SteveDeKnight

Tragic, init? I know Hugh Jackman must be a pretty nifty talent to work with, but other than that, what in Rao's name could possibly interest DeKnight in that show?

I'm baffled and stunned.

He left Smallville for THAT? Wow. Just wow!!! :ninja:

Him working on the new Terminator franchise might have been more interesting and more up his genre alley, as would even the vampire detective thing, whatever the hell that was, but Hugh Jackman upstaging his own employees in a musical based in a Casino????

:eek:

That's not good. Not good at all.

I'd be surprised if an expensive show like that lasted a month if it doesn't get good ratings.

*sigh*

Oh, well... I guess we'll see.
 
Him working on the new Terminator franchise might have been more interesting and more up his genre alley,
Totally agree!

as would even the vampire detective thing, whatever the hell that was,
MOONLIGHT (CBS Fridays, 9pm ET)
In this new twist on the traditional vampire type of story telling, an “undead” private investigator named Mick (Alex O’Loughlin) uses his acute vampire senses to help the living instead of feeding on them. With only a handful of undead confidantes for company, Mick fills his days by trying to protect the living. Moonlight is created by movie producer Joel Silver (The Matrix).​


but Hugh Jackman upstaging his own employees in a musical based in a Casino????

:eek:

That's not good. Not good at all.
I'm still stunned.

Did DeKnight write the puppet episode on Buffy? LOL (Might explain some things.)

I'd be surprised if an expensive show like that lasted a month if it doesn't get good ratings.
I'm trying to figure out which group they're going after. Comedy? Musical? Bollywood aficionados? Gamblers? Jackman fans? LOL

Seriously though, what on Earth interests DeKnight in that genre? Not that it's "bad" mind you. It just doesn't seem like anything he'd be interested in doing based on what he's done in his career so far.
 
Oh... dear...
http://www.zap2it.com/news/custom/p...supfronts-2007,0,6742514.photogallery?index=5

Really?

groan.gif

Oh my. I do love Jackman, and if he was a regular I'd definitely be tuning in. But from the write-up, it sounds like his appearances will be sporadic at best.

You know, this project just seems like something DeKnight would be interested in though. I"m not exactly sure why I think that - maybe it's the quirky uniqueness of it, or maybe I'm just remembering the Buffy musical episode - but it does seem to fit him.

Two words - Cop Rock. :dry:

(C'mon.. I know someone else remembers that fiasco.) :)
 
I'd be surprised if an expensive show like that lasted a month if it doesn't get good ratings.

The Terminator Franchise has a huge built in audience. All FOX has to do is advertise that show right. But its FOX & their track record sucks
 
Maybe CBS offered him a steady job as a staff writer, he did say he was looking for that when he left Smallville
 
The Terminator Franchise has a huge built in audience. All FOX has to do is advertise that show right. But its FOX & their track record sucks
Triplet was referring to Viva Laughlin, not the new Terminator series. The latter should do quite well.

Maybe CBS offered him a steady job as a staff writer, he did say he was looking for that when he left Smallville
Hey, I bet that's it! :up:
 
Maybe CBS offered him a steady job as a staff writer, he did say he was looking for that when he left Smallville

That's exactly what he said his contract is. He has a contract with the network so if the show he is working on fails, he just moves on to another project within the network.
 
That's exactly what he said his contract is. He has a contract with the network so if the show he is working on fails, he just moves on to another project within the network.

LOL!

That's good because I'm not sure I have a good feeling about this one lasting even a full season, despite the fact that Hugh Jackman will be occassionally guest starring...
 
LOL!

That's good because I'm not sure I have a good feeling about this one lasting even a full season, despite the fact that Hugh Jackman will be occassionally guest starring...

Well I think that's what was the driving edge for him to leave Smallville, this was really a big step in his career and too good of an opportunity to pass up.

But yeah, Hugh Jackman in that show sounds like the only good thing. I saw Hugh Jackman on stage in Sunset Boulevard, and he is really, really good at the whole song and dance thing.
 
To further ratchet up the iconic caliber of the show, the writers emphasize parallels between Clark, Lex, and Lois, making their destinies that much more entwined. They are written with similar personality ticks—fierce obstinacy, emotional avoidance, and a will of steel. The writers sew the struggles of the three characters with the same thematic threads; misunderstood by others and ill fitting in their environments, having run-ins with authority and interruptions in schooling, and the trio can certainly swap war stories about the tyrannical father figures in their lives.

Ah Ha Thank you Deknight for coming straight out and say what I've been saying from since Season 4 (Lois arrival)


SteveDeKnight said:
One early concern of the writers was that, while they were finally cleared by DC Comics to actually use Lois Lane , they had to avoid strains of characterization overlap with her cousin, Chloe Sullivan, who was aspiring to professional journalism from the start of the show. The writers kept this concern in mind according to DeKnight, but overall did not regard it as too much of a challenge. Lois, after all, had not latched on to her future career upon arrival.

"Originally there was some concern about duplication of character. I know some online fans complained that Lois is going to steal Chloe's thunder. And there was some conspiracy theory that Lois is going to die and Chloe take her identity."

DeKnight dismissed such "conspiracies", illuming some of the reasoning behind their ease with featuring two aspiring female reporters.

"It's like 'Wait a minute, now Clark's also going to become a journalist and that doesn't step on Chloe," he said, pointing out that besides Clark—who has yet to actively aspire toward the profession—there are countless journalists, and different types at that.

"I understand the concerns that her cousin is already a journalist." But just as Clark's end point is a cape and alter ego as a means to his heroic end, however, "Lois has to slowly figure it all out, too," her own means to effecting change in her world.

DeKnight continues, "And Lois approaches it from a completely different perspective. She's very much the classic, shoot from the hip, get-into-trouble Lois." He said that the writers gradually wrote a deliberate contrast between style and ethics and overall approach between the two budding journalists and cousins.

"We wanted to distinguish between how the two of them go about it. What we were doing was important because we didn't want both of them doing the same thing." As such, Lois is written as having her characteristic penchant for undercover investigative work and Chloe is written as a computer-oriented researcher; Lois initially vocalized cynicism about reporters and Chloe has unbridled enthusiasm about it from the outset.

And when finally in the bullpen herself, Lois shown killing a story that would be spun tastelessly by her tabloid's editor, in contrast to many similar stories Chloe had written and run with nary a pause for concern. DeKnight cites this scene, in the episode Reunion, as one of the subtly defining moments for Lois, laying the groundwork for eventual realizations about her craft and how she wants to pursue it. "There were ethics starting poking up right there...in that scene. We're definitely trying to distinguish between the two styles."

"And we deliberately started Lois out at a tabloid, getting her feet wet there, and then towards the end of the season she really starts to try to get into more serious journalism. But first we definitely want to distinguish between them and their styles."

Besides talking about the journalistic considerations going into writing Lois—even the introduction of her interest was a call back to guest star and future boss Perry White’s strange experience with Clark’s malfunctioning abilities—DeKnight segued into the matters of the heart between the comics’ most famous romantic duo.

Again, DeKnight hit it dead on target . If this isn't enough proof that Erica Durance's version is the same version that by the end of the series will in fact beyond a shadow of any doubt become the iconic and future beloved wife of SUPERMAN/Clark Kent. The Top Ace Reporter of The Daily Planet Lois Joanne Lane-Kent. Then nothing will . Because DeKnight has pretty much riped apart the Chlois theory beyond repair .

The points he made about the many difference between the way Lois & Chloe handle professional journalism is a huge nail in the confin.
 

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