capacity" when he tortures.  And he only tortures when, like, the fate of at least several million people are in iminent peril.  

February 2, 2008 6:06 PM

dbhuff said:

The 'Jack Bauer' exception is BS.  What would make the show interesting would be if he tortured the wrong person or tortured the right person only to find out no one was in danger, or tortured someone who gave him false info (either the right or wrong person).  I mean these are people who often WANT to die for their cause.  If there's a nuke about to go, do you think a knife in the thigh is really going to get the RIGHT answer?

February 2, 2008 9:28 PM

CharlesFosterKane said:

"Africa was a place Jack had gone to seek some kind of penance."

"a pancake breakfast at an IHOP to talk through the elements of Jack-in-Africa that still weren't working"

Where to begin?

February 2, 2008 10:48 PM

Nari224 said:

Didn't he (Bauer) actually torture the wrong person somewhere along the line - his girlfriend's ex-husband from memory?

February 3, 2008 12:11 PM