Do you geek out when you're sitting 50 feet away from your favorite TV stars at Comic-Con? Well, I get to geek out for a living, and I get a lot closer than 50 feet. The past two weeks have been the Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour, and as a working journalist and TCA member, I've been immersed in a world of actors, producers, writers and executives like Marty McFly overloaded with stimuli in the distant future of 2015.
The Television Critics Association press tours are always my favorite events of the year to cover. Twice a year, in the summer and winter, some 160 television reporters from around the country (and Canada) gather in Los Angeles. The networks, including cable and PBS, present panels with the actors and producers for each of their new shows. Unlike Comic-Con, however, these events aren't open to thousands of fans. It's an exclusive Q&A with industry professionals. After each panel, the talent stays for about 10 minutes to mingle further in what reporters affectionately call a "scrum" or "gaggle," which means a bunch of journalists surrounding a star up close and firing questions until a network publicist pulls them away. Most networks throw an evening party where the TCA can get further interviews with the stars - more scrums!
The TCA press tour may be a business event, but when you love television and have found a job doing what you love, it's like your ultimate holodeck program, only real! Geek bloggers are welcome and indeed carry a lot of the conversation regarding any shows like Fringe, Revolution, Grimm, Once Upon a Time, Arrow or The Walking Dead. This January, the winter press tour included lots of nerdy shows, and some of our favorite geek stars this side of Felicia Day. We had to narrow it down to 10, which shows you how much great geeky stuff is on TV this year!
10. Uncovering Da Vinci's Demons.
David S. Goyer wrote the Blade trilogy, which we can credit with introducing all the Marvel comics that followed. He also co-wrote the Dark Knight trilogy, and a Magneto script that was never made, but he wasn't here to talk about comic books, rather, his new Starz show Da Vinci's Demons, coming in April. Of course thanks to The Da Vinci Code, everyone now knows Leonardo Da Vinci was more than just a painter. Goyer's show turns him into Sherlock Holmes, but the Robert Downey Jr. action hero Sherlock Holmes, not the literary brainy Sherlock Holmes. While inventing all his ahead of their time devices (if you don't know about these, go watch Hudson Hawk!), Da Vinci (Tom Riley) will solve a royal conspiracy and fight bad guys with swords and parkour!
"People have said that aside from Christ, he's the most recognized historical figure in the world, so in that regard, my approach to it was not dissimilar to adapting Batman or Superman," Goyer said. "Obviously we did a lot more historical research. I would say 80, 85% of what's in there actually really happened, and then we've embellished it with a little bit of what I'm calling historical fantasy, or things like that. But he has a pretty incredible life. We didn't have to embellish as much as you would think."
9. Desiring the NeedWant from Defiance.
Syfy's upcoming series is most ambitious. They created a new TV series and a new third-person MMO video game set in the world. Defiance is about an American town in an alien-terraformed future, where six new species of aliens cohabit with humans; one of the main characters is a kickass alien girl with red hair and a cro-magnon forhead. A key setting is the NeedWant, a brothel bar, so Syfy dressed up the Langham hotel's Viennese ballroom as the NeedWant. I had a blue absinthe drink that felt very futuristic, and tasted like the future too, but they didn't go the extra mile of hiring high-priced escorts and dressing them like alien species.
While the Defiance talent mingled, Trion video game developers demoed some early game levels. Once the game launches in April, players can meet some of the characters from the show to get their in game missions, but don't worry, the show will make sense without playing the game. As if that's a worry for hardcore gaming sci-fi fans, but it makes the rest of the world feel better.
8. Kevin Bacon and James Purefoy earn a whole new Following.
The Following is one of the biggest new shows of the season, partly because of its pedigree, but largely because as a violent serial killer show, it's the scapegoat in the current media vs. guns debate. Kevin Bacon stars as Ryan Hardy, a former agent who caught serial killer Joe Carroll (James Purefoy), and now must work with him to stop Carroll's proteges from future killings. In a lighter moment from a very serious panel, Bacon and Purefoy kissed on the mouth in front of reporters to show what great chemistry they had. Mr. Six Degrees himself and and Solomon Kane/Kantos Kan lightened up a grim session. The show is excellent though.
7. Getting under Stephen King's Dome.
Stephen King's latest 1000-pager is becoming a summer TV series from CBS. They start shooting in February, but they had a video of Stephen King talking about the show, with series producer Brian K. Vaughan. It's basically the plot of The Simpsons Movie: a town becomes encased in an invisible dome. This is the scary version, though, where their electronics stop working, they run out of food and start killing each other. Some of the early animatics show a cow sliced in half by the descending dome, a plane crash into midair and EMP effects disabling pacemakers. King seemed maniacally gleeful about the adaptation, which he hopes could run even longer than the book.
6. Farscape's revenge.
Rockne S. O'Bannon, creator of Farscape, developed the new CW series Cult. Cult is about a show on the CW called Cult whose fans may be involved in kidnapping and murder. It's a meta show within the show, and it comes out of O'Bannon's experience with Farscape fans. Don't worry, O'Bannon still thinks Farscape fans were all lovely, but O'Bannon imagined if they were nefarious it would make another great show. I agree. The pilot is awesome!
"The origin of the show actually did come out of my Farscape experience, where I witnessed the kind of incredible fan passion for a show and the ability of fans to kind of find each other through social media and connect up," O'Bannon said. "In the instance of Farscape, which is a very kind of benign science-fiction adventure show, but it started me thinking what if the show were something with a little bit darker edge and what kind of fans would that then draw? And so Farscape obviously was the kind of catalyst for the idea."
Does anyone else see it as alarming that A&E felt the need to go with a 50's era decor for the Bate's Motel press meeting? I mean, they update the story to the present but then entice the press with nostalgia for the orginal's production sets? Sounds like a bait-and-switch to me.
How do you even dress up a room like the Bate's Motel dining room circa 1950's? I seriously doubt the original Bate's Motel had a dining room. What motel does?
I really want to like this but I'm very nervous. They tried to go this backstory route way back in 1990 with Psycho IV. It did not go well and they had Anthony Perkins.
Hrm, Topless Robot gets Entertainment Weekly news with a thin coat of "Most of that stuff is vaguely related to 'geek', right?" io9 gets Rob's list of the 20 worst Gobots.
I've been defending Topless Robot's new management. It takes time to adjust and find a groove. I even defended the first fast food review. But, honestly, the site doesn't really look or feel like Topless Robot any more. It is like the launch trick Marvel pulls when they switch leads inside a title, knowing that a Hercules book wouldn't sell on its own, but if it carries on from Incredible Hulk's numbering it can carry on some of the audience.
Topless Robot is looking more and more like a general entertainment site, with the thin veneer of "geek" to justify keeping the old name.
@Baines So Da Vinci isn't nerdy? JJ Abrams isn't nerdy? Wonder Women isn't nerdy? Stephen King isn't nerdy? I think your displeasure is unfortunate. But that is the benefit of the internet, you could move along to some place else. Baines...we hardly knew thee
man what is in the water today? all of the blokes we never heard of jumping ship. pro tip - if nobody heard of you before, you won't be missed - unless you sign off with a WRT level diatribe. challenge accepted internet? <y/n>
@Baines Not that it'll change your opinion any, but it's really difficult to get credentialed for the TCAs. Getting a guy on the inside to report on shows of interest to us (and I stand by the idea that all the shows mentioned are of some interest to us - I switched out those that weren't) was a bit of a coup, and far from cribbing EW news.
Though EW has Geoff Boucher, the biggest name in legit geek journalism, so any comparisons there are arguably flattering.
"I would say 80, 85% of what's in there actually really happened, and
then we've embellished it with a little bit of what I'm calling
historical fantasy, or things like that. But he has a pretty incredible
life. We didn't have to embellish as much as you would think." So quickly, can someone show me in the history books where Da Vinci started Parkour?
@Canadian.Scott Reminds me of the article I read about Burton's Sleepy Hollow when it first came out. They described it something like 'Ichabod Crane is a police detective/forensics engineer instead of a one room school teacher but otherwise it is exactly like Washington Irving's original story." Anybody who has actually read the story (or even watched the Disney cartoon) couldn't possibly make such an asinine statement. It's like saying "except for making the character of Jesus a pill popping womanizer with a chip on his shoulder we followed the story of the Bible very closely."
I am excited about SHIELD and The Following. I'm on the fence about Under the Dome. And i could do without prequels of Wonder Woman and Psycho. As for the other stories, has anyone followed Revolution? I started to watch it, gave it six episodes and then bailed.
@Canadian.Scott Under the Dome might work, but I look through King tinted glasses. The best way for it to work would to put all the reality tv stars under the dome and not give a shit about them.
@Canadian.Scott I watched a little after my boss said how great it was, for somethingto talk about at work, however I my suspension of disbelief was strained past breaking by a world in which potato clocks don't work
@Canadian.Scott I could never get past the utter idiocy of the premise, so I never watched Revolution. I probably won't watch Bates Motel, but I hope it does well for Freddie Highmore's sake. He was a good kid actor, and I'd like to see him make something of himself as he gets older.
@rabidronnie As long as it isn't more psycho movies...Revolution was a mistake, the acting was brutal, the storyline made no sense. But then again I loved The River and we all know how that worked out...i will never know what happened to Admiral Pike...
@rabidronnie @Someguy I can get through the selective stuff but the lead actress is about as emotional as a board. And then the dad from Twilight just starts fights when he had nothing else to say. Again, why does The River die and Revolution live?!? But then again i love found footage stuff.
@Someguy@Canadian.Scott@rabidronnie I think you nailed it with the word "selective." What has stopped working, what still works. . . I mean, I don't know a lot of specifics because again, I didn't watch it, but it seemed incredibly inconsistent as to what basic scientific realities have continued to work and which ones haven't.
@Canadian.Scott@rabidronnie A premise like Revolution would work for a Twilight Zone or Doctor Who episode or two, but you cannot be that undefined and selective in you plot points and make a show last.
Excited about S.H.I.E.L.D., Cult, The Following (although given Fox's abyssmal track record, I expect that if it's any good it will be cancelled after one season at most), Defiance (set in my hometown, woot woot!) and possibly the new Stephen King mini-series. Although goddamnit now I gotta read that whole 1000 page book by this summer! Anyway, tv is getting too exciting now!
my first thought when i saw what the list was going to be and how hard it was going to get ten. is would at least the shield tv show make the cut some where. or maybe the cws attempt to finaly give wonder woman her due in other media. make the cut and surrprised shield is number one . plus love that i am not the only one who thinks cult is bannons little revenge for farscapes ending
Awesome list! It's very cool to be able to see some of this "inside" stuff.
I've looked through all of the trailers, and the one that sticks out to me is the Da Vinci one. Why does everyone have a British accent if the show is supposed to be set in Italy?
@Big.Jim.Slade Starz needs something since Spartacus is ending. I have to say my opinion of Starz and the way they have dealt with Spartacus and the death of the lead actor will get me to at least try a new series from them without even knowing what it is.
They've earned my support. And I like steampunk Davinci.
Frankly I got bored with the villain of the week Arrow however I admit that I would watch the crap out of the same show if the lead were a buff female - all the better with short hair.
@Gallen_Dugall Get out of here. 1. Arrow has such a complicated and overarching plot, with every event directly leading to another, that is is beyond stupid of you to call it a villain of the week show. 2. I hate i09. I hate it. And you have the audacity to come to my haven and post one of their horrid "look at something someone did" posts?! Fan art?! A whole article dedicated to FAN ART!? And they do that multiple times DAILY.
Don't post this here. Don't link to i09 here. I don't need to see any of this. Get out.
@angry@Gallen_Dugall Yeah, I assume that by season two they'll have all the plot minutia worked out and I'll give it another shot. As for io9 no one is going to put a gun to your head to make you follow the link but I still drop into io9 for Robs bits and if I see hot Wonder Woman fan art I follow up on that too, but yes the site sucks particularily in the inability of people to have conversations about stuff - like this.
@Canadian.Scott@Someguy Ugh. I tried real life once.. I wandered around for days looking for someone with an exclamation mark over their heads. Finally had to give up; grab random people and scream at them, "Do you have a quest for me!!!!!?" "Can I go kill 10 pigeons and bring them back to you??" "I have collected 100 timbits, where do I turn them in????"
@rabidronnie @Someguy @Canadian.Scott i totally play this game but mine is set in a boring office which my wonderful company will not let me put stuff i want in.
@Someguy@rabidronnie@Canadian.Scott I play that game! Probably a different server, though. . . and cleanup is not nearly as easy as it is in "Sims". . .
Yea I've been playing that Virtual reality game that everyone been saying I should play. They call it real life. Trust me, it's not as good as people keep telling you it is. No save points; no extra lives; Turns out your also can't just jump on a guys head and take his coins either.
My turns not over yet though, I'll have to get back to it so I will be in and out for a little while.
@angry@Gallen_Dugall That's where Rob went, so if I have to ignore a few annoying posts to get to his, I'm willing to go there a couple of times a day. Not that LYT isn't kicking ass here...