#14 Writing - Selling - Producing a Television Pilot - a podcast by Bob McCullough & Suzanne Herrera McCullough: Hollywood Film and Television

from 2013-07-08T03:47

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Suzanne opens discussing Ryan Seacrest’s new reality show “Montecito” and then 


analyzes some hits before reviewing “The Seven Worst Reality Shows” to


ever make it on the air...while Bob shares his passion for


vinyl Rock ‘n Roll record albums.


The conversation moves on to how Bob took advantage of his “inside track”


deal with NBC Productions and his relationship with programming exec


Brandon Tartikoff to pitch and sell a pilot for  Time Out for Dad, which starred


NFL Hall of Famer Dick Butkus and Harriet Nelson.


Bob tells what it was like meeting Chicago Bears linebacker Dick Butkus


for the first time, and then how Butkus held his own as a comedic actor


surrounded by first timers on a movie set. 


Bob recalls his meeting withHarriet Nelson who appeared


in the show...while Suzanne lets it be known that she’s had a lifelong “thing”


for Harriet’s son, famed rocker Ricky Nelson.  We also hear about the


casting process that discovered future TV star Johnny Galecki,


star of the CBS-TV series The Big Bang Theory .


Bob and Suzanne touch upon the fact that Time Out for Dad may


have been ahead of its time, dealing with the challenges faced by a


stay-at-home father married to a wife whose career is on the rise.  They


reminisce about working with Scarface star Paul Shenar on the pilot, as well as


with the veteran crew members whom Bob spent time with, pumping them


for their stories of “Old Hollywood”.


Bob admits to being a “born marketer”, describing the story-point prop shoes


that he shamelessly wrote into the show in hopes of breaking into


the world of  Nike’s Air Jordans, and then turns to the cruel odds of


the TV pilot process as a project goes through the various phases of


story-pitch-script-shoot...and then the dreaded decision-making that follows.



The episode closes with the realities of network programming


changes, as Bob gives his own definition of


“failure” in the world of television.

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