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“The Chosen”: A Jesus and his disciples for the modern age
The narrow streets that look like Jerusalem or Capernaum may make you feel as if you’re walking through the Bible itself. But this isn’t the Holy Land overlooking the Sea of Galilee. It’s a production set in the heart of Texas. And the man showing “Sunday Morning” around is no archaeologist; it’s writer-director Dallas Jenkins, the man behind the wildly popular faith-based series “The Chosen.”
“The different ideas that people have in their head of who Jesus was is fascinating,” said Jenkins.
Which means telling the story is fraught with hazards. “Oh, I’m walking through – I wouldn’t say I’m trying to avoid landmines, I’m walking through landmines every day!” Jenkins said.
In an era when studies show Americans are getting less and less religious, “The Chosen,” about the life of Jesus and his disciples, has found more than just a niche audience, says star Jonathan Roumie. “We even got a letter from somebody from the Church of Satan that was like, ‘You know, I don’t believe all this stuff necessarily, but you guys tell a really good story.’ And I’m like, if that guy is taking the time to write? Like, what’s going on in his world?”
While exact numbers are hard to pin down, producers claim more than 200 million people have watched the first three seasons – that’s “Game of Thrones” kind of numbers.
What makes “The Chosen” different are the backstories that Jenkins has created for some of the Gospel’s most well-known characters. Jenkins said, “We’re gonna take them down from stained-glass windows. We’re gonna take them down from statues. And we’re gonna remind ourselves that these people had the same questions, struggles and doubts that we have.”
The tax collector Matthew, for example, is portrayed as living with mild autism. Mary Magdalene is suffering PTSD and struggling with alcohol. Simon is married, and isn’t above having the arguments all couples have.
And then there’s Jesus himself, who it turns out has a pretty divine sense of humor. Roumie said, “I think showing those sides of Jesus, while you don’t see them often, doesn’t make them wrong.”
For all its popularity now, “The Chosen” was not something studios were jumping to make, especially with Jenkins, who said he’d thought about quitting. His previous film has landed with a thud, and nobody wanted to back him on another project. “I imagine that God tends to use the broken and tends to use the humbled,” he said. “And I wasn’t a humble person until that day.”
He turned to crowdsourcing to raise money, a long shot. But boy, did it pay off – more than $10 million poured in, a record for a crowd-funded media project. “I thought, okay, this is bigger than me,” Jenkins said.
Meanwhile, Roumie was in a wilderness of his own. Acting wasn’t really panning out. “It got pretty brutal,” he said.
A devout Catholic, he says he prayed and asked, why? “Where did I go wrong? Like, what happened? I said, ‘If there’s something else I’m supposed to be doing and somehow I missed it, then You got to tell me.'”
An answer, he says, arrived in his mailbox the same day: money for work he’d long forgotten. “At the end of that, I had, like, $1,100. And three months later, I got a call from Dallas asking me to show up for the show.”
Were they miracles? Both Jenkins and Roumie say that’s up to you to decide.
What does seem clear is the show is apparently offering something that a lot of people were looking for.
A fan convention was held in Dallas this past October, sort of like Comic-Con except instead of super-hero costumes attendees were wearing Bible chic.
And when Roumie arrived, as you might imagine, it was a little like the second coming. “Look how many people we get to meet and hang out with!” he said. “Yeah, that’s pretty cool.”
Security had to usher him away.
“It’s humbling, man,” said Roumie. “I’m a dude that shows up and reads lines and says them to another person who’s saying lines that they memorized. I don’t know that I’ve met anybody that actually was disconnected enough to think that I’m actually Jesus. Just in case it wasn’t clear, I’m not Jesus, not Jesus incarnated. That’s not a thing!”
Near the end of season three, the show faced a quandary: how to show the magnitude of Jesus’ feeding of the multitudes without breaking the bank. Extras would have cost a fortune – but what about the show’s fans who had so generously donated to get “The Chosen” made?
They thought they’d get a few hundred volunteers — they ended up with thousands. Jenkins said, “When my wife and I were pulling onto the set at 5:30 in the morning, we started crying seeing … I get emotional thinking about it, ’cause I’m seeing a couple thousand people already on set.”
As the story goes, five loaves and two fish fed five thousand. Dallas Jenkins sees his job as providing the bread and the fish – how or even if his audience feels full, he says, isn’t up to him.
“When I’m writing at the computer, when I’m on set directing, I’m not thinking, ‘Oh, I hope the show converts people,'” he said. “That’s not the responsibility of a TV show. Ultimately, what happens as a result of the show is between them and God.”
To watch a trailer for Season 4 of “The Chosen” click on the video player below:
For more info:
- “The Chosen” Season 4 will be available to stream in The Chosen app; Season 1 is also available on Netflix
- “Season 4” debuts in theaters beginning February 1
Story produced by David Rothman. Editor: Remington Korper.
See also:
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Former New York Gov. David Paterson, stepson attacked while walking in New York City
NEW YORK — Former New York Gov. David Paterson and his stepson were attacked in New York City on Friday night, authorities said.
The incident occurred just before 9 p.m. on Second Avenue near East 96th Street on the Upper East Side, according to the New York City Police Department.
Police said officers were sent to the scene after an assault was reported. When officers arrived, police say they found a 20-year-old man suffering from facial injuries and a 70-year-old man who had head pain. Both victims were taken to a local hospital in stable condition.
In a statement, a spokesperson for the former governor said the two were attacked while “taking a walk around the block near their home by some individuals that had a previous interaction with his stepson.”
The spokesperson said that they were injured “but were able to fight off their attackers.”
Both were taken to Cornell Hospital “as a precaution,” he added.
Police said no arrests have been made and the investigation is ongoing.
The 70-year-old Paterson, a Democrat, served as governor from 2008 to 2010, stepping into the post after the resignation of Eliot Spitzer following his prostitution scandal. He made history at the time as the state’s first-ever Black and legally blind governor.
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Teen critically wounded in shooting on Philadelphia bus; one person in custody
A 17-year-old boy was critically injured and a person is in custody after a gunman opened fire on a SEPTA bus in North Philadelphia Friday evening, police said.
At around 6:15 p.m., Philadelphia police were notified about a shooting on a SEPTA bus traveling on Allegheny Avenue near 3rd and 4th streets in North Philadelphia, Inspector D F Pace told CBS News Philadelphia.
There were an estimated 30 people on the bus at the time of the shooting, Pace said, but only the 17-year-old boy was believed to have been shot. Investigators said they believe it was a targeted attack on the teenager and that he was shot in the back of the bus at close range.
According to Pace, the SEPTA bus driver alerted a control center about the shooting, which then relayed the message to Philadelphia police, who responded to the scene shortly.
Officers arrived at the scene and found at least one spent shell casing and blood on the bus, but no shooting victim, Pace said. Investigators later discovered the 17-year-old had been taken to Temple University Hospital where he is said to be in critical condition, according to police.
Through their preliminary investigation, police learned those involved in the SEPTA shooting may have fled in a silver-colored Kia.
Authorities then found a car matching the description of the Kia speeding in the area and a pursuit began, Pace said. Police got help from a PPD helicopter as they followed the Kia, which ended up crashing at 5th and Greenwood streets in East Mount Airy. Pace said the Kia crashed into a parked car.
The driver of the crashed car ran away but police were still able to take them into custody, Pace said.
Investigators believe there was a second person involved in the shooting who ran from the car before it crashed. Police said they believe this person escaped near Allegheny Avenue and 4th Street, leaving a coat behind.
According to Pace, police also found a gun and a group of spent shell casings believed to be involved in the shooting in the same area.
“It’s very possible that there may have been a shooting inside the bus and also shots fired from outside of the bus toward the bus,” Pace said, “We’re still trying to piece all that together at this time.”
This is an active investigation and police are reviewing surveillance footage from the SEPTA bus.