A week worthy of television
TONY DODERO
Last Sunday, I told the wife that we just had to watch the “Extreme
Makeover: Home Edition,” that was airing on ABC that night.
Reason being of course that the scheduled episode was the one in
which a Costa Mesa family was to be featured.
Since we are both junkies of the Home and Garden Television
channel, and still in the market for a new house ourselves, it was
hardly a difficult sell.
We gave the kids a bath, put them to bed and plopped down in front
of the TV.
The story on Sunday was about Tom and Deirdre McCrory and their
expanding family and need for more space. It was a great story,
really.
Last month, the couple was the fortunate recipient of a free home
makeover, reality-TV style, in which their humble Rosemary Place
abode on the Eastside was transformed into a glorious mansion.
Well, not exactly, but they did get an additional 500 or so square
feet of space added to their 1,000-square-foot house, complete with
new rooms, redecorations and landscaping.
The transformation was really fun to watch, as was the
reality-based story that unfolded about the crew in charge of doing
the makeover.
The McCrorys were in need of more space because they were
outgrowing their house. They already have two boys, one aged 3 and
another 21 months, and Deirdre is expecting. Not just expecting a
baby mind you but expecting three babies, as in triplets.
And, oh yeah, Tom’s mother is living with them.
We live with my wife’s mother right now, so there was a situation
we could relate to.
But there would soon be more.
As we watched the show, one of the designers mentioned that he
needed to know the sex of the triplets so he could know what color to
paint the new nursery.
They showed a scene in which one of the show’s cast members is
talking with the doctor and looking over the ultrasound pictures and
the doctor whispers the sex of the babies in his ear.
My wife, Beth, screamed.
“Oh my god,” she said.
I looked at the TV.
“That’s Dr. Lindsey,” I said.
Turns out the doctor on the television set was our doctor -- the
same one who had just delivered our 5-month-old son, Nathan.
Michael Lindsey is one great obstetrician, as I’m sure the
McCrorys can attest, but with all the great baby delivery doctors
living in this stretch of the planet, it was amazing seeing him there
on TV.
And it got me to thinking just what a small world it is and just
how much Newport-Mesa is thrust into the limelight.
And it wouldn’t stop with that.
Tuesday at lunch, I had the pleasure of sitting next to County
Treasurer John Moorlach at the Hall of Fame luncheon put on by South
Coast Metro and the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce.
The doings were just getting started to honor South Coast Plaza
executive Werner Escher, South Coast Repertory geniuses Martin Emmes
and David Benson and Orange County Marketplace founder Bob Teller
(congratulations to them all by the way), so Moorlach and I were
chatting it up.
The topic was homes and home prices and how the spike in prices
has had a big effect on the county tax rolls, when the subject turned
to the home makeover show and its Costa Mesa hook.
He said something about the show being HGTV on steroids and I was
telling him about the whole Dr. Lindsey sighting.
“That was Michael Lindsey?” Moorlach asked.
Turns out the Lindsey was Moorlach’s client way back when he was
doing certified public accounting for a living rather than tax
collecting (just an inside joke, John).
And Dr. Lindsey’s partner at the time, Tony Zepeda, delivered
Moorlach’s two sons.
“A small world indeed,” he told me later in an e-mail.
If that wasn’t enough Newport-Mesa six degrees of separation for
the week, then came Ryan Seacrest.
Seacrest, the popular host of the hit TV show “American Idol,”
decided to pipe in on the decision by Ensign Intermediate School’s
administration to monitor the color pink in a recent school photo.
Seacrest, who apparently is fond of pink, decided to stir up the
masses on his radio show and the whole thing turned into a media
frenzy this week with poor Ensign in the crosshairs.
Whew. Time to get back to normal.
Then came Thursday morning. I was bombarded with messages from
staffers and readers who had caught the Wednesday night edition of
“The OC.”
The story goes that in one scene on the hit Fox Network show that
is supposed to be based in Newport Beach, someone tells a character
that he ought to go to a particular party in town because the “owner”
of the Daily Pilot would be there.
At first, that story line got garbled a bit and some had thought
that the character mentioned the “editor” of the Daily Pilot. Now
that would have been real exciting.
Alas, it was the owner they mentioned. And that would be pretty
hard to get the owner in one room since it happens to be the
thousands of shareholders of the Tribune Co., the parent company that
owns the Los Angeles Times. The community news division of The Times
publishes the Pilot.
But then again, “The OC” is NOT a reality based television show
like “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition.” That’s why I keep hoping the
cast will write the “editor” into the story line, with Brad Pitt in
the lead role of course.
Seriously folks, if you count the rape trials of Newport Coast
resident Kobe Bryant and Gregory Haidl, the son of Corona del Mar
resident and Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl, it was a pretty big week in
the media for Newport-Mesa.
As John Moorlach says: “It’s a small world indeed.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.