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#1 |
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,136
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https://ew.com/tv/this-is-us-creator...ress-pandemic/
Creator Dan Fogelman answered a fan's question on how the hit NBC drama will deal with the coronavirus, both on-screen and off. Fogelman offered "some vague" answers, tweeting: "Not sure yet on production start" and "Not sure when new eps will air." He added: "Yes on Covid. We've decided to attack things head on" and that the show still has the "Same planned ending. Same route to get there." The This Is Us writers have been working remotely via Zoom. Fogelman recently told EW that the show was trying to find a way to incorporate coronavirus while still being a weekly escape from real-world problems. “It's a really huge challenge for us," he told EW. "I keep saying, 'As if juggling this show with 18,000 timelines and characters isn’t hard enough.' It really is a complicated question. It's been complicated for all shows. I can't tell you the amount of debate that has gone into everything from our show existing in a world that corona has not happened, like many shows are going to choose to do, to making the entire first nine episodes all happening during a quarantine period in our off-season. We've been all over the map. I think we have a plan that splits the balance.... But you know, we're fluid writers. We have the ability to adjust as needed.” Sterling K. Brown promises the issues of 2020 will be a key part of This Is Us Season 5 "I can tell you the show is coming back with a bang," he tells the Los Angeles Times. "And I can tell you that the world will be reflected in our show. I won’t go into the details, but it is in the forefront of the show’s consciousness that the times in which we are living in are extraordinary and (creator Dan Fogelman) took it upon himself to say, 'I think that we can help people through this time by showing them how the Pearsons are dealing with it.'" ALSO: Ranking This Is Us' Top 25 characters. |
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Last edited by TMC; 08-22-2020 at 05:22 AM. |
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#2 |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,136
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There is something tangibly different about This Is Us tackling the coronavirus pandemic
"The first draft of pandemic programming is over," says Kevin Fallon. "Shows that were scripted during the start of lockdown, filmed through Zoom videos, or self-shot in performers’ homes documented the first, often awkward, subjectively unpleasant attempts at dramatizing these unprecedented times for TV. Love in the Time of Corona, Coastal Elites, Connecting…, and Social Distance were admirable, if uneven experiments. Those efforts strived to bottle the lightning storm of emotions and fears of those first spring months but were unable to keep up with the pace and escalation of it all, often becoming either quaint or pandering. But now we have TV shows back in production on actual sets. We have long-running, beloved series returning, forced to reckon with how the pandemic would alter the lives of the characters we’ve followed and loved. COVID is scheduled to factor into a slew of returning fall TV series, including Grey’s Anatomy and Superstore, both of which will chronicle how essential workers are affected by it. And This Is Us might be the first big fan-favorite to come back with the coronavirus as a major character." Last night's two-hour premiere, says Fallon, "speeds through the naivete of character’s attitudes in the first few months of the pandemic, bumbles its way through over-explaining social distancing protocols that allow the family to be together, and eventually calls out a veritable BINGO card of traumas from the seven months since the series last aired... That said, there is something tangibly different about seeing COVID introduced to a series that already existed, rather than watching one of those new shows centered around it. It may even be more palatable. One consequence of these last seven months of separation from loved ones, not to mention the pall of disease and death, is that people are thinking more about family: how much they miss them, and how memories are having to stand in for actual time together. There is something undeniably emotional, then, of watching those very things mirrored in the Pearsons." ALSO:
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jan 21, 2007
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 4,885
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I think they did a good job!
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