Daniels, Sorkin bid farewell to HBO's 'Newsroom'
By MIKE CIDONI LENNOX, Associated Press
Nov 5, 2014 3:17 AM CST
Jeff Daniels arrives at "The Newsroom" Season Three Premiere on Tuesday, Nov 4, 2014, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)   (Associated Press)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — There were neither tears nor cheers at this TV-season premiere.

That's partially because cast and crew of HBO's drama series "The Newsroom" had already moved on. They wrapped the finale weeks ago.

The party Tuesday night at the Directors Guild in Hollywood was simply to kick off the show's third and last season, which premieres this weekend, and to say, "Good show" to the series for one last time.

"The bittersweet part is the people," said actor Jeff Daniels, who portrays the star anchor of a cable-news network struggling with more than ratings. "This was a good group."

"The Newsroom" debuted on HBO in June 2012 to much fanfare and strong ratings. But critics were out-of-the-gate mixed on the series, and fans began to tune out as the first season came to a close. The series' second season earned generally stronger reviews, and its premiere saw ratings rebound — though it eventually became clear that the show would never become one of HBO's blockbusters, such as Poul's own "Six Feet Under."

The network gave a green light to a truncated third and final "Newsroom" season, which is not to be confused with a cancellation, Poul said.

"If HBO had wanted to cancel us, they wouldn't have said, 'We want to cancel you, but we'll spend an extra $40-to-$50 million for a final season before we let you go,'" Poul explained. "You don't spend the money for a season of television unless you want to make that season of television. And it was our choice. We wanted to go out this way. And I think we're going out as strong as we've ever been."

Season three deals with dilemmas surrounding reporting on the Boston Marathon bombings. Network brass face a possible hostile takeover. One key character's career may be destroyed after a leak of classified government documents.

Co-star Olivia Munn said the series' legacy is that it inspired a new crop of journalists.

It made viewers "really fascinated with the guy sitting behind the news desk and the girl writing that column," Munn noted. "So, I think that was really an exciting thing, and I think it was a great thing."

Daniels said spending three seasons walking in a reporter's shoes left him with a greater appreciation of the challenges facing real-life journalists.

"The struggle these guys have between being right and being first," Daniels commented. "It's so difficult now with Twitter, with Facebook. When news breaks, a lot of people go there instead of waiting for journalists to tell you what's really going on or what's true. And the real guys battle that every single day."

The third and final season of "The Newsroom" debuts Sunday on HBO.

Online:

http://www.hbo.com/the-newsroom#/

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