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GARY:

Writer:

NBC's critically acclaimed "Against the Grain" (1993-1994)

CBS's "The Client" with JoBeth Williams (1995-1996).

Other Credits:

ABC's "The Monroes" with William Devane (1995)

ABC's "Second Noah," starring Daniel Hugh Kelly and Betsy Brantley (1996)

Showtime's "Fast Track" with Keith Carradine (1997-1998)

"Hope Island," the PAX TV series starring Cameron Daddo (1999)

Feature Films:

Co-wrote "The Jordan Journey" (1999)

"Just A Few Savages," an upcoming movie from Impact Films.

Series Creator:

"Doc" and "Sue Thomas: F.B.Eye" for PAX


DAVE:

Created and produced:

ABC's "Jack's Place" starring Hal Linden and John Dye (1991-1992)

NBC series "Against the Grain" (1992-1993) starring Ben Affleck

CBS's "The Client" with JoBeth Williams (1995-1996).

Co-created and executive produced:

"High Incident" with Steven Spielberg for ABC/DreamWorks (1995-1997)

Feature Films:

"Chameleon," starring Anthony LaPaglia and Kevin Pollak (1995),

The 1996 Disney release "The Blue Wall"

"The Jordan Journey" (1999), which he co-wrote, along with his brother Gary R. Johnson.

"Just A Few Savages," an upcoming movie from Impact Films.

Series Creator:

"Doc" and "Sue Thomas: F.B.Eye" for PAX

SMALL SCREEN NEWS

What's Up...With 'Doc'?

By Laura J. Bagby
CBN.com Producer

CBN.comThe award-winning PAX TV hit show Doc is, as Gary R. Johnson fondly quips, 'headed for the barn,' a friendly way of saying that this fall marks the final season for the series. A total of nine episodes are slated to run.

And Gary, who, along with brother Dave Alan, is the creative genius behind this show and another PAX specialty, Sue Thomas: F.B.Eye, is ready for the break.

Between Doc and Sue Thomas, the Johnson duo has been responsible for creating 90 episodes in the space of two years, not an easy undertaking considering the small writing crew with which they have been working. And now as Doc draws to a close, Gary told me half-jokingly recently in a phone interview, the brothers are looking forward to 'cutting back to full time.'

In some ways, the timing couldn't be better.

Gary R. JohnsonThe show is ending while it is still popular with audiences, a real plus for the extended life of the show. As Gary explains, "The ratings stayed up there, so we are not limping." Plus, because the Johnson brothers had advance knowledge of the series end, Gary says, "We were able to set it up and end it the way we wanted to."

Speaking of endings, what can audiences expect in this last season? More importantly for avid Doc viewers, will Dr. Clint Cassidy and Nurse Nancy Nichol finally get together?

Not wanting to give anything away, Johnson simply stated, "You will just have to wait and see. I will say, though, that all of those questions will be answered. I won't say how they will be answered."

Fair enough.

But Gary did tell me that the real Sue Thomas, upon whose life the series Sue Thomas: F.B.Eye is based, will appear on an episode of Doc. She will play a deaf woman who is rescued from a fire when her hearing ear dog hears the fire alarm and manages to call 911.

Incidentally, in September, the real Sue Thomas, the Johnson brothers, Deanne Bray (who plays the lead in Sue Thomas: F.B. Eye), and several other actors who play FBI agents on Sue met up in Columbus, Ohio, for Thomas' yearly benefit golf tournament, which helps raise money for dogs for the deaf.

Hearing about friendly get-togethers like this had me wondering just how well the actors and crew of Doc and Sue Thomas get along on and off camera.

From reading the positive cast comments on the official Web sites for both shows, I wasn't surprised to hear Gary express what I had been hoping," The characters are great characters, and they do get a long really well in real life in both show." In fact, Sue Thomas and Deanne Bray are, as Gary says, "like soul sisters now. They get along really well."

And so they should. After all, both leads in both series are people of faith.

"The characters are Christians, and the actors who play them are Christians," says Gary.

Billy Ray Cyrus and Dave JohnsonSo believers out there can rest assured that because of this, these shows have a different standard to live up to.

But just because the shows are about the lives of God-honoring people, that doesn't mean the Johnson brothers intend to simply target Christendom.

"We don’t want to just preach to the choir. We want to bring new people into the tent," says Johnson. "That is more what we want to do is to try to bring more people to the Lord."

What better way to do that than to get wide coverage from the liberal media?

"If you stop and think about it, what could be a better episode of Oprah than the real Sue Thomas and what she has accomplished in her life as a deaf woman and Deanne Bray, who plays her in the TV series? There would not be a dry eye in the place," says Johnson.

But Oprah hasn't been calling. Neither have a lot of other secular media outlets. In fact, Gary notes, "We have a really hard time with most of the secular press giving us much publicity."

Which makes support from the Christian community all the more important.

The best way to show support is to write to advertisers on the show, to write to the networks, and to write even to your local TV critic and thank them for upholding these shows with good values.

Sometimes Christians are prone to harp on the negatives, but Gary says this is the wrong way to get attention.

"It is more important to support the shows that you like that have your values than it is to boycott the shows that push the envelope too far," he says, citing how initial complaints against NYPD Blue did nothing to yank the long-running show off the air and likely did more in the way of labeling disgruntled citizens as 'extremists.'

For those who can't get enough of Doc, the first season of the show (11 episodes) is out on DVD and video. Gary hopes that PAX will eventually decide to offer the rest of Doc for purchase.

What is on the horizon for the Johnson duo? Will they join PAX and become another voice in the reality show market? Possibly, says Gary, with this caveat: enough leeway to express their opinions on politics and religion.

I guess we will have to stay tuned. In the meantime, Gary is proud of the work he has been able to accomplish thus far.

"There is a big audience for what we do, and we know that we do it well," he says.

Comments? E-mail me.

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