Any news on Cawley's Buck Rogers and Wild Wild West remakes?

Discussion in 'Fan Productions' started by dayxday1000, Jul 13, 2011.

  1. Captain Robert April

    Captain Robert April Vice Admiral Admiral

  2. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    F___ Gil Gerard I suspected.

    But Erin Gray also seems to concur in that article.
     
  3. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    IIRC, Gray and Gerard filmed their scene and were done.
     
  4. Captain Robert April

    Captain Robert April Vice Admiral Admiral

    Well, Gerard has never been shy about voicing his opinions about a given production. Just check out his interviews in Starlog and what a pack of idiots were working on that Buck Rogers.
     
  5. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    In fiction he'd be called an unreliable narrator, to be polite.
     
  6. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    Yes yes, Gil Gerard blah blah, but Erin Gray also said as much. Are we ignoring her because of him?
     
  7. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    No. I merely note that to the best of my knowledge neither of them were involved in the production in any ongoing way and may not in fact know what's going on it with it.
     
  8. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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  9. Captain Robert April

    Captain Robert April Vice Admiral Admiral

    They need to go the old fashioned route, and recruit investors.
     
  10. JimTheBuilder

    JimTheBuilder Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    ...or sponsors.
     
  11. Captain Robert April

    Captain Robert April Vice Admiral Admiral

  12. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    You need up-front capital investment to make the show. Therein lies the trick. Sponsors generally pay to have the advertising alongside a program. They don't usually pay up-front so you can make it.
     
  13. stonester1

    stonester1 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Gotta wonder if the above poster speaks of the pompatus of love....
     
  14. Captain Robert April

    Captain Robert April Vice Admiral Admiral

    He's a joker, he's a smoker, he's a midnight toker...
     
  15. chardman

    chardman Vice Admiral In Memoriam

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    They do when it comes to daytime broadcast television. Virtually every program aired during the daytime, be it a talk show, a game show, or a soap opera, declares at some point: "The following companies or individuals have provided production assistance (and/or prizes), in exchange for the following promotional consideration" which is followed by a flurry of very short bundled ads. In other words, these folks collectively paid most or all of a show's production costs up front, with the understanding that they'd all get these brief bundled advertisements in return. Ads that are actually a part of the show, and will air every time this episode airs, independent of what the network or local broadcaster would normally charge for the equivalent commercial time.
     
  16. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    Daytime TV isn't a business I know as well as some other parts of the TV business, but the quote you post doesn't say anything about paying up-front for the production. Prizes are provided when someone wins, not before the show is made. Production assistance sounds like providing prizes to show on the set, items to appear in the production, etc., not up-front capital investment to build sets, hire crew, etc. Please feel free to educate me if you have some references to how this works that I'm unaware of.
     
  17. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    You guys are about 38 years late. Where humor is concerned, better never than late.

    BTW, the "Maurice" in that song is a reference to the song "Enter Maurice" on an even earlier album.
     
  18. chardman

    chardman Vice Admiral In Memoriam

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    No, "Production Assistance" sounds like they provide assistance in the production itself, which is exactly what it usually refers to. I wish I could provide some documentation to back this up. but this is one of those things that the industry doesn't like to share, and tends to be a bit hush-hush about. (I know about it because of a friend who used to work for Tribune Broadcasting, which is one of the nation's leading syndicators).

    Some of the ins and outs of it can be found in the Promotional Consideration Rule of the FCC (Sections 508/908). You might be able to find this online, though I just tried a quick search, and came up dry. (The FCC online document database and search engine really SUCKS!) I know a pdf of it is available somewhere online (or at least used to be) because I used to have a copy of it which I know I downloaded from a .gov website of some kind.

    Anyhow...

    The kind of bundled advertising used by daytime broadcast shows often pays for most all of the production costs of a show, entirely up front. In the case of syndicated shows (and syndication is still very prevalent in daytime TV) this permits the producers of a show to sell their show to broadcasters at little or no cost, thereby assuring wide market coverage, not only for their show, but for the sponsors who paid for the bundled advertising within it. The bigger the market distribution, the more the bundled "Production Assistance ads" are worth. And because these ads are contained in the body of the program itself, it doesn't use up any of the usual ad breaks for local broadcasters to exploit.

    I mean, you don't think that most of those syndicated daytime talk shows are on the air because they're all that popular, do you? They're on the air because they're dirt cheap to local broadcasters, and even though they don't command very good ad rate prices for a broadcaster to exploit, they're so cheap that those smaller ad rates often generate much higher overall profits for the broadcasters than the pricey syndicated reruns of more popular network shows like "Friends" or "Everybody Loves Raymond". Heck, even older syndicated mainstays like "Afl" and "Facts of Life" are still pretty expensive compared to ultra inexpensive fare like "Judge Joe Brown" and "The Wendy Williams Show".
     
    Last edited: Sep 26, 2011
  19. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    :lol: :techman:

    Great. Now if we could explain "pompatus..."
     
  20. GSchnitzer

    GSchnitzer Co-Executive Producer In Memoriam

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    Pompatus would appear to be a lyric from *another* much older song, misheard by Steve Miller. The word from that older song "The Letter" written and sung by the late Vernon Green, is puppetutes--women who are half puppet and half prostitute. Green was discussing the advanatages of having "puppetutes of love."

    More at Cecil Adams' column The Straight Dope here:

    http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/972/in-steve-millers-the-joker-what-is-the-pompatus-of-love