How Facial Expressions and Body Language Speak For All Of Us, All The Time.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Paul Ekman grades "Lie to Me"--the show he inspired

Reading Between The Lies
By Marc D. Allan
Special to The Washington Post
Sunday, July 12, 2009


With the first season of "Lie to Me" completed, Paul Ekman is ready to assign grades to the Fox drama he inspired:

A-minus for entertainment value, B-plus for realism.

Ekman, a professor emeritus at the University of California at San Francisco and a social psychologist who works in the area of deception and demeanor, said 85 percent of what "Lie to Me" depicts is accurate.

"Baum does care to get it right," Ekman said.

He was speaking of Samuel Baum, who created the show after learning about Ekman's work using facial expressions and verbal tics to help determine whether someone is telling the truth.
"I thought a franchise set around someone who did that kind of work would give real scope to the kinds of cases you could explore -- one week a political thriller, one week a family drama," Baum said. "A little movie every week."

He centered the show on a character named Cal Lightman (played by Tim Roth), an in-your-face investigator who leads a firm that helps law enforcement and government agencies.
The Lightman Group -- partner Gillian Foster (Kelli Williams), newcomer Ria Torres (Monica Raymund) and researcher Eli Loker (Brendan Hines) -- is typically hired to investigate crimes. But occasionally its clients are people such as a multimillionaire who wants to know whether his fiancee really loves him.

Read the rest of the article at the Washington Post

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