The
thriving cable channel is the brainchild of former Xtatik
frontline vocalist Peter C. Lewis. In decades past, Lewis
was a member of the San Fernando vocal group Bread Boys,
before recording his first hit Susanna with Atlantik.
For Lewis, Synergy TV is a long-time dream finally become
real. The visionary CEO says he has always believed that
in regards to audio and video, one ought to accompany
the other.
The
word synergy means cooperative action. Drawing on insider
experience as an artiste, combined with eight years as
the owner of the film and television production house,
Bread Boy Entertainment, Lewis’s career demonstrates
some synergy of its own.
With
songs like Tay Lay Lay, Gone Clear and Big Truck fading
with the drunken memories of carnivals gone by, many have
speculated that Lewis has kissed his singing days good-bye.
“No, not really. [I could] never personally do that,”
said Lewis “Every now and then I still run and jump
up and do that kind of thing. You never really lose that.
When de time is right I’ll do de live thing again.”
In the meantime, he describes his relationship with his
former band mates as ‘cool’, sharing that
he recently returned with them from a trip to Jamaica
carnival.
Synergy
has become top priority. Lewis takes an active role in
the operations at the studios on Tragarete Road in Port
of Spain. Whether conceptualizing original show ideas
or hosting Pete’s Picks on-location at home or abroad,
Lewis is a necessary ingredient in the stew.
“To
be honest I been missing the travelling with the band,
but I travelling right now with Synergy. We’re trying
to go a lot of places and do a lot of things,” said
Lewis regarding current cost analyses underway to make
the station available in North America via satellite.
At present, only select Synergy programs are available
in the United States on the Caribbean International Network
in New York City.
One
such program is season two of the wildly popular Synergy
Soca Star. Similar to its US counterpart American Idol,
Soca Star leaves the fate of talented hopefuls up to both
the opinions of the viewing public and the judgment of
industry professionals. The choice to limit the competition
to soca music came easily for Lewis. “Trinidad is
soca. We have soca artists who go out on the circuit.
Is a big ting for us. I mean look at how people making
a living out of it, living comfortable now. Soca is our
ting. I can’t teach nobody how to be a reggae artist
and even though reggae picking up in Trinidad now, it’s
not our thing. Soca is we ting, so we have to deal with
it from that perspective,” said Lewis
Umi Marcano reigned supreme in season two, but Lewis says
the real measure of the program’s success thus far
is derived from season one. “We actually did make
Fireball a star. He came to Toronto recently. That is
the whole trick of it,” said Lewis. “You have
to get these kids into the mainstream and ting. They have
to be able to want it as well,” said Lewis. In June,
the station hopes to create the same kind of buzz over
the next Synergy Super Model.
Beyond developing new talent and beauty, it is clear that
Lewis is committed to helping Caribbean culture as a whole
penetrate the mainstream. Lewis, however, is not the only
one vying for eyes in this pursuit. In 2006, multinational
conglomerate Viacom introduced MTV Tempo to the list of
cable options for Caribbean viewers. In the shadows of
a broadcasting giant, Lewis’s wry optimism glows
brightly.
“Someone
could come with a next channel in the morning and people
would watch that too. You hadda understand that you’re
on cable and people will always want to watch something,”
said Lewis “and competition is good, because it
gets you into thinking and doing the things you have to
do to always be on top. If it affected anything, it’s
just in terms of making us be better at what we do.”
For more information on Synergy TV visit www.synergytv.net