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#61 |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,401
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I don't have a lot of evidence but I want to feel inclined to add Tim Doyle. There have been whispers out there that he has been in the past, verbally abusive towards female writers. We do know that he departed from the Goldbergs spin-off Schooled 13 episodes into the second/final season due to "creative differences sparked by Doyle’s vision for the comedy, which did not reconcile with ABC, Sony TV, and ABC Studios’." Doyle was a (if not thee) driving force behind the removal of Alexandra Kronsey from Last Man Standing after the first season.
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#62 |
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Cat-tastic and Whiskerlicious
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Join Date: Sep 01, 2006
Location: The Catacombs
Posts: 20,606
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Tim Doyle was not the force behind Alexandra Krosney being fired, that I blame on Tim Allen. And posting rumors about Tim Doyle being abusive is unproven gossip that is not needed, you seem to have a vendetta against him. I have a bunch of contempt for ABC screwing TKAA out of a renewal for Liz Meriwether's pair of garbage comedies. I did not watch Schooled, but wouldn't put anything past ABC with their shoddy treatment of him. Plus that show had a lot bigger problems with Bryan Callen, who was on Schooled from day one long before Tim Doyle was hired.
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__________________
Top 200 TV Shows https://www.sitcomsonline.com/boards...14#post6225214 Top 150 Movies https://www.sitcomsonline.com/boards...84#post6175384 Top 1100 Scripted TV Characters https://www.sitcomsonline.com/boards...d.php?t=493306 Top Rookie TV Shows by Calendar Year https://www.sitcomsonline.com/boards...d.php?t=365017 Top Movies by Calendar Year https://www.sitcomsonline.com/boards...d.php?t=473533
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#63 | |
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#64 | |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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Murphy's recent movie musical The Prom marked his latest disappointing project for Netflix, arriving after lackluster reviews for The Politician, Hollywood and Ratched. The megaproducer's $300 million 2018 Netflix deal gave him cash and independence. But as Vulture's Jackson McHenry points out, it may have made Murphy out of touch with what made his previous shows so great. "The nine shows he’d produced at FX over 15 years, including Nip/Tuck, Glee, and American Horror Story, had always been maximal, attention-grabbing, full of cruelty or gore," says McHenry. "Run through with a strain of righteousness, they focused on underdog characters (theater geeks, gay teens, brunettes) boxing out their own space in the world. The shows could be angry about injustices of class, race, gender, sexuality, and, often, beauty. They could also be scattershot, favoring big swings in tone over consistency. More often than not, they had you by the throat. Murphy’s move to Netflix marked a certain anointment by the industry — at the time, it was called the biggest deal for a TV creator in history — and Murphy talked about it as if he had been invited to sit with the homecoming court at the cafeteria....But with millions in hand and more power than ever, the work Murphy has made at Netflix so far has been curiously tedious. In a review of his spring 2020 miniseries Hollywood, this magazine called it 'so narrow-minded that its sentimentality curls all the way back around to cynicism.' When Ratched premiered in the fall, the Ringer’s headline was simply 'Another Ryan Murphy Netflix Show, Another Miss.' Murphy has always had an eye for clever casting — reviving the career of an older actress, spinning out a career for one of his favorite regular players. Now, he has seemingly grown enamored with the possibility of casting whichever stars he pleases and allergic to challenging them with unflattering material. His sympathies, always conflicted between the world’s brown-haired losers and its glamorous blonde winners, have tipped slightly but conclusively toward the side of the winners." That can be seen in Murphy's seeming obsession with celebrities in his Netflix work. "Murphy has long had a sense of the chutes and ladders of power: who’s climbing up, and who’s pushing everyone else down," says McHenry. "Now that he’s on top at Netflix, he seems to have grown more fond of the whole board game. In his 2019 Time profile, Murphy notes that 'everything I’m working on is about one idea — taking marginalized characters and putting them in the leading story.' He brags about how he has every A-lister’s phone number — except for Meryl Streep’s. ('There’s everybody, and then there’s Meryl.') Those have always been Murphy’s two conflicting motivations, which he’s channeled through his characters all the way back to Popular: identification with the underdog and obsession with the top dog....While Murphy’s star casting goes back to Glee and American Horror Story, on Netflix it has gone into overdrive. See the casting of Cynthia Nixon in Ratched or Bette Midler in The Politician: Both play characters that wink at their own personae (a powerful queer woman, a comedic schemer) and never go deeper than that. Murphy’s desire to center A-listers is made most literal in The Prom. Unlike its Broadway iteration, which humbled and humiliated its stuck-up actor characters, Murphy’s version celebrates the magic of celebrity....The humor and tension of so many of Murphy’s earlier series came from an awareness of the world’s unfairness and the absurdity of in-group politics. Resentment was the grist for his content mill. In his Netflix work, Murphy has created fantasies of acceptance — noble, perhaps, but quickly and cheaply earned. When resentment does appear, it flows outward and down, toward the haters, the critics, or the townspeople of Indiana." |
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#65 |
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Member
Forum 3000 Club Member
Join Date: Jun 25, 2001
Location: Boston, MA, USA
Posts: 3,419
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TMC spends a great deal of time on these boards posting unfounded rumors and gossip. They made a post on the Family Ties board about Justine Bateman being bitter about her brother’s success, with absolutely no evidence. I’ve decided to start calling TMC out on these posts, and I’m glad you’re doing it as well. The worst thing we can do is say nothing when we see this type of gossip and rumormongering.
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#66 | |
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And when I brought up Fred MacMurray's admitted "detachment" from his work on My Three Sons, you flat out accuse me of "slandering/disparaging" a dead man. In the case of Tim Doyle, how exactly am I making stuff up all by myself, when I just said that a female writer who worked for him on The Kids Are Alright implied on Twitter that he used abusive language? You completely and absolutely overlooked if not flat out ignored what I just said. |
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Last edited by TMC; 12-06-2021 at 12:43 AM. |
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#67 | |||
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Last edited by TMC; 02-23-2022 at 06:30 AM. |
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#68 | |
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#69 | |
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Julie,Julie Anne,&Felice 4Ever
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#70 |
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Member
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Join Date: Aug 04, 2009
Location: Memphis Tennessee
Posts: 3,072
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A guy named Kurtzman is basically the “show runner” for the new Trek series Discovery and Picard, which in my opinion and the opinion of the majority of Star Trek faithful are not good shows with terrible storylines and mostly terrible characters. Trek nation isn’t feeling the love but watch the dreck out of loyalty to the franchise and the hope that something better comes (and if we don’t watch it, Trek dies).
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#71 | ||
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#72 | |
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#73 | |
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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In a series of posts on Instagram and Twitter, Carpenter writes that she stands with Ray Fisher, who accused Whedon of “gross, abusive, unprofessional and completely unacceptable” behavior on the Justice League set. "For nearly two decades, I have held my tongue and even made excuses for certain events that traumatize me to this day. Joss Whedon abused his power on numerous occasions while working on the sets of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel. While he found his misconduct amusing, it only served to intensify my performance anxiety, disempower me, and alienate me from my peers. The disturbing incidents triggered a chronic physical condition from which I still suffer. It is with a beating, heavy heart that I say I coped in isolation and, at times, destructively." Carpenter went on to state that " Joss has a history of being casually cruel. He has created hostile and toxic work environments since his early career. I know because I experienced it first-hand. Repeatedly. Like his ongoing, passive-aggressive threats to fire me, which wreaks havoc on a young actor’s self-esteem. And callously calling me ‘fat’ to colleagues when I was four months pregnant, weighing 126 lbs. He was mean and biting, disparaging about others openly, and often played favorites, putting people against one another to compete and vie for his attention and approval." Whedon has yet to respond to the just-posted allegations. ALSO:
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Last edited by TMC; 02-10-2021 at 06:53 PM. |
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#74 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,401
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TMC just so happens to be my actual initials, which I had long before TMZ was a thing! And what exactly does my username have to do with the topic of "worst showrunners ever"!?
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#75 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,401
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Craig Thomas and Carter Bays - The series finale of How I Met Your Mother and how disappointing it was has been dissected and discussed to death. So, I won't try to rehash it too much. I'll just say that it seemed like a tell-tale example of what could happen when showrunners let their egos get in the way. They didn't even understand why people loved their show.
Simply put, they WANTED to meet the mother and fall in love with her as Ted did. Instead, she's treated like a footnote in the finale so that Ted can go chase Robin. Many viewers of HIMYM believed that it was obvious by the end of their relationship, that Ted and Robin were just two very different people. And yet, Thomas and Bays were so fixated on the idea of both of them ending up together. Then the writers did put Barney and Robin together (which likely wouldn't have happened if the show had ended sooner), and they worked so much better than Ted and Robin ever had. This naturally meant that a good relationship that they spent a lot of time on had to be destroyed to in order to get to the ending that they wanted. HIMYM was maybe a victim of its own success. It's a perfect example of a show that the writers had to keep developing events they hadn't originally intended. But by getting renewed so many times, the story grew into something the showrunners never originally intended it to be. So logically, the ending needed to change with it. It actually would have been terrifically easy to change the ending of the show right up until the end. Instead, Carter and Bays stuck with an ending that only worked for the early version of the show, where Ted and Robin didn't seem toxic as a couple, where Barney hadn't grown and become a worthy partner for Robin, and where the audience hadn't met Tracy, the mother. Carter and Bays have only themselves to blame for not sticking the ending. |
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Last edited by TMC; 01-29-2026 at 02:03 AM. |
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