"I Am Not Above Hidden Cameras": Jeff Lewis About CameraGate on "Flipping Out"

Oh. My. God.

I knew that there would be major fallout from Jeff's decision to install a hidden camera in his office in an effort to catch Chris Elwood slacking off, but even I was ill-prepared for just how much absolute drama this would create.

For a series that has always been a hotbed of drama but has couched it in some hysterical set-dressing, I was pretty surprised by the gravitas of this week's episode of Flipping Out ("Tear Down") for a number of reasons.

Jeff Lewis has always been a control freak who has had a hard time keeping his anger in check and, well, expressing emotion in a sympathetic and encouraging way. So I was surprised by how calm Jeff was when he took Chris Elwood into his office and told him that he was going to be fired, permanently this time. Jeff could have screamed and ranted and raved about violations of trust and turned this into the Spanish Inquisition but instead he calmly told Chris that he had installed the camera and had caught him using the computer (apparently, he checked Facebook 151 times in three days, which must be a new record), which was strictly forbidden. For his part, Chris admitted that he had done wrong and accepted Jeff's decision with a sadness and vulnerability I didn't think he had in him; he said that Jenni didn't know that he had been on the computer or had been slacking off and sadly drove off.

What happened next was truly shocking. Rather than see the scene between Jeff and Jenni, in which he told her about the hidden camera and about Chris' firing, play out on-screen, we instead witness this scene via the hidden camera footage, a decision which made the innate tension and emotion of the scene even more patently real, despite the narrative distance from the audience. Seeing Jenni break down (and Jeff casually point to the camera, hidden in a smoke detector on the wall) literally made my heart leap into my chest. She was completely and utterly undone, betrayed by the two men in her life whom she thought would have her back.

For his part, Chris moved out that day of the adorable little house on Finley which they shared (and which was owned by Jeff) and they split. It wasn't due to the hidden camera that Jenni and Chris' marriage fell apart but it certainly didn't help matters either and must have dragged out a host of other problems to the surface. Personally, I think it's perhaps a good thing. Chris clearly wasn't happy working for Jeff and had been given multiple chances to prove himself worthy of something better; he lied to Jenni about what he was doing at the office and let her defend him to Jeff time and time again. For Jenni's part, I can understand why she wanted to leave Finley and think it's likely for the best: besides for the many bittersweet memories she has of the place where she and her estranged husband lived, it's probably a good thing that Jeff isn't her employer and her landlord. It's definitely a Good Thing that she constructs some barriers between her personal and professional lives as she tries to regain some balance in her life, sans her husband.

Jenni posted a blog entry at BravoTV.com, entitled "I Move Forward" about her marital situation:
"The truth about a marriage is only known to the two people involved and sometimes it is a mystery to them.

My husband said he did not want to be married to me. I had no choice but to respect his wishes.

I am learning all I can from this ... surrounded by my family and friends and with God's help ... I move forward."
Sad but to the point.

While Jeff tried to get things back to normal as quickly as possible (even promoting new Chris to house manager/trainee creative assistant), it was absolutely clear that Jenni wasn't coping very well to the fallout from the hidden camera situation and began making mistakes left and right, which wasn't like her at all but also displayed just how much her marital problems had shaken her. I don't really understand why at Jeff Lewis' office there are no paid vacations, which seems absolutely criminal to me, but Jeff should have given her a few (paid) days off to get herself together, especially as the entire incident (i.e., hidden camera) occurred at the office and directly involved him as well. It was entirely foolish to think that the Hidden Camera Affair only involved him and Chris when Jenni clearly had a vested interest in its outcome.

To make matters worse, Jenni stepped on a rusty roof tack at the Encino house and had to have a tetanus shot (ouch) and, after a series of small blunders, accidentally gave a blank check to a vendor in front of their client. Jeff's freak out was a little much, however. It's not as though she knew the check was blank and a quick call to the bank could have stopped any payment on it immediately if he was that concerned. As it was, they got the check back, Jenni apologized profusely, and she even offered to call Lorie to explain the situation.

Jeff doesn't really know how to deal in situations involving complex human emotions; he claims that he wasn't held as a child and so abhors hugging and that may be true. It's clear he cares deeply for Jenni and doesn't know how to console her at all. Paying for a massage for her is a nice gesture but sometimes you do have to show some real emotion. And if Jeff does love Jenni as much as he says he does... then sometimes love means having to do something when it's inconvenient for you to do it: in this case, to reach out to her emotionally.

That said, I do think Jeff has a wickedly funny sense of humor and managed to make Jenni laugh with his Tijuana comment at her most vulnerable moment. In that moment, despite his many flaws, I really did see that Jeff does have a heart, even if he doesn't know what to do with it most of the time.

All in all, an episode with very little actual flipping out, given the circumstances, and a glimpse into Jeff's efforts to change the way he reacts to things and people. But at the end of the day, I'm worried about Jenni and hope that she finds the strength to persevere and find herself, post-Chris.

Next week on Flipping Out ("Looks Like New"), Jeff makes Chris take the bus, leading to a teary breakdown; Jeff and Ryan return to work for Courtney but discover that she may only want to employ Jeff and not Ryan.

"Bonjour, Chez Lui": Secrets and Lies Lead to Jeff "Flipping Out"

I was on the edge of my seat last night. I wasn't watching Damages, Lost, or any of the haute-tension dramas that seem to fill up my TiVo in recent years but rather the series that is keeping me entertained all summer long: Bravo's Flipping Out.

Last night's episode of Flipping Out ("Closer Inspection") had all of the elements of great television drama: mystery (who did crack the shower's glass panel at Valley Oak?), suspense (would Jeff catch his employees goofing off by using his nanny cam?), guilt (would Jeff crack under the strain of concealing from his staff/friends that he was secretly videotaping them?), denial (ahem, Jenni), and a soupçon of humor in the form of Chris Elwood, who may have very well damned himself by answering interior designer Zenzi's call by saying "Bonjour, chez lui," rather than the ascribed telephone greeting.

That Chris would answer the phone without knowing who it was in that fashion was shocking to me and I'm not Jeff Lewis. That he would do so on camera (the ones filming the series, I mean) and then swear on the lives of everyone he holds dear was shocking. And then to be caught on the hidden nanny camera on top of it is even far worse for him, especially as it gave paranoid Jeff Lewis even more ammunition to scour the hours of footage he had amassed looking for other wrongdoing. And he found it: Chris using the forbidden laptop, Chris texting, Chris reading, and--worst of all--Chris seemingly going through his personal files.

I'd be surprised if Chris makes it through another week of employment at Jeff Lewis' office, good day there or not.

I feel most bad for Jenni, who goes to the mattresses to defend her husband and who often finds herself in the unenviable position of being caughter between her employer (who is also her landlord) and her husband, who--let's face it--isn't the most ambitious or driven of workers. The "chez lui" incident now makes her look like a dupe and a patsy; she defends her husband to Jeff, swearing that he would never dishonor Jeff or take advantage of him, unaware that there is secret footage (and not-so-secret series footage) showing him doing just that.

Jeff, of course, has found himself in a bit of a Catch-22. He set up the camera in an effort to see if his staffers were doing their jobs but felt guilty keeping this a secret from Jenni, who--if we're being honest--really is his right hand/nursemaid/best friend. In order to confront Chris Elwood about what happened, he'll have to come clean about the secret filming and likely Jenni will feel that this was not only an invasion of their privacy but the ultimate betrayal of a man who claims to be their friend. So, yes, Jenni, something does smell "funky dunky" in Lewisland.

Me, I'm more intrigued by the scenes for next week's episode, in which we see a hysterical Jenni saying that she just wants "him" to get help. After seeing last night's installment, I'm still not sure whether she's talking about Jeff or Chris, but the shot of her sobbing in the car was enough to make me crumble a bit inside. (As was her terse blog entry on the subject of the nanny cam at BravoTv.Com.)

Sure, Jeff suffers from OCD and, hells yes, he's completely paranoid (just look at how his mind leapt to his "enemies" when faced with the cracked shower glass rather than blaming it on an accident) and Chris has always been a slacker, but I never for a moment thought he was a liar. So then, is Jenni looking to get help for her boss (who in this case is right to be furious) or her husband ("The Elwood Who Cried Wolf")? I can't wait to see.

Next week on Flipping Out ("Tear Down"), Jeff is forced to decide if this is the end of the road for Chris Elwood, after giving him so many chances in the past. Will Chris be permanently banished from Commonwealth? Find out next week.

Why I Am Still, Well, Flipping Out About Bravo's "Flipping Out"

I have a serious, serious problem: I am completely addicted to Bravo's docusoap Flipping Out.

There, I said it. Whew.

I went on and on about this hysterical series last year when the cabler aired the first season of this series, which focuses on the high-paid antics of real estate prospector Jeff Lewis and his band of co-dependent staffers, including executive assistant Jenni, housekeeper Zoila, and trash guy Chris, and his tempestuous relationship with former lover-turned-business partner Ryan, as they flip houses and, well, spend a lot of time dealing with Jeff's OCD-fueled tantrums.

If you're looking for a guide on how to make money in the sinking ship that is the Los Angeles real estate business, look elsewhere. Now in its second season, Flipping Out hasn't changed it's modus operandi; it's still not really about the houses themselves (though the progress Jeff made on Commonwealth is stunning in itself) but about these incredibly flawed but captivating characters. Jeff is still a tyrant among tyrants, flipping out (oh, you knew I had to say that at one point) about the smallest things, like that his Starbucks latte seems more like 150 degrees rather than 140 or that Jenni selfishly wants pepperoni pizza when he wants meatball. Things like that.

Adding to Jeff's stress this season is a massive renovation project on a historic 1911 home in Hancock Park and a client--Courtney--who gives Jeff a run for his money in the demanding diva department. She's not afraid to stand up to Jeff to get what she wants, even when those demands are erratic and illogical. And Jeff can't stomach being bossed around by someone he describes as a "nutjob." Of course, these two are so similar that it's no wonder that their every conversation throws up a series of blazes between them. With wildfire season in full swing, it's a dangerous situation.

Last week's episode ("The Flip Side") was an absolute gem, focusing on Jeff's long-suffering housekeeper Zoila, who has recently gotten her US citizenship as well as some ideas of her own, like asking for her birthday weekend off from work (Jeff is angry as she did have Christmas off) and talking about Lincoln's emancipation of the slaves. For his part, Jeff decides to get Zoila an oil painting of herself by a local artist for her birthday... only the thing is absolutely hideous, portraying Zoila in an unflattering light and depicting her as a hellion in a maid's uniform. One of the reasons I love Flipping Out is that it's hard to tell quite when Jeff is being serious and when he's joking but sadly this instance was no joke as Jeff honestly thought he was doing something nice for Zoila... and then leaves it to Jenni to explain to the artist why she needs to "redo" the piece and eliminate some of Zoila's chins. Ouch.

Why I watch isn't necessarily to see when Jeff will flip out (at least, oh, a dozen times an episode) but to see when Jenni and Chris (not to mention my beloved Zoila) will finally snap. Do they get away with a lot off stuff that they wouldn't be able to at any other office? Hells yeah, but Jeff Lewis is a demanding, controlling, and mercurial employer whose constant demands wear down a person's sanity after a while. How this married couple can stay together when faced with a hellstorm of biblical proportions day in and day out is beyond me (and this is coming from someone who recently tied the knot himself). That day of reckoning may still be in the future, but in the meantime, I can't get enough of seeing them pushed to the brink and still managing to come back for more.

Having worked in the entertainment industry in Los Angeles for going on six years now, maybe it's the masochist in me that sees its reflection in the Jeff Lewis Company staffers on Flipping Out. Or maybe it's just the fact that this series makes me laugh out loud in a way that very few scripted comedies can these days. Take your pick.

Tonight on a new episode of Flipping Out ("Good Cop, Bad Jeff"), Jeff becomes suspicious of his assistants when he notices that not much is getting done around the house and wants to install surveillance cameras to keep an eye on his employees.

Know Your Onion: Why I'm Still Hooked on Bravo's "Flipping Out"

Jeff Lewis is clearly insane. And yet I can't stop watching him.

I'm talking about the focus of Bravo's docudrama Flipping Out, which wraps its six-episode run on Tuesday night. I've been a pretty outspoken champion for the quirky (and at times soapy) reality series, which follows the travails of OCD-suffering "real estate investor" (i.e., speculator) Jeff Lewis, his business partner Ryan, and Jeff's troika of long-suffering assistants and lethargic maid Zoila.

The reason I am writing today is about onions. Yes, onions. In this week's episode, Jeff flew off the handle at second assistant Bowman because he didn't check the box containing his El Pollo Loco lunch at the "restaurant" (I'll use that term loosely) and was absolutely aghast to discover that it did contain onions, even though Bowman said he had asked for no onions.

A cardinal sin, if there ever was one. But what got me the most (besides for the ingenious way that the producers bookended the episode with two different onion incidents) was what Jeff actually said straight-faced during a talking head about Bowman: "He doesn't view this work as important. And the fact is ordering my lunch without onions is important. It's very important."

You are kidding, right?

Sure, I work in the entertainment industry where people have been fired for not requesting soy in their bosses' Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf lattes, but even I found this slightly over the top and it felt like something that Michael Scott or David Brent might have uttered without thinking. Jeff needs to get some perspective, stat. Especially as he seems incapable of doing anything by himself, whether that's taking his own cat to the vet (he felt like he deserved a medal for that one, earlier in the episode) or removing said onions from his lunch, a task better left to Bowman to do over the kitchen sink, along with any rice that the onions may have inadvertently touched.

(Loved that loopy maid Zoila thought that the passive-aggressive Jeff was praying when he sat there, starring incredulously at his onion-laden meal.)

And yet it's these very same scenarios that have kept me glued to the television week after week to watch Jeff's assistants and everyone around him flounder in his wake. In a town as notoriously abusive as Los Angeles, it's perhaps reassuring to see that even assistants on reality TV series can't escape from the tyrannical rule of the oppressive overlords... even though what they should be doing is running as fast as they can and get as far away from Jeff Lewis as possible.
"Flipping Out" airs its season finale Tuesday night at 10 pm on Bravo.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: NFL Football (CBS; 8-10 pm); My Name is Earl/30 Rock (NBC); NFL Football (CW, 8-10 pm); Ugly Betty (ABC); Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? (FOX)

9 pm: The Office/Scrubs (NBC); Grey's Anatomy (ABC); Don't Forget the Lyrics (FOX)

10 pm: Without a Trace (CBS); ER (NBC); Men in Trees (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

8:30 pm: 30 Rock.

It's Televisionary's favorite new comedy from last season. On tonight's repeat installment ("Cleveland"), Floyd (Jason Sudeikis) asks Liz if she would ever think about leaving Manhattan and moving with him to the Midwest, while Jack takes off with Phoebe (Emily Mortimer) for Paris and perhaps a quickie wedding?

9 pm: The Office.

On tonight's repeat episode ("Women's Appreciation"), after Phyllis is, er, confronted by a flasher, Dwight and Andy team up to catch the predator, while Michael, who has some personal problems of his own, attempts to comfort and console the women in his own unique style: by taking them on a very special outing.

Why I Can't Get Enough of Bravo's "Flipping Out"

I have a serious problem. Pardon me if I seem a little embarrassed talking about it, as this is a new development and one that, frankly, puzzles and surprises me.

Here goes: I am addicted to Bravo's new docusoap Flipping Out. There, I said it. The first step to dealing with problem is to admit it exists and I've now put my issue directly on the table.

I first came across Flipping Out a few weeks ago when I scored a screener episode with the first two installments. I will admit that I was skeptical about the program and started to watch it fully expecting to be rolling my eyes within the first few minutes. And then something strange happened: I was sucked in and couldn't stop watching. I sat through the first two episodes in one sitting, hungry for more.

Let's backtrack for one second. For those of you not up to speed, Flipping Out is Bravo's latest addition to its docusoap ouevre, which includes programs like Work Out, Real Housewives of Orange County, Blow Out, and Million Dollar Listing. In other words, series that don't usually hold my interest longer than it takes to reach for the TiVo remote.

Flipping Out deals with the brilliant and eccentric (the perfect reality TV combo, it would seem) real estate investor Jeff Lewis; his job in layman's terms is to flip houses but he does so with a style and panache--not to mention extreme budgets--that is unrivaled in the field. His life is helped along and hindered by his incredibly TV-ready staff: executive assistant Jenni, a Julia Louis-Dreyfus clone with aspirations of acting and, er, rapping; second assistant Stephen, a hilariously sarcastic slacker who has only now realized what he's gotten himself in for; live-in maid Zoila, who becomes exhausted after a scant ten minutes of work; and Chris, a.k.a. Trash Guy, a struggling actor and doofus who happens to be married to Jenni.

From that description, it doesn't sound all that promising, but the dramatic success of the series depends on the conflicting personalities of its leads. Jeff is an OCD-prone perfectionist who lords it up over his employees. Hell, he even arranges a feudal sit-down lunch with the staff, with himself at the head of the table. And he's got a fiery temper, which probably comes in handy as he's frequently firing his troublesome staff. Don't worry though. Even favorite assistant, Jenni, who keeps his life on track and whom Jeff refers to as his conscience, has been fired and rehired about two or three times. Jenni's husband, the hapless Chris (who is incapable of manning the door during an open house without impersonating Hugo Weaving in The Matrix), has been fired and rehired no less than SIX times. In this week's episode, Chris loses Jeff's beloved cat Monkey (he gets stuck in a drawer behind the bottled water which MUST be lined up with labels facing outwards) and leaves for an acting job rather than stay to find the errant kitty; Jeff freaks out and screams at Chris. In an aside, Jeff admits that he always thought Chris was an idiot but now believes that he's some sort of evil sociopathic genius. Um, riiiiight.

Along the way, there are constant conflicts with the staff and hapless business partner/ex-boyfriend Ryan, troubles with building inspectors and escrow, and tenants that just won't move out of their old homes. And, oh, psychics, spiritual healers, exorcisms, and house blessings. (I nearly forgot about all that.) Throughout it all, Jeff insists that his staff are his family and wants to keep them close.

Personally, I think they're all crazy but that's the fun of the series in a nutshell. It's not a home improvement show at all, though the results of Jeff's work are impressive to behold; instead, it's a docusoap about the behind-the-scenes drama of house flipping and the diva-like personality of what it takes to be at the very top of this dramatic profession.

In the end, Flipping Out has got compelling, quirky characters that put most scripted dramas to shame and an underlying humor that hooks you and keeps you coming back for more. Trust me on this. Your house might not look anything like one of Jeff's creations, but there's no way you're not going to want to stay in on Tuesday nights to see what new drama he and his team are cooking up next.

"Flipping Out" airs Tuesday nights at 10 pm on Bravo.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: Power of 10 (CBS); Most Outrageous Moments (NBC); America's Next Top Model (CW); According to Jim/Knights of Prosperity (ABC); So You Think You Can Dance (FOX)

9 pm: Criminal Minds (CBS);
Last Comic Standing (NBC); America's Next Top Model (CW); According to Jim/Knights of Prosperity (ABC); Don't Forget the Lyrics (FOX)

10 pm: CSI: New York (CBS); Dateline (NBC); The Nine (ABC)


What I'll Be Watching

10 pm:
Top Chef on Bravo.

On tonight's episode of
Top Chef
("Guilty Pleasures"), nerves fray and tempers flare as the chefs are tasked with preparing the perfect "hangover" snack. But who's that dreadlocked guest judge? Why, it's none other than Table 8's Govind Armstrong.