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Burn Notice is entering the third season on the
USA Network, and I asked Matt Nix, Executive Producer
and creator, about the roots of Burn Notice. Matt
gave an amazing amount of detail of about the
thinking behind the concept of Burn Notice.
"The truth is, the direct inspiration was
conversations that I had had with our consulting
producer, Michael Wilson, who had worked in that
environment. And the thing that really struck
me about talking to him and interacting with him
was that we tend to think of people who work in
those arenas as superheroes, you know, people
who are not human beings. They don't have likes
and dislikes. They're just sort of like robot
people who protect us, and they can do anything."
"I became really interested in the idea
that when people devote themselves to mastery
of a craft like espionage, they pay a real price
for it, and it's not - I mean as much as I love
movies and books that do the sort of like, and
the price they pay is they have robot arms, or
the price they pay is mind control or things like
that. Really, in the real world, the price that
these people pay is, you know, I mean, they entered
that world because it's something they need psychologically,
and to me it was always a fascinating question
to say, like, what sort of person wants that?
What sort of person is okay with saying, like,
I hold some ideal so sacred that I'm willing to
make my entire life a rouse in service of that
ideal."
"You know, I so love my country that I'm
going to go and pretend to hate my country and
have all of my friends be the enemies of my country,
and spend years doing this just so that I can
strike a blow on behalf of something that I care
about. You know, what is that? Like, what sort
of person devotes himself to a single principal
at that level, and so there's that question. Like,
what background do you come from"
"And so, I looked into it with Michael Wilson,
and I also read other things. And it's, frankly,
been an interest of mine since I was a little
kid. Like, who really becomes that? And then,
at the same time, I'm interested in what are the
costs ongoing. I mean, one of the things that
we talked about on the show is that things should
come at a cost. Like, we'll ask, what is the human
dimension of this thing that Michael is going
to do? What sort of practice does he have to undergo?
Like, he may be able to do this particular kind
of fighting, but does he enjoy doing it? Does
he find it unpleasant? Are his muscles sore for
days afterwards? Like, what are the practical
human realities of becoming this kind of superhero?
And so, I guess my inspiration is, you know, a
real interest in the human dimension of those
abilities, where they come from, what spurs you
to want to do that, and what price you pay ongoingly."
"And, I mean, actually, even down to the
fact of, even down to the way that I became friends
with Michael Wilson was, you know, he sort of
contacted me because he like a short film that
I had done that was available on the Internet,
and as we talked over time, I realized that all
of Michael's friends essentially are people that
he had to choose almost at random because if you
work in the world of intelligence, if you sit
down at a bar and there's somebody next to you,
and you strike up a good conversation, and you
have a wonderful time, you can't ever talk to
that person again because that person could be
a plant. That person found you. That person happened
to be in the right place at the right time, and
you happened to get along with them. It's much
too dangerous to make those kinds of friendships."
"You really need to make friendships with
people that you select because the danger that
someone that you randomly select on the Internet
and decide I like this guy's short film, let's
be friends. The chances that I'm going to be someone
who is out to undermine him in some way are vanishingly
small. But if you're just bumping into people
on the street, well, somebody may have put that
person there for you to bump into. And it struck
me, like that's a big way to compromise your life.
That's a huge deal to say you can never have a
friend that you didn't choose."
"And so, looking at what does that mean
for Michael and, like, what does it to explore
that kind of character, and what does it take
out of him? And I also think that what's fun about
that is it generates a lot of drama, but it generates
just as much comedy as it does drama. One of my
central inspirations and one of the things I talked
about in pitching the show was something that
I had talked about with Michael and also with
some other people, which is the idea that a lot
of these people who are doing this kind of awesome
commando stuff, you know, they parachute into
a jungle, and then they've got to run around doing
things. If they bought that awesome jacket at
REI before they parachuted into the jungle, and
now they have to leave it behind because they're
in the jungle and they're not really going to
carry around that jacket, but they needed it because
they were parachuting through the upper atmosphere."
"I had this great conversation where - it
was actually Michael Wilson was saying basically
it's a bummer to leave that REI jacket behind
because you went and you picked it out, and it
was fun, and you kind of liked the way it fit.
And then you've just got to leave it in the middle
of the jungle. It sucks. And that was hilarious
to me, and so pitching that to USA, you know,
it's real. There's a sort of pathos there. Your
heart sort of goes out to that poor spy who has
to leave his favorite jacket behind in the jungle,
and it also sets up an awesome action scene. It's
exciting. Honestly, I can't get enough of it."
Read the entire interview with Matt Nix here.
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