Robby Benson
Author of Billy: The Early Years [2008 film]
About the Author
Image credit: Robby Benson
Works by Robby Benson
Associated Works
Beauty and the Beast: Original 1991 Motion Picture Soundtrack (1996) — Preformer — 99 copies, 1 review
Beauty & The Beast: One Magical Christmas (Read Along) (1993) — Narrator, some editions — 54 copies, 1 review
David and Goliath (The Greatest Adventure Stories from the Bible) (1986) — Narrator — 49 copies, 3 reviews
2-Movie Collection: Disney Beauty and the Beast [animated and live action films] (2017) — Actor — 6 copies
All the Kind Strangers [1974 flm] 3 copies
The Legend of Prince Valiant: The Complete Series, Vol. 2 — Voice — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1956-01-21
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- actor
film director
teacher - Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Yes, THAT Robby Benson, the one that was a child sitcom star and, turns out, went on to directing and producing sitcoms, including Ellen and Friends. According to the blurbs, Benson has taken that experience and turned it into a satiric look at Hollywood in general and the process of creating sitcoms in particular.
Ostensibly, the story is about 7 days in the life of J.T. Baker, a principaled director trying desperately to produce an episode of a wildly popular sitcom (suspiciously similar to show more Frends) in spite of the malicious interference of a cast of zany characters, to include sex- and ratings-crazed network executives, corrupt network lawyers, greedy agents, incompetent producers, over-indulged actors, and a host of other wacky characters. Oh, and everyone pretty much speaks Yiddish. Have I omitted any entertainment stereotypes? I assure you, Benson hasn't!
In other words, don't mistake this for some sort of "insiders" perspective into the world of Hollywood. While Benson does inject some realism in the form of process insight and industry lingo (indeed, there's a running gag in which Benson provides sarcastic footnoted definitions for the more obscure terms), this is pure, broad farce. The characters are one-dimensional stereotypes, the plot is preposterous, and there's nothing subtle about the gags (goofy nailgun accidents, a bar mitzvah featuring a hip hop superstar rapping the Torah - you get the idea). All that's missing is a laugh track, but not to worry - you'll almost certainly supply that yourself.
In summary, there's nothing here that hasn't been done before ... over and over and over again. Still, this is readable, engaging, and undeniably funny, so you (probably) won't begrudge the time you spend reading it. My advice: save it for those times when you're in the mood for light entertainment or really need a laugh, however cheap. show less
Ostensibly, the story is about 7 days in the life of J.T. Baker, a principaled director trying desperately to produce an episode of a wildly popular sitcom (suspiciously similar to show more Frends) in spite of the malicious interference of a cast of zany characters, to include sex- and ratings-crazed network executives, corrupt network lawyers, greedy agents, incompetent producers, over-indulged actors, and a host of other wacky characters. Oh, and everyone pretty much speaks Yiddish. Have I omitted any entertainment stereotypes? I assure you, Benson hasn't!
In other words, don't mistake this for some sort of "insiders" perspective into the world of Hollywood. While Benson does inject some realism in the form of process insight and industry lingo (indeed, there's a running gag in which Benson provides sarcastic footnoted definitions for the more obscure terms), this is pure, broad farce. The characters are one-dimensional stereotypes, the plot is preposterous, and there's nothing subtle about the gags (goofy nailgun accidents, a bar mitzvah featuring a hip hop superstar rapping the Torah - you get the idea). All that's missing is a laugh track, but not to worry - you'll almost certainly supply that yourself.
In summary, there's nothing here that hasn't been done before ... over and over and over again. Still, this is readable, engaging, and undeniably funny, so you (probably) won't begrudge the time you spend reading it. My advice: save it for those times when you're in the mood for light entertainment or really need a laugh, however cheap. show less
I saw the author in the teen romance movie "Jeremy" in 1973, and he's since branched out into writing, composing and directing. He really knows Hollywood and skewers it in this novel. After a sitcom director's accidental death by nail gun, outsider J.T. Baker is brought in to run the show. If real producers, writers, and stars are as crazy, evil and just plain dumb as these characters... yikes! Fun to read. It's probably no coincidence that J.T.'s son is named Jeremy.
This is an exaggerated tale of what the behind the scenes people go through to get america's favorite television show on air. The only thing I think is exaggerated is that all these things happened on one set. I'm sure at least one of the things that he describes happens on every show. When I first started reading this, I didn't think I was going to like it. He started out explaining everything, but once it got into the story I really enjoyed it. I would recommend this book to anyone who is show more in production or would like a glimpse at how a television show comes together. show less
This was a well written book but oh so painful to read. I felt horribly at how heinously the main character kept getting treated. It made me squirm!
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Also by
- 35
- Members
- 178
- Popularity
- #120,888
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 8












