Transcript
Geri Cole:
Hi, I’m Geri Cole, and you’re listening to On Writing, a podcast from the Writer’s Guild of America East. In each episode, you’re going to hear from the people behind your favorite films and television series, talking about their writing process, how they got their project from the page to the screen, and so much more.
Today, I’m excited to be joined by Danny Strong, creator and co-writer of the new Hulu series Dopesick. Dopesick is an eight episode series depicting the full scope of the opioid crisis. Danny’s also the co-creator of the Fox series Empire, the writer of the Hunger Games Mockingjay Part One and Two, Lee Daniels’ The Butler, and the Writers Guild award winning films, Game Change, and Recount.
In this episode, we talk about how he weaved four stories across three timelines, writing stories that spark national conversations, and how falling into you YouTube holes can be a part of your process.
Danny, thank you so much for joining us today. And I’m going to echo Jason in saying thank you so much for making this series, because I feel like I discovered how much I didn’t know. Yeah, how much I didn’t know and how much it actually has affected my generation. And it was sort of always happening, but I don’t think I was not nearly not aware as I should’ve been. So I feel like actually I might be a little bit out of my depth in this conversation because it is such a complex issue. So please bear with me.
So I just want to start out actually by saying, how are you doing, in general, but also in light of the bankruptcy ruling? How are you feeling?
Danny Strong:
Yeah, I mean, in general, to be honest with you, it’s just intense right now, releasing the show. We did a premiere yesterday in New York and there’s going to be a DC screening and I go to Washington DC for three days of press and then I’m going to London day for four days of press. And it’s all very exciting, but it’s also stressful. And then I got to get back to my writing as well and my producing. So there’s a lot of different things going on, but, yeah, I’m excited about the show. I’m excited about the reception of the show. The bankruptcy is something that I had internalized many months ago, was really clear where that had been going for quite a long time. It was clear where it was going when Purdue very cleverly picked Judge Drain in that region to file bankruptcy. And so it’s sort of just one more example of Purdue getting away with it and justice not truly being served for their actions.
Geri Cole:
Which is a surprise, honestly, probably to no one, but still heartbreaking, nonetheless. So there’s so much here. There’s so much here and there’s such a great responsibility to the story. I guess I want to hear about what personally drew you to this story and how did you start?
Danny Strong:
The story came to me from John Goldwyn, who was one of the producers of it, who had reached out to me. We had breakfast and he pitched me the idea of the opioid crisis, about writing and directing a movie on the opiod crisis. And I thought I’d read the article, the New York article by Patrick Radden Keefe that he had read, that sort of had sparked him where he thought there would be a great movie about the Sackler family. And so I thought, “Oh yeah, I read that story and it’s a perfectly enraging story.” So then I started researching beyond the story, and there’ve been multiple books at that point written about it. And there was a big Esquire article about it as well. There was a lot of information out there, pretty much a really kind of stunning amount of information out there.
And why I say stunning is the fact that it took Patrick’s article in 2017 for the country to understand, “Oh, no, this was all generated by one company controlled by one family.” So when I dove into the research, when I read about a US Attorney case, my ears pricked up because I thought, “Oh, oh, there’s a case, which means there’s an investigation, which means there’s maybe a legal drama there, and an investigative thriller there.” And then I read about in 2000, 2001, the DEA had an active investigation into Purdue Pharma and it started this press war against Purdue Pharma. And my screenwriter ears pricked up again. I’m like, “Oh, oh, so we’ve got more investigators taking actions against this company.” And it made me think, “Oh, well, that’s how you could construct this as a story, because you would have some clear protagonists to follow. You would have procedural beats of things they did, you would have hopefully exciting revelations from what they uncovered, and by showing what they uncovered, you would then be able to have some of the bigger ideas, which is showing the crimes of the company.”
And then I thought, “Well, okay, can we go inside the company? Well, that could be a whole other storyline. If we could go inside the company and actually construct scenes with Richard Sackler and Kathe Sackler and Michael Friedman and Howard Udell and Paul Goldenheim, these characters.” And I didn’t know if I could, if there would be enough information out there to be able to do that. But then I thought, “Oh, well you got another storyline. Okay, this is getting good.” And then lastly, I thought, “Well, you can’t do all this without doing the victims. We need the victims, so how do we dramatize the victims?” And I chose Appalachia and a coal mining town because when I found the most, I don’t know if dramatics the word or the most interesting or the most maddening, was just the origin story of how it all it happened. And because Purdue Pharma had targeted mining, logging, and farming areas as their phase one launch, it made me think, “Okay, I need one of those kinds of towns will be the town that we personify as the victims of Oxycontin.”
And how I ended up on mining was, it’s so funny, I started Google imaging mines, logging facilities, and farms.
Geri Cole:
Wow.
Danny Strong:
And so I just started looking at them and then visually I really liked mines, and thought, “Oh, visually, this could be really interesting.” Because I had no bias towards, or a real strong opinion on, who was a bigger victim of Purdue Pharma, loggers, miners, or farmers. They’re all victims, but who should I personify? Because I felt like I couldn’t do more than one, for the sake of the story. And visually I thought of, “Okay, the mining world’s going to be really interesting.” And there was a really compelling cultural element to miners that I saw in these videos I started watching.
So that’s another thing I just do as a writer, is I start looking at YouTube videos. They’re not even documentaries. You’d just be surprised at how many random YouTube videos there are on any sort of subject matter. And sometimes there’s often these 10 minute documentaries that people just do, and they throw up, and they’re usually very raw and they’re not very polished and there can often be quite fascinating and quite fruitful because it’s someone living that experience, filming it on their phone, and filming interviews and then they put it together. And there was, watching these mining documentaries, these 10 minute long shorts, I would say short subjects on this, I was taken by the pride, the pride that miners had, in what they do and this feeling that they’re building America in those mines and building people’s homes and what they’re doing for the country. Which for me increased the sense of tragedy that they were taken advantage of by Purdue Pharma. That Purdue Pharma took advantage of the fact that they’d get injured. And so would be perfect people to target for Oxycontin.
And I’m not saying I didn’t get that sense of pride in logging communities and farming communities as well. I don’t know, I just liked the visual feel of being in the mines, and then I immediately started clicking on mining videos, and I was quite moved by watching the interviews with people talking about how proud they were of what they did. So that was my start.
Geri Cole:
Wow. Wow, wow, wow. Also, I love that YouTube holes are a part of your process. You just like start watching.
Danny Strong:
Yeah, all the time, all the time. And it’s not even that deliberate, it’s sort of, I’m like, well, I don’t know anything about that. And then I’ll just go to YouTube and start watching because I often write things about things I don’t know anything about. I did a little video once where it was, it wasn’t write what you know, it was write what you’re passionate about. And for me, it’s what I’m passionate about and just what I’m interested in. You know? Like, “Oh, I don’t know anything about that. That’s really interesting.” And I’m not afraid to start from scratch on something.
Geri Cole:
That’s a really awesome perspective because I feel like you do always hear the write what you know, which is not bad advice, but, yeah, also write what you’re fascinated in, because then there’ll be no shortage of enthusiasm.
Danny Strong:
That’s exactly right. I think write what you know is, by the way, by all means, write what you know, if that’s what someone wants to do. I mean, I think that’s a great idea, but I do think that it’s also completely totally appropriate for someone who’s not a professional writer, who wants to write a book on something or a memoir, someone works in the horse business or is a lawyer and they want to write a book or a screenplay or a play or whatever they want to write. And it’s like, “Well, if you’ve never written anything, maybe you should write about the law or the horse business or whatever it is that you have that background in. That makes total sense.” But I’ve spent the last, I don’t know, 20 years, 22 years now, writing, not every day, almost though. I mean, there’ve been times off, for sure, where I’m in a production on something. So it’s not about, I don’t need to dwell on my own past to write something. In fact, I’m not really interested in my own past.
If I were to write a project about actors in their 20’s auditioning for guest stars and commercials and voiceovers, and then occasionally a movie, if you’re lucky, that’s the only project, that’s the only script I got inside of me that’s in the right category.
Geri Cole:
Well, I mean, I would watch that too.
Danny Strong:
Okay. Okay. Good.
Geri Cole:
So you had these sort of like, I want to say four threads of the DEA investigation, the legal investigation, the inside the Sackler family, and then the victims. Were there any other threads that you considered, and had to edit out and then how did you, I guess decide, because there are so many characters and you’re going back and forth between different times and it’s so much, but it’s so clear and how did you work out that structure and figuring out what to edit?
Danny Strong:
Well, and there are some sub threads as well where the Sackler family, there’s the thread of Purdue Pharma and then there’s this other thread, which is a major storyline, which is the pharma reps, which is Billy and Amber, mostly focused on Billy’s story of the world of the pharma rep as well. So I have another sub thread in the Sackler storyline that I wanted to make a big storyline, which was Arthur Sackler in the ’50s and the ’60s coming up with all the advertising techniques, his motivation, that his nephew Richard would come to prefect or use in the marketing and distribution of Oxycontin. Because it’s very much Arthur Sackler’s playbook, everything that they did to market Oxycontin, it’s just sprayed out of what he was doing in the ’50s and he ’60s. And I thought that could be a fascinating sort of Godfather II like thread.
And I ended up cutting it because we had shifted from 10 episodes to eight episodes. It was originally going to be 10. And then when the show went from FX to Hulu, because I originally wrote the pilot for FX. When I went to Hulu, we decided to drop down to eight. And one of the reasons was, well, there was a couple of reasons. One, there was a concern that, “I don’t know, can I get people to watch 10 episodes on the opioid crisis?” Eight felt, even though it’s still plenty of episodes, felt a little more palpable.
Geri Cole:
Wow, okay.
Danny Strong:
And then there was a rival Netflix project, which was ahead of us. They had already started a writers’ room. We knew they had a writer’s room that had been going for a few months maybe at that point, I’m not sure the exact date they started, maybe six weeks, whatever it was, but we were behind. And I’m a fast writer and I thought, “Okay, well if it’s eight episodes, maybe I could even catch up with them and beat them to production,” because I felt like I could go faster than a writer’s room could go. But then we ended up doing a writer’s room and I had four writers. It was a small room and they were great. It was a great group. So. that’s what happened.
And then they just went into production a few weeks ago.
Geri Cole:
Wow. So you did beat them.
Danny Strong:
Yeah. We went into production in January and they went into production in September. So we beat them by eight or nine months. So they’re actually going to be in production while we’re airing. But it’s Netflix and maybe Netflix just doesn’t care. They’ve got their own algorithm and millions and hundreds of millions of eyeballs and so it just doesn’t matter to them. Which by the way, great, more power to everyone.
Geri Cole:
Absolutely.
Danny Strong:
So anyways, that was part of the process of how that Godfather II storyline went away. Sorry, if these answers are so long winded.
Geri Cole:
No, no, no. That’s great.
Danny Strong:
And then the construction of the narrative of, four, maybe five, intertwined storylines, over three different time periods, was incredibly complicated and was really difficult to construct and was difficult to edit and post. And what made it difficult was the timeline jumping and I think it’s pretty seamless in the show. I think it works pretty effortlessly, but it was not effortlessly constructed. It was really challenging to put it together. When I was writing the pilot, I thought to myself, all right, this would have been hard enough with four storylines, let alone doing it in three different time periods. But when I was writing the pilot, I started to get the rhythm of it and started to feel my way through it. And I started just coming up with sort of principles of better to try and stay in a single timeline for as many scenes as possible, the Finch Creek and the Sackler world, I will always keep them in the same timeline. So I will never move Richard Sackler around into someone else’s timeline. He’ll always stay in the same timeline as Dr. Fenix and Betsy.
It felt like there were some key principles that I would not deviate from. And I ended up deviating from them like once or twice. Richard Sackler appears in Bridget’s storyline, because Richard Sackler went and had a meeting with the DA, that actually happened and it was a great opportunity to have these characters meet. And actually that scene in which he goes and meets at the DEA, much of it is verbatim as the meeting actually happened per the sourcing.
Geri Cole:
Wow.
Danny Strong:
Per the books I read on it, but not the whole scene. There’s definitely some made up, but the foundation of it is actually what happened. So really sticking to that principle. And then I thought if I did that, then the few times I break it, and a character shows up in someone else’s timeline, if it’s not confusing, hopefully it will be very exciting, because it will be years have passed, or it’ll be like, oh wow. And then we can have a ton of information in one cut where we can find out what happened to someone in one cut.
And I had, in episode six, one of the characters show up in the investigative, the US Attorney’s story timeline and you found out what happened to him in episode six.
Geri Cole:
I was going to say. Was it episode six? Is that the Michael [crosstalk 00:16:43]
Danny Strong:
I’m not going to say who or what, but what ended up happening was right before we shot it, not the scene, but that episode, I re-read the script. And I thought, “No, I’m not ready for the audience to know what happened to this character. It’s under cutting dramatic tension for the next two episodes.” And I took the scene out. So I was like, “We’re not even going to shoot the scene, I’m going to cut it, because I don’t want the audience to know by episode six what happened to him? I want them to know in episode eight.” And luckily it was such an easy thing to fix. It was just removing one scene.
Geri Cole:
Wow. Wait, can we, I want to know now what that scene was that was removed.
Danny Strong:
I’m not going to say what had happened, but it was Billy, the pharma rep. In episode six, I had the audience know what happened to him.
Geri Cole:
Oh. Okay.
Danny Strong:
Where his arc ended up because he appeared in Rick and Randy’s storyline, which is taking place several years after the storyline, we’ve been following him throughout the show. And I thought it would be exciting and cool.
Geri Cole:
Yeah.
Danny Strong:
And then I realized, yeah, it is cool, but it also it’s undercutting his arc for the rest of the season.
Geri Cole:
Oh, yeah. I see that.
Danny Strong:
So I removed it.
Geri Cole:
Okay, wow. I have so many followup questions. One, because I want to ask you about the writer’s room and how that worked. But I also, before we move on into the writer’s room, I do want to hear, how did you come up with those guidelines of not to cross and how many guidelines did you have? And I guess, did they just sort of come organically as you were writing the pilot where it’s like how to keep this clear?
Danny Strong:
They were all logic based.
Geri Cole:
Okay.
Danny Strong:
They were really logic based of just if I’m going to do three different timelines, how do I not make it confusing? And I think it was trial and error where I think that I would put a character in another character’s timeline, and this was when I was writing the pilot, and I’d read it and I’d think, “Oh, that’s really going to confuse the audience.” And it was really that. It’s almost that simple, where when I did it, it read confusing because you didn’t know where you were in time, and so that’s when I started coming up with these rules, and they were really about clarity at the end of the day.
And then if I’m going to break them, it’s going to be crystal clear that I’ve broken them, that this character’s entered someone else’s timeline, because we’re now with that character years later, and I would only do it if it’s powerful to do it. And it was a few times. I didn’t do it much, but the Richard Sackler example’s sort of perfect. Actually I don’t even necessarily think it’s powerful that he’s in another timeline. I just think we’re just excited to see him and her, face to face.