Can we please not pick on individual writers before we see what their final output for this new series is?
Many people don't like "Batman & Robin". But those people forget one thing: This movie was exactly what the producers intended it to be at the time. It was aimed at children, had a lighter tone (still dark, but more colorfull), got more poeple (kids) into the whole "Batman"-mythos, sold a whole lot of toys, and was quite successfull at the box office (and people forget: successfull with critics at the time). And characterwise it is more in line with the source material than for example Murder-Battfleck. Not in tone and visually though - but that's not the job of a writer.
Goldsman is a writer for hire. He writes stuff. Fast. And consistent. That's the driving force for tv-shows. You cannot have some super artsy-indie writer that arguibly has a more independant vision but needs a year to dinish a draft. That's what indie-movies are for. A tv-show needs guys that got told an idea and plot for a single episode, and then a few days deliver a 60-pages draft that fits into the grander scheme. There's nothing better than a "writer for hire" for this job.
Many people don't like "Batman & Robin". But those people forget one thing: This movie was exactly what the producers intended it to be at the time. It was aimed at children, had a lighter tone (still dark, but more colorfull), got more poeple (kids) into the whole "Batman"-mythos, sold a whole lot of toys, and was quite successfull at the box office (and people forget: successfull with critics at the time). And characterwise it is more in line with the source material than for example Murder-Battfleck. Not in tone and visually though - but that's not the job of a writer.
Goldsman is a writer for hire. He writes stuff. Fast. And consistent. That's the driving force for tv-shows. You cannot have some super artsy-indie writer that arguibly has a more independant vision but needs a year to dinish a draft. That's what indie-movies are for. A tv-show needs guys that got told an idea and plot for a single episode, and then a few days deliver a 60-pages draft that fits into the grander scheme. There's nothing better than a "writer for hire" for this job.