Dreams Come True in Dry Creek
The Little TV Town That Could goes to the Big Apple in award nomination.
By: Mitch Traphagen
The actor
was ready, the lights and camera were in place and all that was left was
for the ambient daylight to reach the director’s desired level of
darkness. Les McDowell crouched over and said, “Let’s say a quick
prayer.”
McDowell does not claim to be an overly religious man, but he’s
learning. Little by little, in a place that he built, good things are
happening and dreams are coming true. He doesn’t claim the credit for
that — to McDowell something else is in play, something bigger.
“I’m not going to preach or anything,” he said. “In today’s crazy
world, the only time we make eye contact with each other is when we’re
driving 60 miles per hour down the road. People don’t take the time
anymore.” He would like to do a little something to change that.
He was fired from a prominent gig on a country radio station in
Tampa. For some people in middle age that could begin a downward spiral.
McDowell dove into cowboy poetry, a passion of his, and soon began
sharing it via Facebook. Before long, he was uploading videos to
YouTube, the videos needed backdrops and soon enough, a 1880s town was
taking shape on his property near Parrish. Dry Creek was born.
“I didn’t know why I was doing it,” McDowell said. “We started having
people show up out here just to see Dry Creek. My wife asked what she
should tell people — it was like a Kevin Costner thing. I told her to
tell people I was building backdrops for cowboy poetry.”
But McDowell expanded upon the Kevin Costner thing in the movie
“Field of Dreams”. It wasn’t enough to say, “If you build it, they will
come.” McDowell reinforced it with, “If you build it and believe in it,
they will come.” And they did come.
Armed with a $100 camera and some volunteers, dreams of a television
show soon began to take shape. Word got around and cowboys and actors
showed up in support. Then professional director Christian Moriarty
volunteered, along with a soundman and other crewmembers. Like the
others, Moriarty came because he saw McDowell’s passion. He believed it;
he believed in McDowell and his show.
“Things are a lot different than they used to be,” McDowell said
during the filming of one scene on August 17. Takes and retakes were
shot, with the director shouting, “Camera rolling!” and the digital film
clapper clapping. One scene required more than five hours of work. The
upcoming fall season of the series will be better than ever. [Click here for a trailer of this episode.]
Dry Creek is the kind of show that you can watch with your children
and not be embarrassed. After rocketing to fame from YouTube to national
exposure via BlueHighways TV, it is a television show that harkens back
to a more simple time, not only on the set itself but also in spirit.
It recalls a time when, according to McDowell, your word was your bond.
Across the country, millions of people have access to Dry Creek on
BlueHighways TV. In the Tampa Bay area, subscribers to Verizon FIOS can
watch it on channel 246 at 7:30 p.m. on Saturdays. BlueHighways TV has
approached local cable company Bright House about carrying the channel
and they indicated that would be possible if their subscribers request
it.
McDowell is passionate about family-friendly TV. In conversation, he
refers to such iconic shows as Little House on the Prairie, Bonanza, and
The Waltons, all shows that would be more costly to produce in today’s
environment of low-cost reality TV.
During his years in radio, he was the voice and the star that
hundreds of thousands of people heard, but in Dry Creek, he is
restrained. Yes, he created the show. Yes, he writes the scripts and
appears in the episodes. But he is increasingly aware it isn’t about him
anymore. It is something that he hopes could change the landscape of
television again. It is something that he hopes can change some lives.
He says he doesn’t want to go back in time (“I like my iPhone too
much.”), but he does want to bring some of what was good back then into
today.
Tropical Storm Isaac passed the Gulf Coast of Florida with not so
much as a glancing blow. McDowell’s town of Dry Creek came through OK,
with the exception of some minor street flooding — just as it would have
been back in the 1880s. In 1880, the population of Tampa was just 720
people; it was an isolated village in an unforgiving environment. Back
then, you often had no choice but to count on your neighbors. That is
just what happens in Dry Creek and that is what McDowell is trying to
show. It’s OK to help your neighbors. It’s OK to slow down a little in
this fast-paced world.
A generation or two ago, some kids built model airplanes or built
train sets. When Les McDowell was a kid, he helped his father build a
stagecoach. As an adult, he worked on the fringes of Hollywood and in
the show business of big market radio. Today he is a struggling producer
of a family television series and he sees it as a big step up.
“Everything I’ve ever done in my life has led to this,” he said. “It
is a dream. We are working with no budget. It has been a whirlwind and
I’m not giving up on it. I wish I could take credit for it, but there is
something more going on here. I never would have gotten this far on my
own.”
Recently, executives at BlueHighways TV notified McDowell that Dry
Creek had been nominated for a CableFAX award for Best Family Friendly
Show or Series. The nomination puts the show into the league of
programming from much larger networks, including Lifetime, HBO, ABC
Family, Showtime and others. Upon learning of the nomination, McDowell
updated the Dry Creek Facebook page with an image of the Little Engine
That Could climbing a hill repeating the words, “I think I can. I think I
can.” Dry Creek, with virtually no budget but with a cast and crew of
talented people who believe in McDowell and in the idea that American
families will again embrace family programming, has become the Little
Town That Could.
“With no television professionals to guide them and only a $100
camera, the producers of Dry Creek set out in May of 2010 at the foot of
the proverbial mountain with a goal of reaching the peak,” BlueHighways
TV said in a press release. “As word spread about Dry Creek, people
wanted to be involved. Professionals with state-of-the-art cameras and
sound equipment volunteered their time, and the cast and crew spent
weekends gathering donations of lumber and props to help the little town
of Dry Creek grow. Along the way, BlueHighways TV saw Dry Creek come
together with a passion to provide quality family programming that
matched its own. In two years, Dry Creek has gone from posted YouTube
clips to nationwide distribution, with 12 HD episodes on BlueHighways
TV.”
For BlueHighways TV, it is more than just a feather in their cap. They believe in the show, too.
“Competition for the CableFAX awards is fierce, and I personally
consider that Dry Creek / BlueHighways TV making it into the finals is a
wonderful statement of the quality programming that Les McDowell and
his cast and crew put in every episode,” said Denise Hitchcock,
BlueHighways TV executive vice president of marketing and public
relations. “We are very excited about Dry Creek — even before it was
nominated for an award. Now we want everybody to know about it.”
You can help Dry Creek by calling Bright House to request that BlueHighways TV and Dry Creek be added to their programming lineup. The toll-free number is 888-289-8988 or locally at 813-316-2626. Although millions of people have access to Dry Creek across the country, Bright House serves hundreds of thousands of people in the Tampa Bay area and across Central Florida, many of whom may enjoy family programming from a local production.
For more information about Dry Creek, click “Like” on their new Facebook page at www.facebook.com/DryCreekTV.
For information about BlueHighways TV, visit www.bluehighwaysTV.com.
The CableFAX award winners will be announced during a ceremony on Oct. 30 at the W Hotel in New York City.
Link to article and slideshow of pictures: http://www.observernews.net/thisweek/front_page/4057-Dreams-come-true-Dry-Creek.html
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