proggrrl: (Firefly-Mal's many faces)
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Ronald D. Moore: the one man that reduces Joss to a giggling fanboy. *wink*



Totally cute.  He's a striking writer, dammit! Not a "mere fanboy"!!! lol

BTW: what the heck was Joss Whedon doing at a Sci Fi Channel picketing day? Hmmmm? *g*
proggrrl: (A series of Tubes?!?)
TED TURNER
"Men should be barred from holding public office for 100 years," says billionaire Ted Turner. "Men have been running the world for too long and they've made a mess of it." If women were in charge, he adds, "it would be a much more peaceful, prosperous, equitable world...You'd have a huge shift away from military budgets and into education and health care." (SOURCE)

WOODY ALLEN
IMDB NEWS:  Film director Woody Allen fears Scarlett Johansson will ruin her promising acting career by indulging in the party lifestyle - advising her to take inspiration from Meryl Streep instead. The moviemaker worked with the 23-year-old on several film projects and insists she is one of the most talented stars of her generation. But Allen is terrified she will destroy her chances of major success if she goes the same way as other young actresses and gets involved with the movie industry's infamous party scene. He tells New York Post gossip column PageSix, "(Johansson) is so beautiful and so sexy and so gifted... she can do anything, but she has to make the right choices of films and she's got to not go the Page Six party route. I don't want to read about her in the paper with this boyfriend or that boyfriend, or in rehab or taking pills. I don't think she's always made great choices. She has to take her acting seriously... the way someone like Meryl Streep did it." (SOURCE)

RUSSELL T. DAVIES
Ever mindful of [Doctor Who’s] "mainstream audience" (meaning, not just sci-fi enthusiasts) and put off by "exclusivity" in general, Davies said he is reticent of creating overly inclusive stories dependent on viewers' in-depth knowledge of ornate histories.

This job is made easier by Davies' policy of ignoring the voices of those most vigilant. "I think we're an unusual science-fiction franchise in taking a very big step back from fandom and having nothing to do with them. . . . Every program on the BBC has a message board on the website. I forbid it to happen on 'Doctor Who.' I'm sorry to say this, all the science fiction producers making stuff in America, they are way too engaged with their fandom. They all need to step back."  (SOURCE)

JAMES MARSTERS
TV Guide: Is that one of the reasons you like doing sci-fi — hard work and lots of sweating?
Marsters: One of the reasons. But you know, some of the writers from Buffy are on the best shows around — Grey's Anatomy, 24 — you name it. And they all have the same complaint: "This is great, but I just want to have a big demon come out of a rift hole and suck someone into some interesting universe." I'm like, "You're on 24, man. There could be nuclear war at any time!" And he's, "Yeah, it's boring. I'm stuck to reality!"

TV Guide: Is it true that a few years ago, British filmgoers voted you and Keira Knightley the actors they most would like to see as Romeo and Juliet? Supposedly you beat out Leonardo DiCaprio and Orlando Bloom!
Marsters: It's true. Overseas, Buffy was a lot bigger than it was in America. The characters even had their own stamps in one of the former Soviet Union countries. But that was fun to hear. Of course I said, yes, I'd do it, but Keira wouldn't comment. [Laughs]

TV Guide: So life after 40 seems pretty good, doesn't it?
Marsters: Yeah. Forties are good! I'm thinking with my brain now, which is a lot more clear, and women seem to appreciate that. It's a wonderful decade where you're in control of yourself but the women are still interested.

JOSS WHEDON
Dear Writers,

I have good news. I have lots of good news. In fact, I have way too much good news.

The strike is almost over. A resolution is days away. Weeks. Friday. Valentine's day. Two weeks exactly from whenever my manager/agent/lawyer told me. Yes, after talking to writers and actors all over town, I'm happy to report that the strike is going to end every single day until March. Huzzah! All of this entirely reliable information means that at last the dream of the writing community has been realized: the Oscars will be saved.

Let's step back.

The Oscars seem to be the point of focus for a lot of this speculation. That either they must be preserved, or that the studios feel they must be preserved, and therefore this terrible struggle will end. There is an argument to be made for wanting the show to go on: it showcases the artists with whom we are bonded (there's no award for Best Hiding of Net Profits), and it provides employment and revenue for thousands in the community that has been hit so hard by this action. Having said that, it's a f%$#ing awards show. It's a vanity fair. It's a blip. We're fighting (fighting, remember?) for the future of our union, our profession, our art. If that fight carries us through the Holy Night when Oscar was born, that's just too bad.

And the studios? Well, the Oscars provide advertising revenue and a boost for the films that win. But the studios have shown impressive resolve in ignoring short-term losses in order to destroy us. I don't hear any knees knocking in the Ivory Towers over that night of programming. Hey, I wish I did. I wish, like a lot of people, I could hear anything from in there besides that weird clicking sound Predator makes. (SOURCE)

PS: fandom response. Will someone please put that on CafePress - like NOW!

proggrrl: (Lost-season 4 first shot)
LOST:  Uh, yeah. Awesome.  Those music videos running during the S4 premiere were so fun, especially the Locke one set to CRAZY by Patsy Cline, HAH...ABC does fanvids.  Kewl. 

After my powerwatch of S3 last week - entire season in 5 days - I was a tad bleary eyed.  But it was big fun.  Love the Flash Forward idea - what a great way to reinvigorate the entire structure of the show.  Is it just me, or does this show have a wicked lot in common with BSG?  Also - I am officially a "Jater" bitches!  That pop-up tidbit during the S3 finale rebroadcast on Wednesday was enlightening. *chuckle*

[profile] mediocrechick has posted something that I, too, am sure I am going to become completely obsessed with.

I also learned a new word this week: "Transmedia Storytelling."  We needed this new name for something that can no longer be pigeonholed under old words "ARG," "Viral Marketing," or any of that.  It is becoming (thanks to folks like Whedon, JJ Abrams et al) a new form of entertainment that is unlike any before it.  Heh.

FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS:  I'm getting a little frantic as we are about to run out of episodes.  Trying to stay calm.

PBS GREAT PERFORMANCES AUSTEN SERIES:  Uneven...nevertheless, OF COURSE I'm watching it!  Need to make sure I pimp my favorite older Austen adaptations to you folks:  the 1995 version of PERSUASION.  The 1995 version of SENSE AND SENSIBILITY.  The 1999  version of MANSFIELD PARK.  And do I really need to mention the Colin Firth & Jennifer Ehle version of PRIDE & PREJUDICE? Really? *g*

BREAKING BAD
: Trying to stick with it.  They almost lost me last week in the 2nd ep...putting such loser guys under a microscope is making me cringe.  But I just cannot turn away from all the chemistry lessons!  They are just...fascinating.  Especially the one involving the bathtub (ewww).

IN TREATMENT
:  I have a full week's worth stored on the Tivo.  Haven't had time yet.  Is anyone out there watching?  It's confirmed that Battlestar Galactica's Michelle Forbes will soon make an appearance, btw.  See Mo Ryan for more on that.
proggrrl: (Firefly-River on ceiling)
Gods I'm a loser. *g*  But how can any SERENITY fan resist? I'm staying in touch with my inner child.

Yeah, that's it.
proggrrl: (More cowbell!)
Stallone chats with fans at AICN...I like this guy, seriously.  One / Two / Three

JJ Abrams, Robert Orci, Bryan Burk and even Zachary Quinto for a sec (posting as "ZQ"), answered fan questions here today live from the STAR TREK set.  Love them.  ETA: summary of answers and set photos now up over here.

A 90 minute podcast interview with Joss.  *swoon*

I would kill to go to this.  And for you folks who haven't seen all the Oscar-nominated movies yet: check this out.
proggrrl: (Summer is a terminator)
I watched the pilot ep on Yahoo this weekend [yes I think it's still up there unfortunately it's been taken down now :-( ], and enjoyed it a lot.

Please, please don't let this one 1) Get gorammed cancelled by Fox after 4 episodes; 2) Get me all hot and bothered over another favorite actress playing an awesomely powerful femmebot, and then proceed to start getting lamer and lamer as time goes by.

*fingers crossed*

Glau FTW!
proggrrl: (Firefly-River on ceiling)
I really loved what I read in this IGN piece covering the Mutant Enemy Day last Friday on the WGA picket line at Fox...especially this:

IGN TV: What do you think it will take to get things to change and to come to an agreement?

Joss Whedon: We have to break them. These are multi-billionaires who could give a rat's ass about any of the issues they're actually talking about except for one – If they can break this union, then they can break them all. If they can do that, then they can control everything. They already, thanks to the [repeal of] Fin-syn laws and all of the sort of vertical integration, control almost everything. They're very close. They have basically one last thing to figure out how to own and rule in and we're it. And it's simply not going to happen. The only way we can break them is just by stopping. By being out here instead of in there. And we'll do it. We'll do it for a year. We'll do it forever. We'll do it until somebody else steps up and says "Hey, we'll run a business a different way." We'll work for those people instead. What you're going to find in Hollywood is maybe a lot fewer millionaires, but a lot more working people with steady jobs, because these guys can not crush us. It will not happen.

Fight the frakking power!


[Glau & Fillion on the lines]

Also, for you fans of WGA strike humor: check out the fake AMPTP site before someone pulls it down! ROFL
proggrrl: (She liked Imaginary Men)
Have you been following the Writers Guild of America (WGA) strike?  I know a lot of you have done.  I've been reading my fill of it for seems like many months now, even though I have nothing to do with that side of the film/TV biz.  Yet as a fan, and as someone who makes my living marketing films to the masses, I am fascinated with this strike and its fallout.

One of the most important things the strike has brought about has been what appears to be the birth of a tipping point of sorts for what is called "the creative community" - ie, the writers, filmmakers, actors, and even producers, of all the shows we fans are so enamored of.  Is this entertainment indeed as Joss Whedon has recently suggested, America's #1 Export?  Is it something that we fans simply cannot live without, our modern mythology, a mirror we hold up to ourselves?  What is its value, that is now apparently the question in Hollywood.

Anyone who follows this strike at all on the internet has probably read a few of the things I want to bookmark here.  I just want to make sure you've read all this, if you are interested in the future of entertainment on the internet...or "in new media" or however you like to call it.

Something happened when NETSCAPE founder (and FUNNY OR DIE investor) Marc Andreessen wrote this on his blog - and, much more importantly, this piece here about the idea of Hollywood beginning to become more like Silicon Valley.  While somewhere in their gilded castles high above us all, Steve Jobs gleefully rubbed his hands together, and the Google Boys popped open another bottle of Dom, these two little blog posts began to make the rounds.  On the picket lines, and elsewhere.  Meanwhile the striking writers' presence on the internet, and their direct interaction with fans, blossomed.  Most people on my flist probably know what I'm talking about.  (If not, go have a look at the past month of posts on Sitrep and UnitedHollywood.)

After a little time, Patrick Goldstein had some more to say.  Maureen Ryan collected her thoughts and (being a previously music-obsessed journalist), made the music connection as well as the Silicon Valley one.

Today I see that Goldstein (aka "PGoldy" in some blogger circles, heh) has taken this ball and run even further.  This new piece is the most fascinating yet, in that we fans can glean here from a super-insider, Hollywood-wide discussion going on right now that could change the film & TV business in PROFOUND WAYS.  I feel the need to post this excerpt:

Perhaps both sides in the writers strike should start studying the new economic model operating in today's pop music world. If your product has lost its value in one arena -- meaning if no one's buying your CDs anymore -- you can create value in a new arena. That's why Prince gave away millions of copies of his latest CD, because the real money for him was in concert tickets. It's why Beyoncé and Gwen Stefani have launched clothing lines and the fragrance industry is chock-full of perfumes from Britney Spears and Jennifer Lopez.

"Successful pop artists represent something to people, so their value is in loaning their persona, their music or their likeness to other marketers," says Ken Hertz, a veteran music industry attorney who represents Beyoncé and the Black Eyed Peas and does strategic marketing with such companies as Hasbro and McDonald's. "That's where the new equity lies. Music is the best way for a marketer to build trust with people. And if you trust them, you're going to buy their product, but the real engine for creating trust is the music."

That's not to say that screenwriters will strike it rich endorsing Dell computers (although "Daily Show" contributor John Hodgman will surely make more money for his appearances in those Mac vs. PC ads than writing books like "The Areas of My Expertise," a hilarious almanac of utterly unreliable information). My point being: No one knows where the real value of writing will come from five years from now. It may still be in residuals from TV and films, but it may be from some new YouTube-style Internet buzz site fueled by outside money from Wall Street or Silicon Valley.

While the WGA and the studios flail away at the negotiating table, snarling at each other like the warrior ice bears in "The Golden Compass," new entrepreneurs from Wall Street and Silicon Valley are entering the fray every day. The studios have been buying up or trying to co-opt many of the new entertainment streams, but the writers have a lot to say about the future, since the Internet is a medium where the word has retained tremendous power.

"We're entering an era where, just as there are 300 cable and satellite TV stations, there will be 300 different economic models for different kinds of entertainment," says veteran film producer Michael Shamberg. "There will always be a primal need for people to tell stories, but no one knows what the price structure for those narratives will be. It's a time of extraordinary experimentation of how to sell things, therefore it's an extraordinary time in terms of what you can sell."

So the writers can count on one key advantage. Even when it's difficult to agree on the value of almost anything, it's not hard to understand that in a business of storytelling, everything starts with the storyteller.

On a final note - many months ago, I read this piece in the New York Times...and wondered about its larger implications in the film/TV biz.

This is very, very exciting for us fans.  Keep your eyes and ears to the ground folks.

And please keep calling the Big Media, keep sending pencils.
proggrrl: (BtVS spike tied up)
Hey Boston area fans - who ever thought you'd get to rally for the cause with both Joss Whedon AND some guys from THE DAILY SHOW? FTW. Just saw this on Fans4Writers:

Hey, everyone. So our Boston rally for fans and writers is officially on the books! Here are the details:

We are planning the event for Friday, December 14th from 12 noon - 3 pm. There will be an assembly of writers, fans (and potentially celebrity guests!) at the distinguished public affairs program Cambridge Forum in the Meeting House of the historic First Parish (Unitarian Universalist) Church, 3 Church St., Cambridge, MA 02138. There, guest speakers (which so far include Joss Whedon, Rob Kutner with a few of his Daily Show crew, and myself) will say a few words of thanks to our fans and talk about the cause they're supporting. Once we are sufficiently pumped up, everyone will march with picket signs and pamphlets throu gh Harvard Square to a rally outside of the famed Harvard Lampoon building, where so many great television comedy writers cut their teeth. It will offer a chance for Boston fans and writers to walk side by side, show the media and AMPTP that we're galvanized in our cause, and we're growing. We know our position is just, and we'll keep adding similar demonstrations in cities across the country until we get a fair deal. (In the event that an agreement between the Guild and the AMPTP is reached prior to the rally, we'll simply change the focus to a celebration of the resolution.)

Your job is to show up and bring your friends! We want fans of all shows and films in attendance. We wouldn't be here without you and we want to show the studios and networks that our fans are a force to be reckoned with. So get on the fan boards and spread the word.

I hope to see you on Friday, December 14th. It's going to be a memorable event.

In solidarity,

Jaime Paglia
EP/co-creator "Eureka"


OK that is super cool.

Also, you Los Angeles area Whedonverse fans can go show your support for the writers of the Mutant Enemy clan at their picket day on December 7th.  All details and a map of location at Fox Studios here.
proggrrl: (fandom is like this *sweet*)
Joss Whedon continues to blog up a storm...*glee*

Attention all fans who love TV, film, and the people who write that stuff: y'all know to go check out Fans4Writers, yes? And that there are forums for Joss Whedon fans? And Ron Moore/BSG fans? *bouncy*

Also there is this great site called Bring TV Back, that lists which net/studio honcho you should write to for each TV show...if you're into that sorta thing.
proggrrl: (Joining the darkside heh heh)
Oh what is a fangirl to do...Hulu just let me come inside their beta site...in the midst of the frakking writers strike...ie, I doubt anyone's getting residuals on this stuff...Yet if we fans flock to sites like Hulu, there'll be no way to DENY the profitability of online distribution...thereby strengthening the writers arguement...

*head explodes*


I give up. Below are two Hulu embeds for ya:

1. the Joss Whedon-directed episode of THE OFFICE from a few weeks ago, BRANCH WARS.

2. a BATTLESTAR ep from last season, one of my favorites: THE SON ALSO RISES. It introduces Master-of-The-Universe defense lawyer Romo Lamkin, and is saturated with a profound grief - as the characters mourn Starbuck's death - while the BSG cast and crew mourns what they assumed was Katee Sackhoff's termination. The Six interrogation scene still ranks as one of my all-time favorite BSG scenes. Key things to know: Lee Adama (forced to guard Romo) was in love with Starbuck. So was the guy who is drunk and standing on the viper. The ship's commander thought of her as a daughter. The blond chick in the prison cell is a cylon (robot). And Gauis Baltar, the dude who looks like Jesus? Well...1) He's in big trouble with the law, 2) the robot is in love with him.

What's a fangirl to do...when Content is queen?



proggrrl: (Heroes Bell'l killya)
I agree with Anne Thompson, who agrees with EW.com: this WGA strike will probably bring a zillion new film/TV folks into the blogosphere. That's a good thing. It's already having an effect on Joss Whedon (3 times in one week! *joy*) and Damon Lindelof, and a lot of other writers.  Most important of all, Josh Friedman has posted.  After 10 months of silence! *glee*

*additional glee about Friedman being the showrunner for THE SARAH CONNOR CHRONICLES*

Not surprisingly, internet/tech guru Marc Andreessen really gets what is going on, down to the roots. The Titanic hit an iceberg 10 years ago, and the Captain is just noticing now. Also, as usual: when Mark Harris is right, he is very, very, very right.

I still say these writers (and directors and actors) should consider what the internet did to the music business.  It's not all doom and gloom.  Many artists have figured out how to make this work to their advantage.


Meanwhile:
  • This is ridiculously hilarious. And hawt. This is just hawt. (Yes, that was Milo.) This is just hilarious. (You rock David Anders!)  Thanks JK & Adrian, for making my day a bit sunnier.
  • This trailer for Denzel Washington/Oprah Winfrey's film THE GREAT DEBATERS looks terrific.

And BSG fans in the Los Angeles area? What are you doing on Friday morning?
proggrrl: (WGA strike)
At Universal, Steven Spielberg was smiling and waving at picketers as he drove onto the lot. Director Garry Marshall did a walk up and down Lankershim, saying hi to all the picketers and even giving a little speech in support. The "me too" honking was crazed since it's some kind of corridor for heavy truck traffic. "You really get the feeling that your picket is a touchstone for general frustration with corporate power," a striking writer stationed there emailed me. "And that's not just because they stop, lean out their car, and tell us to stick it to 'those corporate fuckers' (which they do, a lot)."

- Deadline Hollywood "On The Line: Strike Day 3"



Joss Whedon is too sick to picket today, but had this to say about those gorrammed rabble-rousin' strikers. *swoon*

WGA is videoblogging the strike and all sorts of other socialnetworky, web2.0-ish stuff. Here's a video that explains the reason for the strike:

proggrrl: (WGA strike)
Very cool icons of support, from Lexigeek.



ETA: Also some terrific ones by crazyvictoria:



proggrrl: (BtVS spike tied up)
Because I can't stop with the Joss Whedon news...or strike news…

Somebody (and I'm still trying to figure out if they actually have been hired by the production company, the network, or "Joss' People") has started a social net for Whedon's new show DOLLHOUSE.  Here they are on LJ.

Whedon has once and for all put the kibosh on the Serenity 2 rumors.

This guy has coined a hilarious term:
"Joss, ever one to sweeten what's already delicious, adds a cherry on top: Eliza Dushku (Faith the Vampire Slayer) is coming with him. The baddest B.K.* TV babe of my lifetime will star as "Nora" in the new series Dollhouse...[snip]

*B.K. (Before Katee Sackhoff) "

Meanwhile it's clear that there is a strike, that our boy supports it fully, and that apparently if it ends quickly DOLLHOUSE could be getting started as early as February 2008 (by that I mean, shooting eps).

I know you're getting tired of my mentioning it, but if you still need some clarity about the issues involved in the WGA strike, read thisAnd this, which I find even more fascinating, coming as it does from the general biz community rather than any entertainment biz source.

Not only that but: if you’d like to join the WGA members on the picket line, YOU ARE WELCOME TO COME DOWN. Ha.

Joss just posted on Whedonesque, which is always fun.  (And no, the fact that I know this does not make me a stalker.)


:: Goes off to make a dollhouse tag.  Strike be damned. ::
proggrrl: (BtVS faith)
Here's what I learned from SciFi Wire this morning...


*SQUEE*

Joss Whedon is returning to TV!  That he is re-teaming with the wonderful Eliza Dushku and Tim Minear, is heaven sent.


That it's on Fox, and announced on the eve of a still quite likely WGA strike, makes me shiver.


:: prays for righteousness to win out in the end ::

:: also prays for Nathan Fillion to be cast alongside Dushku ::

:: overwhelmed by geeked out joy ::


...Other things learned this morning: Sci-Fi Channel is going green along with its NBC/Universal parents, and NBC is apparently either scrapping or postponing the making of HEROES: ORIGINS.  That last one is a real shame - I seem to be in the vocal minority (or silent majority?) who is STILL ENJOYING THIS SHOW?  Don't frak with it NBC.

OK, now everyone go back to JOSSIFIED SQUEEING! *g*


ETA: More on the new Whedon thing here and here and here...ah life.  It's a pretty impressive week for Joss and/or X-Files fans, eh?
proggrrl: (Firefly-River on ceiling)
I’m in the mood for a Jossverse update…

The BtVS Sing-a-long shutdown is dire, but I love what the founders are doing in the meantime: hosting MOULIN ROUGE Sing-a-longs, and selling these great DIY home BtVS Sing-a-long kits (just like what you’d get at one of their shows).

Jane Espenson is doing a virtual book tour for her new tome SERENITY FOUND.

Jewel Staite has commented about the SERENITY 2 rumors on her blog.  

Ah!  Here’s something to tide us musical fans over - REPO! THE GENETIC OPERA, co-starring Anthony Head…And, on a side note: how awesome is this picture of Head (which I now think is from DOCTOR WHO)?



LOL...Looks like we will all get a chance to see some footage from this, during the airing tomorrow of the Scream Awards on SPIKE.  Vid got taken off of youtube, but FirstShowing.net still has it…*glee*
proggrrl: (UB the twins)
Well it turns out that yes, the Buffy-Sing-a-Long shutdown by FOX is indeed union-related...it's just not the Writers union.  Also, another speck of evidence supports the SERENITY 2 movie rumor ("…I heard it from Nathan so if it turns out not to be true you can blame him…”).  Hmm.

I just loved this week's HEROES (Kristen Bell is coming! To hang with Milo? Most exxxxcellllent).  Bye bye CALIFORNICATION and MAD MEN. I will miss, miss, miss you. *sigh*

Still really enjoying DIRTY SEXY MONEY (even if it is turning into DAMAGES.  Just a little.)  On the fence about REAPER (the Kevin-Smith-bloom is coming off the rose), CHUCK (not funny enough/not sexy enough), and PUSHING DAISIES.  But the latter is probably a keeper, it's gloriously twee and Kristen Chenoweth is a delight.  Her dog bf is killing me.  We'll see how the next few eps go, now that the network has banned our boy Barry Sonnenfeld from doing any more directing.  Hanging in for PRIVATE PRACTICE.  GREY'S final 2 minutes last week was stunning, and UGLY BETTY can do no wrong in my eyes - so there.

I've changed my mind about BROTHERS & SISTERS and am sticking with it.  The past 2 weeks have been great, and I just listened to this incredibly profound podcast interview with its lead writer and creator, the playwright Jon Robin Baitz...check this out.  He is deliciously articulate and thoughtful, feminist...just great.  What a blessing to have this guy writing for TV.  

Speaking of The Treatment podcasts: I have been catching up on a backlog of 'em, and wanted to recommend another great one for you TV fans out there: last summer's interview with Showtime executive Robert Greenblatt.  It's a fascinating listen for any fan of serialized TV.  Most interesting to me was RG's insider view of why 10 or 13-ep series often work out better than 20 or 22-ep ones.  Also really enjoyed hearing screenwriter Tony Gilroy, who talks about writing the scripts for the BOURNE films, and working on his new feature MICHAEL CLAYTON, which is Gilroy's first stab at directing.   Elvis Mitchell's interviews are as smart as Charlie Rose's - with the added plus that Elvis knows what the frak he's talking about much more often.

I love podcasts.  They are a fantastic thing to have handy for workouts, train or walking commutes, hikes, or long car and airplane trips.  Here are a few of my current favorites:

[Today's subject line is from DIRTY SEXY MONEY. Natch.]

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