Sentences with phrase «episodes of the show written»

While there have been various Sherlock Holmes comics and manga in the past, this one will adapt specific episodes of the show written by Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss and, based on the cover art, use the character likenesses of Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman, who play Holmes and Watson, respectively.

Not exact matches

Another super informative resource: watch this episode of the Small Businesses Do It Better show with Sue Kirchner, who shares her tricks on writing content that continues to bring in traffic, where she gets most of her traffic from, which social network brings the most visitors to her website and her tips on getting press coverage.
Fortunately, Los Angeles has plenty to offer the young and aimless: When he wasn't working, Woolverton took improv classes, read screenwriting books, and wrote a pretend episode of his favorite TV show, FX's The League.
The #AskGaryVee Show, which is up to 123 episodes as of this writing, is the brainchild of Gary Vaynerchuk, who, in my mind, is one of the most creative and brilliant marketing and social branding experts.
Prior to the show, Waithe built a resume marked by episodes of Fox's Bones and Netflix's Master of None (the latter earned her an Emmy, making her the first black woman to take home the award for comedy writing).
This has been much to the shock and horror of television series who were unfamiliar with his writing; the so - called Red Wedding episode which appeared towards the end of the show's just - finished third season caused widespread outcry online.
Rachel Decker writes a column for RELEVANT about how a recent episode of the hit show Bones taught a lesson about our motivations for forgiveness.
Even though show creator Dan Harmon was unceremoniously fired from writing any more episodes, it looks like the next season of Community will put Jeff, Annie, Britta, Troy, Abed, Shirley...
Dodging between episodes of Jersey Shore (blissfully, now cancelled) and American Idol, it's easy to forget the plethora of artfully written, beautifully directed and masterfully acted shows that are actually making an appearance on the airwaves.
In the most recent episode of his CBN show, The 700 Club, Pat Robertson gave this advice to a viewer who wrote in that he felt conflicted about continuing his engagement to a Muslim woman.
talk about skewing the stats to fit your own conclusions... this is like a slap in the face to every real Arsenal fan... have you no shame, have you no dignity, have you no sense of right from wrong... if you think everything was so well orchestrated why is everyone and their brother laughing at the way in which we conduct business both on and off the field... either you're a paid hack or a delusional buffoon... regardless you can't be a genuine Arsenal fan because the difficulties facing this club having been going on for years and this latest episode in our pathetic recent history is but a glaring reminder of how far we have fallen... I'm not going to waste my time discrediting every single ridiculous statement you made in your love letter to Wenger, but if you write another article I will gladly expose you for the fraud you truly are... this club is in desperate need of a serious cleansing and for you to try and package this dog and pony show as a well - oiled machine is a direct insult to anyone who has supported this team during the supposed «lean» years... the deceptive and disrespectful manner in which this organization has treated it's fans is an abomination to supporters everywhere and for you to even try to justify their actions is akin to saying just shut - up and keep filling our pockets... so please crawl back under whatever stone you crawled out from under and think carefully before you spew this type of propaganda ever again
This exclusive membership gives you access to all of our archived episodes, written transcripts of the shows, plus some bonus content after each show.
Back in 2012, I wrote a post called Modern Family Thinks My Family is Creepy, about a particularly disappointing episode of a show I love.
It gives you access to all the archived episodes, written transcripts of the show, a behind - the - scenes look at the conversations that take place after each interview is over, plus a special monthly newsletter with special giveaways, discounts and so much more.
I wrote and published five books, started two companies, wrote two episodes of a popular TV show, wrote a documentary, started teaching yoga, and maintained several other jobs throughout all of this.
Back in episode 44 we read an email that Brianna wrote to us about the birth of her first daughter Audrey (link to episode 44 in show notes).
When it came time for her own births (which you'll hear about in the show but can also read her full - length written accounts of both births on our website with the episode's notes), Kathryn and her husband Patrick decided on home birth.
The Hollywood Actor is a friend of The Producer and The Actress, he worked on a show which The Producer wrote and directed, and which The Actress starred in (see below for the first episode!)
There's an amazing lack of focus, uneven characters and writing, the direction is essentially a lazy copy of the direction in Breaking Bad (another show that just so happens to be about cocaine), and I'm really upset over the fact that I wasted two hours (I watched three episodes) of my life trying to enjoy this piece of **** I'll be honest, this is a really generous rating, and it probably doesn't even deserve it.
The show benefits from superb writing with the slight exception of the eighth episode, where the script falters a bit trying to balance comedy and mayhem.
That's not to say that it's as empty as an episode of «Alf» (one of the shows Stahl wrote for during his addiction; the puppet's name has been changed so that the real Alf won't sue); it's just that there's not the slightest accumulation of dread from scene to scene.
(Basically a copycat of Friday the 13th the series) Each episode was predictable with badly written dialogues, non of the characters were likable until the introduction of Claudia Donovan who revived the show by giving it some energy.
All in all The Last Jedi is another triumph for the franchise, but one can't help but wonder if it could have been written neater to seem less like 3 - 4 episodes of a TV show and more like an actual movie.
And speaking of Norman... Highmore is stepping behind the camera yet again to write another episode for the show.
At various points in his fantastically varied and storied career he wrote position papers on the need of support for a moribund Australian film industry, wrote and directed numerous episodes of such seminal TV shows as Homicide and Division 4 for Crawford Productions, was central in establishing film courses and departments in places such as Canberra and Brisbane (Griffith University), wrote plays and performed poems at Melbourne University and La Mama in the 1960s, directed feature films in the early 1980s (most memorably Ginger Meggs in 1982), made documentaries for the ABC and SBS (The Myth Makers, Images of Australia, The Legend of Fred Paterson, and numerous others), wrote and edited such books as Screenwriting: A Manual and Queensland Images in Film and Television, helmed commercials for a vast array of companies and government bodies, contributed film reviews to ABC radio (and more occasionally TV) across various states (for almost 40 years), wrote for numerous publications including Overland, The Canberra Times, Metro, The Concise Encyclopedia of Documentary Film, The Hobart Mercury, and so much more.
The script for the film is being written by Chris Henchy, who also wrote the upcoming Will Ferrell movie Land of the Lost along with a couple episodes of the Mark Wahlberg - produced HBO show Entourage.
The show only ran for six episodes, but with the likes of David Mitchell, Robert Webb and Ricky Gervais on the writing roll, it was clearly doing something right.
In addition to taking over Star Wars: Episode IX, producing a live - action remake of a smash - hit anime, making another Stephen King TV show, and producing a show about RuPaul (not to mention the countless things he already produces), J.J. Abrams apparently still has time to write yet another TV show.
And finally, Collider's Alison Keene wrote, «His Last Vow combined the action and humor elements of the show's earlier episodes, without tilting one way or the other too much (like some might say the first two of this season did).
Director Jerry Jameson is most experienced on the small screen, having helmed episodes of dozens of TV shows, including «Murder, She Wrote» and «Walker, Texas Ranger.»
But the one with the potential to be the most talented of them all is Daniel Kaluuya, who had a supporting role in the earliest iteration of the show as Posh Kenneth, as well as writing a pair of episodes.
Hill would take on the role of creative director and write a few episodes, but the show never went further than its...
The uneven second season of Aziz Ansari's show contained two perfect TV episodes, one of them, Thanksgiving, written by his co-star Waithe (for which she already made history, in June, as the first black woman to win an Emmy for comedy writing).
If you've had your fingers on the pulse of British TV, you might recognize the London native from his time spent as Posh Kenneth on early seasons of Skins (a show he also wrote for), or, like any U.K. actor worth his salt, from an episode of Doctor Who.
I wasn't planning to write about Gallery1988's first annual «Is This Thing On» art show as it really has little connection to movies or television (or so I thought... the above piece featuring Judd Apatow mashed - up with the infamous Star Trek Tribbles episode is a fine example of this).
Season Two boasts of a relatively interesting Blu - ray exclusive that shows how episode 13, «ABQ,» was constructed in the writers» room, with story beats mapped out on index cards painstakingly hand - written by Gilligan himself.
I love to see a really good episode of a TV show and break it down to its story beats, see how they approached the storytelling, and pick up little tricks that I use in my writing.
While she is best known for playing the outrageous, unstable Kapoor on The Office, Kaling is also co-executive producer of the show and has written 18 episodes over the course of its six seasons (the most recent of which was last night's hilarious, ridiculous «Secretary's Day.»)
# 55 of The Writing Coach podcast, writing instructor Joan Dempsey, who previously appeared in episode 38, returns to the show to discuss the laWriting Coach podcast, writing instructor Joan Dempsey, who previously appeared in episode 38, returns to the show to discuss the lawriting instructor Joan Dempsey, who previously appeared in episode 38, returns to the show to discuss the launch...
For episode 49 of the Happy Self Publishing show, we sat down with Ajit Nawalkha, co-founder of Mind Valley, founder of EverCoach, business coach and author of the Book of Coaching to find out how he wrote his book in just 8 (yes, you read that right!)
In addition to working on Night Heat he wrote the pilot for Diamonds, a detective show that ran for a couple of years; and also wrote episodes for Law & Order and Street Legal.
He has authored screenplays based on his books and also written numerous television episodes for some of UK's best shows.
Over in the show notes for this episode, you'll find a full written transcript and a mockup of how a good press release should be structured.
Even then, this would have made for a weakly written episode of the show.
I showed him one of my cartoon scripts, Dungeons, it was a funny twelve episode series I wrote during an internship, after some discussion, we decided it was excellent material for a Golden Axe inspired retro brawler.
Matt Stone and Trey Parker's involvement is immediately evident from both the writing and the voice acting, and the fact that the HUD is minimal makes the game look identical to an episode of the show.
On the latest episode of The Game Informer Show podcast (which you can subscribe to right here) we spoke with God of War's writers Matt Sophos and Richard Gaubert about their journey through the game industry, the scary process of writing the new God of War, and what the game's ending might mean for the future of the series.
Having Alan Wake play through episodes of «Night Springs», the TV show Wake wrote for, is a great idea.
So much has been written about Emin — by herself and others — since she first came to prominence alongside fellow Young British Artists (YBAs) Damien Hirst and Sarah Lucas more than two decades ago that her story seems to have congealed in a series of now quasi-mythical episodes: the childhood in the seaside town of Margate; the promiscuity; the abortions; the shop with Lucas; the first show with White Cube's Jay Jopling, cheekily entitled «My Major Retrospective 1963 — 1993»; the tent (Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963 — 1995); My Bed (1998); the drunkenness; the heartbreaks.
At the beginning of every month Nick (the guest on the show — to listen to this specific episode, click here) writes down his goals for the month.
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