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Here Come the Judges

All Rise for a spot on courtroom tv

By Staff -- Broadcasting & Cable, 9/5/2005

Sidebars:
Now Presiding

Not every judge is TV-ready. Former New York Mayor Ed Koch, the first judge on the 1997 revival of The People's Court, seemed dynamic until he got in front of a camera. He was thrown out of court two years later.

Producers tried to recruit Jeanine Pirro, a district attorney and cable-TV crime commentator, for a proposed court show several years ago. But she opted instead to pursue a political career and is now looking to challenge Hillary Rodham Clinton for her New York Senate seat.

Today, many agents find, package and shop court talent, stepping into what was once the exclusive domain of studio development executives. The genre's strength guarantees them steady commissions to supplement their 10% on more pricey shows with less staying power.

The recipe for a judicial hit isn't complicated: “You meet the litigants, get a description of what the case and lawsuit are about, and see a beginning, middle and end,” says Greg Meidel, president of programming for Paramount Domestic Television, which produces and distributes the top two court shows, Judge Judy and Judge Joe Brown. “It's at hyper speed, and it is all really entertaining.”

Almost all the judge shows involve binding arbitration. Many revolve around small-claims cases. Twentieth Television's Divorce Court also deals with family law and marriage reconciliation, palimony and cohabitation contracts. Sony's Judge Hatchett features cases involving DNA issues and interventions.

The decisions rendered by these TV courts, taped in Los Angeles and New York, are rarely challenged because, as several court producers acknowledge, the shows “guarantee collection”—in other words, pay the judgments—due to strong competition among the programs to get the financially challenged litigants to appear.

With the exception of the two top-rated shows, most pay appearance fees. Sony notes that Judge Hatchett litigants get $300 for small-claims cases but do not get an appearance fee if they undergo costly DNA tests or interventions. Court shows generally also cover travel, room and board.

With a large portion of the daytime audience African-American, as well as increasingly Hispanic, studios have been looking for judges with whom viewers can identify. Among the seven syndicated court shows this fall, four will have African-American judges (Greg Mathis, Mablean Ephriam, Glenda Hatchett and Joe Brown), and two will showcase Cubans (Marilyn Milian and Alex E. Ferrer).

Over the past decade, a dozen daytime court shows have been spawned by Judge Judy (7.5 GAA rating September 2004-July 2005). Below is a look at five survivors and one new entrant, Judge Alex.—J.B.

 

Now Presiding

PARAMOUNT

Judge Joe Brown (4.8 GAA rating): The arbitration court belongs to Brown, a former Memphis, Tenn., prosecutor, who gained recognition in presiding over James Earl Ray's final appeal for his conviction in the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. He also came to national recognition for his creative sentencing practices as a criminal court judge in Tennessee.

SONY

Judge Hatchett (2.6): This is the only court show to venture outside the courtroom and tape on-location teen interventions. Sony credits Judge Glenda Hatchett with being all about fashion and showing young litigants that she cares.

TWENTIETH TV

Divorce Court (3.8): This coming season, Twentieth Television's trimmed-down Judge Mablean Ephriam will add, among other things, confessionals allowing litigants to freely express themselves directly to viewers.

Judge Alex (debuts Sept. 12): Syndicated television's newest court show moves in to take the place of Twentieth's cancelled Texas Justice (which is now being sold as library product). The new series is hosted by former police officer, attorney and Florida Circuit Court Judge Alex E. Ferrer, whose family escaped Cuba when he was 1 year old. Most recently, Ferrer served on the Judicial Circuit Criminal Court encompassing Miami-Dade County, the largest trial court in Florida.

WARNER BROS.

The People's Court (2.8): A one-hour revival of the popular 30-minute series that ran from 1981 to '93. During its earlier reign, People's Court spawned seven now-defunct legal shows, launching the second wave of court series following the 1950s pioneers. Marilyn Milian, the show's third presiding judge, is a Queens, N.Y., native of Cuban descent. She was a Miami Criminal Circuit Court judge and an assistant state attorney in Dade County.

Judge Mathis (2.7): Touted as the youngest-skewing court show, the Warner Bros. series features Judge Greg Mathis. The former gang member, school dropout and jail inmate, who turned himself around as a promise to his dying mother, became the youngest judge in Michigan's history.

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