Saturday, July 5, 2008

News Brief

The Nuke Fancast: Episode #6
Hilarious recap of last week's Luke and Noah scenes, the fans question of the week and the always touching "How Nuke Changed My Life" segment.


McGovern to pen daytime drama series for BBC
Jimmy McGovern, the award-winning writer of THE STREET, has been commissioned to create a brand new daytime drama series for the BBC. The series, which has the working title MOVING ON, will consist of five 45-minute episodes that will be stripped across a week on BBC1 next year. Each episode will take place in a house where a family or individual is moving in or out, and aims to explore "contemporary issues facing Britain," the BBC said.

Checking in with ATWT's Austin Peck
"I have to take off my hat to the writers, because everything I have been able to do as an actor started with what they have given me," Peck says. "They've allowed me to be goofy, to be silly, to be arrogant and obnoxious -- childlike, actually, like a big puppy dog. They see that's a big part of my personality, so they write toward that."

INTERVIEW: Former AMC and current ARMY WIVES star Kim Delaney
On reprising her role as Jenny on ALL MY CHILDREN if asked: "Uh-huh. I would do it. I love Agnes Nixon. I love the whole show. But I can't [now] — I have no time!"

SOAPNet plans BEVERLY HILLS 90210 beach marathon
On Saturday, July 26th, SOAPNet will glory in the 50 hottest moments of the original Fox series. From 4:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m., ET/PT, three beach-oriented episodes of the show will be shown back-to-back-to-back, with six interstitials that will reveal from 1-50, the hottest "moments" in BH 90210 history.

PHOTOS: Now it's the boys' turn... The HOLLYOAKS hunks strut their stuff

Not to be outdone by their female colleagues from Channel 4 soap HOLLYOAKS, the boys have stripped off...just weeks after the girls did the same. The HOLLYOAKS hunks were in Mallorca shooting the official 2009 calender and they certainly did not disappoint. It turned into more of a battle of the six packs then a friendly lark about the sun as the lads stripped off and showed the photographers what they were made of during the shoot.

Deep Soap: Don’t Knock It Until You Try It
Sara A. Bibel blogs: "Earlier this week I attended a networking event for people who work in New Media. (I figure I qualify now that I’m a blogger.) Hundreds of people crowded into a bar. We all attempted to schmooze over the loud music. I was introduced to the friend of a friend. When the small talk led to my soap writing past he said, 'I hope you won’t find this offensive but…' In my opinion, if you have to start a sentence that way with someone you’ve just met, it’s better to keep your mouth shut. He kept going. 'So is writing for soaps considered to be like writing for the National Enquirer? Do you just sit around throwing out crazy ideas?' It never ceases to amaze me how people who don’t watch soaps think they know about them. Most non-watchers think all soaps are as unrealistic as Passions. I try to explain that most shows take themselves more seriously, but they rarely believe it. These non-viewers have no qualms about telling me how the soap writing process works."

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