Sunday, October 11, 2020

The Story After the Storm Story

This feels weird.

Sunday night The Weather Channel broadcast an episode of "Storm Stories" that included me and others who made it through the northern California firestorms of October 2017. I liked the episode, although I chuckled at some of the melodrama, but that goes with the genre. As I said in my previous post, the producers and crew were very kind and considerate, and that goes a long way toward making me feel great about the whole experience.

I have a few notes . . .

First, the interview was not shot in my house. The camera crew of five set up shop in a large, semi-rural B&B about 20 miles south of Santa Rosa. Best I could tell, they also slept and ate there, and outfitted the big living room to be a TV studio.

The interview happened in late June, so high Covid season. The crew was careful and diligent. Everyone wore masks the entire time I was there. The camera crew was a good 10 or so feet away from me. When they dabbed a bit of make-up on my face, they had me put on a face shield and then reached under it with gloves on. I slipped off my mask when on camera, then put it right back on when we cut. It felt safe.

I sat on what looks like a log but was actually a sort of ceramic stool, because all the chairs had high backs and they didn't want them peeking over my shoulders. It got uncomfortable. Somewhere is an outtake of me standing up and shaking my butt to get blood back into it.

I took two shirts, blue and red. They had me change so that different footage would look like it had been shot on different days. Show-biz magic! I doubt anybody noticed. 

I was there a bit more than an hour. The field producer, Mario, was a good interviewer, and in fact got me so relaxed and conversational I said a few things that, upon reflection, I dreaded seeing on TV. So I emailed the producers, explained my worry, and they said "No problem, we don't want you to have any regrets about talking to us so we won't use it," which is extraordinary. They didn't have to do that; I'd already signed the release. That impressed me.

The view from my stool. Mario's on the left. Sorry I forgot the cameraman's name.

I was also impressed when the producers called me weeks later to fact-check their narration script. That almost never happens. 

After the interview was over and I was driving home, I got a frantic phone call. They'd forgotten a very important shot! Could they drive to my house to do it? It was quicker for me to turn around, so I went back. What was this critical footage they so desperately needed?!

It's the one-second intro where I'm looking away from the camera, then my gaze slowly turns to stare directly into the soul of the viewer at home. Which I thought was hilarious. "What'd you do today Brian?" "I turned my head. Dramatically." We did four or five takes on the front porch, and then I went home for real.

I think the episode was very well produced. It was dramatic, but so was the actual firestorm. 

I was happy to see my friends Mike Harkins--whose tale of trying to save his neighborhood with a garden hose you may remember from A Fire Story--and Melissa Geissinger, as well as the perspectives of the sheriff's deputy and firefighter. Mike's and Melissa's stories were really the heart of the episode.

I didn't know they would have actors portray Karen and me in dramatic re-enactments. I was disappointed that my actor was old, fat, and slept on the wrong side of the bed. I suppose Brad Pitt was unavailable.

The program broadened my own perspective on a disaster I was in the middle of. I was unexpectedly moved. I hadn't seen most of that fire footage in three years, and some I don't think I've ever seen. Both Karen and I felt a very strong sense of, "My God, we really were in the middle of an inconceivably large and violent disaster and survived it!" Three years of getting by day to day has dulled some of those raw nerves. "Storm Stories" reminded us. If you want to know what it was like, that's kind of it.

I'm happy I did the program, and very much appreciate The Weather Channel and "Storm Stories" coming to tell our story. 

5 comments:

Amy Coapman said...

I watched the episode. I thought it was extremely well done, and yes, dramatic, but as you point out, Brian, the firestorm itself provided the real-life drama! I read "A Fire Story"shortly after its publication, and it provided the perfect lens through which to view this depiction of a terrible and historic event.

And, I thought you looked just great on camera :-)

Debbie said...

Hi Brian,
I just lost my home in the Beachie Creek fire here in Oregon on September 8th. I work in a Middle School library here in Salem and when I got to back to work that next week, there was A Fire Story sitting on my Graphic Novel shelf, just waiting for me to read it. It is so spot on. I have recommended it to several people already who are processing their grief. We had just moved onto our dream home on the Little North Fork river on July 1st and knew we'd come home to the place we'd retire in, share with family and pass on. My husband is out there today with our contractor as we work on how we will replant, rebuild, reset our hearts from the beauty that was destroyed. But the river is still there. I can still sit on our 'beach' and listen to the riffles sing their song that had already lodged deep into my heart in those short two months. I brought home river rocks, and they sit in our temporary long term house on the fireplace along with our clay 'circle of friends' that was one of the four things we found intact after we were allowed back. Hopefully by this time next year we'll be back. I'm truly amazed by the kindness of people, family, friends, complete strangers that have curled around us giving us hope and helping us take another step to coming home again. Thank you for your book. It's already checked out again.
Debbie Willer

Quarantine Occasional said...

Hi Brian!
Do you know where I can watch your segment? I tried searching for it but Google kept showing me this article!

Brian Fies said...

Gigi, not now, sorry. The Weather Channel has a YouTube channel, but all of the Storm Stories on it are more than a year old. Maybe it'll turn up there someday?

Thanks for trying to take a look.

Quarantine Occasional said...

Okay! Thanks!