Chuck Lorre and Nick Bakay, co-creators of pithy new HBO comedy Bookie, are sitting on a large and comfy look couch in the former’s office. It’s a piece of furniture that looks like it belongs in the workplace of one of Hollywood’s most successful showrunners. Not because it’s a luxury piece that reeks of status, but rather due to the couch looking perfect as a substitute bed for a working writer pulling an all-nighter.
“Nick has a background, not only as a degenerate gambler, but as a very knowledgeable resource on this,” Lorre says. “One of the things I learned from Nick is that Danny is an old-school character: get to know your customers. When they win, you go to them and hand them the cash in the envelope, and you extend them credit because you’ve vetted them and know they can conceivably pay. So much of this is about relationships over a period of time – it’s not a guy staring at a computer screen.”
“I have read the obituaries for situation comedies for 30 years, but it’s just a matter of someone making a good show,” Lorre says. “At the end of the day, I don’t think the audience cares about how many cameras you use, just make characters we care about and make it funny and the audiences will come.”
With Bookie, Lorre was able to come full circle in his sitcom history in one distinct regard. Danny and Ray’s rounds include several visits to Charlie Sheen, with the Hollywood star playing a version of himself full of questionable advice and gambling debts. Lorre and Sheen were friends and collaborators for years on Two and a Half Men before Sheen was fired from the show in 2011 due to illegal drug usage. His self-destructive behaviour at the time included vitriolic comments about Lorre, but when Lorre reached out during pre-production, Sheen was receptive to not only working together, but sending himself up.
“It was a joyful reunion after all the years of heartache and that mad clusterf— that ended our relationship,” Lorre says. “We were able to say it was in the past and he had a great sense of humour about himself and he was able to play Charlie Sheen the degenerate gambler and make fun of himself. Charlie has a great deal of perspective on his public persona.”
Bookie streams on Binge from Thursday, November 30.
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