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On today's episode, I'm chatting with television and film writer, Joseph Dougherty about his new book, Rod Serling at 100: One Writer's Acknowledgment. Joe and I talk all about how he got started in the entertainment business, and a bit about his time on the TV show Thirtysomething and his experience writing the HBO Film, Cast A Deadly Spell. We end up diving into talking about why the Twilight Zone, created by Rod Serling, is still so important after all these years and how this TV show and showrunner has influenced so many different horror and sci-fi authors, actors, directors, and more.----Intro/Outro Music: "Phantom Fun" by Jonathan Boyle----Show E-Mail: cultcinemacircle@gmail.com----Pick Up Joe's Book: Amazon or Barnes and NobleFollow Pacific and Court on InstagramFollow Fayetteville Mafia Press on InstagramFollow Cult Cinema Circle on Instagram, Bluesky, and Letterboxd Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
TVC 669.2: Joseph Dougherty, author of Rod Serling at 100, talks to Ed about “They're Tearing Down Tim Riley's Bar,” the first-season episode of Rod Serling's Night Gallery that is widely considered to be among the very best pieces of writing that Serling ever did, and why Joe believes the episode itself “exists somewhere in a space between The Twilight Zone and Night Gallery.” Rod Serling at 100 is available from Fayetteville Mafia Press.
TVC 669.1: Part 2 of a conversation that began on our last program with Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, director, and author Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars, A Screenwriters Companion: Instruction, Opinion, Encouragement). Joe's latest book, Rod Serling at 100: One Writer's Acknowledgment, takes a deep dive into the legacy of the Emmy Award-winning writer/producer, with a particular focus on Serling as a writer, and what Serling's body of work continues to mean to Joe personally. Topics this segment include Serling's apparent affection for Julius Moomer, the effervescent yet talentless television writer who served as Serling's protagonist in the famous Twilight Zone episode “The Bard” (and who had previously appeared as a minor character in Serling's live television drama The Velvet Alley); the similarities in structure between the Twilight Zone episode “Nervous Man in a Four-Dollar Man” and “Last Night of the Jockey”; and the contentious television interviews that Serling gave to Mike Wallace and Dick Cavett in 1959 and 1972, respectively. Rod Serling at 100 is available from Fayetteville Mafia Press.
TVC 669.3: Joseph Dougherty, author of Rod Serling at 100, talks about the opportunity he once had to adapt Rod Serling's live television drama The Velvet Alley into a film, and how surprised he was to learn just how sparsely Serling wrote when Joe studied Serling's script for “The Purple Testament” for style purposes as part of the Velvet Alley project. Also in this segment: Ed asks Joe about his experiencing working with acclaimed actor David Strathairn when Stathairn starred in Joe's stage play Chester Bailey. Rod Serling at 100 is available from Fayetteville Mafia Press.
TVC 668.6: Joseph Dougherty, author of Rod Serling at 100, talks to Ed about “Dust,” “Mr. Denton on Doomsday,” “Mr. Garrity and the Graves,” and other Western-themed episodes of The Twilight Zone, and how Rod Serling's disenchantment with the television can be traced with the network interference he faced during the production of The Loner (CBS, 1965-1966), the existentialist Western starring Lloyd Bridges that, though set in post-Civil War America circa 1865, really served as Serling's commentary for the divided nature of America in 1965. Rod Serling at 100 is available from Fayetteville Mafia Press.
TVC 668.5: Joseph Dougherty, author of Rod Serling at 100, talks to Ed about how The Twilight Zone operates on an ethical and moral universe (for the most part); why The Twilight Zone is particularly appealing to anyone who loves language; and why Joe believes that most of the hour-long Twilight Zone episodes are better than most people remember. Rod Serling at 100 is available from Fayetteville Mafia Press.
TVC 668.4: Ed welcomes back Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, director, and author Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars, A Screenwriters Companion: Instruction, Opinion, Encouragement). Calendar year 2024 marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of Rod Serling (The Twilight Zone, Rod Serling's Night Gallery). To mark the occasion, Joe's latest book, Rod Serling at 100, takes a deep dive into the legacy of the Emmy Award-winning writer/producer, with a particular focus on Serling as a writer, and what Serling's body of work continues to mean to Joe personally. Rod Serling at 100 is available from Fayetteville Mafia Press. Topics this segment include how Serling was among the first writers that got the general public to take science fiction seriously, and why the parables told on The Twilight Zone remain timeless because human emotions are timeless.
In this episode I spoke with author Joseph Dougherty about his book "Rod Serling at 100: One Writer's Acknowledgement. The year 2024 marks the centenary of Rod Serling, creator of The Twilight Zone and Night Gallery. Emmy-winning writer Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars) picked this special anniversary to reflect on Serling and his contributions to television drama.
My conversation with Emmy Award winner Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars) and author of "Rod Serling at 100." --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lights-camera-author/support
Cast a Deadly Spell (1991) is a horror fantasy detective television film with Fred Ward, Julianne Moore, David Warner, and Clancy Brown. It was directed by Martin Campbell, produced by Gale Anne Hurd, and written by Joseph Dougherty. The original music score was composed by Curt Sobel. Cast a Deadly Spell combines two genres – eldritch tales of H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos, and film noir mysteries. A sequel entitled Witch Hunt was released in 1994, with Dennis Hopper playing Ward's character. FRUMESS is POWERED by www.riotstickers.com/frumess GET 1000 STICKERS FOR $79 RIGHT HERE - NO PROMO CODE NEED! JOIN THE PATREON FOR LESS THAN A $2 CUP OF COFFEE!! https://www.patreon.com/Frumess
In a craft-centered episode, Joseph Dougherty (Pretty Little Liars; thirtysomething) discusses dialogue.THE WRITERS PANEL IS A COMPLETELY INDEPENDENT PRODUCTION.Follow and support the show by subscribing to Ben Blacker's newsletter, Re:Writing, where you'll also get weekly advice from the thousands of writers he's interviewed over the years, as well as access to exclusive live Q&As, meet-ups, and more: benblacker.substack.comSOCIALS:Bluesky: bsky.app/profile/benblacker.bsky.socialTwitter: twitter.com/benBlackerFacebook: facebook.com/tvWritersPanel Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
TVC 617:4: Ed welcomes back Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, director, and novelist Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars, A Screenwriter's Companion). Joe has just published The First Cylinder, a breakout science fiction novel that draws inspiration from War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells, only it tells the story of the invasion of Mars from the perspective of the Martians. Tony Figueroa and Dan Farren join Joe and Ed for a roundtable discussion of such early science fiction TV shows as Tales of Tomorrow, Science Fiction Theater, Space Patrol, and Fireball-XL5. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
TVC 617.5: Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, director, and novelist Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars, A Screenwriter's Companion) talks to Ed, Tony Figueroa, and Dan Farren about why The Outer Limits is more lyrical and visually stylistic than The Twilight Zone, even though the network run of Outer Limits lasted just fifteen months. Joe's new novel, The First Cylinder, is available from Fayetteville Mafia Press and Amazon.com. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hey Dude, my life has been a real jigsaw puzzle, slowly put back together this past month. Not only does my truck have a rebuilt engine, I may have found my voice...again. QUOTE: "At first I thought it was going to be a disaster, but in the end, it was perfect." AUDIO LINKPEOPLE: Dean Whitbread, John in the UK, Father Time, Joseph Dougherty PLACES: Altadena Library, Bob Lucas Branch, Bob's Big Boy (Toluca Lake), Yosemite, Fresno, Oakhurst, Frazier Park, Los Angeles County, Bakersfield, Central Valley THINGS: Ford Ranger Truck, History of Podcasting, Facebook, Podcast Movement SOUNDS: footsteps, gravel path, wind, birds, plane, Laguna Sawdust Cowbell Chimes GENRE: storytelling, personal narrative, personal journal PHOTO: "Intro Pod Tweet" with my iPhone XS RECORDED: June 29, 2023 from the "Wawona Lawn" under the flight path of the Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, California GEAR: Sony ICD PX370 digital voice recorder and Sony ECM CS3 "tie-clip" microphone. HYPE: "It's a beatnik kinda literary thing in a podcast cloak of darkness." Timothy Kimo Brien (cohost on Podwrecked and host of Create Art Podcast) DISCLAIMER/WARNING: Proudly presented rough, raw and ragged. Seasoned with salty language and ideas. Not for most people's taste. Please be advised.
ON THIS EPISODE We interview the authors of "A WORLD OF DEMONS: THE VILLAINS OF DOCTOR WHO," including Hannah Friedman, Ken Deep and Barnaby Edwards.In their own words:"A World of Demons: The Villains of Doctor Who”“One may tolerate a world of demons for the sake of an angel”—Jean-Antoninette (“Reinette”) Poisson, aka Madame de Pompadour, “The Girl in the Fireplace”What a world of demons Doctor Who has presented us with over the past seven decades: from Daleks and Cybermen to Weeping Angels and the Silence, the greatest villains of the Who-niverse have achieved an iconic status all their own, cementing themselves in the minds of millions of viewers (why else would Parker Brothers have devised a version of Monopoly after them?). If, as the Seventh Doctor once said, "You can always judge a man by the quality of his enemies,” the Doctor is great indeed, rescuing the universe time and again from some of the most formidable and terrifying villains in science fiction history. Now, for the first time, an entire anthology of essays is dedicated to deconstructing this gallery of blackguards. Who are the greatest Who villains of all time? Why are they so frightening? And—apologies to Shakespeare—what do they tell us about the villainy of our own fears?Featuring essays by Joseph Dougherty (executive producer, Pretty Little Liars; producer, thirtysomething), Steven Ashby, Anton Binder, Sarah Corey, Ken Deep, Jan Fennick, Hannah Friedman, Mark Givens, Nancy Hutchins, Jennie Jarvis, Don Klees, Chris Kocher, Robin Koman, Charles Martin, Michael Robinson, Steve Sautter, and Shane Thomas.Edited by David Bushman (Conversations with Mark Frost) and Barnaby Edwards (president, Doctor Who New York)► A WORLD OF DEMONShttps://www.fayettevillemafiapress.com/product/doctor-who-copy/?fbclid=IwAR3T0BiIgXXT1vjJ0H8GmrDJ1slB0vm5xg0Ipuu_1fljcGR7F-iUtnmR8p8Follow The Legend of the Traveling TARDIS on Social Media:► FACEBOOK - Facebook.com/TheTravelingTARDIS► YOUTUBE - YouTube.com/TheLegendOfTheTravelingTARDIS► WEBSITE - TheLegendOfTheTravelingTARDIS.com► TWITTER - Twitter.com/TheTravelTARDIS► INSTAGRAM - Instagram.com/legendtravelingtardis► TWITCH TV - Twitch.tv/travelingtardis► IHEARTRADIO - iheart.com/podcast/966-the-legend-of-the-travelin-30296020The Legend of the Traveling TARDIS covers the latest news, gives the most diverse reviews and fun interviews about the Doctor WHO WHOniverse.► THE LEGEND OF THE TRAVELING TARDIS FAMILY OF SPONSORS:► Doctor WHO: Worlds Apart Virtual Card Game: doctorwho-worldsapart.com► FameTek / Speakers and Chargers: fametek.com► BE A PART OF OUR FAMILY OF SPONSORS - Got a product or service you want promoted on The Legend of the Traveling TARDIS?Email Sage@hanginwithshow.com or Christian@hanginwithshow.com for rates and details.Thumbnail design by KEVO RISSE of "Husbands Talking, More or Less Podcast."► PODCAST: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/html-husbands-talking-more-or-less/id1446018337
The Stagecraft podcast is hosted by Jan Simpson. It is a series of interviews with playwrights (and musical book writers) of shows opening on Broadway and off-Broadway. Guest: Joseph Dougherty, Playwright of “Chester Bailey” JOSEPH DOUGHERTY (Playwright) earned Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle nominations for his play Digby produced read more The post Stagecraft: Joseph Dougherty, Playwright of “Chester Bailey” appeared first on BroadwayRadio.
TVC 591.3: Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, and director Joseph Dougherty talks to Ed about some of the challenges posed when adapting a novel into a screenplay. Joe's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion: Instruction, Opinion, Encouragement is available now through Amazon.com as well as your local bookseller; a select number of autographed editions are available through Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 591.2: Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, and director Joseph Dougherty talks to Ed about why novelist Stephen King is the Charles Dickens of our generation; why imagination is another essential tool that every writer should have; and why the process of writing and editing is often like peeling an onion. Joe's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion: Instruction, Opinion, Encouragement is available now through Amazon.com as well as your local bookseller; a select number of autographed editions are available through Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 591.1: We'll bring you Part 2 of a conversation that began last week with Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, and director Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Judging Amy, Pretty Little Liars). Topics this segment include Joe's award-winning stage play Chester Bailey, and how the works of Rod Serling, Herb Gardner, Kurt Vonnegut, and Ray Bradbury both influenced and inspired Joe to become a writer. Joe's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion: Instruction, Opinion, Encouragement offers insights and advice, both practical and nonpractical, to writers and would-be writers about the writing process, how to survive in “the business,” and reflections on the influences that led Joe to a successful career. A Screenwriter's Companion is available now through Amazon.com as well as your local bookseller; a select number of autographed editions are available through Fayetteville Mafia Press. A new production of Chester Bailey opens Wednesday, Oct. 5 at the Irish Repertory Theatre in New York City and continues through Sunday, Nov. 6. For tickets and more information, call (212) 727-2737 or visit IrishRep.org. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 590.1: Ed welcomes back Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, and director Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Saving Grace, Pretty Little Liars, Chester Bailey). Joe's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion: Instruction, Opinion, Encouragement offers insights and advice, both practical and nonpractical, to writers and would-be writers about the writing process, how to survive in “the business,” and reflections on the influences that led Joe to a successful career. A Screenwriter's Companion is available now through Amazon.com as well as your local bookseller; a select number of autographed editions are available through Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 590.6: Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, and director Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Saving Grace, Pretty Little Liars, Chester Bailey) talks to Ed about why writing for actors often means learning how those actors breathe and writing to their lung capacity. Joe's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion: Instruction, Opinion, Encouragement is available now through Amazon.com as well as your local bookseller; a select number of autographed editions are available through Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 590.2: Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, and director Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Saving Grace, Pretty Little Liars, Chester Bailey) talks to Ed about the importance of curiosity and specificity when writing (regardless of which form of writing one practices) and why the difference between writing and directing often comes down to verbs. Joe's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion: Instruction, Opinion, Encouragement offers insights and advice, both practical and nonpractical, to writers and would-be writers about the writing process, how to survive in “the business,” and reflections on the influences that led Joe to a successful career. A Screenwriter's Companion is available now through Amazon.com as well as your local bookseller; a select number of autographed editions are available through Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 581.2: Emmy Award-winning writer/producer Joseph Dougherty, author David Koenig (Shooting Columbo: The Lives and Deaths of TV's Rumpled Detective), Dan Farren, and Tony Figueroa discuss the important role that music played in the original Columbo (particularly the score that Oliver Nelson wrote for “The Greenhouse Jungle”); favorite moments of Columbo episodes; and the New York company that briefly produced a line of Columbo yogurt. Shooting Columbo is available in hardcover, as an eBook, and as an audiobook through Amazon.com. Joseph Dougherty's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion, is available for pre-order through Amazon.com and Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 581.3: Emmy Award-winning writer/producer Joseph Dougherty, author David Koenig (Shooting Columbo: The Lives and Deaths of TV's Rumpled Detective), Dan Farren, and Tony Figueroa discuss the important role that the first clue plays in a given Columbo episode, and why Columbo has discovered new viewers of late, for reasons that go beyond the pandemic. Shooting Columbo is available in hardcover, as an eBook, and as an audiobook through Amazon.com. Joseph Dougherty's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion, is available for pre-order through Amazon.com and Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 581.1: Part 2 of our special roundtable discussion devoted to Columbo featuring Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, director, playwright, and author Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars, Saving Grace, Chester Bailey), David Koenig, author of Shooting Columbo: The Lives and Deaths of TV's Rumpled Detective, writer/producer Dan Farren (Story Salon), and Tony Figueroa of This Week in TV History. Topics this segment include how Southern California was very much a character in and of itself on Columbo; episodes that were either filmed, or at least took place, outside Los Angeles; and Columbo clues that were originally written with one episode in mind, but were eventually used in another. Shooting Columbo is available in hardcover, as an eBook, and as an audiobook through Amazon.com. Joseph Dougherty's new book, A Screenwriter's Companion, is now available for pre-order through Amazon.com and Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars writer Joseph Dougherty joins the podcast to discuss his new book A Screenwriter's Companion which gives advice and encouragement to writers who want to learn how to write screenplays. Order it at Fayettevillemafiapress.com
TVC 580.4: A special roundtable discussion devoted to Columbo, including the original NBC series (1971-1978); Prescription: Murder, the play by Richard Levinson and William Link that begat Columbo (and which eventually led to the two Columbo pilots, Prescription: Murder and Ransom for a Dead Man); and how the ABC revival (1989-2003) holds up, compared to the original series. Joining us on the panel are Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, director, playwright, and author Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars, Saving Grace, Chester Bailey); David Koenig, author of Shooting Columbo: The Lives and Deaths of TV's Rumpled Detective; writer/producer Dan Farren (Story Salon); and Tony Figueroa of This Week in TV History. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 580.5: Emmy Award-winning writer/producer Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars), author David Koenig (Shooting Columbo: The Lives and Deaths of TV's Rumpled Detective), writer/producer Dan Farren (Story Salon), and Tony Figueroa of This Week in TV History discuss the often unheralded contributions of mystery writer Jackson Gillis to Columbo; why the episodes shepherded by Richard Alan Simmons and Patrick McGoohan were more character-driven than mystery-driven; and why shoes were important to Columbo. Shooting Columbo is available through Amazon.com. Joseph Dougherty's latest book, A Screenwriter's Companion, is available for pre-order through Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 580.6: Our special roundtable discussion devoted to Columbo, featuring Joseph Dougherty (thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars, Saving Grace, Chester Bailey), David Koenig, author of Shooting Columbo: The Lives and Deaths of TV's Rumpled Detective, writer/producer Dan Farren (Story Salon), and Tony Figueroa of This Week in TV History continues. Joseph Dougherty's latest book, A Screenwriter's Companion, is available for pre-order through Fayetteville Mafia Press. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars writer Joseph Dougherty joins the podcast to discuss his new book A Screenwriter's Companion which gives advice and encouragement to writers who want to learn how to write screenplays. Order it at Fayettevillemafiapress.com
This weekends guest is Dr. Joseph Dougherty. Joe runs the Genetics Lab at Washington University in St. Louis in Missouri. His research focuses on trying to understand the genetic and cellular underpinnings of both normal behavior and psychiatric disorders, primarily autism. One of Joe's current projects is studying the MYT1L gene. Tune in to learn more! Visit genetics.wustl.edu/jdlab to learn more about Joe's lab and their research!
Rep. Adam Schiff on the January 6th Committee and Restoring Trust After Trump: The Takeaway speaks with Representative Adam Schiff, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee and one of the members of the House committee investigating the insurrection, about the work of the January 6th committee and some of the other central issues facing Congress and the Democrats today. Holly Robinson Peete, An Advocate for Autism: Actress, author and “gangsta mom of four” Holly Robinson Peete joins us to talk about her advocacy work for kids on the autism spectrum and her decision to go public about her son's diagnosis. How Researchers Are Using Stem Cells To Learn More About A Rare Form of Autism: We spoke with Dr. Joseph Dougherty, professor of genetics and psychiatry at Washington University in St Louis about the research that he and his team are conducting. For transcripts, see individual segment pages.
TVC 555.6: Alexis Hunter, author of Joi Lansing: A Body to Die For, discusses the dangers of silicon enhancements, especially today. For our listeners on the East Coast, Alexis will sign copies of Joi Lansing: A Body to Die For at the historic Stonewall Inn in New York City, the birthplace of the contemporary LGBTQ movement, on Monday Oct. 18 from 6pm to 8pm. Alexis will also read a passage from the book that night, while Vincent DeSalvo, and Joseph Dougherty—the producer and screenwriter, respectively, of the forthcoming miniseries adaptation of Joi Lansing: A Body to Die For—will join her for a Q & A session afterward. October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
0:00-Intro and Movie Summary2:00-Movie Discussion44:54-Cast and Crew; Awards56:56- Pop Culture1:00:14-TV1:09:13 - Rankings and Ratings To see a full list of movies we will be watching and shows notes, please follow our website: https://www.1991movierewind.com/Follow us!https://linktr.ee/1991movierewind Theme: "sunrise-cardio," Jeremy Dinegan (via Storyblocks)Don't forget to rate/review/subscribe/tell your friends to listen to us!
Penny Darlene Dougherty, 72, departed this life Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021 at her Choctaw Bluff residence. She was born Dec. 4, 1948 to Mildred and Joseph Dougherty in Casper, Wyo. She had resided in Denver, Colo., the majority of her life. A 1966 graduate of Natrona High School in Casper, Penny continued her education and received a Bachelor Degree in Criminal Justice and an Associate Degree in Social Science at the Metropolitan State College in Denver. A loving woman of God, she had come to know Christ Jesus at an early age and was baptized at Grace Lutheran Church in...Article Link
Gavin Mevius, co-host of The Mixed Reviews joins us to talk about Cast a Deadly Spell, the made-for-TV movie from 1991 that asks us all to imagine a world where anyone can use magic, but with one hard-boiled detective named Harry Philip Lovecraft (Fred Ward) who chooses not to for...reasons? Perhaps it has something to do with his backstory, which is...never brought up? Or the rules of magic, which are...absent? Or the societal order, which is...never mentioned? Alright, you know what? You dig just a little bit into this HBO original and you'll discover that its film noir roots are deep, but its Lovecraftian influence is superficial at best. But hey, what it lacks in substance it makes up for with jokes about racism, transphobia, and statutory rape! Maybe there's a reason Joseph Dougherty isn't a household name. The discussion ends around 59:35, but feel free to keep listening on after that for Jim's crazy Batman Returns theory and a poll as to whether watching the Super Bowl or The Snyder Cut inspires more dread. Follow The Mixed Reviews on Twitter @TheMixedReviews Follow Gavin Mevius on Twitter @FriendlessMean
Nothing says Thanksgiving like Ezra's gangly legs on a bike. We spy with our little eye, something that begins with a commentary track for Pretty Little Liars s01e04 “Can You Hear Me Now.” The liars have the only good idea in the entire run of the show: just blocking A's calls. Also, this is the first collaboration between writer Joseph Dougherty and director Norman Buckley. Cheers!
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists podcast
Nothing says Thanksgiving like Ezra’s gangly legs on a bike. We spy with our little eye, something that begins with a commentary track for Pretty Little Liars s01e04 “Can You Hear Me Now.” The liars have the only good idea in the entire run of the show: just blocking A’s calls. Also, this is the first collaboration between writer Joseph Dougherty and director Norman Buckley. Cheers!
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars podcast, Seasons 5-7
Nothing says Thanksgiving like Ezra’s gangly legs on a bike. We spy with our little eye, something that begins with a commentary track for Pretty Little Liars s01e04 “Can You Hear Me Now.” The liars have the only good idea in the entire run of the show: just blocking A’s calls. Also, this is the first collaboration between writer Joseph Dougherty and director Norman Buckley. Cheers!
Hey Dude, I express my deep love for the TV show Columbo after watching "pioneer of American cinema" John Cassavetes guest star alongside his friend and collaborator Peter Falk.AUDIO FILEQUOTE: "I started to measure time by how many Columbos" PEOPLE: Howard HughesACTORS/FILMMAKERS: Peter Falk, John Cassavetes, Blythe Danner, Myrna Loy, Martin Scorsese, Gena Rowlands,Wim Wenders, Joseph Dougherty, Ben Gazzara TV/FILMS: The Rockford Files, Columbo, Husbands, A Woman Under the Influence, Wings of Desire, Monk, The Dick Cavett Show, Shadows, The Killing of a Chinese BookiePLACES: Los Angeles, The Hollywood Bowl, Altadena, BurbankTHINGS: macaroni and cheese, Amazon Prime, noodge, independent film, DIY, New Yorker Columbo cartoon, Beat Generation, mail-in ballotsSOUNDS: footsteps, gravel path, Laguna Sawdust Cowbell Chimes, birds, necklace, airplanes, hummingbird GENRE: storytelling, personal narrative, personal journalPHOTO: "Cassavetes on Columbo Googled" shot on my "new" iPhone6RECORDED: October 30, 2020 in the new "Cafe Cherie Studio" under the flight path of the Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, California GEAR: Sony ICD PX370 digital voice recorder and Sony ECM CS3 "tie-clip" microphone.HYPE: "It's a beatnik kinda literary thing in a podcast cloak of darkness." Timothy Kimo Brien (cohost on Podwreckedand host of Create Art Podcast)DISCLAIMER/WARNING: Proudly presented rough, raw and ragged. Seasoned with salty language and ideas. Not for most people's taste. Please be advised.
Hey Dude, I express my deep love for the TV show Columbo after watching "pioneer of American cinema" John Cassavetes guest star alongside his friend and collaborator Peter Falk. QUOTE: "I started to measure time by how many Columbos" PEOPLE: Howard Hughes ACTORS/FILMMAKERS: Peter Falk, John Cassavetes, Blythe Danner, Myrna Loy, Martin Scorsese, Gena Rowlands, Wim Wenders, Joseph Dougherty, Ben Gazzara TV/FILMS: The Rockford Files, Columbo, Husbands, A Woman Under the Influence, Wings of Desire, Monk, The Dick Cavett Show, Shadows, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie PLACES: Los Angeles, The Hollywood Bowl, Altadena, Burbank THINGS: macaroni and cheese, Amazon Prime, noodge, independent film, DIY, New Yorker Columbo cartoon, Beat Generation, mail-in ballots SOUNDS: footsteps, gravel path, Laguna Sawdust Cowbell Chimes, birds, necklace, airplanes, hummingbird GENRE: storytelling, personal narrative, personal journal PHOTO: "Cassavetes on Columbo Googled" shot on my "new" iPhone6 RECORDED: October 30, 2020 in the new "Cafe Cherie Studio" under the flight path of the Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, California GEAR: Sony ICD PX370 digital voice recorder and Sony ECM CS3 "tie-clip" microphone. HYPE: "It's a beatnik kinda literary thing in a podcast cloak of darkness." Timothy Kimo Brien (cohost on Podwrecked and host of Create Art Podcast) DISCLAIMER/WARNING: Proudly presented rough, raw and ragged. Seasoned with salty language and ideas. Not for most people's taste. Please be advised.
We're very pleased to have writer and director Joseph Dougherty on the podcast for one of our very favorite episodes of PLL. That's right, we're doing a commentary track for s04e19 “Shadow Play.” Joe gives us a ton of insight into the behind the scenes work of producing the famous black & white episode of PLL, and it is a delight.
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists podcast
We’re very pleased to have writer and director Joseph Dougherty on the podcast for one of our very favorite episodes of PLL. That’s right, we’re doing a commentary track for s04e19 “Shadow Play.” Joe gives us a ton of insight into the behind the scenes work of producing the famous black & white episode of PLL, and it is a delight.
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars podcast, Seasons 5-7
We’re very pleased to have writer and director Joseph Dougherty on the podcast for one of our very favorite episodes of PLL. That’s right, we’re doing a commentary track for s04e19 “Shadow Play.” Joe gives us a ton of insight into the behind the scenes work of producing the famous black & white episode of PLL, and it is a delight.
Where do you go when you need to trade information in exchange for a mask of your own face? Howabout special guests Joseph Dougherty and Norman Buckley, the filmmaker's behind today's commentary track for s04e04 “Face Time.” We've got some classic scenes to discuss, like Melissa and Spencer at the lake, Lt. Tanner humoring Hanna in the park, and whether Aria is hurt or injured.
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars podcast, Seasons 5-7
Where do you go when you need to trade information in exchange for a mask of your own face? Howabout special guests Joseph Dougherty and Norman Buckley, the filmmaker’s behind today’s commentary track for s04e04 “Face Time.” We’ve got some classic scenes to discuss, like Melissa and Spencer at the lake, Lt. Tanner humoring Hanna in the park, and whether Aria is hurt or injured.
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists podcast
Where do you go when you need to trade information in exchange for a mask of your own face? Howabout special guests Joseph Dougherty and Norman Buckley, the filmmaker’s behind today’s commentary track for s04e04 “Face Time.” We’ve got some classic scenes to discuss, like Melissa and Spencer at the lake, Lt. Tanner humoring Hanna in the park, and whether Aria is hurt or injured.
The 10-year anniversary celebration rolls in with a special double-guest commentary track for s04e03 “Cat's Cradle.” We are joined by writer Joseph Dougherty and director Norman Buckley to talk Baker Bro Zach, Aria's distaste for dudes who don't like her black & white movies, and the one and only Hector Lime, Merchant of Masks and Secrets.
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars podcast, Seasons 5-7
The 10-year anniversary celebration rolls in with a special double-guest commentary track for s04e03 “Cat’s Cradle.” We are joined by writer Joseph Dougherty and director Norman Buckley to talk Baker Bro Zach, Aria’s distaste for dudes who don’t like her black & white movies, and the one and only Hector Lime, Merchant of Masks and Secrets.
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists podcast
The 10-year anniversary celebration rolls in with a special double-guest commentary track for s04e03 “Cat’s Cradle.” We are joined by writer Joseph Dougherty and director Norman Buckley to talk Baker Bro Zach, Aria’s distaste for dudes who don’t like her black & white movies, and the one and only Hector Lime, Merchant of Masks and Secrets.
Set: The Decadence of Obsolesence Ken's Last Ever Radio Extravaganza - "The Decadence of Obsolesence" - Show #432, from May 11, 2012 [Live in a garage across from a park, summerish afternoon in Charlottesville. Playlist follows:] Fleetwood Mac - "Sara" - Tusk [Loop] Valentino Sound Effects Library - "Air - Air conditioner" - Volume 8 Fridge - "Harmonics" - Happiness Dufus - "Anouk" - In Monstrous Attitude La Dusseldorf - "Rheinita" - La Dusseldorf / Viva Michael Crichton - "TV captures attention, people spend their lives staring at screens" - Looker director commentary [The television can capture attention in a way, and take you away from real life. I think it's become more true as a quality of human attention, that not necessarily so much for television, but I sometimes think that more and more of humankind spends their days looking at screens. Meanwhile, kids are neglected, spouses are neglected, relationships, families, everything's neglected, we're looking at the screen. And whether it's the internet now, or whether it's DVD's, iPods, whatever it is, we're not, we're not in the present; we're in the image.] Pete Townshend - "You're So Clever" - Scooped Jonny Greenwood - "Open Spaces" - There Will Be Blood s.t. Alan Watts - "Intellectual Yoga" - Philosophies of Asia [So long as you can be pursuaded that there's something more that you ought to be than you are, you've divided yourself from reality, from the universe, from god, or whatever you want to call that.] Big City Orchestra - "A Child's Garden of Noise" - A Child's Garden of Noise [...I wish there was a sign that said, "noise, please." Yes, maybe there ought to be a sign like that.] Timothy "Speed" Levitch - "The grid plan" - The Cruise Gundecha Brothers - "Hum Sab Mahi - Raga Bhairavi" - Hum Sab Mahi Bill Nelson - "The Spirit Cannot Fail" - Chance Encounters in the Garden of Lights- (1) The Angel at the Western Window [Never let anything cause you to doubt your ability to demonstrate truth.] Fleetwood Mac - "Everywhere" - Tango in the Night [Loop] Fleetwood Mac - "Gypsy" - Mirage [Loop] Mikey - "On college bookstore" [What the guys and girls buy on their parents' accounts, unitemized] Orson Welles - "Videotape TV static" Orson Welles - "Interview" [If they don't like what you do, really...I was going to show them that they were wrong, and I've spent the rest of my life showing people, trying to prove that what is said is wrong, and that's been an enormous waste of spirit and of energy.] Strom Carlson - "NV Bell Payphone in Pahrump - March 2004" [Telephone recordings] Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass - "Mexican Road Race" - S.R.O. [Martin's recording from father's vinyl] Holcombe Waller - "Hardliners" - Into the Dark Unknown Neil Diamond - "America" - Jazz Singer Joe Jackson - "Another World" - Night and Day [Loop] Talking Heads - "Sax and Violins" - Until the End of the World soundtrack Timothy Busfield and Ken Olin, actors; Joseph Dougherty, writer; Tom Moore, director - "No matter what you do, there's going to be a price (Learn to compromise)" - thirtysomething: Season 2, Episode 13 [There's a price, no matter what you do, there's going to be a price. So, you know what you do? You find out what's important and you make boxes. And in this box, you have what it takes to work with somebody like Miles, and in this box, you have what you take home to Janey and to Hope, that's how you get through. So, that's the key to happiness, a little self-induced schizophrenia? ... You want to have a life here, today, then pick your fights and learn to compromise.] Ricky Gervais - "You don't need everyone on the planet to like you" - Time Interview [More people hate it than like it. Obviously. Luckily, you don't need everyone on the planet to like you. So, you do it for you and like-minded people] Dondero High School A Capella Choir - "Fox on the Run" - Pop Concert 1996 [Sweet cover (1974)] Timothy "Speed" Levitch - "Working for a living" - The Cruise [One of the great tragedies of this experiment called civilization is the fact that people have to work for a living...] Ludwig von Beethoven - "Variation V Si prenda il tempo un poco piu vivace" - Beethoven Vol. 8 Cello Sonatas (Maisky - Cello, Argerich - Piano) Harrison Ford & River Phoenix (actors), Paul Theroux (novel), Paul Schrader (screenplay) - "America is a toilet" - Mosquito Coast [Look around you. How did America get this way? Land of promise, land of opportunity. Give us the wretched refuse of your teaming shores. Have a Coke, watch TV, have a nice day, go on welfare, get free money, turn to crime (crime pays in this country). Why do they put up with it? Why do they keep coming? Look around you, Charlie: This place is a toilet.] Harrison Ford & River Phoenix (actors), Paul Theroux (novel), Paul Schrader (screenplay) - "We eat when we're not hungry" - Mosquito Coast [We eat when we're not hungry, drink when we're not thirsty, we buy what we don't need, and throw away everything that's useful. Why sell a man what he wants? Sell him what he doesn't need. Pretend he's got eight legs and two stomachs and money to burn. It's wrong, wrong, wrong.] Harrison Ford (actor), Paul Theroux (novel), Paul Schrader (screenplay) - "It's an absolute sin to accept the decadence of obsolescence." - Mosquito Coast [It's an absolute sin to accept the decadence of obsolescence. Why do things get worse and worse? They don't have to; they can get better and better. We accept that things fall apart, but they don't have to. Things can last forever.] Steven Jesse Bernstein - "More Noise Please" - Prison [..can't live without all this goddamn noise. Maybe I need the noise to write poems, make love and eat. I'm going to hang a sign out my window that says, "more noise, please," or, "thank you for making noise." Maybe we are the kind of people who need to have what we don't want just to get along, to do the basic things... Myself, I could not sleep last night. I could not close the window, either. I tried to tear the window out of its frame.] Joe Frank - "Grace requires degradation" - Another Country Pt. 3 [...to have so much beauty, perhaps you have to have this much degradation] Ida - "My Fair, My Dark" - My Fair, My Dark [Loops] Joe Frank - "Hamburger paper waste" - Another Country Pt. 3 [The hamburger is made. 30 seconds later it's been wrapped in paper, which is put in a box. 15 seconds later, that box has been put in a bag with a napkin, and 10 minutes after that, the bag...] Fridge - "Lost Time" - The Sun [Loops] Timothy "Speed" Levitch - "Running from the cops all my life" - The Cruise [...According to them I was running from the cops for a month before they caught up to me. ...and I felt like a fugitive. But you know what? Every day I feel like a fugitive. It never occurred to them that I am running from the anti-cruise every day. And when I was up in front of the judge for my arraignment, the judge said my biggest problem with this case is that this guy, this current person we're judging, ran from the police for a month. And if I could've spoken, of course I wasn't allowed to speak, I would've said, it's been a lot more than a month. I've been running from you people all my life, all my life, and I'm going to keep running.] Ken - "My grandmother told me I was a very good child, I was very quiet" Dufus - "Anouk" - In Monstrous Attitude Belle and Sebastian - "Storytelling" - Storytelling Ken - "Scary to make without knowing what you're making" Malcolm Clarke - "Romanescan Rout" - The Radiophonic Workshop [Or perhaps 2002 remaster] Bill Nelson - "The Spirit Cannot Fail" - Chance Encounters in the Garden of Lights- (1) The Angel at the Western Window [Never let anything cause you to doubt your ability to demonstrate truth.] The Carpenters - "Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft" - Passage [Like a Disney cult song. Cover of 1976 Klaatu song.] Toto - "Rosanna" - Toto IV Simon and Garfunkel - "The Sound of Silence" - Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M. [Simon only, thanks to Steve Fitch, Dec. 2011] Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - "Requiem Introitus" - Amadeus s.t. [Backwards] The Feelies - "When Company Comes" - The Good Earth [Guitar loop] Neil Young - "Down By the River" - Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere [Loops] Bob Dylan - "Series of Dreams" - The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991 [Loops. Recorded March 23, 1989] Tom Cruise (actor), Paul Thomas Anderson (writer/director) - "I will not apologize for who I am" - Magnolia [I will not apologize for what I need, I will not apologize for what I want] Cat Stevens - "If You Want To Sing Out, Sing Out" - Harold and Maude s.t. [Loop] Cat Stevens - "The Wind" - Teaser and the Firecat / Rushmore s.t. [Guitar loop] Timothy "Speed" Levitch - "The grid plan" - The Cruise [Can't imagine having my own identity] Ken - "Live ambient street sound" Set: Lost episode from November 2013 Ken's Last Ever Radio Extravaganza - "Lost episode from November 2013" - Show #483, from Nov. 8, 2013 Keith Fullerton Whitman - "Roxy Music-More Than This (1982)" - Greatest Hits (2003-) Kraftwerk - "Autobahn" - Autobahn Ken - "Soundchecking" Neil Diamond - "America" - Jazz Singer William Shatner - "AT&T Microworld" ? - "Discovering Electronic Music Part 2" - Discovering Electronic Music George Lucas - "Themes put in different contexts, character put into situation, decision to leave, take step beyond" - The Making of American Graffiti W.G. Snuffy Walden - "My So-Called Life Theme" - My So-Called Life s.t. Ken - "It's like a stand-up comedy routine, without the comedy" Claire Danes - "She's looking for someone to blame" - My So-Called Life (Pilot) Sam Harris - "Death and the Present Moment" [Even if you play your game perfectly, you're going to witness the death of everyone you love. There's no satisfying way to hold onto the past.] Ken's Last Ever Radio Extravaganza - "Co-existentialism (holding your breadth)" - Show #482, from Nov. 6, 2013 [Live phone call] Ken's Last Ever Radio Extravaganza - "Beginnings come out of nowhere (Trust)" - Show #468, from Aug. 21, 2013 [Live phone call] The Open University & BBC - "Seymour Papert and Logo, Part 2" - Talking Turtle Claire Danes - "You agree to have a certain personality" - My So-Called Life (Pilot) Hal Hartley - "(Closing) - Trust" - Possible Music - From The Films of Hal Hartley Ken - "Screens are secretive. Screens are filters." Adrien Brody - "How are you to imagine if images always provided" - Detachment movie Jeff Daniels, Guy Sanville - "Always two steps behind" - Chasing Sleep The Open University & BBC - "Seymour Papert and Logo, Part 2" - Talking Turtle Michael Crichton - "TV captures attention" - Looker commentary Cowboy Junkies - "Sweet Jane (live)" - The Trinity Session Talking Heads - "Dream Operator" - True Stories Scholastic - "Making Mistakes" - How Do I Learn? [Why do you suppose people make mistakes? Is it because they're not looking, or listening? Is it because they're not thinking? Could the sun make a mistake? Could the sun pop out of the sky? Do we all make mistakes? Oops, I guess we do!] ? - "Discovering Electronic Music Part 2" - Discovering Electronic Music George Lucas - "Themes put in different contexts, character put into situation, decision to leave, take step beyond" - The Making of American Graffiti David Cronenberg - "Forbidden images (Videodrome)" - The Directors: The Films of David Cronenberg (1x10) [Test] Martin Donovan, Hal Hartley - "Intimacy list" - Surviving Desire [Kissing, caressing, holding, slapping, shouting, talking, waiting, listening, hoping, encouraging, forgiving, laughing, relenting] W.G. Snuffy Walden - "My So-Called Life Theme" - My So-Called Life s.t. Ken - "Today I know that I know that nothing has been found" [A test] La Dusseldorf - "Rheinita" - La Dusseldorf / Viva Set: Today Kraftwerk - "Autobahn" [Loop] Ken - "Today" Scholastic - "Do You Forget?" - How Do I Learn? [Is losing like forgetting, and finding remembering?] https://lastever.org/show/200727
Set: The Decadence of Obsolesence Ken's Last Ever Radio Extravaganza - "The Decadence of Obsolesence" - Show #432, from May 11, 2012 [Live in a garage across from a park, summerish afternoon in Charlottesville. Playlist follows:] Fleetwood Mac - "Sara" - Tusk [Loop] Valentino Sound Effects Library - "Air - Air conditioner" - Volume 8 Fridge - "Harmonics" - Happiness Dufus - "Anouk" - In Monstrous Attitude La D
From November 2015: Part 3 of our roundtable discussion with Anne Serling (As I Knew Him: My Dad, Rod Serling), Joseph Dougherty (Pretty Little Liars), Dan Farren (Story Salon), and Tony Figueroa about the legacy of Rod Serling and episodes of The Twilight Zone and Night Gallery that continue to resonate with us. Topics this segment include Anne's thoughts on what particularly makes a good Twilight Zone story. A poignant memoir of growing up with Rod Serling that also humanizes the man whom many of us think of as an icon, As I Knew Him: My Dad, Rod Serling is also a book, as Joseph Dougherty put it, "for anyone who has ever had a dad." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
From November 2015: Part 2 of our roundtable discussion on the legacy of Rod Serling featuring Anne Serling, Rod's daughter, and the author of As I Knew Him: My Dad, Rod Serling. Topics this segment include the Night Gallery episode "They're Tearing Down Tim Riley's Bar" (one of the best scripts Serling ever wrote), and the sheer number of people who became writers because of Serling, despite Serling's fear that his body of work would not stand the test of time. Joining Anne, Ed, and Tony Figueroa are Joseph Dougherty, Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, and director of such shows as thirtysomething and Pretty Little Liars, and Dan Farren, one of the producers of Story Salon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TV Confidential commemorates the fortieth anniversary of the death of Rod Serling with a special multi-part minisode edition of our November 2015 conversation with Anne Serling, Rod's daughter. Anne joins Joseph Dougherty, Dan Farren, and Tony Figueroa for a special roundtable discussion of the legacy of Rod Serling, his impact on three generations of television writers, and episodes of Twilight Zone and Night Gallery that continue to stay with us. Anne’s book, As I Knew Him: My Dad, Rod Serling, is a poignant memoir of growing up with Rod Serling that also humanizes the man whom many of us think of as an icon. Joseph Dougherty is the Emmy Award-winning writer, producer, and director of such shows as thirtysomething, Saving Grace, and Pretty Little Liars. (He is also one of the biggest Twilight Zone fans that we know.) Dan Farren is one of the producers of Story Salon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hey Dude, on International Podcasting Day my old friend Paula Small reminds me of the inspirational early days of podcasting and the "spiritual experience" I had with Sugarman. CHARACTERS: Individual One, Dan Klass, Joseph Dougherty, Malik Bendjelloul, Rodriquez LOCATIONS: Coffee Fix, Studio City, Palm Springs, South Africa PODCASTS: The Bitterest Pill, The Dan and Lance Podcast Experiment, Lance Anderson Podcast Experiment, Handwritten Theatre, NPR TV/MOVIES: Thirtysomething, Pretty Little Liars, Searching for Sugarman STUFF: Story Salon, Ponzi scheme, peak experience, Unitarian Universalist, calling, CBD SOUNDS: sirens, saw, wind, cars, plane, crow GENRE: storytelling, personal narrative, personal journal PHOTO: "Paula's Tweet" shot on my iPhone5 RECORDED: September 30, 2019 on the observation deck at the Zane Grey Estate in Altadena, California DISCLAIMER/WARNING: Proudly presented rough, raw and ragged. Seasoned with salty language and ideas. Not for most people's taste. Please be advised.
Hey Dude, on International Podcasting Day my old friend Paula Small reminds me of the inspirational early days of podcasting and the "spiritual experience" I had with Sugarman.CHARACTERS: Individual One,Dan Klass, Joseph Dougherty, Malik Bendjelloul, RodriquezLOCATIONS: Coffee Fix,Studio City, Palm Springs, South AfricaPODCASTS: The Bitterest Pill, The Dan and Lance Podcast Experiment, Lance Anderson Podcast Experiment, Handwritten Theatre,NPRTV/MOVIES: Thirtysomething,Pretty Little Liars, Searching for SugarmanSTUFF: Story Salon,Ponzi scheme, peak experience, Unitarian Universalist, calling,CBDSOUNDS: sirens, saw, wind, cars, plane, crowGENRE: storytelling,personal narrative, personal journalPHOTO: "Paula's Tweet" shot on my iPhone5RECORDED: September 30, 2019 on the observation deck at the Zane Grey Estate in Altadena,California DISCLAIMER/WARNING: Proudly presented rough, raw and ragged. Seasoned with salty language and ideas. Not for most people's taste. Please be advised.
Neste episódio, descobrimos dois originais filmes da década de noventa escritos para a televisão por Joseph Dougherty que contaram com realizadores e elenco de calibre cinematográfico: Um Feitiço de Morte (Cast a Deadly Spell, Martin Campbell, 1991) e Witch Hunt (Paul Schrader, 1994).
Surprise extra podcast! Pretty Little Liars writer, director and executive producer Joseph Dougherty joins us to provide commentary on “Farewell, My Lovely” and dish on the series as a whole. Topics include: the amazing Janel Parrish, the construction of the Five Years Forward PLL world, Paily, Charlotte's villainy, Ezria controversy, and much more. Thanks to @Kockenlocker for tiding us over till the big finale.
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars podcast, Seasons 5-7
Surprise extra podcast! Pretty Little Liars writer, director and executive producer Joseph Dougherty joins us to provide commentary on “Farewell, My Lovely” and dish on the series as a whole. Topics include: the amazing Janel Parrish, the construction of the Five Years Forward PLL world, Paily, Charlotte’s villainy, Ezria controversy, and much more. Thanks to @Kockenlocker for tiding us over till the big finale.
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists podcast
Surprise extra podcast! Pretty Little Liars writer, director and executive producer Joseph Dougherty joins us to provide commentary on “Farewell, My Lovely” and dish on the series as a whole. Topics include: the amazing Janel Parrish, the construction of the Five Years Forward PLL world, Paily, Charlotte’s villainy, Ezria controversy, and much more. Thanks to @Kockenlocker for tiding us over till the big finale.
WKLP Episode 3 - Do You Know Where Dreams Come From? Scott and Chris are back with another episode of the podcast, this one focusing on Season One, Episode 3′s “Rest in Pain,” originally broadcast April 26, 1990. The episode was written by Harley Peyton, who ‘80s kids may have first noticed as the screenwriter of 1987′s Less Than Zero, based on the novel by Bret Easton Ellis. Peyton would go on to write and/or produce some pretty poor films like Heaven's Prisoners and Bandits in the early ‘00s and more recently worked on television series such as Dracula. Peyton was nominated for writing this episode, as was Mark Frost for writing the pilot. Before one argues that the split votes resulted in David E. Kelley winning for L.A. Law, Kelley was nominated with William M. Finkelstein for a different episode. Joseph Dougherty was also nominated, for thirtysomething. As long as we're talking Emmys, here are the Peaks nominations, with the winners in parentheses: David Lynch - Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series for the pilot, (Thomas Carter - Equal Justice/Scott Winant - thirtysomething)(tie) Kyle MacLachlan - Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series (Peter Falk - Columbo) Piper Laurie - Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series (odd choice to push her as a lead actress)(Patricia Wettig - thirtysomething) Sherilyn Fenn - Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series (Marg Helgenberger - China Beach) Twin Peaks - Outstanding Drama Series (L.A. Law) ABC did tie with NBC for most major nominations with 47, and won the most awards with 11, beating CBS with 10, NBC with 8, HBO with 3 and Fox with 2. HBO's 11 nominations were primarily for original movies and specials; they were just starting with original series. This episode had 16.7 million viewers, so another 2.5M dropped off from the previous week. There were at least two scenes in questionable taste featuring a male figure straddling either Laura Palmer's corpse or her coffin, so perhaps the early ‘90s sensibilities of some fans were offended. The title of the episode is, “Rest in Pain.” As usual, we titled the podcast on a line of dialogue from the episode. The episode was directed by Tina Rathborne, who would go on to direct one more episode of the series, episode #17. She previously directed Isabella Rossellini in the feature film, Zelly and Me, and of course, Rossellini was in Lynch's Blue Velvet and Wild at Heart. Rathbone borrowed some bits from the previous episode's dream sequence with Lynch's permission, wanting to add visual flair to an episode she felt was heavy with characters sitting and talking. Rathbone would praise the banal, mundane elements of life in Twin Peaks and the boy next door character of Agent Cooper, which made the violent, lurid and surreal elements more striking. Rathbone describes the series as a Bildungsroman, a German term for a novel of formation/education/culture, as Agent Cooper learns over the course of the series to become a more enlightened, well-rounded person. She also points out that in Cooper, Lynch and Frost introduced Carl Jung's theories of analytical psychology, which deals with and introduces such concepts as the personal and collective unconscious, and places great emphasis on symbols, anima and animus, the ego, and the shadow. The episode introduces two significant characters but also a secret group, The Bookhouse Boys, an extralegal fraternal order consisting of two actual police, Sheriff Truman and Deputy Hawk, as well as Big Ed Hurley. The setting for the Bookhouse was a real location, That Old Place Restaurant in Cornell, CA, much the same as seen on screen but with the bookcases and books added. Other episodes featuring The Bookhouse would feature a set, quite a bit larger and with more rooms than possible, based on the dimensions of the outside. The Bookhouse Boys insignia is that of a tree with a golden sword essentially taking the place of the trunk and spine of the tree. Miguel Ferrer debuts this episode as FBI agent Albert Rosenfeld, getting some great scenes condescending to Twin Peaks' Sheriff's Department, whom he sees as backwoods clods. Ferrer, son of Oscar-winning actor/director Jose Ferrer, would reprise his role in TP:FWWM. His other film, TV and animation voice credits are too numerous to mention, including roles in the holy trinity of network investigative dramas, CSI, NCIS and Law & Order. Ferrer's work as Albert was well-received by critics, and Ferrer was reportedly a welcome addition to the set, bringing a lot of laughter to his approach to the character. Sheryl Lee doesn't debut, exactly, but gets her first shot really acting and talking onscreen, not as Laura Palmer, but as her cousin, Madeleine “Maddy” Ferguson, a nerdier, brunette version of Laura who seems to be as decent and nice as many thought Laura was. She comes from Missoula, Montana, Lynch's real birthplace. We'll discuss duality in Lynch's work down the road more, but let's note here that Maddy's name is itself a reference to one of the great cinematic explorations of duality, Hitchcock's Vertigo, which featured Kim Novak as Madeleine and James Stewart as Scottie Ferguson. We question the acting skills of Dana Ashbrook in this episode, a San Diego native with two sisters also in the industry, but he's had a decent career as well, mostly in TV (CSI, Blue Bloods, Law & Order), and no doubt his appearance in an episode of Psych must have been a Twin Peaks parody, as the episode was titled, “Dual Spires.” Thanks, as always, for listening and reading. We'd love to hear what you think, so please follow us on Twitter @whokilledlaura1, on Facebook and Instagram at Who Killed Laura Podcast, and email us at whokilledlaurapodcast@gmail.com. Google + and Gmail: WhoKilledLauraPodcast@gmail.com Facebook: facebook.com/WhoKilledLauraPodcast Twitter: @WhoKilledLaura1 Instagram: @WhoKilledLauraPodcast Tumblr: http://whokilledlaurapodcast.tumblr.com
Writer Joe Dougherty from Pretty Little Liars joins us to talk about the episodes of Thirtysomething he wrote. He also tells us the one connection he put into Pretty Little Liars from thirtysomething. We discuss all the episodes he wrote and focus on the relationship of Michael & Miles. Follow us @30somethingpod
The guys are back to talk more Pretty Little Liars, The Prisoner, and obscure film references with writer and producer Joseph Dougherty. We discuss “Shadow Play,” Vivian Darkbloom, what Paige might be up to in California, what's in Ezra's special blend, and much much more. Adjust your theories accordingly! Seriously!
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars podcast, Seasons 5-7
The guys are back to talk more Pretty Little Liars, The Prisoner, and obscure film references with writer and producer Joseph Dougherty. We discuss “Shadow Play,” Vivian Darkbloom, what Paige might be up to in California, what’s in Ezra’s special blend, and much much more. Adjust your theories accordingly! Seriously!
Bros Watch PLL Too - A Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists podcast
The guys are back to talk more Pretty Little Liars, The Prisoner, and obscure film references with writer and producer Joseph Dougherty. We discuss “Shadow Play,” Vivian Darkbloom, what Paige might be up to in California, what’s in Ezra’s special blend, and much much more. Adjust your theories accordingly! Seriously!
Denny was sworn in as a Deputy United States Marshal for the Western District of Washington, retiring in 2001.During his career he worked in witness protection, bank security, prisoner movement and asset forfeiture. He retired as Supervisor of Enforcement Operations for the Western District of Washington. Denny has arrested some of the nation's most wanted criminals including: •Christopher Boyce (as depicted in the movie "The Falcon and the Snowman") •Martin Pang (arsonist) •Joseph Dougherty and Terry Lee Connors (bank robbers) Denny is one of the few Deputy U.S. Marshals to receive the prestigious Director's Award presented by the U.S. Marshal's Service, not once but twice. His Expert-level knowledge of the criminal justice system is second to none.
Joseph Dougherty leads the discussion about legendary filmmaker Sam Fuller. As Joe says, "You feel the man making the movie...""When you're at the end of your rope, all you have to do is make one foot move out in front of the other. Just take the next step. That's all there is to it." --Samuel FullerIn order of appearance:Sam FullerSteel Helmet (1951)I Shot Jesse James (1949)Pick-up on South Street (1953)Richard Widmark (actor)Shock Corridor (1963)Baron of Arizona (1950)Vincent Price (actor)House of Bamboo (1955)Big Red One (1980)Robert Lippert (producer)John Ireland (actor)Gene Evans (actor)Naked Kiss (1964)Francois Truffaut (filmmaker)Shoot the Piano Player (1960)Jean - Luc Godard (filmmaker)Breathless (1960)Jim Jarmusch (filmmaker)Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999)Peter Bogdanovich (filmmaker)Targets (1968)Boris Karloff (actor)Sid Melton (actor)Forty Guns (1957)Barbara Stanwyck (actress)1941 (1979)Steven Spielberg (filmmaker)A Return to Salem's Lot (1987)Stephen King (writer)White Dog (1982)Martin Scorsese (filmmaker)Theme from The Conversation by David Shire... 37:50 / 34.7 MB / Rated: PG-13... "Thanks for the download"...
Our first show of Season Three has our storytellers "Desperately Seeking" a girlfriend, acceptance, help, love, one’s self and youth. Emmy award winning writer Joseph Dougherty is our Featured Performer. Enjoy! "Tony & Joe" shot by Lance Anderson… Music by John O’Kennedy…Recorded Live on Friday, February 22, 2008 at The Coffee Fix in Studio City, California… Rated: PG-13 (Some Adult Language and Themes)… “Thanks for the Download!”