20TH UPDATE, 2:50 PM: Refresh for latest… About 1.9 million homes and businesses remained without power today, down from 8.5 million across the East immediately after the storm. More than half of those still without power are in New Jersey. About 84% of New York City’s subway system should be restored by Monday morning. Electricity is back on for most if not all of Manhattan, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said, and power has been restored to much of the rest of New York City. Resumption of electric service means that most movie theaters have reopened up and down the East Coast and studios tell Deadline that business is booming.
Meanwhile, as temperatures fall toward freezing NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg said today that 30,000 to 40,000 people in the city alone would need housing. U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said federal agencies are looking for apartments and hotel rooms for people displaced by Sandy. Some people have been reluctant to leave their homes because of scattered looting. “People are in homes that are uninhabitable,” Cuomo said today. “People don’t like to leave their home, but the reality is going to be in the temperature.” About 5.8 million homes in the East rely on heating oil, and distribution has nearly collapsed in some of the hardest hit areas. New York area distributors have already been forced to ration supplies. Officials also fretted that displaced residents would not be able to vote in Tuesday’s Presidential election. Scores of voting centers were rendered useless by the record surge of seawater in New York and New Jersey.
On Friday night, NBC’s commercial-free live one-hour benefit telethon Hurricane Sandy: Coming Together included Bruce Springsteen, Jon Bon Jovi, Billy Joel, Christina Aguilera and Mary J. Blige in a blend of music, storm footage and calls for donations from Jon Stewart, Tina Fey, Whoopi Goldberg, Danny DeVito and others. (You can watch it here) Matt Lauer hosted the show that was carried across several NBC networks including USA, MSNBC, E! and by HBO, Discovery’s Fit & Health and Velocity networks and The Weather Channel as well. Jimmy Fallon gamely led an all-star performance of the Drifters’ “Under the Boardwalk” that featured Joel, Springsteen and Steven Tyler who also delivered an emotional “Dream On”. Sting performed an equally passionate acoustic version of The Police hit “Message In a Bottle” and its promise to “send an SOS to the world.” Springsteen and the E Street Band closed the show with “Land Of Hope and Dreams”. Ironically, millions of people for whom the benefit was organized couldn’t watch because they still had no electricity. Separately, ABC has planned Monday, November 5 as Day of Giving across its network and syndicated programming to encourage viewers to help those impacted by the storm.
As New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie imposed gasoline rationing, New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said 8 million gallons had been unloaded from commercial tankers and another 28 million gallons would go into distribution terminals over the weekend. He also said the Defense Department was sending 12 million gallons of fuel to be pumped from five mobile stations. The gas initially was to be free and limited to 10 gallons per recipient. But after citizens swarmed the mobile units, the gas was cut off and reserved mainly for emergency workers. Officials pointed out that the extra 28 million gallons en route to New York should ease any continuing shortages.
Frustration and anger are mounting as clean-up and recovery efforts continue. Tempers rose Friday amid widespread fuel shortages as desperate motorists eager to fill up formed long lines at gas stations in the metropolitan New York City area. Bloomberg canceled today’s New York City Marathon after anger over the decision to move forward with the event reached a boiling point. Many complained that
it was diverting badly needed resources from recovery efforts, including power generators that would be used for the media tent at the marathon’s finish line. The move also has forced ESPN2 to adjust its programming. It would have been the first NYC marathon to have aired on national television in nearly 20 years. Bloomberg initially defended the decision to hold the marathon, saying it would give people something to cheer about after a dismal week and provided a tremendous boon to the city’s economy.
Media companies headquartered in New York City donated millions to relief efforts for the storm that has claimed 111 lives in North America and incurred damages upwards of $50 billion. Disney pledged $2 million and Viacom said it was giving $1 million, joining News Corp, which previously pitched in $1 million. Time Warner Inc. said it would donate a minimum of $1 million for recovery efforts, and the NFL and the NFL Players Association have pledged to donate $1 million to the American Red Cross. The NFL and its TV partners will run messages and screen crawls to promote donations. Time Warner Cable also pledged $600,000 and began dispatching a fleet of free mobile Wi-Fi hotspots and charging stations to affected areas.
There is some good news regarding Gotham film production. The Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting says, beginning Monday, it will issue permits for exterior locations on a case-by-case basis. Areas where exterior filming won’t be permitted for now: south of 42nd St in Manhattan, Staten Island, Coney Island, Red Hook, the Rockaways, Breezy Point and other affected areas.
In New Jersey, the site of MTV’s hit reality show Jersey Shore was decimated. “I have never seen devastation like this in my life. Not here in New Jersey”, Gov. Chris Christie told CNN (photo at left). “You know, you see sights like the Seaside Heights boardwalk, where the program the Jersey Shore is filmed, the boardwalk is gone. It is gone. Amusement rides, a roller coaster, a log flume, in the ocean. It
‘s incredible. Homes destroyed. It’s an awful thing.” Jersey Shore, in its final season, wasn’t in production this week, but the cast — themselves mostly without power — has been active on Twitter talking about the storm and its impact on the oceanfront communities. Deadline has learned that MTV is tentatively exploring a storm-relief Jersey Shore special that would feature the cast. President Obama toured New Jersey Wednesday with Christie, a Republican governor who crossed party lines to praise the president’s response to the storm. The White House announced that a power restoration working group has been established to cut red tape and increase coordination among federal and local governments and the private sector to restore power to people as quickly as possible. U.S. Air Force cargo planes were flying electrical company bucket trucks and crews from Southern California to New York to speed hurricane relief efforts, defense officials told the Wall Street Journal.
All Broadway shows are up and running, but Off-Broadway theater hasn’t been as lucky. Several shows including the popular Blue Man Group remain dark. Previews for the Public Theater’s Giant and Sorry have been delayed and the Vineyard Theater hasn’t scheduled a new opening date for Douglas McGrath’s Checkers and Classic Stage Company’s Ivanov with Ethan Hawke is also on hold.
TV broadcast schedules have begun to return to normal. Comedy Central said The Daily Show With Jon Stewart and The Colbert Report have returned with live episodes. Tuesday night NBC pre-empted new episodes of Go On and The New Normal, which were to air from 10-11 PM, following The Voice, for an NBC News special on the storm. Monday’s editions of The Voice, impacted by storm-related evacuations and power outages, was repeated last night 8-10 PM (The Voice). The Voice will pre-empt NBC’s comedy block, which will return next week. On ABC, a news special pre-empted Private Practice, which will return in two weeks, following the Presidential elections next Tuesday.
Related: Hurricane Sandy’s Moved On, But Entertainment Losses Will Mount Until Services Resume
ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel Live, which completed a weeklong stint at Brooklyn’s Harvey Theatre, cancelled its show Monday but broadcast an original Tuesday night, with Howard Stern, Tracy Morgan and musical guest Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings. Kimmel’s show Wednesday night with special guest David Letterman delivered the ABC late-nighter’s biggest Wednesday audience since its 2003 debut. NBC’s Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, which taped without an audience Monday, also taped a regular broadcast with an audience, while Late Show With David Letterman taped again audience-free on Tuesday. The CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley expanded to one hour (6:30-7:30), with Pelley anchoring from Lower Manhattan; otherwise, the network stuck to its regular schedule. So did Fox. NBC News aired a Sandy’s Fury special from 10-11 PM, replacing Go On and The New Normal. ABC aired a The Perfect Storm edition of 20/20 Wednesday night at 10 PM, with a scheduled episode of Private Practice moving to November 13.
TV shows whose production schedules have been affected include Warner Bros. TV‘s 666 Park Avenue, The Carrie Diaries, The Following, Golden Boy, Gossip Girl and Person of Interest plus the pilot The Secret Lives of Husbands And Wives; CBS TV Studios‘ The Good Wife, Blue Bloods and Elementary and NBCUniversal’s 30 Rock, Law & Order: SVU, Smash, Infamous, Do No Harm, and syndicated shows Maury and Steve Wilkos. Showtime also shut down Nurse Jackie and The Big C due to the storm.


Wake-up, Showbiz movers and shakers! What will it take to get production to return to the Golden State? After all, isn’t “Sunny California”, the reason the business took hold here begin with? Why can’t we get our politicians to get it together to make California as affordable to shoot in almost every other state in the Country…and Canada?
The reason production came to LA was the original runaway production from NEW YORK, the movie capital back then. Back then Hollywoodland was about as far away from New York as they could get, physically and in spirit, a place where land was cheap, where people worked cheaper, a place without the rules and unions that New York had.
The move of production to California had more to do with the more available natural light for photography in the days before big studio lights and the distance between them and process servers from the fairly litigious Edison Company than it had to do with NYC unions.
Actually New Jersey was the production Capitol, prior to Cali.
Natural light had nothing to do with the move. Productions moved here to,escape the litigious (how ironic) Motion Picture Patents Corporation. They were back east, and did not know what was happening out west.
Light was just a bonus.
It will take a massive change in government taxes and regulations. It’s just far too expensive to conduct business in California, and those who can move, are.
Yeah, cuz NY is soooooooooooo unregulated.
The south east is where the industry is heading, I’m waitting for a studio to make it offical and move their main offices to S, Carolina of Florida.
There’s no excuse for not filming many, many “interior” scenes in CA. Start there and maybe part of the workers’ income would find it’s way back to CA to pay for filming here.
Because California SUCKS. No energy, no flavor and a lot less culture.
NYC is where the biz started, its where the artists want to be and as soon as you get another earthquake it’s where the biz will stay.
All LA has are untalented prom queen wannabe actors, while NYC has Broadway, Lincoln Center, Harvey Weinstein and Scott Rudin.
Now shut the FUCK up and build a subway that runs thru Beverly Hills and do something about your traffic AND your segregated city.
Doug E. Fresh, stop embarrassing yourself. Have an afternoon cocktail. You are correct in saying the film business did begin in NYC however. The rest are the rantings of a crazy person.
The LA-vs-NY argument is as tired as your rant.
Ugh, NYC vs LA is so played out. If you’re a professional in this industry, you end up working in both places (or 99% of your peers you interact with do) and you realize there are pluses and minuses to both places.
There is something to what you are saying as far as LA goes. Lived in both worlds and the most downtrodden neighborhood in NYC has more character than anywhere in LA. Not true of all of CA but LA is sprawling and bland and has no ‘personality’ – it looks like a dozen other large urban cities in the US. If you are going to shoot in LA to get the ‘look’ of LA, may as well go to Vancouver or Toronto because you can accomplish much the same. For interiors LA is as good as anyplace but if you want genuine referencing, outside of those touristy landmarks, LA is characterless.
Do No Harm shoots in CT? I mean, the show looks pretty shitty, but that’s interesting. Where are their stages, Stamford?
Hmmm…major storm every 100 years vs a major earthquake every 30 years or so. Tough call.
This is the second in as many years. As a steadfast New Yorker, it pains me to say this will likely creep up on us as the new norm. When our kids are taking “The History of Climate Change” in high school, we’ll be able to say we were there when hurricanes came to the northeast to stay.
DB: Something is happening to New York’s climate. We had a hurricane last year, Hurricane Irene, and we had Hurricane Sandy, which was much worse, last week. Before these we had not had a major hurricane since 1985. We have had half of New York City’s major blizzards in just the last 15 years. We are getting very stormy weather. Governor Cuomo told President Obama that we seem to be having hundred year storms every 2 years.
Yeah, the West coast might get an earthquake, but then the rest of the day is beautiful.
Filmmakers left NY for CA because they could shoot virtually year-round (winter was brutal on early productions).
Incentives have brought major films and shows to different locations (X-FILES and others notably to Vancouver).
But even NYPD BLUE used to come to Manhattan twice a year to shoot exteriors.
Vancouver was getting production because it was less expensive to shot there. Incentives were not needed.
And the film industry left NEW JERSEY not NY.
HAWAII 5-0′s producers will love this. They have a hard enough time getting enough episodes cranked out to fill a season as it is (whatever a “season” actually means anymore).
Smart decisions by CBS, CW, and FOX to go with reruns. NBC and ABC, shame on you!
Huh – why?
I’m very happy to hear Jimmy Kimmel got his head out of his ass and decided it would be best to cancel the tapings for his show tonight and possibly tomorrow. What they were thinking only 24 hours ago when they wanted to go through with tapings was outlandish and stupid, but they thought better this time around.
Everyone on the eastern seaboards and inland, please stay safe and praying you guys and gals get through this horrific storm system!
First here in the southeast we’re used to Hurricanes hitting our Gulf Coasts. We know how to rebuild and recover from them.
I’ve been following the local news coverage out New York and the surrounding area. Already the storm surge has moved into Lower Manhattan and the water is still coming in. Hurricanss and Northeasters are no laughing matter no matter how big or small. Byt the New Yorkers so far have done the right thing safety wise; but with the storm surge already apartment lobbies have been flooded. Still Sandy is coming ashore so for some it’s going to be a long night. I’ve been through Hurricane Katerina and even inland it had its impacts.
Hey CNN -
Bill McKibben of 350.org said “Frankenstorm” is an accurate description because Sandy was caused by a combination of natural and human-influenced climate conditions.
Don’t get too cocky. Earthquakes could do a lot of damage in California.
humm lets see a winter storm every year that stops the city cold for a week –times 4 to 5 months of shoveling snow and driving on ice and what have ya to –humm a quake every 20 years that messes up a small section of the city –
choices cali or NY
cali
I’ve spent too much of the day, listening to the screeching of on-air reporters. This has been an example of doomsday reporting, and ineptitude. Too many channels, too much posturing.
Agreed. When you have six local, English-language TV stations doing the same coverage to the point of ad nauseum, there’s going to be ineptitude.
Due to climate change, storms of this magnitude could batter the East Coast every few years. It could become a predictable occurrence. If that happens, productions will inevitably move to California. This could really impact jobs on the East Coast.
Funny…there’s mayhem in NYC, and Angelenos use it as an opportunity to lament the state of entertainment in Cali.
You are absolutely correct Doug E. Fresh! L.A. is a watered down NYC on every level. No pun intended.
Global Warming or just a freak storm? I vote for global warming.
LA is the place in the USA.
Guys, “decimated” means “to destroy 10% of something.” Jersey was more than decimated.
David Brenner had a funny line, a riff on W.C. Fields – L.A. – it’s Philadelphia with a beach!
I have a lot less respect for Bloomberg today. What an opportunist. He’s switching his support to Obama because of climate change. Only when he himself is impacted does he make such a grand pronouncement. Katrina had no bearing on his thinking? Will he outlaw Super-Sized storms? Perhaps he could have addressed some of the implications of these big storms regarding the transformers in N.Y.C instead of addressing Type 2 diabetics…who are imbued with an on-going craving for sugar irrespective of the size of the cup. I’m in powerless Hoboken and have a world class view of his arrogance in darkness south of 34th. Further to the point voting in the election may not even be a possibility. Callow, hollow, supercilious “let them eat cake” stuff. Actually literally. And the will-you-or-won’t-you-run-for-president-thing is a freaking bore. Make your intentions clear. Run. Or shut up. Why don’t you do something about the C.I.A. embedded in the Financial District as represented by mobsters (literally)like the Bermans? Sick C.I.A. mobsters and monsters is what they are. Look the other way, Mr. Independent, look the other way.
Actually several tv shows are now made in Canada due to low productions costs: Haven, on CW Nikita is filmed in Toronto. Haven is filmed in Chester,Nova Scotia. Since the old days of New York and Los Angeles filmmakers have spread out to here in the Southeast for example. Canton Ms now has a studio but Louisana has been some the new locales. Like Expendidles 2 and Breaking Dawn Part two were shot there. The Red Dawn remake was filmed in Michigan for example. Though New York and Los Angeles still remain the film power centers; some have branched out to other locales where productions costs are cheaper.
Glad to see Bloomberg support Obama instead of the cipher, but he should have cancelled the marathon. Wrong message and can’t afford to divert the resources.
I was no fan of Bush, but one thing I find deeply troubling is that if Bush had returned to campaigning after Sandy as quickly as Obama has, he would have been simply EXCORIATED for it on every single news channel.
Has journalism with integrity been destroyed by the Internet, or has it always been this bad?
Yeah, anyone know if “We Take Care of Our Own” was part of Bruce’s lineup Friday night?
He damned sure didn’t mind using Katrina to pillory Bush, but it’s okay that President Obama went back out of the campaign trail once he checked in and made out with Governor Christie for a few hours.
Will be interesting to see how BLUE BLOODS (and not-shot-but-set-in-CSI : NY) will address Sandy in it’s storylines.