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Veronica Mars Began As A Story About A Boy Detective In A Texas High School





The mystery drama “Veronica Mars” is known for putting actress Kristen Bell on the map — but, believe it or not, the lead character wasn’t always a girl named Veronica. Creator Rob Thomas told Huffington Post in March 2014 that he originally conceived the show’s story with a teenage boy detective in the lead. The character was going to be a student at a ritzy school in the Austin, Texas suburbs called Westlake High School, based on Thomas’ actual adolescence at the same school.

Thomas ultimately developed “Veronica Mars” as a book idea and a TV pilot before settling on producing the concept for television, and zeroing in on what actually excited him about writing it. “What was thematically interesting to me after teaching high school for years, was this generation of information overloaded media savvy jaded-before-their-time teenagers,” Thomas explained to the outlet. “I was interested in a story about loss of innocence.” Focusing on innocence led him to change the show’s lead character to a teenage girl. “A story about loss of innocence to me became more powerful with a female protagonist,” he noted. “It hurt more.”

Creator Rob Thomas found the emotional core of Veronica Mars

Before he switched the lead of “Veronica Mars” to a girl and cast Kristen Bell in one of her best roles, creator Rob Thomas took even more inspiration from his teenage years — where he attended a wealthy high school he wasn’t actually zoned for, but went anyway because his father was the vice principal. Instead of the show’s original teen boy lead being the son of the school VP, the early version was the son of the local sheriff. 

But once the creator zeroed in on his new protagonist, he went on to write the show’s pilot script with nothing in mind except the story he wanted to tell and the strong young woman who would lead the way. “I decided going in, I’m just going to write this script how I want it to be, and I’m not going to think about networks, I’m not going to think about standards and practices,” Thomas told Nylon in July 2019. “I’m just going to write the script that I want to without any studio or network guiding me.” In finding the key to the detective show’s emotional core, Thomas’ script blossomed into the iconic cult series it is known to be today.



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