‘True Detective’ city spokesman admits this season is basically unwatchable
When a producer called the city of Vernon, California last year to see about shooting what was only described as “a police drama” (aka, HBO’s True Detective) in the town for a few weeks, city officials jumped at the chance.
The Los Angeles County enclave just south of downtown had become associated with a string of scandals: between 2006 and 2010, L.A. County grand juries handed down three separate corruption indictments, including one for misappropriation of city funds at “ludicrous” volumes. As recently as 2011, the county was threatening the city with full-out disincorporation.
That was likely part of its cinematic appeal.
It’s not clear what city officials were expecting from the show, but the producer said nothing about how the city would be portrayed, or what parts of the plot would unfold there, or even that the name of the city would be changed (or the quality of the script!).
But in an interview with Vanity Fair, show creator Pizzolatto pegged Vernon as the inspiration for a show about urban industrial human depravity.
“[Colin Farrell] is a detective for this city within L.A. County that’s almost entirely industrial,” Pizzolatto said. “He’s indebted to, employed by, and somewhat friends with [mobster Vince Vaughn]. They get drawn together because of various collusions around the murder of this figure, this city manager.”
But that didn’t really matter to the officials, almost none of whom were familiar with True Detective’s first season, or Pizzolatto, according to Fred MacFarlane, a strategic communications consultant hired in 2011 by the city to be its official spokesman.
“We really considered the the focus of this whole effort as keeping film production jobs, to keep filming production shoots in California, and more specifically in southern California, keep it in the L.A. area, and help generate jobs,” he said.
City officials “knew this was going to be good for the local economy,” MacFarlane added.