If you're still carping about our frigid January weather, put yourselves in the boots of the American dreamers who battled avalanches, rapids, wolves, con men, typhus and frostbite in the Yukon near the start of the 20th century, all on the slim chance they'd strike gold.
The chances for Discovery Channel to hit the jackpot with "Klondike," its first scripted project, are much rosier. Historical miniseries have been game-changers for such networks as the History Channel ("Hatfields & McCoys") and Reelz ("The Kennedys"). The story is an ideal companion piece to Discovery's reality series "Gold Rush," often the most popular show on all of Friday-night TV among men ages 18-49.
"Discovery is about man's relationship to nature, and sometimes that's a beautiful relationship and sometimes that's an agonizing relationship," said Delores Gavin, the network's executive vice president of production and development.
In the case of "Klondike," that relationship is mostly agonizing.
Richard Madden ("Game of Thrones") plays a recent college grad who, with his best friend, heads north to seek his fortune in Dawson City, a lawless town that makes HBO's "Deadwood" look like Palm Springs.
There, the two discover a way of life so scrappy that men will battle to near-death over a couple slabs of wood while the 1-percenters show utter disregard for the shivering masses. It doesn't take much of a leap to draw parallels to our modern-day economic gap.
"I see this just as another piece of American madness," said Sam Shepard, who plays a kindhearted priest trying to bring God to a godless society. "It's another chunk of the insanity that we carry around with us, regardless of whether we're involved in technology or if we're involved in trapping beavers."
To capture the raw tone of the era, director Simon Cellan Jones eschewed computer-generated effects and had his actors get their feet wet — sometimes literally. A pivotal scene had Madden falling out of a raft and barreling down freezing-cold rapids.