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Damned by Overt Praise
In the last decade of the previous century, I had an overall deal with 20th Century Fox studios. One of the projects I developed was a pilot for an hour dramedy about a typical suburban family in Atlanta, the Kirbys, whose parents were divorcing, all told from the point of view of their snarky 13…
Read More‘Code Blue’ to the Ambassador Lounge
Katherine LaNasa’s recent and much-deserved Emmy win for HBO’s The Pitt took me back to July, 2008 when I worked with her on Ghost Whisperer, and from there I spiraled down Memory Lane to April, 2000 and the origins of the character I wrote for her. The episode was called “Save Our Souls” and was filmed almost…
Read MoreWhatever Happened to Dexter Gaines?
For me, the most important element of historical fiction is verisimilitude. To focus on the “believe” in “make believe.” Visuals have always been a vital component of my writing, and I often create Photoshop images to give vibrant life to whatever world I’m writing about, whether “look books” and “pitch decks” for television, or photos…
Read MoreEight Books About a Pop Culture Phenom You’ve Likely Never Heard Of
by Mark B. Perry “Divinely impossible.” “Glamorous and unpredictable.” These are just a few of the printable words used to describe a legendary beauty who packed London’s West End theaters with adoring fans in the 1920s, scandalized Hollywood in the 1930s, became the queen of radio and television in the ’50s, and even played a…
Read MoreScreenwriting vs Fiction
I’m honored to be featured in LitHub.com, writing about how screenwriting helped prepare me for fiction. Click the image to read the full article.
Read MoreMy Summer and Fall With Mike White
A recent profile in The New Yorker of White Lotus creator Mike White neglected to mention his very first TV creation, a short-lived 2001 Fox show called Pasadena. I took the oversight personally because I happened to have been Mike’s showrunner on that series. It was one of the more educational, entertaining, and bizarre gigs…
Read MoreOne Book, Two Debuts, Three Titles
My mother tells a story I don’t remember about someone once asking six-year-old me what I wanted to be when I grew up. Without blinking, I replied, “Jimmy Stewart.” Even at that early age, I was already under the thrall of the movies and TV shows beaming into our den through the rabbit ears of…
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