According to Frost – an obsessive Strat-O-Matic player as a child – his love of baseball began as early as he can remember.

“I was born in Brooklyn, moved to Los Angeles the same year the Dodgers did, grew up as they were building Dodger Stadium within walking distance of my home, so baseball has been a part of my life like the air that I breathe,” Frost said. “And I’ve had the good fortune of always being in a city with a good team. We moved to Minneapolis in the late ‘60s when the Twins were fantastic, I went to college in Pittsburgh in the early ’70s when they were at their peak, I moved back to L.A. in ’74 when the Dodgers were great again, so I’ve been fortunate to always have interesting teams to follow.”

As for Twin Peaks, Frost looks back fondly on those years when he was part of an evolving television landscape.

“We had 32 hours back in 1991-92, and with my partner David Lynch we kind of blew open that genre of the nighttime soap and took it in a whole other direction,” Frost said. “A lot of people always look back at Twin Peaks and say that was the start of this explosion we’ve had in good television drama, but we did it in a time when there were still only three networks. The challenge for us is to try and come back and raise the bar above what we did the last time. We’re coming back with season three of Twin Peaks after a 25-year absence. We’ve finished the scripts, we start production in September, and that will be coming out on Showtime sometime in 2017.”