Rumor has it she's been active on Facebook, so perhaps she has just (wisely) broken the TrekBBS habit.
That's good to hear.Rumor has it she's been active on Facebook, so perhaps she has just (wisely) broken the TrekBBS habit.
I agree. I don't agree with her always, either, but it's an honest kind of disagreement.I think the TrekBBS would be a sadder place w/out Temis...I don't always agree with her-but I love reading her takes on things.
We are returning to more scripted shows. You'll see new scripted series and miniseries over the next two years. We're really embracing our science fiction roots. And we're acquiring more scripted pilots, and going back into the big miniseries department again. We've signed more series [like Helix], a drama with meaty science fiction hook. It fits with Being Human, which is how we'll air [Helix] at the beginning of the year.
High Moon was ordered to pilot in April. We should hear casting news pretty soon.Isn't Syfy doing Brian Fuller's Moon show, or did that not get picked up?
So would that make it a show for next summer or next fall?High Moon was ordered to pilot in April. We should hear casting news pretty soon.Isn't Syfy doing Brian Fuller's Moon show, or did that not get picked up?
Probably summer if it gets picked up.So would that make it a show for next summer or next fall?
Syfy's Mark Stern spoke to THR about their plans in general:Feature film producers Chuck Roven and Richard Suckle of Atlas Entertainment -- one of the production companies on board the Universal film -- submitted the pitch, which is being eyed as a 90-minute backdoor pilot that would eventually lead to a straight-to-series order in a fashion similar to Syfy's Battlestar Galactica. Terry Matalas (Nikita, Terra Nova, Star Trek: Enterprise) and Travis Fickett(Nikita, Terra Nova) will pen the script, with 24's Jon Cassar on board to direct the project, which hails from Universal Cable Productions.
"We're looking at short orders, maybe eight to 10 [episodes] as opposed to 13," Stern said. "Some may be [split runs of] 10 and 10. Our goal is to do five or six original scripted series a year and a big tentpole event miniseries that could also possibly serve as a backdoor pilot to a series as well, the way that Battlestar Galactica did. It's an exciting time for us."
"We're really trying to figure out what our next year is going to be," he added. "We have Helix in January; we're trying to figure out what our summer series is going to be. We have a lot of different options. We know that Defiance is going to come back in the summer, and the last six episodes of Warehouse 13 are going to be back along with Defiance. Then there's this big gray zone after that of what follows. We definitely have a miniseries we want to try to do for December of 2014 -- Jamie Foxx's is a series of half-hours we might do for Halloween of 2014. We're looking to do a big four-hour miniseries -- a tentpole mini -- at the end of 2014, and we're trying to figure out what that's going to be."
"We have a half-dozen scripts that are all pretty amazing in their own way," Stern said of Syfy's development pipeline. "It's a return to our roots in terms of science fiction: cool, interesting push-the-genre science fiction. Some we're looking at doing straight to series, because you really want to give them the flexibility and do a closed-ended, arced run. Some of them are going to be traditional pilots, and then we'll decide and they may be a bit more episodic."
Set during the height of World War II, Horizon centers on a secretary at the FBI who discovers that her husband might have been killed in a battle with a spaceship in the South Pacific. Obsessed with learning the truth, she becomes the only person standing between Earth and an alien invasion.
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