In December 2021, I along with several other journalists from other publications sat down with the cast and crew of BEL-AIR. BEL-AIR is a contemporary dramatic reimagining of the beloved and culture-defining 90s sitcom The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. The series is based on Morgan Cooper’s viral fan film Bel-Air, which dropped in 2019 and lit the internet on fire. 
Below is a group interview had with Co-Showrunners / Executive Producers: T.J. Brady and Rasheed Newson. Both T.J. and Rasheed were extremely enthusiastic when speaking about the series. It was both refreshing and inspiring to hear their take and approach on the modern day version of Fresh Prince. The new life being brought to the series is done with such care by a creative team dedicated to pushing the boundaries and revealing truth in storytelling.
Question:
How did you two envision dramatizing such a comical sitcom? That’s like, obviously everyone’s number one question.
TJ Brady:
We were helped out a lot by the trailer that Morgan Cooper put online for the tone and the feel. So it’s not like we were starting from nothing, grasping in the dark. When you have a compass reading like that, you know what direction you’re walking in. So that was a big advantage. That visual template and tone and, you know, between the lighting and the music to follow.
Rasheed Newson: We also found it with the entire writer’s room when we sort of got together. And that was sort of the fun part of just looking at this show and taking it apart and going, okay. “Now What if this were real?” In the pilot of the Fresh Prince, Will meets Carlton, Ashley, and all of them for the first time. And so you start going from a drama series, why exactly haven’t we met our cousins and why, if we’ve been struggling in Philadelphia and y’all been rich this whole time and so that led to this idea that there must be some secrets to this family, and now you’re in the world of drama.
Question:
So, that kind of gets me thinking the original show came out in the nineties. That was obviously a very different time in America. Which can represent rich, affluent black people, but they have certain political beliefs and, they refer to themselves as Republicans multiple times in the individual series and stuff. So…And now in 2021 things are a lot different…America’s a lot different. What do you say? How do you reflect that in the drama? Especially with the wealth disparity too.
Rasheed Newson:
One of the things we wanted to shake off the idea is that if you’re rich and black, you’ve traded in your allegiance to liberalism along the way. One of the things, you know, if you’re on set of the show when you walk into the mansion, it’s filled with a lot of art, African-American art. Everybody from GWA to Ferrari Shepherd. When you walk into this house, they’re not just rich, they’re black and rich, and you walk into this house and you should know that a black family lives here. And so we did go the other way. I mean, Phil, we’ve made him quite liberal. That was a deliberate choice because of that sort of, that old dichotomy of, well, if you’re rich, you must have sold out along the way. It’s not true. We’re not living there anymore.
Question:
Phil’s character is an interesting dynamic there too. You talk About criminal justice, the conversations we have nowadays, you have Phil he’s running for DA, correct? How do you balance those modern-day political conversations into this drama?
Tj Brady:
Part of it is you’re gonna see an evolution of Phil’s campaign and his campaign message as the season comes along. He starts off at the beginning trying to walk that fine line like I want to reform, but if I reform too much, I don’t wanna be branded as a radical and you know, Will coming in their life is a catalyst for change. That’s kind of the premise of the series and slowly over the course of a season against political advice from people are trying to keep, I know how you feel, but that doesn’t have to be what you say. He’s gonna have a conflict with that and be pressed by people in his family to say what he really feels, which is great. But the reality is there is a political price to pay for it and to show what that is and to show how difficult it is to walk that line in today’s America, without trying to gloss over that or pretend like you can come out and say something and everything’s gonna be great.
Rasheed Newson:
Very early in this room, there was a question of “Hey, do you want to be aspirational? Are we showing the world as we wish it was? Or we showing the world as it is?” We have opted to show the world as it is.
Question:
There are a number of interesting updates to these characters. We’ve got Carlton doing drugs, we’ve got Hillary as the social media influencer you know, Uncle Phil broke the law to get Will out. How did you decide on how to repurpose these characters for modern audiences?
Rasheed Newson:
Again, it felt like it was a group discussion and it was just sort of everybody sort of talking especially with Morgan and trying to figure out where would this go and what would be interesting? One of the things that that was, I think tough is these characters are incredibly beloved. And so you don’t want to do anything that seems to diminish them, but it’s a drama people have to do something interesting. People have to do something that isn’t along the straight and narrow. So it was just trying to find things that fit within the model of who they were, but you go, okay, I could see them doing that.
TJ Brady:
And they could also provide a story engine to keep telling stories as they pursued, whatever it is that made them different and unique this time from the drug use to the influencing, like, what is she actually gonna be doing Hillary? You know, and if you’re a food influencer, all the different places that could put you, what are the limitations on that? How saturated that space already is, and trying to find a niche to stand out that could give a character, something to butt up against and strive for that their money couldn’t necessarily just provide. You can’t just buy yourself into influencing, as far as I know, I mean maybe followers. But they’re not real people.
Question:
So the sitcom is very Will-focused and that’s kind of just the nature of sitcoms. This drama seems to be leaning more towards an ensemble. We’re learning very intimate things about all of the characters. Was that a cognizant choice when you were putting it together?
Rasheed Newson:
It was a decision and it was a necessity, right? Because there just was a limit to the number of stories you could tell if you were just following one character, but if suddenly you’ve got everybody on the campus at your disposal, it just made for richer drama. I’ve been very proud because there was some backstory stuff for the Phil and Viv characters at the beginning of the season, you tell the actors this and you hope you’re able to actually get to develop. And I felt like we’ve been able to come through on that promise. We wanted to avoid the model where Viv and Phil were sorts of props who just came in to give advice and teach the lesson to the kids. We wanted them to have stories of their own that had nothing to do with the children.One of the most interesting days in the room was when we started talking about, okay, who is this? You know, we think of them as Uncle and Aunt, who were they before they had kids? Who are Phil and Viv? What was this marriage like? What did they want? And so that’s given us a lot of material.
TJ Brady:
And you know what, I’m really, really proud of the parental storyline. I mean that one, I think given our age and our experience, we both have families. We both have kids. We both balance marriage with a career. The Phil story and the Viv story are intertwined. They need each other. But I’m just very proud of the story arc over 10 episodes, we’re delivering where there might be a little bit of a shift in the relationship and power dynamic that we’ve established in the pilot.
Rasheed Newson: And we’re very excited about that. One of the reckonings of being on this show is the show came out 30 years ago. I’ve watched every episode, I am 42 years old. I used to watch it as a kid. And I was like, oh, I can’t wait till I’m that old. And now I’m doing this show and I’m like, I’m Uncle Phil. And I have the same taste in music. I mean, they’re in their forties. I said to my husband, I was like, cause I was doing the thing you’re doing like backstory stuff and you go, oh, well, what music would Uncle Phil listen to? And I’m like, should I think about Motown? You’re like, no, he’s not your parents. He’s you.
Question:
Regional rap is very up, it’s especially an immense thing here in LA. I wanted to understand how you guys not only number one, brought those characters into 2021 with their music interest, but how you represented the different changes?
Rasheed Newson: That’s all Morgan.
TJ Brady: A lot of that comes from Morgan. Who’s tapped into the scene more so than, than either of us. I would say a lot of it comes. We hired a great music supervisor, Philippe Pierre, who’s very tapped into regional, especially Southern California. And the composers we hired for this. I want to give a huge shout-out to the amazing Terrace Martin and Robert Glasper. Those guys are an incredible asset to the show. And I just, I love working with them. They’re the sweetest people and so talented. So I just shout them out all day.
Rasheed Newson: but it has the DNA from the beginning. I mean, I think our day one, Morgan came and there was like there was his lookbook and it was like 200 pages. We went to characters and clothes. He had a Spotify playlist for every character on the show. Like this was just day one. He was like, “Okay, this is the music that this character listens to.” Whether or not it makes it in the show, it informs them of who they are.
Question:
Obviously, it opens up with middle child. I wanted to know where were you guys first when you heard that “First things, first Rest in Peace, Uncle Phil” and how did that resonate with you? And then bringing that obviously to the opening scene. It’s still kind of lethargic in a sense.
Rasheed Newson:
It’s a powerful piece. I mean, I, where were you? I used to watch Fades Of Black on MTV on Sunday mornings. But now I feel like I hear music on a one-year delay. Because in addition to being an old dad with two young children, things filtered through me, but I imagine I heard it in the car and it probably clicked because it was speaking to something from my era.
TJ Brady:
Yeah. I don’t know. I don’t know where I was. I know where I was when I first saw the song I used in the trailer, Morgan put online I can remember being at work on another job and someone forwarded it to me like this is the best F’N idea ever click, open it up. And it was the best FN idea ever. All I could think of was, “Wow. I wish I had thought of that.”
Question:
One thing I liked a lot about the pilot was the way it had slight nods to the original. There’s a part where Will says, “You got in one little fight. My mom got scared.” What is that line as a showrunner between paying homage and not being too on the nose? And not going too leading into the old one.
Rasheed Newson:
We dance with it every episode. Because one person’s idea of funny the other person is “Oh, that’s too much.” The idea is the scene shouldn’t hinge on it, that can’t be the, that can’t be the button to the scene or the joke of the scene. It has to sort of just lay there. I think there’s a scene, episode three, Uncle Phil is playing pool. Now he doesn’t do the whole, we’re not doing a shot-for-shots sort of thing, but he’s really good. And, the scene is about something else and it’s just a part of the scene. So that’s where I think the sweet spot’s been.
TJ Brady: Did everybody remember from the pilot when he is on the plane, what he is drinking? Orange juice out of a champagne glass. And that’s deeper because that didn’t even make the credits, that’s in the real song. It’s in the song’s radio version, you know, so it’s orange juice out of a champagne glass.
Rasheed Newson: But it’s funny because we want people who love the original to have moments, every episode where they’re like, okay, they remember us. Dice in the mirror.
Question:
How involved has Will been in the development of the series?
Rasheed Newson:
The most involved was in the casting of the character of Will when we were trying to find Jabari. I mean, it’s the role that kind of put him on the map that led to his career. And it was probably the most pressure I think we’ve been under because you’ve gotta find somebody that not only you think can carry the show, but at some point you’re like, this is gonna go all the way up to Will and he’s got to weigh in on this. Luckily Jabari just knocked it outta the park. And then of course we’ve been using Will in the promotion of the show. The teaser that came out, what I love about that is like the four moments you’re like, “Is that him?” So that’s been great.
TJ Brady:
I want to give a shout-out. As you mentioned, casting, Jabari, Vicky Thomas, legendary Vicky Thomas casting director. When you talk about sifting through a mountain of submissions very early on in the process. We went to Philly. You know what? You’re in Philly, and I think there’s somebody you should meet. So her name is part of this creation story in a big way. And for any and all of you here, she might be worth an interview. She’s just an amazing legendary African American female casting director who continues to change the game.
Rasheed Newson:
I mean, it was like “Oh, just, you know, find the next Will Smith.” That was the cast. And I found it heartbreaking as I would I stopped watching the slates because you go to watch the slate, they’re supposed to tell how tall they are and you know, where they’re coming out of. People were pleading with “I was born to play this role. I’ve watched it. Just give me a chance.” I feel like people were like, “God told me I’m gonna be the next Will Smith”. I was like, I can’t watch.
Question:
How many people auditioned for the role?
TJ Brady: We saw…I don’t know.
Rasheed Newson: They weeded it down for us. It felt like I feel like 60 or 70 that got to us. I feel like everybody in that, every actor in that demo and some not in the demo, some people I’m like “You are 35.” You’ve seen our cast. There’s that thing of like are you going to be the show where the teenagers are like 30? Like, are you gonna play that? And so we’re like, no, we want people who are actually around the age, but it means you’re gonna be going with people who have fewer credits and less experience. Are you really going to put a show on someone’s back? But then you’re going, well, that’s what they did with Will, you know, 30 years ago. And it worked out pretty well!
Question:
You mentioned earlier that you were a kid when the show came out. Yeah. so obviously there might be some kids nowadays that didn’t watch Fresh Prince. My nephew, for example, he’s 15. I told him I was coming to this. He was like “Fresh Prince?” And I was like, “What?” And that’s when I’d realized. Oh, wait, okay. I’m getting a little old. So are you trying to appeal to that younger audience?
Rasheed Newson:
Absolutely. I mean because of that, that’s why this show has to be able to stand on its own. That’s why it couldn’t just be referential. It couldn’t be that show. Where you’d only enjoy it if you’d seen the original, it’s gotta hook you now and it’s gotta do it on its own power.
T.J. Brady:
That’s why if you look at the people we cast it’s amazing the way they’re gonna be dressed, the music they’re listening to. The things they get into it’s all designed around that. Right there. We’ve got to earn new viewers and we know that.
Question:
What was that first table reading like when you got everybody together?
TJ Brady:
It was exciting. It was a logistical nightmare because it was on Zoom. We couldn’t get everybody in the same room. I mean because we’re in a pandemic. I was gonna say it was worse then, I guess it was worse then. It’s still bad now, it’s tough. It was on zoom, but they did a great job. What’s great is our job is to go in and just say hello, introduce it, and step back. And there are just moments where we’ll watch over you. Like this is happening. Yep.
Question:
Did you have a specific moment for both of you? Where it just clicked? Like “Oh, okay, this is happening. We’re here.”
Rasheed Newson:
It was when we were in Philadelphia and I don’t think it was the first scene, but we were doing a scene. It was with Jabari and April. The 16th and Market. And what, what I got was, one, they were great. And we were here in Philadelphia and we’re doing it and the whole community. Everybody came out to see what was happening and when we would tell them and they were really excited. It really sank in. Everyone didn’t believe us. Will wasn’t there. “Where’s Will? Where’s Will?” “He’s not here!” “I know you gotta say that. He comes later.” And I’m like, no, don’t wink at me. He’s not coming.
Question:
Speaking of the fact that you had to do this during a pandemic, during the show, there’s no mention of the pandemic. I don’t see any masks. There’s no social distancing. Can you walk us through that decision to not have this set during the COVID era?
Rasheed Newson:
We talked about it and from an acting standpoint, you’re gonna lose this much of the face. It just handicapped so much from an acting standpoint.
TJ Brady:
Being unable to predict the future about it. It’s a difficult thing to gauge where we’re gonna be when it comes out. In addition to the fact that on some level we’re trying to provide some level of wish fulfillment. And I think we’re all looking forward to the days when we don’t need these anymore.
Rasheed Newson:
I’m always hesitant to have a character use a cell phone because it’s one of those things that date the show. If somebody pulls out a flip phone, you’re like, “Oh Jesus”, you’re like listening to the dialogue. It became one of those things too.
TJ Brady:
COVID though, just from a production standpoint, just give a shout out to our COVID team, keeping everybody safe. Being able to pull off some of these locations and shoot like it is. We’ve been doing this for 14 years working as TV writers, producers, and it’s way harder than it’s ever been to get a location. Especially if you want to shoot an interior, it’s a lot more expensive. It’s a lot harder. We have lost things two days before it’s all set up to go to a place. No, they said no because COVID numbers are up now. I would be disappointed, but I couldn’t even argue against it.
Rasheed Newson:
Like we were looking at one school and then suddenly the parents were like, wait a minute, we can’t go into the school. And you’ve got to let 200 people from a production crew go into the school. And I was like, you got this we’ll find something else.
TJ Brady:
So that has really impacted us a lot. And I think it’s a testament to the team around us. They’ve been able to get things done.
Question;
To what degree do you feel like you guys are doing some predictive state of Black America in terms of writing? To what degree did you sort of do some projections about the future as you were writing still now?
TJ Brady:
I think what we did was sort of extrapolate a few things when it comes to Phil’s campaign. Where we think the conversation around black candidates running for office, policing, and how to talk about that. We’ve seen some things reflected in the past election that we extrapolated forward. Also around the state and Rasheed, the amazing art collector that he is and I’m not just making that up. He’s like a legit art collector. He was extrapolating out some trends in the world of a black art, where it is, and trying to talk about where it’s going in terms of styles, the marketing, the framing of it in the larger culture, where does it belong and how is it handled and appreciated?
Question:
Can you talk about the juxtaposition between the beginning of the episode? And then the middle when he gets to LA. So like in Philly it’s just very much just dark, even the lighting in it. In comparison to when Will arrives.
Rasheed Newson:
The lighting was sort of funny because some of that’s like just the difference between the east coast and west coast light. It was overcasting when we were in Philly and I was like, this is the sky that God gave us. And then when we got here and it was just like blasting sun when we were going. We were also trying to go for I mean, when he comes here, this is to become his home. So there should be, it should feel more harmonious. It should feel more, not regimented, but more sort of stable. I mean just something as simple as I know, no like this, no one cares, but it’s in my head that it matters when he has breakfast with his mom like she’s up, she’s cooking it and serving it off the plate and he’s just eating it out the bowl, like right there by the island. These people sit down for breakfast. That’s important. So it’s just those juxtapositions. We try to give to like every part of life, which is not to say one is better than the other. They’re just different.
Question:
There’s been this conversation about colorism in Hollywood and with a dark skin Aunt Viv, the original, and the light skin Aunt Viv. Did you guys give any thought to that when it came to casting?
Rasheed Newson:
Yeah. I mean, we decided that the family would be a dark-skinned family and that was just, I mean, we had to make a decision and that was it. We said we don’t necessarily, we didn’t feel like we saw as much representation in that realm as there should be. And so we said, well, there’s something we can do something about that. And we can just make the decision that this will be a dark-skinned family. The Banks will look like this on the color spectrum.
Question:
So I was reading that there was a bidding war that was happening between Peacock and HBOMax. And for this obviously, there is going to be this huge property behind it. It’s probably going to be one of the biggest shows when it comes out. Do you feel an immense amount of pressure?
TJ Brady:
We do. We’ve wanted to do this job for a long time and to run a show we knew it was hard because we had seen it. But again, going back to the, having a family and kids, before I had kids, like, you know, it’s a lot to have a kid I’m like, oh I know. And they’re like, no, really it’s all I know. And then I had kids and I’m like, oh my God, it’s a lot, you know there are some things that you can only learn by. There’s something I say to my wife all the time when the pressure’s piling up and it’s getting crazy. I say, these are the problems I pray for. If I’m gonna have a problem, I want to have showrunner problems.
Question:
In that vein as producers, I know a lot of your job is being asked for something impossible and then making it possible. Do you have a specific moment where someone asked for the moon and you’re like, all right, I got my lasso?
Rasheed Newson:
Let me go through my list of NDAs <laugh> can I tell you I mean, this is dude, I’m trying to make this sound as boring as possible. There just came a time when we were doing the episodes and there was a moment of like, oh actually we should flip these two episodes. We should air this one before that one. And we were already in production and, and it meant that the storylines had to flip and it meant that the actors you’re gonna be doing something in this you’re reacting to something in this episode, in the next episode, you’re actually gonna do the thing you’re reacting to in this episode, in addition to setting up the whole post-production schedule. So we could take the one that shot later and move it earlier and finish it first. That was, we’re not gonna say which one. You guys can guess which ones were. And by the way, it becomes a logistical creative nightmare, where you’re going, we can do this, but I just wanna say, I wanna go into the fear because I have a lot of it. We’ve worked on a lot of shows. I always say America gets to decide, right? We do what we can. America’s gonna decide. I’m gonna move on to this one. Oh man, I hope America loves us because I know what the legacy is. I don’t want to be part of the team that messes it up. You know? I mean, forget America with my family. I’ve got to go to reunions and hear from cousins and uncles and aunts that you ruined the Fresh Prince. I don’t want that.
Question:
We talked earlier with the different characters about Jeffrey, about how he’s got a lot more swag than jumps around that made me wonder, like which character do you feel underwent the biggest transformation from the sitcom to this interpretation?
TJ Brady:
I think it’s Carlton. Yeah. Personally Carlton, cocaine. Yeah. Why he’s doing that? What’s his story behind it? We didn’t wanna just go like, oh, he’s reaching, he’s doing cocaine. So what I will say is Carlton, he just wanted to look at trying to make a real 16 to 17-year-old privileged young man in a situation like that, but the pressure on him of being kind of the only, or you know, different ways that can manifest itself, trying to live up to a dad who is that successful? You know, a middle child trying to like really take a lot of what that could be and just shave off any of that didn’t ground, the original. But to really have to build a character, we could take on a journey who wasn’t there for a punchline, you know, our Carlton’s not a joke.
Question:
So he’s not going to do the dance is what you’re saying?
TJ Brady:
We’ll have a little dance party and they’ll bust it out. There we go.
Question:
The actors were talking about their improv or their ability to have that freedom. I’m sure Morgan can elaborate on that. But as you guys are in the writer’s room and being there throughout the entire process, how has their abilities to improv and like kind of change up the lines a bit improved the show?
Rasheed Newson:
I mean, anytime an actor or actress can say it in a way that makes it more natural and spontaneous coming out of their mouth. It’s great. I love that they sort of surprise each other. So you’re getting genuine reactions when someone cracks a joke or when somebody flirts like, oh, you’ve been there with it. And they don’t go into it like I’m gonna change the line. We do it as written a few times. And then if we play with it a little, you know, give them the freedom. We just do one or two at the end where they just go do whatever they want. It’s also, I mean, it’s an acknowledgment of just what we’re writing for a 16-year-old kid. I’m not gonna have all that dialogue. This is where the story has to go. But if you want to throw some flavor into it, I’m absolutely willing to take it.
Question:
Modern criticisms of the show were the way it handled queer storylines and LGBTQ. Are there any queer characters in this?
Rasheed Newson:
There is a queer character in this. Tyler is Will’s first friend at school and a member of the basketball team. He’s six, five. He’s not in the pilot. He’s when Will goes to school.
TJ Brady:
It’s just played as kind of who the character is. There are no very special episodes.
Rasheed Newson:
And also one of our series regulars, we were gonna get into their sexuality later in the season.
Question:
Going back to Carlton. Of course, him not have a punchline and is not always being that jokester. The scene in the locker room is a very serious scene where it talks about, race and who’s allowed to say what based on what group they’re around. Why would you all say that that scene is important?
Rasheed Newson:
It speaks to the different worlds they’re coming from. Right? Like, what I like about that is you could always just say like, Connor, shouldn’t say that word. It’s the N-word what are you doing? But for Carlton given where he grew up and the people he grew up around, he’s like, it makes perfect sense. And we wanted to dig into why, if we gave us something for those two characters, this is the first real clash of like, okay, it’s one thing to know that I lived here and you lived over there. You feel alien to me if this is what you’re allowing. So it really just let us dig into the chasm between them culturally and the worlds they come from.
Question:
I want to talk about the creative team and the writer’s room specifically. What was important in those early conversations about we need this amount of people, these types of people in our writer’s room and the creative team down from the director, cinematographer, to the production designer, what were those conversations like?
Rasheed Newson:
I think for the writer’s room, what we wanted, because especially as we were beginning, we weren’t, we had to find the tone. So there were a couple of people who came from comedy who were in the writer’s room. Because we’re like, well, we do want it to be funny sometimes. Yeah. You know, this should not be an unrelenting drama. And then there was sort of a mix of experience in terms of different shows people had come from. When it came to directors down the line it’s a mix of having people with experience, but also know that you want to give some people a shot. So there are some people who have important positions who’ve never had those roles before. I mean, and some of them are glamorous.
One of them, Jason Little, locations manager. He is from Philly and was enthusiastic to do this job. And he’s an African-American man and he’s just never had the shot. And everybody said, this is yours, this is gonna be your time.
TJ Brady:
Directors, you know, we really try and try hard to have our directors slate reflect the diversity of the cast and America at large. I mean really making that effort. That’s been all the way from the top, you know, supported and supported by Peacock, Universal, and Westbrook. And they’ve all been great about that.
Rasheed Newson:
Well, then there’s a recognition that it’s not only the right thing to do. It makes the show better.
Question:
Were there any series that influenced the direction for you guys about it?
TJ Brady:
It doesn’t manifest in any other way you know, visually or anything other than just sort of story engine and where the drama comes from. I’ve always loved Friday Night Lights because it’s a show about young people about family. There are grown-up stories, there are youth stories, there are sports. But most of the drama in Friday Night Lights didn’t come from the football field. So I would have to say that. I really love that show. It’s more inspiration than it is a direct influence. I haven’t pulled anything from it. We’re probably pulling more from our lives than anything else.