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SyFy 2011 non-scripted shows announced

jefferiestubes8

Commodore
Commodore
SyFy is at it again with new non-scripted programming...

Net to unveil development slate of 10 reality shows

Syfy original programming prexy Mark Stern talks:

Slate includes "Dinner With Deepak," hosted and produced by bestselling author Deepak Chopra
;
RelativityReal docu-series "Tyler Shields," which follows the life and work of the art photog. "Shields" is produced by "Star Trek" star Zachary Quinto.
Wow talk about totally non-sci-fi. This is just a photographer.
http://www.tylershields.com/
The fact that Zachary Quinto is even attached to it is questionable.
Talk about totally unrelated to
In keeping with the success of the net's makeup competish skein "Face Off," Syfy will further explore the fx world with Gurney Productions' "Monster Man," which follows the work of creature fabricator Cleve Hall and his monster-making team.
Stern called the show "our own 'American Chopper,' " referring to the offbeat family dynamics on that Discovery Channel hit
I watched 2 episodes of Face Off and really liked them. I can see that series lasting a few seasons.
"Stunts Unlimited," a series that follows the titular stuntman fraternity through the development process as its members create complex and dangerous stunts. Series is produced by Ric Roman Waugh and Gary Binkow with no production company yet attached.
This sounds rather fun. It doesn't seem right for SyFy but another network.
Syfy will develop "Culture Shock With Tommy Lee," in which the former Motley Crue member seeks to uncover and expose secret societies.
Serious investigation journalism exposing secrets...right. This will be a gloss-over show with nothing in depth. My guess is the host Tommy Lee will have half of the screen time and the rest being generalizations. Showbizspy refers to it as an "investigative travel series".
North One Television's "High Tech Hoaxes," in which teams of engineers play technologically advanced pranks on unsuspecting pals;
Pranks with gadgets...yawn.
25/7's "Overthunk," a competish skein in which creators build competing Rube Goldberg-esque devices;
This sounds interesting in the OK Go music video world type of thing.
3 Ball Productions/Eyeworks USA's "Change the Day You Die," in which the show's creators use predictive technology to perform an intervention on seemingly healthy folks with bad habits that will eventually kill them.
Mar. 22, 2011,
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118034202?refCatId=14

the others being:
Haunted Collector, a working title, centers on a family of renowned paranormal investigators who spend its time tracking down haunted items. The family then houses its collections -- think guns, jewelry, paintings and dolls -- in its museum. The series, from Gurney Prods.' Scott Gurney and Deirdre Gurney, will be paired with the second season of Hollywood Treasure, beginning in June.
Sounds like Pawn Stars and a Cash-in-the-Attic type show.

A month later, Syfy will roll out Legend Quest, an action-adventure series that followsreal-life symbologist Ashley Cowie as he travels the world in search of hidden, mystical artifacts. Each episode is designed to combine Indiana Jones-style adventure and Da Vinci Code-type connections as theories are explored. The series is a co-production from BASE Production’s John Brenkus and Mickey Stern and Universal Networks International.
F
inally, Paranormal Witness, a drama-documentary series from Raw TV, the creative team behind Locked Up Abroad and Gold Rush Alaska. The show will bring to life the stories of people who claim to have lived through paranormal experiences. Episodes will feature a mixture of first-hand testimony and gritty drama. Dimitri Doganis and Bart Layton will serve as executive producers on the show, which is set to premiere in September.
Gritty drama? recreations?
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/syfy-picks-up-three-reality-169676

Syfy’s new series, “Marcel’s Quantum Kitchen,” is one more workplace show in which people in a semi-glamorous field — in this case, high-end catering — do their job. The niche angle is that the titular chef uses futuristic techniques, tools and ingredients to create his dishes.
His specialty is “molecular gastronomy,” which applies knowledge about the chemistry and physics of food to its preparation. He flash-freezes an orange to create a gelatin dessert and heats and then inflates cheese in an attempt to make fake egg shells.
There may not be enough science for the channel’s core audience, but the cooking processes make this series a bit more interesting and entertaining than the average workplace series.
This show sounds interesting and a right mix for the audience of SyFy for a non-scripted show.
http://www.medialifemagazine.com/ar...ews_21/-Marcel-s-Quantum-Kitchen-a-snack-.asp

last year's SyFy non-scripted programming thread
SyFy considering doing Cooking and Talk Shows...
 
Well, somebody at SyFy's programming department has been watching a lot of the Discovery Channel recently...
 
I get a bad feeling SyFy is slowing following the same path The Nashville Network followed. It used to be all-country music, all the time (every time I tuned it they were showing line-dancing. Became a bit of a joke). Then they started airing stuff like Dukes of Hazzard, which was fine as it fell into the demo. And then they started to air non-country programming as an experiment. Then we started to see things like James Bond movies show up. And then it became "The National Network" which lasted a couple of years until the final country music show disappeared and it became Spike.

It's a slippery slope.

Doesn't help that half of those shows sound like rehashes. I mean, that Tommy Lee show is just Jessie Ventura's Conspiracy Theory with a new coat of paint.

Alex
 
Wow! What a lot of shows I have NO interest in seeing. A few in there, maybe, but the majority? Who is the target audience?
 
Who still watches that channel anyway? It stopped being a relevant source of Sci-Fi years ago.............
 
I never heard about molecular gastronomy until I saw a cook on Food Networks "Chopped" using it to make some kind of gel which the judges said tasted vile.

But damn is that A LOT of programs... So they're pretty much doing away with scripted shows for these?
 
Well, even back in the old days, they usually only ran one or two nights of original programming. It was mostly reruns of old scifi tv shows and movies.

This is just replacing reruns of ENTERPRISE or whatever.
 
But damn is that A LOT of programs... So they're pretty much doing away with scripted shows for these?
They get more bang for their bucks with 'em. Generally, they're cheaper and easier to produce for the most part, IMO...

True. It's the same with the crappy movies they show. SyFy would (and still does) acquire them at a cheaper price than it would have to pay to make episodes of whatever Stargate they were airing and even if the movie didn't get as good a rating (although some did get better ratings), the cost vs profit was better for the crappy movies.

But I was mainly surprised at the huge number of shows. I'm guessing most are 30 mins, but that's still a lot of new shows. These are actually being produced in multiple episodes and not just pilots of them right?
 
But I was mainly surprised at the huge number of shows. I'm guessing most are 30 mins, but that's still a lot of new shows. These are actually being produced in multiple episodes and not just pilots of them right?

It's just what they are putting into development. Less than half will ever see the air.

Last fall they released a list of ten or so half hour scripted concepts they were developing. I saw at deadline.com they have that whittled down to three. And of those three, one, maybe two, will make it to series.
 
Wow! What a lot of shows I have NO interest in seeing. A few in there, maybe, but the majority? Who is the target audience?
That's me too. It's becoming too reality tv based there. And Marcel's new show 'Marcel's Quantum Kitchen'... he was on Top Chef originally... I'm definitely not planning on watching. Didn't like him on Top Chef, and still don't like him. The troll :p :lol:.
 
Okay, does anyone else think 'SyFy' as in science fiction and 'non-scripted' are an oxymoron that doesn't belong together? How could fiction not be scripted? This is exactly what this network's problem is.
 
Reality TV is scripted, they just avoid admitting it, probably because it's badly scripted.

Skiffy's scripted lineup doesn't sound so hot, either. What I like: David Strathairn and maybe In the Dark. Did they actually greenlight the Lee Majors show? :rommie: Tell me this isn't a fake show they added as a prank:
Snowmageddon (working title) – December 2011 -- A story about a mystical snow globe that makes very bad things happen in the real world when it is shaken.

We'll have to look elsewhere for the best sci fi shows on TV. Skiffy is done. :p
 
Wow, nothing there interests me. The last show Syfy put out that really interested me was SGU. Right now, the only show I continue to watch on there is "Sanctuary". Sad.
 
Reality TV is scripted, they just avoid admitting it, probably because it's badly scripted.

Skiffy's scripted lineup doesn't sound so hot, either. What I like: David Strathairn and maybe In the Dark. Did they actually greenlight the Lee Majors show? :rommie: Tell me this isn't a fake show they added as a prank:
Snowmageddon (working title) – December 2011 -- A story about a mystical snow globe that makes very bad things happen in the real world when it is shaken.

We'll have to look elsewhere for the best sci fi shows on TV. Skiffy is done. :p

And Three Inches? The jokes write themselves....
 
Wow! What a lot of shows I have NO interest in seeing. A few in there, maybe, but the majority? Who is the target audience?
That's me too. It's becoming too reality tv based there. And Marcel's new show 'Marcel's Quantum Kitchen'... he was on Top Chef originally... I'm definitely not planning on watching. Didn't like him on Top Chef, and still don't like him. The troll :p :lol:.

I think he was seriously going for a Wolverine look with that haircut he had first time on Top Chef. But he ended up looking like an ugly Kewpie doll. And those were ugly to start with.
 
The fact that you watch Sanctuary is sad. :p
Different strokes and so on. I think it's a fun, cheesy show that sometimes manages to deliver some good drama. Some of the stuff from the first two seasons reminded me a lot of how a "League of Extraordinary Gentleman" TV show may have been in tone.
 
Yes reality tv is poorly scripted, but a network whose mission is the fantastical should not have non fiction programming. Have SyFy and the Science Channel just swapped or what? Sci Fi used to have Science Fact documentary series, and if the Science Channel had always had a block of sf programming with science fact discussions inbetween, I wouldn't care now that they are showing Firefly.

I hate when networks sell out their original principle just for the ratings bottom dollar.
 
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