Archive for the ‘Television’ Category

Star Trek to be Butchered

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

As usual when a company comes out and says they are going to digitally remaster something, Star Wars for example, I always get the feeling that something bad is going to happen (Star Wars for example). Well now it’s going to happen to the Star Trek Original series (TOS). Gasp!!!

But maybe all is not lost.

All involved said they wanted to stay true to the original series.

“The purpose of this [effects update] is to…not change the story and not change the plot, because we are all so passionate about the way it exists,” said David Rossi. “What we’re really trying to do here is just enhance the experience of watching Star Trek that people can have.”

Much talk has been made over the years about the different looks for the Klingons, but the classic villains remain the same in these updated episodes.

“We wouldn’t…dream of [changing them]. The Klingons existed as the way they are in that series and there’s…an episode of [most recent Trek series] Enterprise that explains why there’s a difference in the Klingons from the original series and the Klingons from future series,” Rossi said. “So there’s no reason for us to go back and do that. And the time it would take us to do that and the amount of resources would be crazy.”

“The star patterns that were in the original opening are exactly duplicated in the new opening. We smoothed out the motion of the Enterprise,” added vid Rossi. “It flies more dynamically now. It occupies real space. It doesn’t look like a model anymore. So that’s kind of the angle we took on it.”

Okuda said they used the original show’s look as a template for any tweaks.

“Star Trek is a period piece, albeit a period in the far future. So all the decisions are being made to honor the production style, the style of cinematography and the style of editing,” said Michael Okuda. “With that as our guidance…it follows very logically trying to re-create the look and feel of the original series.”

“When I was first approached, I was a little apprehensive because…I [was] concerned that the changes would be jarring,” Okuda added. “But then when I understood CBS Paramount’s intention was to honor the original, not to change it…I became very enthusiastic about it.”

Nogawski said one of the biggest reason’s for updating the show is to keep it viable in the age of high-definition TV and beyond.

“As we move into eventually a much better television set than there was in the sixties, moving into more lines of resolution to all the way up to HD, [Star Trek] would have not held up to that viewer,” Nogawski said. “And that viewer, in many ways, is kind of who you’re addressing as the younger viewer who really was not alive when the show was originally produced and may never have watched it up to this date. So it was really imperative to make this change… You’re going to get to the point where black-and-white [and] what was shot over the last forty years is going to become a memory if you don’t have these things looking the way that the eye is used to looking at them going forward.”

[ Quoted text from TV.com, written by Colin Mahan - Click Here ]

Star Trek's 40th Anniversary

Thursday, September 7th, 2006

Forty years ago, on September 8th, 1966, Star Trek debuted on television screens across America, forever changing the landscape of television and science fiction.

Stargate SG-1 Cancelled

Monday, August 21st, 2006

Some sad news, but things may be up as MGM is pushing to keep the series running on another network.

The future of Stargate is in question today, as SCI FI Channel has cancelled the long-running Stargate SG-1, Multichannel News reported today and a GateWorld source has confirmed. The news regrettably follows the airing of the show’s milestone two-hundredth episode on Friday in the US.

Read the Full Story at Gateworld – [Click Here]

Finally More TV in Australia

Wednesday, July 12th, 2006

In three years, there will be at least eight new channels on the living-room television, with other programs beamed straight to the mobile phone.

The new media regime proposed by the federal Government yesterday also promises that a greater range of sporting events will appear on pay-TV rather than free-to-air channels, as the owners of the sports rights are forced to screen events or give them up to Foxtel and others.

“It is consumers who will be the biggest winners, with access to a range of new services, potentially including several new digital channels, and even more to come in the transition to digital television,” said Communications Minister Helen Coonan as she unveiled the changes.

The reforms mean public broadcasters ABC and SBS will be able to show a greater range of material on their extra digital channels from next year.

From 2009, they will all be able to add another standard-definition channel. All the extra channels will only be available to Australians who buy a digital television or a digital set-top box that allows their existing analog set to pick up digital signals.

Limits on the new channels mean stations will not be able to screen sports content not already screened on their main analog channel. This would restrict Seven, for instance, from running a separate channel for Australian Rules football.

Despite the changes, Senator Coonan has put off any opportunity for a fourth free-to-air station until at least 2012, when the analog signal is switched off and everyone will have to convert to digital TVs or set-top boxes.

Instead of a new TV network, however, a range of new services is being proposed on the spare spectrum from 2009, including emerging mobile TV technology and other TV-like services.

Once the switch to digital television happens, all TV stations will be free to broadcast as many channels as they can in their spectrum allocation. Under the latest “compression” technology, this would be about eight for each existing station — or 40 free channels through the living room television.

There is still little detail about what sort of “new” services will be made available on the spare channels being offered from 2009.

“What I need to do was to get in-principle approval to allocate the new channels,” Senator Coonan said last night.

“Now we need to design the spectrum and see how it works. It is a very complex task. I am just not going to say what services they will, but it could be mobile or its could be an in-home service straight to your TV set. But it cannot be a fourth TV station by another name.”

She said that rules governing the spectrum and a plan for either selling it by auction or handing it out by “beauty parade” — where it is given to the bidder with the best proposal — would be formulated before the end of the year.

Pay-TV group Foxtel, which is 25 per cent owned by The Australian’s publisher, News Corporation, has been running trials of mobile TV services with Telstra and Macquarie Bank.

Big Brother AU Adults Only Cut After Political Presure

Saturday, June 24th, 2006

The Ten Network yesterday dumped its Big Brother: Adults Only series, just one day after being told by Coalition MPs the steamy show was damaging the network’s push for key media reforms.

Network Ten executive chairman Nick Falloon and chief executive Grant Blackley received an ear-bashing in Canberra this week while lobbying for law changes that would drive up the potential sale price of the Canadian-controlled company.

Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce said yesterday he harangued the executives over Big Brother on Thursday in a meeting arranged by Ten to argue the network’s case for media reform.

“I listened to what they had to say then told them in no uncertain terms that they were doing themselves no favors arguing for reforms while Big Brother was still on the air,” Senator Joyce told The Weekend Australian.

Mr Joyce said the delegation argued the adults-only version, screened at 9.40pm on Mondays, had been sanitised after complaints about last year’s series.

“And I said, ‘The other night you had simulated anal sex on the TV just three hours after The Simpsons‘,” Senator Joyce said. “Tell me how I explain that to my daughter.”

It is understood Communications Minister Helen Coonan, who has put together the proposed media reforms, also told Mr Falloon many MPs were complaining about the show.

Ten said yesterday it had dropped the series, saying there were only “three or four episodes” left to run.

“Questions continue to be raised as to whether the show should be on air,” a Ten statement said. “We did not see that situation changing, regardless of how we treated the program, and that uncertainty was putting unfair pressure on our team.”

Asked whether the show was dropped due to the push for reforms, a Ten spokeswoman said: “This has come from us looking at a range of issues.”

Ten owner CanWest, a Canadian media company, said in its submission on media reforms to Senator Coonan that plans to wind back foreign and cross-media ownership would enable the industry to increase its profits.

A change in ownership laws would allow more companies to attempt to buy Ten, driving up its price.

The Ten network has also received complaints about Big Brother from the Coalition’s Classifications Issues backbench committee.

The committee is demanding the Australian Communications and Media Authority be given wider powers to patrol content on free-to-air television and respond to public complaints.

During Tuesday’s partyroom meeting, committee chair Trish Draper and Nationals MP Paul Neville complained directly to John Howard about Big Brother.

Mr Neville is an influential member of the backbench communications committee closely scrutinising proposals for media reform.

Ms Draper and Senator Joyce were last night pleased with Ten‘s decision to scrap the adults-only version of Big Brother.

Senator Joyce said the Ten delegation had remained largely silent during his spray on Thursday. “They just sat there sheepishly, looking around for the nearest exit,” he said.

Update: Big Brother 2008 Promo

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Comedy Central + Futurama = New Series

Friday, June 23rd, 2006
Comedy Central has resurrected the former Fox animated series from “The Simpsons” creator Matt Groening and David X. Cohen. At least 13 new episodes will be produced, the first since the series’ original run from 1999-2003.

Expect More Stargate

Thursday, May 11th, 2006

Brad Wright co-executive producer of SCI-FI Channel‘s original series Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis told SCI-FI Wire he’s confident that the longstanding franchise could spin off more series and even a feature film. Projects in the works include a third TV series, a massively multiplayer online role-playing game and a movie, he said in an interview.

“What we’ve built is now bigger than all of us,” Wright said. “Even if I were to not do the movie, I know somebody is going to do a Stargate movie. It’s the second largest franchise for MGM next to Bond. So it’s got significant brand potential, and by two series doing as well as they are and a game coming out, that could really, really, really brand the show in a big way. That’s what they like in this business: a larger franchise with so many legs to it that it could go into the future for years to come.”

The franchise began with the 1994 feature film Stargate, followed by SG-1 on Showtime in 1996. That series moved to SCI-FI in 2002 and will begin its unprecedented 10th season on July 14, becoming the longest-running SF show in American television history. Atlantis spun off of SG-1 in 2004 and kicks off its third season also on July 14.

“I know there will be a movie made,” Wright said. “I know there will likely be another series made, whether I make it or not. It’s just too good a vehicle for storytelling. This is exactly what Jonathan [Glassner] and I recognized 10 years ago, when we created the series. The Stargate is dramatically, and in terms of storytelling, a perfect vehicle from which to launch characters and tell stories. That’s why it will go for years to come.” Ian Spelling