Series of poker trips led to Fox airline comedy ‘LA to Vegas’

You could say the new comedy “LA to Vegas,” debuting at 9 p.m. Tuesday on Fox, was in the cards.

You could, if you enjoy making people groan.

Writer Lon Zimmet drew upon his monthly flights to play poker on the Strip when creating the series, which follows the Las Vegas-bound crew and passengers on the low-rent Jackpot Airlines, where fuzzy dice hang in the cockpit, Captain Dave (Dylan McDermott) plugs steakhouses and brothels from the flight deck and, during times of stress, flyers can seek comfort from a therapy duck.

As flight attendant Ronnie (Kim Matula) complains, “I need to be on a real airline, where people aren’t just looking to cheat on their wives and butt-smuggle molly.”
 


Preparing for takeoff

Shortly after Chris Moneymaker won the Main Event at the 2003 World Series of Poker in what was his first live tournament, online and home players flocked to the Strip to try their luck. Zimmet, who was struggling to find writing work in Hollywood, wasn’t far behind.

“I started making this trip a lot, realizing a lot of people were getting introduced to poker after I’d been playing for years, and could make money off it when I couldn’t get a job anywhere else,” he said at the show’s launch party last month at the Bellagio. “So I used to come out one weekend a month, and it would pay my rent for the month, and it would pay for food for the month.”

A decade later, he says, he realized, “That might be a show. That might be something.”

Three regulars take Jackpot Airlines Flight 1610 from L.A. to Vegas on Fridays, returning on Sunday’s Flight 1322: Colin (Ed Weeks), a UCLA economics professor; Artem (Peter Stormare), who’ll gamble on anything; and Nichole (Olivia Machlin), who commutes to the Strip on weekends at Grapefroots, where customers get a free fruit salad with every lap dance.

Will Ferrell and Oscar-winning writer Adam McKay (“The Big Short”) came onboard as executive producers, as did “Modern Family” co-creator Steve Levitan, whose first job in television was writing for NBC’s airline comedy, “Wings.”

“Complete coincidence. I wasn’t, like, on the hunt for an airline show,” Levitan joked at the Bellagio event, shortly after flying in from Los Angeles with the cast, producers and a gaggle of L.A.-based reporters on an “LA to Vegas”-branded jet. McDermott and Amir Talai, who portrays his co-pilot, Alan, even showed up in uniform.

Levitan had been looking for a series to mark his first directing gig outside “Modern Family” since its debut in 2009. “This is,” he said, “by far the funniest thing I read.”

In-flight entertainment

“Las Vegas is the most enchanting place there is,” sassy flight attendant Bernard (Nathan Lee Graham) gushes in the premiere. “A place where tigers are liberated from their dirty jungles and acrobats can make a living.”

“LA to Vegas” doesn’t make fun of Las Vegas. It has fun with Las Vegas.

“I made sure to pack a (writing) staff full of people who are very familiar with Las Vegas, so everyone has their own stories,” Zimmet said in a follow-up phone conversation. “One of my writers actually used to take trips where he’d get a load of money from someone just to fly out to Vegas to place sports bets for them. So he used to fly out with literally hundreds of thousands of dollars in, like, a suitcase.”

McDermott, who still may be best-known for his seven seasons on “The Practice,” is relishing playing the berserk, muay thai-obsessed, nine-toed Captain Dave: “It’s the best job ever. … They pay me. They feed me. And I laugh all day.”

For anyone struggling with the concept of a comedy set on an airplane, co-star Matula has an easy fix: “It’s ‘Love Boat’ in the sky, but dirtier.”

If that’s not already plastered on billboards in cities across the nation, someone isn’t doing his job.
 


Major turbulence

The first episode of “LA to Vegas” was filmed last spring, and it was picked up as a series in May. Then the events of Oct. 1 cast a pall over the episode’s best inside-Vegas joke: “OK, so it looks like the chapel is next to a gun range,” a groom exiting the plane tells his bride-to-be. “Wait, the chapel is a gun range.”

Josh Bycel, who grew up visiting his grandparents at their home near Boulder Station, said he and some of his fellow executive producers talked about scrapping the joke before ultimately leaving it in.

“We feel like it’s far enough away (in time),” he said. “And it just feels so Vegas. But it was discussed. We want to make sure that we’re as respectful as possible.”

Those involved with the series said that while they’re sensitive to and always aware of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting, the city bounced back so quickly that it didn’t alter their plans for the comedy.

“Sadly, there are enough gun tragedies in this world,” Levitan said, “that that one is not going to be like, ‘Oh, Vegas is forever known as the place.’ … When you think of Columbine, that’s what you’re going to think of. Nobody heard of Columbine before that. But Vegas was known for so much more before that, and it will be known for so much more after that.”

Smooth landing

In future episodes, “LA to Vegas” gets out of the plane, and even out of the airport. And, in doing so, it explores the city’s sillier side.

“I kind of want to show its eccentricities and what makes it probably the most unique city in America, and have some fun with it in all its little nuances,” Zimmet said.

If anything, the series is a celebration of everything that lures more than 40 million visitors here each year.

“Vegas is strong, and Vegas is here to stay, no matter what kind of tragedy happens,” co-star Graham said. “So we keep lifting Vegas up for what it actually was, is and always will be: a place to have a magical time.”

Given his family ties, Bycel takes personal responsibility for how the show portrays the city.

“Vegas is a very special place, a very cool place,” he said. “I love this city. And I think our main job is when we represent it, we want to represent it well.”


Vegas-based shows are no sure thing

Not to jinx “LA to Vegas,” but setting a TV series in Southern Nevada has been a crapshoot at best.

Sure, everyone remembers “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation” and “Las Vegas.” Viewers of a certain age have fond memories of “Vega$.” But how many of you can recall “Hearts Are Wild,” “The Strip,” “The Watcher” or “Viva Laughlin”?

How about FX’s poker comedy “Lucky” or ESPN’s poker drama “Tilt”?

I’d love to hear from anybody who could tell me what NBC’s “The Player” was about, and it debuted just two years ago.

Throw in “Vegas,” “Nasty Boys,” “Blansky’s Beauties” and “The Tortellis,” and you could dedicate a museum — albeit a sparsely attended one — to local scripted series that never made it to a second season.

“Wasn’t there a ‘Dr. Vegas’?” asked “LA to Vegas” creator Lon Zimmet. Why, yes, there was. Briefly.

“I think at least in the comedy realm, there haven’t been too many stabs at a Vegas-based show,” he added.

One of those stabs was NBC’s computer-animated ratings dud “Father of the Pride,” which focused on Siegfried and Roy’s lions and was in the works long before, yet debuted months after, Roy was mauled.

“I honestly think it would have been different had he not gotten bit,” said Josh Bycel, who, along with Jonathan Fener, was a writer on “Father of the Pride.” They’re now executive producers of “LA to Vegas.”

Dylan McDermott, their comedy’s leading man, guest-starred on an episode of the only season of the FX variety series “Penn and Teller’s Sin City Spectacular.”

“Those guys were so much fun,” he recalled. “I had a blast.”

And Kim Matula, McDermott’s co-star, was on an episode of “The Defenders,” CBS’ one-season legal dramedy, not Marvel’s Netflix mashup.

“I got to kiss Jim Belushi on that show, which is amazing,” she said, before explaining that her cat is named Belushi.

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