Another delicious offering from Rob Long, a brilliant confection which is part pure comedy, part expose (there's no French accent thingy on my laptop, but you know what I mean). Long, a hotshot comedy writer is at a loose end following the cancellation of Cheers (Ted Danson having had enough). By then, his talents had propelled him to series producer while still in his mid-twenties. His stock still high, he and his writing partner set about pitching, writing and producing a new sitcom.
Written in as a quasi-script, the book is interlaced with stunningly funny conversations with Long's agent (who'd have guessed?) taking us through to the airing and eventual cancellation of the show. Along the way, Long skewers the studios and networks, their terrified, venal producers and executives, the various Hollywood players and, of course, the conniving, back-stabbing agents whose interest is business only, never art. Long's preface describes the book as being half true, but I suspect it contains the whole truth sufficiently disguised to ensure Long wasn't drummed out of show business for good.
At 160 pages, I gobbled this down in no time, my only caveat being that I wish he'd written something double the length.