Creators of RINGER Set Up Another Thriller Series

This time, RINGER creators Nichole Snyder and Eric Charmelo are trying to work the magic at NBC, which now must have about 50 years of pilots in some form of development. Which does kind of stack the odds against each project making it on air. So our suggestion to everybody reading this is, no matter how cool this new show may sound, don’t get too attached.

Snyder & Charmelo, writers not actors (you can tell by their posture)

‘Ringer’ Creators Developing Gothic Thriller for NBC – by Lesley Goldberg

Three months after The CW canceled its Sarah Michelle Gellar drama Ringer, creators Nicole Snyder and Eric Charmelo have sold another thriller — to NBC read article

HENCH Comic Book Coming to NBC

So the good news, according to Deadline.Com and various other sources, is that HENCH, the comic by Adam Beechen and Manny Bello about a dood who works as a henchman for various supervillains is being developed for TV.

The not so good news, however, is that it’s being developed for NBC by the same people who completely screwed up the U.S. version of PRIME SUSPECT last season. read article

DOCTOR WHO Returns September 1

Only 17 more days till what may not be the most important thing to be happening in the multiverse but definitely is The Big Kahuna of Events in TVWriter™’s corner of our trans-dimensional reality:

DOCTOR WHO, Series 7 (Season 7 in the U.S.), Episode 1, ASYLUM OF THE DALEKS, will be on BBC America at 9 pm Eastern/Pacific time. read article

Kathy sees THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN

Just your average ordinary superhero

Full disclosure—I’m not a fan of Spider-man. Not because I’m arachnophobic.  I don’t mind spiders at all. Spider-man simply wasn’t one of my go-to superheroes. You know how you don’t like something just because? That would be me and Spider-man.

Now I’m a little more partial to the crawly dude since I saw THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN. Overall I found the movie enjoyable. The cast was good, the CGI wasn’t overwhelming or obvious, and as with all Marvel movies of late, the sequel set-up was there and not too ham-fisted. I might even watch this movie again, which I can’t say about too many other films.

And yet, there are a few nits to pick. The main one is the issue of backstory, aka the writer’s bane. How much previous information is too much? How to decide what is germane to the story you’re trying to tell? If you leave anything out, will the audience be confused? If you add more than you need, will the audience be bored? read article

munchman Sees MAD MEN

How dare you suggest this show is about exploitation? It’s really about…breasts.

Yahoo!

I love this show!

It’s all about futility. Meaninglessness. Failure. read article