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BOSSOLOGICAL

EXPLORING BROADCAST IDENTITY DESIGN IN
THE CONTEXT OF POLITICS, KELSEY GRAMMER
AND STARZ NEWEST SERIES: BOSS

EARLIER IN THE YEAR (2011) OUR TEAM was asked to build identity treatments for “Boss.” This was the first time we’d connected with Starz, for television work, other than working earlier on design development for the earlier graphic identity of Encore/Starz.

Actually, it was a competition, and we didn’t win. So the solutions, while close to the intentions of the final, the “other” firm won.

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An interesting intention — in any motion picture or television, theatrical production — is literally the illustration of the story.

It’s making it shine.
Lustration.
Polish.
Light making.

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Working brand visualization, it will be always about the story. And the telling of it. Boss is a compelling draft — the acting is first rate, the rusted corruption of the foundation is ardently deep, it’s a richly styled environment; and in the opening, the compulsions are quickly laid to bare light, transgressions at the ready.

Who owns Chicago? Tom Kane. Tom, he’s flagrant — juiced in power.

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The site offers a rich puzzlement of active games and deceptive plays to boost the watch gate — troubling conversations, bad stories, abusive narratives and rife deception. What else is going on here, the US versioning of “Boss.”

The Boss man cometh. Here’s the story, more at the site.

Mayor Tom Kane (Kelsey Grammer) sits like a spider at the center of Chicago’s web of power; a web built on a covenant with the people. They want to be led, they want disputes settled, jobs dispensed, and loyalties rewarded. If he achieves through deception and troubling morality, so be it. As long as he gets the job done, they look the other way.

Yet despite being the most effective mayor in recent history, a degenerative brain disorder is ripping everything away from him. He can’t trust his memory, his closest allies, or even himself.

Kane’s wife Meredith (Connie Nielsen) knows nothing. Theirs is a marriage of convenience. Kitty O’Neil (Kathleen Robertson), Kane’s advisor, has her suspicions but stays silent. And Kane’s political advisor Ezra Stone (Martin Donovan), a Yale graduate with a rough edge, remains questionless.

Only Emma (Hannah Ware), Kane’s estranged daughter, has a chance of learning his secret. This is going to be the toughest term yet for the Boss.

Starring: Kelsey Grammer, Connie Nielsen, Kathleen Robertson, Hannah Ware, Jeff Hephner, Martin Donovan, Francis Guinan, Rotimi Akinosho, Troy Garity

Boss, freshly launching, is masterminded by the team that brought the market Spartacus and Camelot — equally rich engagements.

When we, as strategic designers sought the play, we built in a specialized way. We searched the parlay to the political ring — rougher, meaner, more to “campaign management.” But playing to a new script, BOLD, SIMPLE, COLORRICH — perhaps to the underbelly of political “merchandising” design, and the city of Chicago.

An exploration, Girvin’s “Boss” in the effort, stacked up:

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Congrats to Starz. Check out Episode 1 — the saga begins.

TIM | designed for
C H I C A G O

–––––
GIRVIN | IMAGINATION +
ENTERTAINMENT

DESIGNING EXPERIENCES:
http://bit.ly/p0aZWw

Times Square, this morning.
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