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sf/f TV development news - 2013

Here's some news that has broader implications for genre TV and TV as a whole. The beginning of the end for ad-supported TV? (AKA, Firefly's revenge.)

This would be a nuclear option for News Corp, which owns 27 TV stations and serves dozens of affiliates. But the company COO’s threat to take Fox off the public airwaves — made today at the NAB annual confab in Las Vegas — suggests how deeply concerned broadcast moguls are about the possibility that they might lose their legal battle against Aereo, and how much that could undermine their ability to extract retransmission consent fees from cable and satellite providers.

...

Bernstein Research analyst Todd Juenger says that the economics of ditching local TV are “seductive.” Fox theoretically could benefit by allowing the FCC to auction off its stations’ airwave spectrum to wireless broadband providers; the agency says it will share proceeds with stations that participate.

Aereo or no aereo, the writing is on the wall. Ad-supported TV is losing its struggle to compete with cable and streaming, which have the advantage of subscription revenues and the luxury of catering to niche tastes. Firefly was the future, ya dopes! :D

Maybe he's just crying and bluffing now, but this isn't the end of the story.
 
Looks like Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell has found co-pro partners and is going in to production this summer as a 7 part mini-series. Funding between BBC, BBC America, Screen Yorkshire and Space, with filming taking part in Canada and Yorkshire.
http://www.virtualpressoffice.com/p...eToDisableHistory=Y&menuName=Home&sId=&sInfo=

JONATHAN STRANGE & MR NORRELL is going into pre-production this month with a world class production team and international co-producers in place, brokered by FAR MOOR MEDIA. The carefully constructed team now in place are: ENDEMOL WORLDWIDE DISTRIBUTION, BBC AMERICA, Bell Media's SPACE and SCREEN YORKSHIRE, along with production companies CUBA PICTURES, FEEL FILMS,Quebec'sCITÉ AMÉRIQUE and co-production specialist FAR MOOR. The seven part series for BBC ONE is based on the bestselling novel by Susanna Clarke, set during the Napoleonic Wars in an England where magic once existed and is about to return.
In the growing international industry of high end scripted drama, FAR MOOR have secured the major international co-production team to enable JONATHAN STRANGE & MR NORRELL to have the best possible financial grounding for a production worldwide.
Peter Harness (Wallander starring Kenneth Brannagh; Is Anybody There? starring Michael Caine and David Morrissey) is adapting all seven episodes of JONATHAN STRANGE & MR NORRELL.
Nick Marston CEO of Cuba Pictures says: "The production has now developed into a seven part series and we are delighted that scriptwriter Peter Harness is well on the way to completing all seven hours. He has just delivered episode five and, with Toby Haynes on board to direct, we are in an excellent position to begin pre-production later this month, with production due to start filming in late summer."
 
Yeah, because Lost and Fringe were canceled after half a season. Oh wait, they weren't. And of course JJ's involvement in both was pretty limited after the initial launches.
I'm not even sure how involved he is with Revolution. As far as I know Supernatural creator Eric Kripke is the showrunner, and I don't think I've really heard JJ Abrams mentioned very much anymore. In fact I don't know if he's ever really been that involved in the story or world building, pretty much everything I've read discussing them seems to indicate it is Kripke coming up with the majority of the stuff.
Other than the beginning of Lost, I don't think he's been very involved with the creative aspects of any of the show's he's produced the last few seasons.

The thing is, JJ is one of those rare people who can assemble a great team, express his "vision", and establish the mechanism(s) to translate that vision without having to micro-manage it like, say, J. Michael did on Babylon 5.
 
^Although these days, a lot of what Bad Robot does is to help get other people's visions on the air. Person of Interest is Jonathan Nolan's show top to bottom, Revolution is Eric Kripke's. Abrams has become an executive who bankrolls and produces other people's creations alongside making his own -- much like Spielberg before him. (I remember that back in the '80s, a lot of people assumed that Gremlins and Back to the Future and Young Sherlock Holmes were Spielberg films, because Spielberg's name was more familiar at the time than Joe Dante's or Robert Zemeckis's or Barry Levinson's, and when people saw him listed as executive producer, they just assumed he was the director/auteur as well -- although of course it didn't help that the advertising played up Spielberg's name to get people into the theater. Now much the same thing seems to be happening with Abrams.)
 
Abrams' involvement in a project means nothing to me. I loved Lost, didn't give a flip about Alcatraz, don't see what the two had in common other than being generally genre and Jorge Garcia. Person of Interest is even further afield, it's very much a CBS show, therefore not to my taste. Ditto for his movies, love one, hate the next one, etc.

He's not a brand-name in the sense that you can tell that his name = yes it will be great or no it will suck. So his involvement with Inhuman or Human or whatever they're calling it doesn't make any difference. But I do like the premise and the cast.
 
He's a hack. 'Inhuman' is 'Questor'. He'd like to be Roddenberry. Who wouldn't and doesn't think they are already. BTW, Nolan is another thieving hack who thinks he's more than a good director too. OTOH, Scorcese is a great writer. No kidding.
 
While he has had a few misses for me, mainly Alcatraz and Person of Interest, I've enjoyed enough stuff Abrams has been involved with, that I'll at least try anything with his name on it. I know he isn't that involved with most of the stuff he's producing, but he seems to choose to put his name and behind stuff that I enjoy. So as long as this trend continues I'll gladly continue to pay to see his movies and watch his TV shows.
Lost, Fringe, and Alias are some of my favorite TV shows.
I've really enjoyed Revolution.
His Star Trek movie is one of my favorite movies, and I really enjoyed his MI movies, Cloverfield, and Super 8.
 
He's a hack. 'Inhuman' is 'Questor'. He'd like to be Roddenberry. Who wouldn't and doesn't think they are already. BTW, Nolan is another thieving hack who thinks he's more than a good director too. OTOH, Scorcese is a great writer. No kidding.
Sounds more like Yoyo and Holmes than Questor. Unless there's a show called Questor that's about an android cop.
 
'Inhuman' is 'Questor'.
Sounds more like Yoyo and Holmes than Questor. Unless there's a show called Questor that's about an android cop.

The show you're thinking of was called Holmes and Yoyo, and it was just one of multiple "human cop with android partner" series in TV history. There was also the more serious Future Cop a year later, and in 1992 there was the Yancy Butler series Mann & Machine (co-created by Law and Order's Dick Wolf), which I'd think would be far better remembered.
 
'Inhuman' is 'Questor'.
Sounds more like Yoyo and Holmes than Questor. Unless there's a show called Questor that's about an android cop.

The show you're thinking of was called Holmes and Yoyo, and it was just one of multiple "human cop with android partner" series in TV history. There was also the more serious Future Cop a year later, and in 1992 there was the Yancy Butler series Mann & Machine (co-created by Law and Order's Dick Wolf), which I'd think would be far better remembered.
It was the first on that popped in my head, even if I reversed the title. What can I say, I'm a John Schuck fan.
 
The show you're thinking of was called Holmes and Yoyo, and it was just one of multiple "human cop with android partner" series in TV history. There was also the more serious Future Cop a year later, and in 1992 there was the Yancy Butler series Mann & Machine (co-created by Law and Order's Dick Wolf), which I'd think would be far better remembered.

I mentioned Mann and Machine many pages earlier in the thread when one of these cop and robot shows was first announced.
 
add me to the camp that thinks Abrams is overrated. He seems to love twists for the sake of them and doesn't care about developing a story I.e. Alias, lost. In fact lost was one of the worst things to happen to tv. It unfortunately ushered in an era of an overreliance on flashbacks, non linear storytelling, overly large casts, convoluted mythologies, breakneck pacing, a need for podcasts and q&a to clarify poor editing and sloppy writing, dragging out answers that never come or are unsatisfying, character deaths meant to shock but come off as predictable and lame. Now all sff wants to do is emulate this flawed format as evidenced by the endless failures we see every season from v, invasion, the event, game of thrones, persons unknown, caprica, flash forward etc. And it isn't just him but the writers he staffs. Orci, kurtzman, pinkner, Wyman, lindelof, cuse,,,they may be fanboys but they aren't very good writers. Fringe was a poorly cloned x files with bland characters and not very entertaining plotlines. Star trek was a two hour mess-plotholes galore, a one dimensional villain that they covered up with add pacing and lots of FX. Alcatraz, undercovers, person of interest, fringe, alias all crap.

Abrams is what happens when an overgrown fanboy is allowed to take control. But then again maybe he's perfect for the poor tastes of American audiences who eat that kind of crap happily.
 
Game of Thrones is a failure?? Someone should tell HBO.
GoT imo is a creative failure. Another example of an unnecessarily complicated drama that has too many characters and plotlines to be entertaining. I don't mind ambitious large scale storytelling but to this degree begins to overwhelm the series. Plus for me the material isn't all that interesting,,,only seeming somewhat sophisticated. Gratuitous nudity and in your face gore just underscores the writers trying too hard to be bold.
 
add me to the camp that thinks Abrams is overrated. He seems to love twists for the sake of them and doesn't care about developing a story I.e. Alias, lost.

Again, you're making the mistake of assuming that Abrams is the head writer on every show he executive-produces. That's true of Alias but not Lost. Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse were Lost's showrunners.

Okay, I'll make it simple. Here's an exhaustive list of all the Abrams-produced TV shows where Abrams was actually the guy running the writers' room:

Felicity
Alias


That's it. Two shows, the last one of which ended seven years ago.

Next, here are all the shows that Abrams co-created and wrote and directed the pilot for, but then turned over to others to write and produce on a weekly basis:

Lost (created with Jeffrey Lieber & Lindelof, run by Lindelof & Cuse)
Fringe (created with Kurtzman & Orci, mostly run by J.H. Wyman & Jeff Pinkner)
Undercovers (created with Josh Reims, run by Reims)

And here are the Bad Robot shows where Abrams is just an executive producer:

What About Brian (created by Dana Stevens, run by various)
Six Degrees (cr. Raven Metzner & Stu Zicherman, run by Kenneth Biller)
Alcatraz (cr. Steven Lilien, Elizabeth Sarnoff & Bryan Wynbrandt, run by Sarnoff & Jennifer Johnson and later Daniel Pyne)
Person of Interest (cr. Jonathan Nolan, run by Greg Plageman)
Revolution (created & run by Eric Kripke)

Granted, Abrams does supervise all these productions; the various showrunners all consult with him and he contributes to the creative process and has approval over their decisions. But in recent years he's concentrated primarily on writing and directing movies and thus has left the day-to-day work on Bad Robot's TV shows in the hands of other people.
 
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