After 4 seasons, 'O.C.' wraps up



The creator of the series says he's proud of the run the show had.
By LYNN ELBER
AP TELEVISION WRITER
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. -- A moment of respectful silence, please, for Fox's departing "The O.C."
Yes, the drama wiped out in the ratings like a klutzy Southern California surfer. Yes, it lost its storytelling punch in season three and then really bummed out fans with the violent death of Marissa, played by Mischa Barton.
But give credit where credit's due. "The O.C." brought dramatized adolescent angst back to TV, gave the tabloids fresh faces like Barton and Rachel Bilson and boosted pop artists by showcasing their music (the band Rooney) or just mentioning them (Death Cab for Cutie).
Set in the Orange County city of Newport Beach, the show even managed to make cultural and economic waves: Residents who knew better began referring to the county with the artificially hip "the" in front of O.C., and the postcard-perfect coastal town enjoyed a bump in tourism.
"The O.C." generated a reality TV boomlet, with MTV's "Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County" and Bravo's "The Real Housewives of Orange County" following in its footsteps.
Not bad for a four-season, 92-episode series about the loves and lives of rich, golden California teenagers -- one even named Summer, to drive home the point -- and the parents that watched over them, or not, depending on their own foibles.
"Overall, I'm incredibly proud of the run the show had," series creator Josh Schwartz said as production ended this month. Just the day before, he recounted, "we were filming on location and there were packs of teenagers screaming for autographs when the cast walked by, and crying that the show was coming to an end."
"We were 24 hours away from wrapping the show and it was surreal to have that level of emotion from our audience," Schwartz said.
About the finale
The series finale airs 9 p.m. Thursday, and won't leave viewers hanging, he vowed.
"We went into this season sort of assuming that it was going to be the last season," Schwartz said. "So we were able to build naturally to this final episode and do the finale the way we always planned."
The conclusion will focus on the show's core -- the affluent Cohen family of Newport Beach and the needy young man, Ryan, they took in, he said. The hope is that fans will find it fun, emotional and "really satisfying," Schwartz said.
Will Marissa, killed in a car crash in last season's finale, manage to reappear?
"All of the characters of the show will be touched on in some way," Schwartz said. He's carefully guarding the final plot twists, including the romantic fates of couples Ryan (Benjamin McKenzie) and Taylor (Autumn Reeser) and Seth (Adam Brody) and Summer (Bilson).
All that, and an earthquake hit the fictional Newport Beach in the Feb. 8 episode, imperiling pregnant Kirsten Cohen (Kelly Rowan) and others.
"The O.C." itself rattled the TV landscape when it debuted in summer 2003. It was a ratings phenom in its first year, ranking as the top-rated drama among advertiser-favored young adults and attracting a total audience of nearly 10 million.
Quick stardom
Schwartz, then only 26 and a recent University of Southern California grad, said the show's young actors became stars "very, very quickly, within two months of the show airing. It was nuts."
"To have had the experience and see those kids be in an airport and walk by a magazine stand and the magazine covers are the cast of your show -- it's exciting," Schwartz said. So was the fact "that we all were able to work together for this time and kind of grow together. I mean, we all really did grow up together. I feel like I did. This is like college."
Newport Beach got a few lessons in the power of TV, according to the town's mayor.
"I think there were some people in town not too pleased about how Newport Beach was portrayed in the series. But I think everybody understands that TV distorts reality," Mayor Steven Rosansky said, a truth known to anybody who used to watch the '80s serial "Dallas."
But while some grumbled about the show's satiric depiction of a hedonistic and shallow Newport, the city gained a higher profile and an influx of visitors, said Rosansky.
The local visitors' bureau capitalized on the attention with a map of locations referred to in the series -- although production mostly took place in Los Angeles -- and by recording the hand- and footprints of some cast members in concrete, he said.
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