Tinderbox Audiobook By James Andrew Miller cover art

Tinderbox

HBO's Ruthless Pursuit of New Frontiers

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Tinderbox

By: James Andrew Miller
Narrated by: James Andrew Miller, Amy McFadden, Robert Petkoff
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From the New York Times best-selling author of Those Guys Have All the Fun comes Tinderbox, the unvarnished, comprehensive, and astonishing history of HBO, told for the first time through the disruptors who led its epic rise to prestige and changed the way we watch television forever.

The exclusive story of HBO’s key creators, executives, actors, and directors gives listeners an unprecedented peek behind the curtain at the founding and triumph of the first “pay-channel” that brought America The Sopranos, Sex and the City, The Wire, Succession, and countless groundbreaking, culture-shifting shows. James Andrew Miller collects insider accounts of the humble beginnings, devastating missteps, controversial business decisions, and, of course, backstage drama and celebrity gossip from the set.

Since televisions entered Americans’ living rooms, the question of whether programming should be “free” - paid for with advertising - has loomed, to the extent that some broadcasters, lobbyists, and fearmongers warned someone would come along and disrupt their Madison Avenue-championed business model. But who would pay for something that had always been free? Home Box Office dared to ask that question in 1972, opening the doors for other pay-channels and ultimately the streaming platforms that are now the norm. They created different, better content - or at least they convinced viewers that different was better. HBO gave us violent scenes with blood and guts, shows like Tales from the Crypt that were actually scary, rom-coms with sex instead of suggestion. We take their big-budget, “prestige” TV for granted now, but their success was far from assured at the outset.

HBO’s audacity built the viewing culture we have today and permanently transformed the television landscape.

A Macmillan Audio production from Henry Holt and Company

©2021 James Andrew Miller (P)2021 Macmillan Audio
Art Entertainment & Performing Arts Film & TV Popular Culture Social Sciences Celebrity Entertainment Business Funny
Fascinating History • Engrossing Content • Excellent Secondary Narrators • Exquisite Research • Captivating Interviews

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The book is fascinating, captivating and exquisitely researched and detailed. The audiobook contains dozens (or more) of shocking and lazy audio edits. How could this have possibly passed any sort of QC process? The mistakes are almost entertaining, they are so plentiful. Still worth the read.

Loved the book; Hated the sloppy audiobook production

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The story was fantastic. Great to hear about the inner workings of the network and the creative process. Flow was a bit fragmented and jarring topic changes. Not sure why only a few narrations (Oliver and Gervais) had accents whereas other’s did not-seemed random.

Great Story

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Narrators were awful. Main narrator sounded like he rolled out of bed after a night of cigarettes and bourbon - mispronounced a lot of words. Female narrator overacts - sounds like a valley girl. Story was ok. Too much emphasis on including every name that worked at HBO

Good listen brutalized by narrators

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Extensive, educational, entertaining sums it. Utterly researched. Worthy of the Wharton School. A big minus is one of the narrators slurred his words so badly I nearly gave up on the book.

One of the narrators slurred his words

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First, the released audiobook uses a rough cut that has our narrators repeating himself or herself using a different inflection in delivery.
Annoying to say the least.

As for the content, I very much enjoyed the look into my favorite television production company since childhood. You get detailed analysis early and entertaining backstabbing bureaucratic nonsense but it dwindled into bitching about change and diversification of projects and management thereof.
The productions details were rich but fell short of embarrassing the talent that’s worked for the network.
I liked it but I won’t go pushing this on my friends

It’s good, but it ain’t great.

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