
‘The White Lotus' critiques luxury tourism while also promoting it with partnerships
When it premiered back in 2021, 'The White Lotus' was a sharp class satire aimed at skewering high-end tourism and the elite one-percenters willing to pay $9,000 a night to relax. Written and directed by Mike White, the darkly comic mystery followed the entitled guests and beleaguered employees at a luxurious Maui hotel over the course of an increasingly tense week.
A destination that was supposed to be a refuge from the world's problems instead became a microcosm for them, a place where the class divide and legacy of American imperialism were on vivid display. 'The White Lotus,' which was filmed its first season on location at the Four Seasons in Maui, somehow made an exclusive resort seem like a toxic pressure cooker. Working there was not just soul-crushing, it could even kill you.
Season 2, a bedroom farce set at a gorgeous beachfront resort in Sicily, looked at sex, money and power. Both installments lampooned the wealthy and depicted people dying under tragic circumstances in picturesque locations. And perhaps counterintuitively, both seasons led to a tourism boom in the filming locations. Somehow, a show that sharply critiqued luxury travel also functioned as a glossy advertisement for it.
This contradiction is even more pronounced in Season 3 of 'The White Lotus,' which premiered on HBO last month. Set on the island of Koh Samui in Thailand, the latest installment follows tradition by opening with a dead body. But it also explores new themes, including the clash between Western materialism and Eastern spirituality, particularly Buddhism. This season's fictional White Lotus is known for its wellness program. Guests are encouraged to put away their phones for the duration of their stay and avail themselves of offerings like yoga, meditation and massage.
Hollywood movies and TV shows tend to focus on the more decadent aspects of Thai culture — from the all-night Full Moon Party to sex tourism in Bangkok. The team behind 'The White Lotus' wanted to showcase other sides of the country.
'Obviously that exists here, but it doesn't define Thai culture,' executive producer David Bernad said in a phone interview last month from Bangkok, where the show was having a splashy local premiere attended by its cast, including Thai-born K-pop star Lalisa Manobal, a.k.a. Blackpink's Lisa, who stars as a worker at the hotel. 'What we attempted to do is depict Thailand in an authentic way — the beauty of the people and the culture — in a way that hopefully brings more positive interest back to Thailand.'
The season was made in partnership with the Tourism Authority of Thailand and the Four Seasons, which once again served as a filming location for the series. The government of Thailand also offered generous tax rebates to the production. HBO collaborated with a slew of brands to create an array of 'White Lotus'-inspired products, including $98 scented candles, $48 sunscreen, $325 overnight bags, $725 dresses and $4.50 flavored coffee creamers. Despite its often dark themes and cynical take on humanity, the show clearly has become an aspirational marketing vehicle for brands across the spectrum. Why, exactly, is a show about terrible people behaving badly (and dying) so appealing to these companies?
'I genuinely don't know the answer. It's a very weird thing,' Bernad said. 'It's surreal, knowing that the original construction of the show was so intimate and small. For me, it still feels strange that anyone is paying attention.'
Given what a pop culture juggernaut 'The White Lotus' has become, it is easy to forget it was conceived as a stopgap — a show that could be made quickly and safely in a single, isolated location during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when HBO was in desperate need of fresh programming.
The original plan was to film in Australia, where strict lockdowns helped keep the pandemic in check. When that proved too difficult, Hawaii became the obvious choice. The setting offered stunning natural beauty but also rich themes to explore, particularly American colonialism and the plight of Native Hawaiians.
Similarly, Season 2 was almost set in France but wound up in Sicily after a scouting trip to Taormina, where a tour guide told them the legend behind the decorative moor's head statues found in the region that became a motif in the series. 'That was the kickoff to Mike wanting to write this bedroom farce season about sexual politics,' Bernad said.
Season 3 was always envisioned as an 'exploration of Eastern versus Western philosophy,' Bernad said. But Plan A was to film in Japan, a country where they'd been keen to make something for years. Largely as a courtesy to HBO, White and Bernad also visited Thailand. (White had negative associations with Koh Samui in particular because he'd been sequestered on the island after getting eliminated from 'The Amazing Race.')
But ultimately they were charmed by the country and its people. White also was struck by a fit of inspiration when he came down with bronchitis while in the city of Chiang Mai. He was treated with potent steroids and 'hallucinated the entire season,' Bernad said. 'Honestly, the next day, we were scouting in the van, and he told me about his dream. It's basically what we shot — his steroid-induced dream.'
Relocating the show to Thailand, where more than 90% of the population is Buddhist, 'allowed us to explore Buddhism as a religion and a philosophy,' Bernad said. One of their creative goals was presenting a more nuanced version of Thai culture than is typical of Western media. 'It's usually like 'The Hangover Part II,' exploiting the darker side of Bangkok. But that's not what we set out to do,' he said.
One of the characters this season, Piper Ratliff (Sarah Catherine Hook), is a religious studies major who has dragged her wealthy Southern family to Thailand so that she can interview a Buddhist monk for her thesis. Her spiritual curiosity is baffling to her family, who are skeptical of the many wellness offerings at the hotel.
Koh Samui is 'like detox island,' a place well-heeled tourists come to engage in practices they associate with Buddhism but are often a mishmash of different spiritual traditions, said Brooke Schedneck, a religious studies professor at Rhodes College whose research centers on Buddhism and religious tourism in Thailand. 'Everyone coming off the plane [in Koh Samui] has their yoga mats,' she said. Places like the fictional White Lotus 'draw on this idea of Thailand as a Buddhist place but [offer] wellness options that don't necessarily connect to Buddhism.' (You'd never practice yoga in a Buddhist temple, for instance.)
'I think it's really funny how ... most of them are going to this wellness resort, and then they're like, 'I don't want to do wellness. Why do I have to do this?'' Schedneck said of the hotel's spoiled guests. 'It shows the individualistic, Western mindset of 'I want to do whatever I want.''
Yet the contradiction between East and West may not be as stark as one might assume. Some Westerners wrongly assume that because Buddhism is so prevalent in Thailand, it means people are less interested in material things. 'The idea that Buddhism can encompass and encourage wealth is something that's difficult for people to grasp,' Schedneck said.
For the Four Seasons, 'The White Lotus' has been an undeniably powerful marketing tool — despite the death and dissolute behavior that goes on at the resorts in the series. The formal partnership, launched ahead of Season 3, means the company can use 'White Lotus' IP and do branded activations, including poolside cabanas and viewing parties, at its resorts. The Four Seasons also recently announced a 20-day excursion in which guests will travel aboard the company's private jet to the show's three filming locations.
As part of its marketing research, the company conducts monthly surveys with high-net-worth individuals. The questionnaire now includes questions about 'The White Lotus.' Of the millennials surveyed, 88% were aware of both brands, and 71% said they were highly likely to visit properties featured in the series.
'We know that if we pick the right show, and if the hotel has been featured in the right way, it has a huge business impact, and it's the best PR we can do,' said Marc Speichert, executive vice president and chief commercial officer at the Four Seasons. He is already seeing a surge of online interest in the Koh Samui property: Visits to the site are up nearly 600% over the same time last year.
'Everybody knows that this is obviously a fiction. The White Lotus isn't the Four Seasons, per se. It just uses the hotel as a backdrop. The PR that we're getting is about how incredible the hotel looks,' Speichert said. (He said that characters like Belinda, played by Natasha Rothwell in Seasons 1 and 3, and Valentina, played by Sabrina Impacciatore in Season 2, reflect the kind of people who do work at the Four Seasons.)
Previous seasons of 'The White Lotus' led to a surge of visitors to Maui and Sicily. In Thailand, where tourism is a major industry, an influx would be welcome. The country saw 35 million foreign visitors last year, according to the Tourism Authority of Thailand, which aims to increase that number to 40 million in 2025.
'Thailand acting as the setting of 'The White Lotus' Season 3 allows us to reach a truly global audience, and offers a unique opportunity to showcase Thailand's breathtaking landscapes, rich culinary scene, vibrant culture, natural beauty and, most importantly, the people and the warmth of Thai hospitality,' said Chompu Marusachot, director of the TAT's New York office.
An increase in visitors would be an economic boon for Thailand, but there is also concern about the potential environmental impact more visitors would have on the country, particularly Koh Samui, which already struggles with a shortage of fresh water and an overflowing landfill, according to reports from local residents. Other Hollywood productions offer cautionary tales: 'The Beach,' released in 2000, helped turn Maya Bay on the island of Ko Phi Phi Leh into a major tourist destination that received as many as 5,000 visitors a day. Because of the resulting pollution, an estimated 80% of the coral in the bay was destroyed. Authorities eventually closed the beach for several years and now restrict access. HBO did not provide comment when asked about the environmental impact of filming 'The White Lotus' in Koh Samui.
But for Bernad, making the series in Thailand taught him the importance of treading lightly. 'You have to come in with a humility that you're not imposing your way of production,' he said. 'You're learning from the local crew and producers, and adjusting to their needs.' Good advice for producers — and tourists — alike.
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Los Angeles Times
37 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
A pyramid scheme seemed like a good idea — until one of the Bishop sisters was murdered
Leave it to Megan Abbott to tap into the American zeitgeist and play on her readers' fears like a conductor leading a doomsday orchestra. As high school and college graduates across the country celebrate the completion of a major milestone, they — and their nervous parents — are looking ahead to a future marked by political uncertainty and economic insecurity. In an eerie echo, Abbott begins 'El Dorado Drive,' her 11th novel, with a graduation party at the beginning of the Great Recession. Though the party is not a lavish affair — just a gathering for friends and family in the backyard of a rental property on El Dorado Drive in Grosse Pointe, Mich. — it's more than Pam Bishop can afford, and every one of her guests knows it. Any party, no matter how modest, reminds Pam and her two older sisters, Debra and Harper, of all that they've lost. Born into a world of wealth and privilege thanks to Detroit's automotive-fueled postwar prosperity, the Bishop sisters — along with their parents, their peers and their children — watched it all disappear during the decline of the American automobile industry. Pam's ramshackle rental on El Dorado Drive, though several steps down from the home she grew up in or the mansion she moved into when she got married, is a symbol of the reckless pursuit of wealth that destroys those who can't see through the illusion. 'When you grow up in comfort and it all falls away — and your parents with it — money isn't about money,' Abbott writes. 'It's about security, freedom, independence, a promise of wholeness. All those fantasies, illusions. Money was rarely about money.' For Pam's ex-husband, Doug Sullivan, money is a game to be played in order to get what he wants, and he will stop at nothing to get it. But when Pam is brutally murdered in the opening pages, he emerges as a prime suspect. The first half of the novel backtracks from the discovery of Pam's body to the graduation party nine months prior, when each Bishop sister is struggling with serious financial hardship. Locked in an acrimonious divorce with no end in sight, Pam doesn't know how she's going to pay her son's college tuition or handle her rebellious teenage daughter alone. The oldest sister, Debra, is buried under a mountain of medical bills while her husband suffers through another round of chemotherapy and her son slips away in a cloud of marijuana smoke. Harper, the middle child, struggles to make ends meet while rebounding from a relationship that ended in heartbreak. The solution to their money problems arrives in the form of a secret investment club called the Wheel. Run for and by women who have fallen on hard times, the program is simple but sketchy. It costs $5,000 to join, but once the new members recruit five new participants, they are 'gifted' five times their initial buy-in. If this sounds too good to be true, you have more sense than the Bishop sisters. Such is their desperation they don't quite allow themselves to see this is a fairly basic pyramid scheme that depends on fresh blood — and their bank accounts — to keep the Wheel turning. The novel follows Harper, the outsider in the family, due to the fact that she's never married nor had children. She's not part of the community, either, because she's recently returned to Grosse Pointe after time away to mend her broken heart. The first half of the novel concerns the Bishops' dynamics and their found family in the Wheel, which operates like a combination of a cult and a recovery group for women who've lost everything. At a moment of vulnerability, Harper is buttonholed by an old classmate named Sue. 'It's called the Wheel because it never stops moving,' Sue said. Twice a month, we meet. A different member hosts each time, and the meetings were just parties, really. And at these parties, they took turns giving and receiving gifts to one another. To lift one another up. As women should, as they must.' Behind the rhetoric of sisterhood lurks avarice and greed. When Harper asks Pam if anyone ever left the group after just one turn of the Wheel, Pam — a true believer — can't fathom backing out of the group. 'Why would anyone do that?' she asks. The answer proves to be her undoing, and the second half of 'El Dorado Drive' follows Harper as she tries to solve her sister's murder. It's a classic whodunit story with Harper — who has plenty of secrets of her own — playing the role of the reluctant detective. Despite the book's suggestive title, the landscape is anything but illusory for Abbott, who grew up in Grosse Pointe and spent the first 18 years of her life there. Evoking a rich setting has never been a weakness of Abbott's stories. Her novels have a hyperreal quality and are often populated by characters churning with desires they cannot manage. Abbott is especially adept at rendering the hot, messy inner lives of young people and at making a book's backstory as suspenseful as the narrative engine that drives the plot. In 'El Dorado Drive,' however, the focus is on adults, and the past mostly stays in the past. The result is a novel in which the story is straightforward and the stakes are low. Nevertheless, true to her penchant for shocking violence, Abbott delivers a revolting revelation that sets up a series of twists that propels the story to its inevitable, but no less satisfying, conclusion. But then there's the matter of the Wheel. When we watch a video of people in a boat who are drinking, carrying on and disobeying the rules of the road, we don't feel badly for them when they end up in the water, no matter how spectacular the crash, because they brought it on themselves. The same logic applies to the participants in the Wheel. We can empathize with the calamities that prompted these characters to take such foolish chances, but we would never make those choices ourselves. Or would we? One could argue that our era will be defined not by whether the American dream lives or dies but by the questionable choices of our political leaders and, by extension, the people who elected them. We may not know where we'll be tomorrow, but Abbott knows wagering that the wheel of grift, greed and corruption will keep on turning is always a safe bet. Ruland is the author of the novel 'Make It Stop' and the weekly Substack Message from the Underworld.


Axios
an hour ago
- Axios
New movies and shows this week on Netflix, Max and Disney+
Here's what's new on Netflix, Max, Disney+, Apple TV+, Paramount+ and Prime Video. What we're watching: New seasons of "America's Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders" and "The Gilded Age" and a documentary about the first Black Mardi Gras krewe. " America's Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders" season 2 available now on Netflix The vibe: We'll catch up on season 1 standouts, including Victoria Kalina and Reece Weaver, and get to know new rookie and veteran DCC candidates. Behind the scenes: Season 2 reportedly reveals a big pay bump for the squad. " The Gilded Age" season 3 available Sunday on HBO Max Zoom in: The events of this season take place following the Opera War. During this period, old money families lost cultural control in New York's high society, replaced by rail magnates, financiers and industrialists. The intrigue: This season's guest stars include Phylicia Rashad, Dylan Baker and Bill Camp as J.P. Morgan. " A King Like Me" available now on Netflix State of play: This film follows the first Black Mardi Gras krewe as they work to bring the Zulu parade back to the streets for Mardi Gras Day 2022 in the face of Hurricane Ida, a global pandemic, and the tragic loss of an unprecedented number of members to COVID-19. More titles " Sally" on Disney+ This documentary dives into the personal life of Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, as told by Tam O'Shaughnessy — her partner of 27 years. Available now " The Buccaneers" season 2 on Apple TV+ This period drama picks up as Nan St. George (now a duchess) and her American friends are firmly entrenched in British society and fighting to be heard. They navigate love triangles, scandals, births and deaths. Available now " The Waterfront" on Netflix "Dawson's Creek" creator Kevin Williamson brings another drama to coastal North Carolina in this series about a family going to great lengths to save their struggling fishing company. Available now " Frozen: The Hit Broadway Musical" on Disney+ " Trainwreck: Mayor of Mayhem" on Netflix This chapter of Netflix's "Trainwreck" series follows the rise and scandalous fall of former Toronto mayor Rob Ford. Available now " Noah's Arc: The Movie" on Paramount+ with Showtime The original cast of " Noah's Arc" will reprise their roles in this film featuring guest stars including Jasmine Guy, T.C. Carson and Eva Marcille. Available Friday " Somebody Feed Phil" season 8 on Netflix "Everybody Loves Raymond" creator and foodie Phil Rosenthal returns to explore culinary scenes in cities including Amsterdam, Sydney, Manila, Las Vegas and Boston. Available now " We Were Liars" on Prime Video This new young adult mystery thriller is based on the New York Times bestseller of the same name by E. Lockhart. Available now " Surviving Ohio State" on HBO Max Ohio State University's sexual abuse scandal is the focus of this documentary, which explores how former campus physician Richard Strauss abused hundreds of male athletes over two decades. Available now

Miami Herald
an hour ago
- Miami Herald
It all began in Miami for TV genius Desi Arnaz. Then he made it big with Lucy
Desi Arnaz is returning to Miami as the focal point of a new book. Long before he loved Lucy, Arnaz loved Miami. The city and the budding celebrity fueled one another. 'Desi's time in Miami is where he became a professional musician, honing his skills with audiences and creating a sensation with the conga,' author Todd S. Purdum said in an email to the Miami Herald while traveling on his book tour. 'It was a crucial stop on his journey to stardom in the days when Miami Beach featured the top stars of show business, who were impressed by Desi's charisma and appeal. He and his parents were grateful for the foothold that Miami gave them to pursue the American dream.' Purdum will read selections from his new book, 'Desi Arnaz: The Man Who Invented Television,' Saturday evening, June 21, at Books & Books in Coral Gables. The book is a tribute to a man who started his entertainment life in Miami. He died in 1986. Arnaz's TV vision The book's title isn't hyperbole. Sure, television existed before 'I Love Lucy,' the sitcom Arnaz starred in with his wife, Lucille Ball and which debuted on CBS on Oct. 15, 1951. But Arnaz's vision shaped the way we watch TV today. Do you enjoy streaming syndicated reruns of 'I Love Lucy' as well as 'Law and Order,' 'Friends' and 'Star Trek?' Thank Arnaz. Arnaz and Ball's production company, Desilu, formed during their 20-year marriage and 'I Love Lucy' partnership, was behind that 1960s 'Star Trek' TV show, too, a sci-fi staple that turned into a television and film franchise. Just another of the duo's behind-the-scenes achievements. 'He was a proud yet simple man with chispa, spark. He never forgot where he came from even as he built a studio empire in Hollywood and changed forever the way television sitcoms are created,' former Miami Herald Editorial Board leader Myriam Marquez wrote in a column in 2010. Arnaz's band life in the 1930s, '40s and '50s was the basis for the musical 'Babalu' that was playing at downtown Miami's Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts at the time. 'To this day, most sitcoms are shot with three cameras and before a live audience using video. He started with film until video was developed. Arnaz's technique opened the way for TV reruns and syndication,' Marquez wrote. Leading conga lines 'Babalu' took its title from Arnaz's signature tune, a joyous Afro-Cuban song he performed as host and music guest of the Feb. 21, 1976, episode of 'Saturday Night Live' during its first season. Arnaz, at 58 and starting the last decade of his life, closed that show by leading the 'SNL' cast on a conga line through the NBC studio in New York. This exuberant televised live showcase of the conga line with the late night 'SNL' Not Ready for Prime Time Players cast came a decade before Gloria Estefan's 'Conga' English-language breakthrough. Nearly 50 years ago, that 'SNL' performance was a reprise of the way Arnaz, in his struggling musician days, introduced the conga line to the U.S. direct from Miami Beach in 1937. He had done so from the stage of the Park Avenue Restaurant on the corner of Collins Avenue and 23rd Street, once a main artery of Miami Beach's entertainment scene. He initially dubbed his conga line his 'Dance of Desperation.' In October 2024, city of Miami Beach officials installed a permanent marker honoring Arnaz at Collins Park near where the Park Avenue stood. Today, the site of that former restaurant-entertainment venue at 2200 Liberty Ave. is the Miami City Ballet's headquarters. You can stream that 'SNL' episode featuring Arnaz on Peacock because of his original vision to film 'I Love Lucy' with multiple cameras, giving studios the opportunity to share classic TV moments for generations to come. Miami's blueprint Even that inspired vision could be traced to the actor-musician's earliest days in Miami and Miami Beach. Arnaz simply had an eye for a room and how to maximize the space for aesthetic as well as monetary purposes. From the 'Desi Arnaz' book: '[H]is father had joined some other Cuban exiles in starting a business to import Mexican tile — roof tiles, bath tiles, kitchen tiles. The Pan American Importing and Exporting Company was capitalized with all of $500 and was operating in a small building on Third Street southwest in Miami. Desi suggested to his father that they close off a portion of the warehouse as living quarters and save the $5 a week they had been paying the boardinghouse. Purdum's 'Desi Arnaz: The Man Who Changed Television' recounts Arnaz's career, starting with his arrival in Miami from Cuba in 1933 with his father, Desiderio Sr. The elder Arnaz had been Santiago's youngest mayor and a member of the Cuban House of Representatives before Fulgencio Batista's first coup. Arnaz's maternal grandfather, Alberto de Acha, was an executive at rum producer Bacardi & Co. The man born Desiderio Alberto Arnaz y de Acha III in Santiago de Cuba on March 2, 1917, arrived penniless in Miami before his 17th birthday. He initially made a living in the U.S. cleaning canary cages. In the fall of 1936, he enrolled at Miami Beach's St. Patrick Parish School on Garden Avenue and completed his formal education at Miami Senior High School. In Cuba, Arnaz once envisioned a law career. After school at Miami High, Arnaz reinvented himself as a self-taught musician in Miami Beach. Without that South Florida start, it's likely there would have been no Lucy to love. Arnaz's father remained in Miami until his death in 1973. After 'I Love Lucy' ended in 1960, Arnaz continued his career in production and performing from a base in California. But he helped support relatives who lived in Miami. 'He did make a number of emotional return visits — to perform or celebrate the first Carnaval — and he always retained a warm affection for Miami and the friendships and formative experiences he had there,' Purdum said. Arnaz was the first king of Carnaval Miami in 1982. He played his music with his children Lucie and Desi Jr. at that inaugural event before a crowd of 35,000 on Southwest Eighth Street. Miami in the 1930s 'It's easy to forget that when Desi and his father arrived in Miami, it was 25 years before the mass exodus of Cubans after Fidel Castro's revolution,' said Mindy Marqués Gonzalez, editor of 'Desi Arnaz: The Man Who Invented Television' and a vice president at publisher Simon & Schuster. 'The main Cuban emigre community was in Tampa and Miami was still a sleepy southern town. They would have been one of the few Cubans here. In some ways, Desi and his father were trailblazers for the thousands of Cubans who would follow and transform the city into a multicultural mecca,' said Marqués, a former Miami Herald executive editor. This earlier era of Miami was where Arnaz and a school chum, Sonny Capone (son of the gangster, Al, who had lived on Miami Beach's Palm Island), would get together after class to sing and play the bongo drums. Arnaz parlayed his talents to a spot in a rumba group called the Siboney Septet, named for the seaside Cuban town just outside Santiago, that was playing at Miami Beach's original Roney Plaza on Collins Avenue. For $39 a week. Arnaz's Latin rhythm skills on the conga drums and infectious stage mannerisms came to the attention of popular band leader Xavier Cugat. 'Miami was the formative stage of Desi's new life in America after Cuba,' Marqués said. 'It's here that he picked up a $5 guitar at a pawn shop and started playing again, like he did in Cuba. And that led to his being 'discovered' by Xavier Cugat, which led to everything else.' That introduction to Cugat, and joining his orchestra for six months, led to Arnaz's musical career at New York clubs and his winter return engagements with his own band at Miami Beach entertainment venues like La Conga on 23rd Street. Thanks in part to Arnaz's musical chops and other musicians he played alongside, the area came to be known by locals and music fans as a 'corner of Havana in Miami Beach,' Purdum reported in his book. 'Desi left his mark, without ever denying who he was,' Myriam Marquez, the Herald's former opinion editor, wrote in her 2010 column. 'How hard must it have been 75 years ago in a country that still had segregated public facilities and often looked at 'foreigners' with suspicion. I recall his writing about his days on the tour bus heading from one gig to another, how he would hang out with his Black musician friends, even when promoters weren't too thrilled about that.' Marrying Lucy Arnaz met Lucille Ball on the set of a 1940 film, 'Too Many Girls,' in which they both had roles. The New York-born redhead and the Cuban Miami music maverick wed that year. 'Today, this kind of marriage in Miami is commonplace. It was such a precursor of what was to come in this community,' Miami filmmaker Joe Cardona said in a 2001 interview with the Herald on the 50th anniversary of 'I Love Lucy.' 'To Cubans in South Florida, this was kind of like looking into a crystal ball,' Cardona said. 'Here was a show that actually featured somebody who sounded like my father. Somebody who looked like my uncle. Somebody my brother could grow up to be,' wrote former Herald columnist Ana Veciana Suarez in 2001. Within a decade of their marriage, the world would come to consider the Ball-Arnaz couple family, a relationship that outlasted their marriage, their professional union, Arnaz's post 'Lucy' career, and their lives. Arnaz died of lung cancer at age 69 in 1986. Smoking Purdum recounts in his book, 'Desi Arnaz: The Man Who Invented Television,' how, upon arrival from Cuba by ferryboat to Key West in the early 1930s, father and teenage son were driven to their first home in Miami. 'On the bus ride to Miami, the mayor made a gesture that implied recognition of how fast Desi had grown up since they'd last met: He offered his son a cigarette,' Purdum wrote. Arnaz, like so many actors of the time, smoked on camera. His habit formed the basis for a sketch on the 1976 'Saturday Night Live' episode he hosted. Arnaz played an acupuncturist treating an ailing patient portrayed by John Belushi. But not 'Chinese acupuncture with needles' Arnaz warns the wary Belushi. 'Cuban acupuncture, with cigars.' When Arnaz died at his California home, after visits from his family, including ex-wife Ball, and with their daughter Lucie at his bedside, the Miami Herald's obituary quoted the musician-actor's doctor. 'He died of lung cancer. It was from smoking those Cuban cigars — that's the truth.' Remembering 'Ricky' Actress and singer Lucie Arnaz said of her father's lifelong work ethic in a 2006 interview: 'He had a lot of moxie and integrity because he had to keep on going. He had to start over, and he had to build everything again. He was fearless.' Ball, in a 1983 interview with Ladies Home Journal six years before she died in 1989 at 77 after heart surgery, said of her ex-husband: Desi 'was much smarter than anyone thought. He was a great showman, a great businessman, a fantastic entrepreneur, and I loved watching the executives finding that out.' In his 1976 autobiography, 'A Book,' that he plugged on 'SNL,' Arnaz recalled his 'great days in Miami Beach.' Basketball. Hot dogs. Beach picnics. On one of his last visits to Miami in 1982, to take his crown as king of the first Carnaval Miami, he told Herald reporters, 'I am returning to my first place — Miami. I started here.' If you go What: An Evening with Todd S. Purdum and moderator Carlos Frias discussing Purdum's book, 'Desi Arnaz: The Man Who Invented Television.' When: 7 p.m. Saturday, June 21. Where: Books & Books, 265 Aragon Ave., Coral Gables. Cost: Free. You can buy the book at the event. Or buy tickets in advance and get one copy of the book for $29.99 plus tax.