'Rehab Addict," the latest series to join the home-improvement genre, may appear to be built on a shaky foundation: a two-person film crew, a no-name host, a catering budget that barely allows for a case of bottled water and a home base in that anti-Hollywood prairie called Minneapolis. But it's a blueprint that's proven sturdy and successful for Magnetic Productions, a year-old company that churns out four cable shows without a yardful of Teamsters, marquee names or backbreaking expenses.
"It's very tricky to produce TV in our category -- home improvement -- and they've done a great job for us," said Andy Singer, general manger for the DIY Network, which beams Magnetic's "Addict," "Sweat Equity" and "Bathtastic!" into 54 million homes. Coming soon: "I Hate My Kitchen!"
Watching a Magnetic team construct a show is like watching a couple of carpenters make a treehouse out of twigs. During a recent set visit at a Minneapolis house being featured this inaugural season, I kept asking when the crew would return from lunch, only to discover that I was already sharing the front porch with the entire team -- two producers from New York and host Nicole Curtis.
Curtis, a real estate agent who bought the foreclosed property over a year ago, long before she was anointed a TV personality, believes the house once resembled a Barbie mansion. Not anymore. The 4,000-square-foot monster came without heat and every single wall suffered from water damage.
Curtis' job is not only to bring back the home's original beauty, but to explain her every move to a camera that's almost always inches away from her face as she sprays down the bathtub, reinstalls the marble sink, refinishes the lights, waters the lawn and tries to avoid stepping on her Teacup Yorkie, Paulie, who scampers around the piles of boxes and slides across the sawdust-covered floor.
"For me, it comes natural," said Curtis, who has little TV experience but was hired after guesting on another Magnetic show. DIY execs signed off on her the same day they saw her demo tape. "I'm a talker anyways," she said.
DIY's hosts don't require a script, a dressing room or a high salary. Curtis said her biggest payoff is the goodies donated to her house from companies such as Kohler, Bobcat and the Tile Shop in exchange for free advertising. What hosts do need is a rapport with audiences. That's where the Midwestern charm comes in handy.
"The talent has been really relatable and really likable," said DIY's Singer. "They come across just like anyone watching."