NEW YORK — The lapels are wide, ''Disco Inferno'' is blasting on the dance floor and lines and lines of nose candy are on offer in the new intriguing Miami-based series ''Hotel Cocaine.''
The eight-episode romp on MGM+ centers on a real-life hotel at the beginning of the war on drugs that had a private nightclub known as a notorious hangout for show business types, CIA undercover agents and drug kingpins.
Creator and showrunner Chris Brancato, the creator of ''Narcos'' and ''Godfather of Harlem,'' explains the show using another hot hangout with war looming: "I describe it as ‘Casablanca' on cocaine."
''Hotel Cocaine,'' set in 1978, centers on the hotel's general manager, Roman Compte (played by Danny Pino), a Cuban expatriate who caters to high-end hotel patrons. He slowly gets sucked into a life of crime trying to protect his daughter from unsavory federal agents on one side, and his equally unsavory estranged brother, a mobster, on the other.
''This show has become about many things. It's about immigration to this country and trying to achieve the American dream. It's also about a man caught in a perilous moral quandary of trying to save his daughter at the risk of betraying his brother from whom he's estranged.''
Leavening the darkness is plenty of humor, mocking the era's emphasis on personal growth through psychedelics and its partying excess. The scripts also have fun portraying real celebrities, like John Lennon, Liza Minnelli, John Bonham, Hunter Thompson and Rick James.
Brancato says he created a careful balance between a ''meat and potatoes drug show'' and comedy. ''I wanted there to be a sense of humor to what is otherwise could be a kind of dark and very dreary subject matter,'' he says.
The show also co-stars Yul Vazquez, Michael Chiklis and Mark Feuerstein. It was shot in the Dominican Republic, which ''looks more like Miami of the '70s than Miami now,'' says Brancato.