The Watch Selina's Gold Onlinelast time we saw Mellie Grant on Scandal, she was waiting to hear whether she would be the next president of the United States.
But the storyline of the fictional First Lady -- played by Bellamy Young -- is not driven by real life, creator and EP Shonda Rhimes said at ABC's Television Critics Association presentation Tuesday.
"I don’t think the candidates have any similarities to the candidates in real life. I don't really equate the two," Rhimes said of comparing the characters on ABC's popular show and former Democratic Presidential Nominee Hillary Clinton and President-Elect Donald Trump.
"That’s not really the goal. The goal was to tell the story we had been telling the entire time."
SEE ALSO: ABC's Shondaland TGIT shows will return a week later because of a Trump specialThe Trump-related remarks -- or lack thereof -- come just one day after ABC said Rhimes' TGIT line-up, which includes Scandal, How to Get Away with Murder and Grey's Anatomy, will be delayed one week because of a 20/20 Inauguration special.
Rhimes said she has nothing to do with ABC's programming scheduling decisions.
"I honestly don’t have anything to do with programming or scheduling, and don’t pay attention to it or spend very much time caring about it," Rhimes told reporters.
The cast echoed the showrunner in insisting that the show isn't solely driven by current events. In fact, five of the six episodes in this first half of the season were written and shot months before the election results.
"Our world is a complete fiction," Young said.
Tony Goldwyn, who plays outgoing President Fitzgerald Grant, said Rhimes is taking the show in a "whole fresh direction" meant to be emotional and entertaining for the Scandal world.
"The fact that it’s in counterpoint to this crazy political world is interesting, but they are not the same and we aren’t in reaction to that," he said.
"That's what makes the show compelling," Joe Morton, who plays Papa Pope, added. "Politics are kind of driving force, but what's at the heart of it is being human and American.
When asked about whether Rhimes is nervous about ratings, the showrunner simply said:
"I don't, and haven't for I would say seven to eight years paid attention to ratings because that's something I can't control. "Ratings are not -- as far as I'm concerned -- real or true anymore.”
Season 6 premieres Jan. 26.
Topics Donald Trump
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best Apple deal: Save $19 on AirTag 4
Tesla faces a potential class action lawsuit over customer privacy concerns
What coronaviruses emerging from a dying cell look like
Angel Reese is a national champion, not the villain
Exceptionally rare radio sources detected in the distant universe
Elon Musk well actually'd Grimes over their baby name just after she gave birth
Tom Hanks shares photo of his plasma donation for coronavirus research
What coronaviruses emerging from a dying cell look like
Operation Rock Wallaby rains food down on wildlife hurt by bushfires
Researchers discover the best fabrics to use for coronavirus facemasks
The internet is talking like Kevin from 'The Office' now
Here are the 20 best tweets from this week because why not?
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。