Idol emcee Ben Mulroney '97
While his friends dreamed of landing jobs after graduation on
Wall Street or at high-powered law firms, Ben Mulroney had different
aspirations. "I remember saying, wouldn't it be great if I
got a job that would pay me to watch TV," says Mulroney. "And
here," he adds, with a laugh, "I've done just that."
At age thirty, Mulroney has become one of the most recognized TV
personalities in his native Canada. He is best known as the affable
host of Canadian Idol, the Canadian counterpart of the popular
reality show American Idol. He also co-hosts the entertainment-news
magazine eTalk Daily, where he delivers the latest news in movies,
television, and music and covers glitzy red-carpet events like
the Academy Awards.
Mulroney's workday is hardly the typical nine-to-five. On any given
day he could start with a rehearsal for Canadian Idol, move on
to a special press screening of a new movie, field questions from
reporters at a press junket for eTalk Daily, and then cover a VIP
function for his network. "I am never in the same place, doing
the same thing, wearing the same thing."
Beyond his television gigs, Mulroney has branched out by writing
occasionally for TV Guide Canada and the Toronto Sun, serving as
a guest host for a morning radio show, and even making his big
screen debut as, what else, an entertainment reporter in the action
movie Fantastic Four.
Mulroney says that his career evolved haphazardly. After graduating
from Duke with a major in history, he enrolled in law school at
Quebec City's UniversitÈ Laval. For those who knew his father,
Brian Mulroney, the eighteenth Prime Minister of Canada, the younger
Mulroney's decision to pursue a law degree seemed a natural next
step.
Yet, in spite of his political roots, he says he soon realized
that law school was the wrong fit for him. "I thought I was
destined to be the world's worst lawyer."
Then, in 2000, Mulroney took his father's place at a national Tory
convention, where he conducted live interviews on television. His
ease on camera caught the attention of Canada's CTV television
network, which offered him a job as a correspondent for a little-watched
show on the network's TalkTV channel. He seized the opportunity
and, within a few years, became the face of entertainment news
at CTV.
Mulroney acknowledges that his famous last name has helped lead
to his TV success: "You know, the name has got a cachet, and
it's got a curiosity factor. If they liked my dad, they will tune
in. If they hated my dad, they are even more likely to tune in." But
he is quick to point out that his network would not keep extending
his contract if he couldn't carry his own weight.
Mulroney says he gets particular satisfaction out of helping to
write the scripts for his shows and assisting in editing decisions.
Ultimately, he hopes to parlay these interests into writing and
producing his own television series. He even has an idea for a
reality TV show that would present a different side of his famous
parents.
"Everyone has a reality show they want to do," he says. "Hey,
I figure if Paris Hilton and her mother can both have reality shows,
no idea is too stupid."
--Malina Brown
Brown
is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in The Washington
Post and The Philadelphia Inquirer. |