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Picture editing, it transpires, is much like a game of soccer: it’s all about teamwork and passing the ball. That’s certainly the ethos among the editorial team at soccer themed comedy show Ted Lasso and perhaps a reason why it’s getting kudos for reaching above and beyond the confines of your standard sitcom.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/ted-lasso-editors-on-the-universal-language-of-soccer/
The Apple TV+ show not only landed 20 Emmy nominations but
recently won a Peabody Award for being a “smart, funny, captivating celebration
of good-heartedness.”
SNL star Jason Sudeikis portrays the title character, a
folksy American college football coach who is enticed to the UK to lead a
down-on-their luck Premiere League soccer team. The show’s heart comes from the
quietly radical way that Lasso, a man in a position of power, chooses kindness
at every turn without sacrificing his authority. He coaches a highly
competitive group of athletes to perform at the highest level by embracing vulnerability,
empathy and decency.
Peabody judges characterized Lasso as “affecting change by
being a deeply good human, one with his own quiet anxieties and pain.” The
series is the perfect counter, they went on, “to the enduring prevalence of
toxic masculinity, both on-screen and off, in a moment when the nation truly
needs inspiring models of kindness.”
The universality of the show’s characters and writing
overrides any need to know much about soccer itself.
“I’ve learned that a field is a pitch, cleats are boots, and
offside is singular,” A.J Catoline, one of Ted Lasso’s editors, tells
Shoot Online. “But the show is enjoyable even if you don’t like sports. And that’s the point.
It’s about being the best version of yourself, even off the field too, be it
actual or metaphorical.”
Catoline and Melissa McCoy each earned a ACE Eddie Award
nomination - Catoline for “The Hope That Kills You” episode, and McCoy winning
the Eddie for the “Make Rebecca Great Again” installment of Ted Lasso.
They are also first-time Emmy nominees for those same respective episodes.
The series has just aired a second season of 12 eps and has
a third run on order from Apple.
The story arc of each season was withheld from almost
everyone outside of the writer’s room, the editors included.
“Cutting
several episodes, we didn’t know how Season 2 would end,” Catoline says. “I’ve heard the cast mention that they get
the scripts just before filming. I think that helps with spontaneity and improv
in the performances. When I got hired, all I knew about the project was the
original short films that were made years ago. It wasn’t until before we
started that Mel and I got the first few scripts and we could see the show was
deeper than a comedy.”
Viewers may not realize how much of the show is visual
effects. None of the show’s football scenes are shot in a stadium or before a
crowd but created in a combination of pre-viz, photography and post-production.
“To start the previs conversation, I first built the
football match using a mix of YouTube clips and stock footage with title cards
over the top to basically build the beats,” explains McCoy. “From there, we worked with our post house,
Digital Film Tree, to compose the shots with their previs.”
Post producer, Kip Kroeger, used those sequences to help
organize the recording of match footage on location in London.
“I think having the blueprints of the scenes helped the
director feel like he was covering everything we needed and then allowed him to
get some amazing shots we never had before in the previs,” McCoy says. “So when
all the footage came back, it was another round of building the scene with the
real footage, which sometimes took a different direction than the previs.”
McCoy says her biggest challenge was finding the line
between comedy and pathos. “Sometimes we’d cut a funny joke because it wasn’t
true to the character, and then on the flip side, sometimes we’d pull back on a
very dramatic moment and play a more reserved take to help the moment not get
melodramatic.”
In season 1, all the final cuts were performed remotely due
to Covid. Season 2 was finished entirely remotely.
“While it’s certainly an advantage to dig into the footage
coming from Lasso Land in the comfort of my home, I miss the constant
connection with my editorial team,” Catoline shares with Cinemontage. “I miss
being able to go next door to Mel’s room and share our insights on watching
dailies. We still try to have meetups over Zoom, but I really miss having lunch
with my editorial crew. When Mel and I were nominated for an ACE Eddie Award we
all popped a bottle of champagne over Zoom.”
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