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Posts tagged as “CBS”

Adapted and continued

Let’s continue to keep tabs on this year’s pilots.

Two new CBS pilots:
Richard Murphy has adapted for TV his own book, Confessions of a Contractor, about an L.A. contractor. The series will be exec by Shawn Ryan.

There’s also another medical drama for the net (the third medic pilot for now), The Eastmans, written by Side Order of Life‘s Margaret Nagle. The show focuses on a family of doctors.

Four new ones over at ABC:
Planet Lucky, by Gaby Allan and adapted from Fiona Neill’s Slummy Mummy, tells the story of a woman who gave up a prominent professional career to be a housewife, raising her three kids.
So is Linette leaving Desperate Housewives?

Cedric the Entertainer may have his own show, as ABC just ordered to pilot Bob Fisher’s The Law, starring Cedric, and focusing on LAPD weekend cops and their off-duty lives.

There is also Canned, written by Desperate Housewives/Reaper‘s Kevin Etten, about a group of friends all getting fired on the same day.
So….What then?

An untitled Anita Renfroe show is also going to pilot and puts to screen the saying that family comes first. The pilot was penned by Robert Hanning and Courting Alex‘s Amy Welsh.

Two go-aheads as well for Bill Lawrence’s Cougartwon with Cox, and Everybody Loves Raymond‘s Tucker Cawley comedy pilot starring Kelsey Grammer.

On the pilot-director front, we have The West Wing‘s Alex Graves shooting NBC’s Day One.
ABC’s Inside the Box will be directed by NYPD Blue‘s Mark Tinker, and Happy Town by October Road‘s Gary Fleder.
My Name is Earl‘s Marc Buckland will direct the still-unnamed Tad Quill comedy pilot.

Well-endowed

Continuing on the pilot season coverage…

NBC has ordered to pilot another comedy, this time named 100 Questions for Charlotte Payne, by Coupling‘s Chris Moynihan. The show centers around Charlotte Payne, a young woman and her life in New York in the dating scene with her friends.

Updates regarding other pilots and their directors:
CBS’ Back will be directed by Cold Case‘s Mark Pellington.
FOX’s Maggie Hill is being shot by 24‘s Stephen Hopkins, and the Sons of Tucson have Malcolm in the Middle‘s Todd Holland as the director.

HBO’s Hung has as well some update, with the announcement of Anne Heche as the co-star (replacing Kristin Bauer).
With production starting mid-March for a 10-episode run, the show is expected to premiere around June.

More and more

Guess what?
Pilot season continues.

NBC has picked up State of Romance, a pilot by Barbara Wallace and Tom Wolfe described as a contemporary Pride & Prejudice in Chicago.

CBS also continues with its pilots by picking up five more.

First, The Good Wife, by In Justice‘s Robert and Michelle King. The story revolves around the wife of a politician pursuing her original career as a defense attorney.

Another drama pilot is Three Rivers, from Jericho/Judging Amy/Providence/Swingtown‘s Carol Barbee. The show is a medical drama about organ transplants, and will tell the story from three points of view: the doctor, the donor, and the recipient.

There’s also yet another Bruckheimer-produced show and yet another medical drama, this time named Miami Trauma (not this Trauma). The script was written by Jeffrey Lieber (the kind-of-but-not-really creator of Lost) and centers around a team of trauma surgeons trying to save critically-injured patients.

On the comedy side, we have Accidentally on Purpose, based on a novel by Mary F. Pols and adapted for TV by Cashmere Mafia‘s Claudia Lonow. The comedy tells the story of a San Fran movie critic pregnant of a much younger man with whom she had a fling.

And finally we have Die, penned by Mad TV‘s Will Sasso and Chad Kultgen. This buddy comedy revolves around two guys living a crappy life, even though for them they’re living the dream.