| ADVERTISEMENT |

Spacecast Community

Welcome to Spacecast Community Sign in | Join | Help
in Search

Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

Last post 08-21-2008, 3:58 PM by Will_edm. 701 replies.
Page 3 of 47 (702 items)   < Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next > ... Last »
Sort Posts: Previous Next
  •  01-19-2004, 10:36 PM Permalinks: 45963 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    I jsut noticed that in the Our Ms. Reynolds deleted scene it's stated that there are 70+ planets occupied. I think that's the only time it's ever mentioned how many there are in the series.

    Originally posted by William
  •  01-19-2004, 11:26 PM Permalinks: 45964 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Yeah, that line is the only indication of how many terraformed/natural worlds there are in the Firefly 'verse. Joss was never big on the world-building.

    Originally posted by vchrusch
  •  01-20-2004, 12:53 AM Permalinks: 45965 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Networks throw rules out window
    By Joanne Ostrow
    Denver Post Media Critic

    Monday, January 19, 2004 -

    LOS ANGELES - Look closely and see the fear in their eyes. At the start of 2004, television executives are desperate.

    "The old rules no longer apply," according to NBC’s top executive, Jeff Zucker.

    "There aren’t any rules anymore," according to ABC Entertainment president Susan Lyne.

    Declining audiences, the temptations of video games and other technologies and an impatient advertising community have prompted a wave of experimentation.

    "The old economic model has lasted too long," Fox Entertainment president Gail Berman said. "We need to change the business."

    There’s a hint of panic in the air. Anxious programmers will attempt a number of alterations:

    NBC will launch its fall season in August. Fox won’t even mention fall, preferring to "redefine the traditional broadcast calendar with year-round programming."

    ABC will try limited-run series on the British model. ("The D.A." is pitched as "four weeks, four murders"). Stephen King’s "Kingdom Hospital" is 13 weeks, beginning March 3. And ABC will adopt shared time slots on the HBO model, mimicking the way "The Sopranos" and "Six Feet Under" appear in rotation.

    The WB will air 22 episodes of the drama "One Tree Hill" twice a week nonstop without reruns, giving viewers an extra shot at finding the show.

    "Why not?" the WB executives ask.

    "We’ve had our heads in the sand for too long," said ABC’s Lyne.

    Desperate times call for progressive programming tricks. While monkeying with the schedules doesn’t resolve anything for viewers fed up with "reality" TV or appalled by the dumbing-down of the medium generally, it’s a sign of the networks grasping for answers in the face of monumental change.

    The uncertainty is giving the business a frontier feel.

    NBC and Fox will pursue a 52-week-a-year season, avoiding a rerun lull. ABC may experiment with fewer commercials at higher prices, giving sponsors the chance to buy time at a premium on the most popular shows. Program length may become elastic, too.

    "This is an exciting time to be in TV but you have to have strong nerves," said ABC’s Lyne. The frontier beckons, but programmers don’t know what they’ll find there.

    One thing NBC’s Zucker does not expect to find there is sweeps. The traditional ratings measurement system is outmoded and will be phased out, he believes, as new People Meter technology is introduced. NBC also expects to say goodbye to knee-jerk coverage of political party nominating conventions. This year for the first time, NBC will launch its fall season following the summer Olympics, knocking the Republicans out of prime-time into the wee hours.

    The executives disagree on whether viewers can navigate their erratic program schedules. NBC thinks chaos is now the norm.

    "We promoted ’Average Joe’ for just two weeks on the air," Zucker said, "and then it came on, and everybody had found it. We promoted ’The Apprentice’ for four weeks, two of those over the holidays, and people found it. We moved ’Third Watch’ over to Friday night with very little promotion and people found it.

    "We have to understand television is changing, and it’s changing right now," Zucker said. "There’s generations of viewers who have now grown up on MTV... and 100 cable channel choices, and all they do is surf around. They’re sophisticated enough now to be able to find the hot new website and to find the hot new show and the hot new channel."

    By contrast, Fox’s Berman acknowledged the difficulty for viewers when TV is unpredictable. "The goal is to try to create a more stable schedule," she said.

    One stunning development executives find themselves chasing is the effect of DVDs. Surprisingly robust revenues from TV-themed DVDs are changing the way television is made. A hit DVD could even revive a canceled series.

    Estimated sales of TV series on DVD exceeded $1 billion in 2003, according to industry reports. Fox’s animated "Family Guy" tops the list; HBO’s "The Sopranos" has earned enough from DVD sales to recoup the entire cost of the early seasons. Serial dramas such as "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "24" are much bigger sellers in DVD than procedural dramas like "Law & Order."

    "The Family Guy" is the best example of the changing business model, Berman said. The Cartoon Network picked up the series when Fox dumped it. Then, "the huge success of the DVD made us pay attention to the show again," Berman said. Additional episodes likely will be produced, and the series may once again be a viable candidate for Fox.

    Joanne Ostrow is in Southern California for the winter Television Critics Association meeting to preview new programming.


    Nothing really directly to do with Firefly, but an interesting article about the 'nets.

    ;)

    Originally posted by vchrusch
  •  01-20-2004, 6:44 PM Permalinks: 45966 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Here's a link to Playboy.com's interview with Morena Baccarin. I didn't get any naughty pop-ups, but you just never know. Consider yourself been warned if you are of the prudish variety or are using the workplace computer. Anyways, the interview -
    http://www.playboy.com/arts-entertainment/wov/baccarin/index.html

    ;)

    Originally posted by vchrusch
  •  01-22-2004, 3:05 PM Permalinks: 45967 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Fun little site - The Dictionary of Mal

    Originally posted by vchrusch
  •  01-23-2004, 12:40 AM Permalinks: 45968 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Originally posted by Zaphod B:
    Here's a link to Playboy.com's interview with Morena Baccarin. I didn't get any naughty pop-ups, but you just never know. Consider yourself been warned if you are of the prudish variety or are using the workplace computer. Anyways, the interview -
    http://www.playboy.com/arts-entertainment/wov/baccarin/index.html

    ;)
    Cool man, thanks!


    later
    don

    Originally posted by Don
  •  01-25-2004, 5:42 AM Permalinks: 45969 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    "Well...here I am...."

    :D *SPEWS COCA-COLA™ FROM NOSTRILS ONTO VDU* :D

    Originally posted by MALCOLM XERXES
  •  01-25-2004, 2:45 PM Permalinks: 45970 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    You must have recently watched Objects In Space. That's a great line.

    Originally posted by vchrusch
  •  01-25-2004, 4:06 PM Permalinks: 45971 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Who sings the FF theme song?

    Originally posted by Joe 22
  •  01-25-2004, 4:11 PM Permalinks: 45972 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Sonny Rhodes.

    Originally posted by William
  •  01-25-2004, 5:14 PM Permalinks: 45973 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    And the story behind that -

    Stony Plain News: Sonny Rhodes recorded the theme song for the new Fox TV Show "Firefly". When the creator of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer", Joss Whedon, conceived the new science fiction "space" series to be called "Firefly" for FOX TV's fall season, he began to look for a "deep, bluesy voice" to sing the theme song he had written for the show. When Stony Plain submitted Sonny Rhodes, everyone involved with the show in Los Angeles loved his sound, and he got the job. One snag: Nobody could find Sonny, who was touring in Estonia. By the time he had been located, he and his band were in Scandinavia - but, again, a phone connection wasn't made. Meanwhile, back in Los Angeles, the prestigious Village Recorders studio had been booked for three days, with an all-star cast of musicians (including bassist Leland Sklar) standing by. All that was needed was the singer. Eventually, with a day to spare, contact was made when Sonny returned to his family in Oakland after a 14-hour flight and a couple of all-too-typical-these-days airport delays. Hearing about the assignment in a cell phone call from Holger Petersen as he drove home from the airport, he had a couple of hours sleep, and then to Los Angeles the next day for the session. "Firefly" is the network's flagship new series, and Sonny's voice will be heard in millions of homes around the world. Sonny Rhodes has also received a Living Blues Award for Most Distinguished Blues Musician (Other Instrument).

    And a link to Sonny's discography:

    http://www.stonyplainrecords.com/sprecord/artists/rhodes.html

    Originally posted by vchrusch
  •  01-25-2004, 5:26 PM Permalinks: 45974 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Joss posted a message to the fans at FFF.net a little earlier today. Linky goodness -

    http://www.fireflyfans.net/thread.asp?b=5&t=3525

    Originally posted by vchrusch
  •  01-25-2004, 5:50 PM Permalinks: 45975 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Seems to me everybody is focusing more on the factr that he tried to post here (which is real cool) than the message himself.

    The whole

    "Checking in to say: Rough @%&$#ing week. Trying to work the movie deal, juggling so many balls and dropping them all, basically ending the week going, "I'm done. I'm tapped. Last man down, I don't even think I can do this."

    tirad didn't exactly sound promising.

    It's good to know he hasn't given up and is still working hard on it, but does this mean that the movie is pretty much dead?

    Originally posted by William
  •  01-25-2004, 5:59 PM Permalinks: 45976 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    I suppose you can look at it that way, but Joss tends to be a big tease at times when it comes to the fans. Dropping hints and being all pessimistic like. I ain't worried.

    ;)

    Originally posted by vchrusch
  •  01-25-2004, 6:13 PM Permalinks: 45977 in reply to 45933

    Re: Still Flying - The Firefly Thread

    Just remember folks, it ain't over until the portly atheistic science-fiction geek sings. If there is absolutely no chance of getting this movie made Joss will tell us, until then, I still hold out hope. That message didn't sound very encouraging though... :(

    Originally posted by Joe 22
Page 3 of 47 (702 items)   < Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next > ... Last »
View as RSS news feed in XML