Showing posts with label Quarterlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quarterlife. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

News Brief

CBS: GUIDING LIGHT Executive Producer Ellen Wheeler talks about the show's new digital production model. " think for anyone who has watched GL for a long time, they will notice that while things are different, things are still the same. We still have Harley's house and Company; we still have the Spaulding Study and the Bauer Kitchen. All the sets viewers have grown up with for generations or in just the past couple of years--Cassie's Farm House, they will still be here. Sets normally don't have a ceiling or walls. So if you are standing back in the studio looking at it, it looks like something that would sit up on a stage during a play. So we took all those pieces that we had and completely finished them, so now the sets have a fourth wall, a ceiling, the lights in the set are not stage lights, but real lights that turn on and off with a switch, if people have a refrigerator it's really plugged in and there is actually food in it. The floor is now a real floor, every set has its real floor, they have tile or carpeting or wood. We took each space and made it complete, somebody's home is really a home; a restaurant is really a restaurant. I think that will be the main change you see. Springfield has really become an extremely real place."

TV Guide Canada: In one of the most important soap interviews you’ll read this year, James Reynolds speaks out about why daytime TV is racist, the future of DAYS OF OUR LIVES, and why it’s hard out there for a minority actor.

Blogging With Carolyn: "Could somebody get the stereotype police on the phone? We have an emergency over on AS THE WORLD TURNS with the new character of Ameera from Iraq. She debuted complete with head scarf, measured speech pattern, and the necessity to walk 10 steps behind a man. As Weekly news editor Mala Bhattacharjee said, "What did they do, check out Writing Muslims For Dummies before they wrote this character?" If Ameera's mother was liberal enough to have an affair with a white colonel, there's no way Ameera would be this blushing violet who's afraid of everyone in Oakdale. And not for nothing, when she was sitting with Noah, Luke came up behind them with a jealous look on his face. Um, Luke? Even though you haven't kissed Noah since September, it has been pretty well established that he's gay. Your competition will never be a girl, and certainly not one whose main topic of conversation is Sadaam Hussein."

Marlena De Lacroix: Patrick Erwin blogs on "AS THE WORLD TURNS’ Men in Love: The Controversy Rages!"

Trek Today: Former soap actors Darlena Tejeiro (ALL MY CHILDREN) and Paul Townsend (THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL) have been cast in Star Trek XI.

Contra Costa Times: Playing cocky charmers is a breeze for former ONE LIFE TO LIVE actor Blair Underwood. But playing alpha male Alex, the ultra-aggressive patient on HBO's taut saga of psychotherapy, IN TREATMENT, is a welcome challenge for the 43-year-old actor.

New York Daily News: Tale of blogger updates young-adult soap opera in 'quarterlife' on NBC.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

News Brief

Hollywood Today: At least one lead writer for CBS soap “Young and the Restless” is crossing the picket line and breaking with WGA brethren, according to Variety. It remains to be seen how the public will view such an action. Some fans may appreciate new episodes; others with family in unions or otherwise sympathetic seem destined to have issues.

UCLA Daily Bruin: Marina Alburger, a UCLA alumna on strike, was a writer for the daytime soap opera “The Young and the Restless,” and said she is especially concerned about the Internet in respect to the dwindling ratings of soap operas. “The sad truth is that daytime soap operas are on the decline since when we were in our heyday in the ’80s,” said Alburger, who, at 24 years old, is one of the youngest writers on strike. “Soap operas are going to be the first shows you are going to find solely on the Internet (such as the new online-only soap “Coastal Dreams”) ... we really need to make money the same way as if it were on a television screen.”

USA Today: Are webisodes ready for prime time? The world of webisodes — episodic and scripted video, as on TV, but short enough to be watched on a coffee break — gets a high-profile jolt this week with the debut of "Quarterlife", a series produced by TV and film veterans Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick. Scott Zakarin, who pioneered the format in the mid-'90s with interactive Web soap "The Spot", says webisodes are finally poised to take off. Though he doesn't expect them to replace TV, "they fill a niche" — the ability to entertain in short bursts, say for someone on a lunch break or a kid efore school. Zakarin's Iron Sink Media just produced "Roommates" for MySpace.

All American Patriots: The curtain rises for a fourth consecutive year as the spotlight shines center stage on stars from ABC's "The View," "All My Children," "One Life to Live" and "General Hospital," who will all be singing and dancing on Broadway for one night only in support of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS. The announcement was made today during ABC's "Super Soap Weekend" at The Disney/ MGM Studios by Brian Frons, president, Daytime, Disney-ABC Television Group. "The annual ABC Daytime Salutes Broadway Cares/Equity Fights Aids benefit was created as a way for us to give back to the community and support a great organization. This event also provides a unique outlet to extend our brand, while giving our loyal viewers the opportunity to see their favorite stars perform live on Broadway," said Mr. Frons. The show will be held Sunday, March 2, 2008 at Town Hall in New York City at 7:30 p.m.

Orlando Sentinel: Who goes Tuesday night on "Dancing with the Stars?" Marie Osmond received the lowest judges' scores. If her fan base saves her, "All My Children" star Cameron Mathison is probably the ejectee. Local note of interest: "Dancing With the Stars" highlighted scenes from his visit this past weekend to ABC's Super Soap Weekend in Orlando.

Mathaba News: "Historias de fuego" (Fire stories) is the name of the new Cuban soap opera to be screened on the Cubavision channel when current ¡Oh, La Habana! is over on December. The premier is Monday, Nov 12 at the 23 y 12 movie theater, to commemorate the Fight-Fighter Day on Nov 13. In statements to ACN, director Noemi Cartaya said this is her first project and it is a homage of the Cuban Radio and Television Institute to the 311th anniversary of the Cuban Fire Department (CBC). An original script by writers Felipe Espinet and Serguei Svoboda, Historias de fuego tells the story of a lieutenant colonel played by senior actor Ruben BreƱa, who is a commander of a firefighter department about to retire. The new soap opera features other first class actors as well, among them Alina Rodriguez, Coralia Veloz, Jorge Ryan, Alberto Pujols, and Heydi Gonzalez. It is made up of 58 episodes of 45 minutes each.

: Gay people on TV are old hat. By now, Entertainment Weekly reported recently, 61 percent of college freshmen, who grew up with "Will & Grace," approve of gay marriage. The finding in the national poll is up 10 percentage points from a decade ago. A turn around the dial will bring you gay story lines in daytime soap operas, same-sex dating on MTV shows such as "Next" and "A Shot of Love With Tila Tequila" and prominent gay characters in ABC's "Brothers & Sisters" and several cable shows -- FX's "Nip/Tuck," HBO's "The Wire" and Showtime's "The L Word." Suspected of being gay is no longer the guaranteed laugh it was on TV anymore, even on macho shows such as "Two and a Half Men." And characters such as George on "Grey's Anatomy" or Barney on "How I Met Your Mother" can be credible as virtual Lotharios, although they are played by gay men. So, to add shock to TV shows in 2007, writers have turned to transsexuals.