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    Home » Fumero, Park Find Comedy and Connection At The Workplace in Netflix’s “Blockbuster”

    Fumero, Park Find Comedy and Connection At The Workplace in Netflix’s “Blockbuster”

    By SHOOTThursday, November 3, 2022Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments3896 Views
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    Melissa Fumero, left, and Randall Park, cast members in the Netflix series "Blockbuster," pose together for a portrait, Monday, Oct. 24, 2022, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

    By Alicia Rancilio

    --

    Actors are accustomed to change, always beginning and ending new projects in various locations with new people. But for Melissa Fumero, who starred in "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" for eight seasons, taking on a new role in the Netflix series "Blockbuster" was anxiety-inducing.

    "I told myself 'Look, that kind of magic doesn't happen again. You had your one unicorn in your career. It's probably never going to be that good again," Fumero said in a recent interview. Those jitters went away when co-star Randall Park and the rest of the cast assembled to film the 10-episode show about the employees of the sole surviving Blockbuster video store.

    "I met this cast and met Randall, and we started all working together, and it was literally the same magic unicorn again. I can't believe it."

    Park — best known for the ABC comedy "Fresh off The Boat" which aired for six seasons — plays Timmy, the proud manager of a Blockbuster store in a small town in Michigan. Quickly into the first episode he gets word that all remaining Blockbusters will be shut down effective immediately, corporate's office is being turned into a WeWork, but Timmy's Blockbuster can remain open because it still generates a small amount of business. He becomes the de facto owner of the last Blockbuster in the world. (The actual last remaining Blockbuster is in Bend, Ore.)

    Timmy loves his job, his coworkers, and connecting with the people who come to his store. In the pilot episode, as Timmy chats with a customer who hasn't rented a movie in a while, he says, "What's it been? Three years this March?" The customer breaks it to him that he's been using Netflix, but ends up renting "Under the Tuscan Sun" on Timmy's recommendation to help get through a breakup.

    Timmy's genuine belief is that the in-person exchange of renting a movie, or just leaving the house to visit any brick-and-mortar store, is valuable because human beings need socialization. His employees (played by actors including Madeleine Arthur, Olga Merediz and Tyler Alvarez) don't exactly match his conviction, but they'll go along with his lofty ideas to bring attention to the store — and to keep working.

    "Timmy is the same kind of boss I would be, I think. Which is not necessarily a good thing," said Park. "The problem with Timmy and the problem with me, is this deep desire to be liked. … He puts out a lot of positivity and a lot of love. That's what really speaks to me about the character. But his need to be liked gets him in trouble often."

    Vanessa Ramos, "Blockbuster" creator and showrunner, says when she was coming up with its characters Park is who she had in mind all along for Timmy.

    "In my original pitch, Timmy was described as 'a Randall Park- type,' and that was because they're like, 'there's no way we can get Randall Park.'" Enter Netflix, which suggested sending it to Park and seeing what happened.

    "He read it and was in. In my brain I was like, 'OK, this is as good as it going to get. Like, I've really lucked out here,'" said Ramos.

    That good fortune continued when her pal and former colleague Fumero, whom she wrote for on "Brooklyn Nine-Nine," became available. Fumero plays Eliza, a down on her luck Blockbuster employee who previously worked with Timmy at the store when they were in high school and he's had a secret crush on her ever since. Eliza went to Harvard — for a semester — but dropped out because she got pregnant. She married, had a baby and is now separated from her husband whom she caught on a date with another woman in the Costco cafe.

    "The thing about Eliza that I was really drawn to was this woman who things didn't go exactly the way she thought they would," said Fumero. "We're catching her at this moment in her life where she's figuring out what's next and who she is after she's already raised a kid."

    Timmy and Eliza have a classic will they/won't they running storyline which the actors say they enjoy.

    "Everyone loves a romance," said Park. "The fact that these two characters also had a history before, makes it so special and different and complicated and all those things. I'm very invested."

    Fumero says "Blockbuster," like "Brooklyn Nine-Nine," is a workplace comedy where employees become family and in some ways know each other better than family.

    "No matter what industry you work in are these little dysfunctional families that exist everywhere and these people that you spend all these hours with every day and it's a part of everyone's life."

    Alicia Rancilio is an AP writer

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    Category:News
    Tags:BlockbusterMelissa FumeroNetflixRandall ParkVanessa Ramos



    In Legal Dispute Over “The View,” ABC Accuses Trump Administration Of Trying To Chill Free Speech

    Friday, May 8, 2026

    In a strongly worded filing, ABC accuses the Trump administration of trying to chill its constitutionally protected free speech and hinder open political discussion.

    The point of contention: The popular show "The View," and whether it's subject to equal time rules.

    ABC's filing to the Federal Communications Commission, made public Friday, came in a dispute involving one ABC station in Houston, KTRK-TV. But the wording indicated the network was embarking on a broader battle with the administration.

    "The Commission's actions threaten to upend decades of settled law and practice and chill critical protected speech, both with respect to 'The View' and more broadly," said the filing on behalf of both KTRK-TV and ABC.

    The commission replied, in a statement emailed to The Associated Press, that equal time law "encourages more speech and empowers voters to decide the outcome of elections. The FCC will review Disney's assertion that 'The View' is a 'bona fide news program' and thus exempt from the political equal time rules."

    The ABC filing appeared to be the latest volley inside and outside the legal arena between the U.S. media and the Trump White House over what journalists perceive as the president's attack on free speech and the media's ability to do its job. Trump has been critical of media outlets whose journalism runs counter to his agenda and sensibilities.

    Among legal battles in the courts: a dispute between the Pentagon and The New York Times over access; a battle between the White House and The Associated Press over how to refer to the Gulf of Mexico; and Trump's anger at The Wall Street Journal over reporting about Jeffrey Epstein.

    The dispute concerns content on "The View," ABC's long-running morning talk show,... Read More

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