Pop Culture and Religious Sensibility on a Mormon TV Network
OCT. 31, 2014
By SAMUEL G. FREEDMAN
SALT LAKE CITY Four years ago, Scott Swofford fielded a question from a colleague that was addressed to him as both a filmmaker and a Mormon. What would it take to make a Mormon television network watchable? Mr. Swofford flippantly answered, About $350 million.
In fact, such a network did exist already. Owned and operated by Brigham Young University, the flagship institution of Mormon higher education, BYUtv was available to about 50 million households through cable and satellite-dish systems. The networks top-rated show, however, was something called Love of Quilting, and it typically drew fewer than 10,000 viewers.
On an October afternoon four years later, Mr. Swofford, 58, sat in the producers chair of a former high school here that had been converted to a film studio. Its eight sets contained a virtual time capsule of 1963 America: Royal typewriter, portrait of John F. Kennedy, copies of The Saturday Evening Post. Cast members strolled past in the appropriately thin lapels and knee-length hemlines.
Mr. Swofford was overseeing an episode of Granite Flats, the television series that has, emphatically, made a Mormon television network watchable. As it prepares for a third season, this mixture of family drama, police procedural and Cold War suspense yarn has earned widespread critical praise and an audience of about 500,000 households per episode.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/01/us/a-formula-for-pop-culture-and-religious-sensibility-on-a-mormon-tv-network.html?_r=0
http://www.byutv.org/show/0aea4804-47dc-470f-b80a-35c8f23d0f27/granite-flats