Rumour mill is that NBC are considering putting their TV content back on iTunes.
The Minearverse 5: Closer to the Earth, Further from the Ax
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls, The Inside and Drive), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
Nikki Finke's back. I'm wishing she'd stayed gone longer.
As Vince Neil once said, "Girl, don't go away mad. Girl, just go away."
Holy shit, redesign.
Okay, that happened in the last five minutes. Because it was still the old site when I looked before my post.
Somebody reset her Wordpress template...
Tim signed some scripts for Cash for the Crew. And I got to play with beagles. Harrison remains my favorite. He promises not to tell Rudy.
NBC and other companies have already used the strike to terminate millions of dollars of long-term production contracts. Mr Zucker is planning to go further by cutting back enduring features of the television business, including the pilot season, in which networks develop programmes, and the splashy "upfront" presentations in which they tout them to advertisers.
"Things like that are all vestiges of an era that's gone by and won't return," Mr Zucker told the Financial Times.
He made his remarks in the midst of a three-month labour strike by Hollywood writers that has cost thousands of jobs, placed a drag on California's economy and raised questions about the future of the business.
Network executives say the economic model that has sustained television is no longer tenable as production costs soar while audiences fragment among cable channels, websites and video games. One chief complaint concerns the pilot season, in which they fund dozens of samples of new programmes – typically at several million dollars apiece – hoping to unearth a hit.
Mr Zucker appears emboldened to make changes as NBC's audience ratings have improved in the strike's wake, mostly thanks to inexpensive reality shows.
"I think there were a tremendous number of inefficiencies in Hollywood and it often takes a seismic event to change them, and I think that's what's happened here," he said of the strike, predicting that "the development process will change forever."
Why do I get the feeling that most of Mr. Zucker's prior business experience was in the exciting field of ball bearing manufacture or something similar?
I think there were a tremendous number of inefficiencies in Hollywood and it often takes a seismic event to change them, and I think that's what's happened here," he said of the strike
Too bad programming executives won't get buried under this seismic event.
I wonder if Mr. Zucker considers his salary an inefficient use of funds.
I know I do.