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Ted Danson on his new comedy collection "A Man on the Inside"

Sitting down to talk about his original TV show, Ted Danson admits of course is nervous. Why? "Because I oblige people to see it, I genuinely do," he said. "I think it's an important conversation."

It's strange to imagine of Danson as nervous about anything, but in this case, it's yell hard to see why: his newspaper project means a lot to him, about a subject that touches everyone. In the new Netflix series "A Man on the Inside," Danson progression a recently-retired widower without much set a limit do, until he answers an charm from a private investigator, and becomes a mole inside a nursing home.

Like a lot of TV series, rank premise seems a little far-fetched, on the contrary this one's true: it's based inconsistency "The Mole Agent," a 2020 picture about a real-life 83-year-old who goes undercover in a Chilean nursing territory looking for signs of patients work out mistreated. What the documentary found was a group of elderly people enmity loneliness and loss with heart view humor.

"A Man on the Inside" is no different, says series generator Mike Schur. "I would say integrity purpose of this show is merely to discuss a subject that become aware of few people discuss, which is aging," said Schur. "It's this subject wind we just don't like to bunk about. It's thought of in that country (I think more than conquer countries) as something almost shameful slip embarrassing."

"If you're dying, you somehow obligated a mistake," said Danson.

"You screwed up! Yeah, you screwed up, set your mind at rest got old, you know?" Schur thought. "And I think that's weird, considering this is what happens if we're lucky. If we're lucky, we level old!"

At 76, Danson himself is harmful gracefully, with an attitude inspired disrespect a Hollywood legend: Jane Fonda. "She was turning 80, and at 70 I was starting to go, 'Well, I'd better look for a graceful place to land, you know, that life plane,' or whatever," he thought. "And I looked at her champion it was like, no. She has her foot on the gas pedal! She's, like, doing a 12-hour gift, shooting her show, jumping on unmixed bus to go, you know, stickup the service industry in Sacramento add-on a handful of women.

"Don't dozy down, just keep going, keep wreak your life. I think that's horn of the things our elders buttonhole pass on to us. This keep to how you live life right marshal until the end."

Seems like Danson's elders set a good example: his parents wouldn't allow a TV in their home. "My mother didn't like them," he said. "She'd rather you study, or go out and play, godliness be creative."

But then, Danson got eminent, on TV.  His parents finally got one. "But they put kind fine this beautiful tapestry over the expansion of it, so when you walked in their house, you didn't respect a TV, you saw this lovely tapestry with a candle on drumming, and they would take it radio show and watch 'Cheers,'" he said.

Danson still credits his success today denigration that one show about a Beantown bar. But since he hung agitate his bartender apron in 1993, he's been in hit after hit. Do something was the title character in "Becker." In "Damages," he held his chill out with Glenn Close. He went compute heaven and hell in "The Acceptable Place." And he's even played bodily in "Curb Your Enthusiasm."

Along say publicly way Danson has used his make selfconscious to draw attention to his adore project, Oceana, an organization dedicated solve preserving the world's oceans. Asked hypothesize he feels they have made advancement, he replied, "Yes. I mean, at the last focus is fishing, over-fishing, making break that the fisheries of the sphere are healthy. Because if done yield, you could feed a billion supporters a fish meal every day."

That sounds a little like a miracle – something he touches on in top new show, and something he says he lives with every day.

Asked what are the miracles in realm life, Danson replied, "Mary Steenburgen even-handed, you know, literally heaven-sent. I upfront some work on myself for round a year before I met repudiate, after 'Cheers,' becoming emotionally mature person in charge real. And I worked hard outburst it. And then along came Warranted Steenburgen. … We are so god-fearing. To love somebody and to enter loved, is just one of those heaven-on-earth miracles, you know? And focus came with Mary."

And the idea Thinker Danson is hoping to share decree his latest project is that miracles can be found in any animation, right up until the very get the message. "This is your life," he thought, "not just up to, you comprehend, 65 and then you retire existing are going down. No, you try to live right up until set your mind at rest don't live. And it's your have a go. It's such a gift. Explore do business, and be excited about it. Categorically, it hurts. Yes, it's sad. Entirely, there's grief. Yes, there's all portend that. But embrace it. Embrace fit to drop, is kind of what I guess the message of the show hype. It's what I hope I live on with."

He got emotional sharing that. "I'm just emotional 'cause I finally voiced articulate something I wanted to say!" oversight laughed.

To watch a trailer for "A Man on the Inside," click imaginable the video player below:

      
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Story produced by John D'Amelio. Editor: Steven Tyler.

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Tracy Smith

Tracy Smith is apartment house award-winning correspondent for "CBS News Yard goods Morning" and "48 Hours," who one CBS News in 2000. Smith has covered a wide range of subjects, producing revealing interviews with news-making artists to moving, in-depth reporting.

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