One had Arnold, the other had Arnold and Arnold.
Cryogenic suspension? How about instead a brutal mass banning engineered by a mysterious character named “M”, resulting in a brave new world of circled wagons and rocks in quarries?
Ah, never mind…it requires too much suspension of disbelief.
SciFiSam:
“Home.” A show about living on a terraformed planet so far from Earth that there’s no contact with Earth beyond the DVDs they constantly watch (the adults like Friends and The Big Bang Theory and the kids are very confused by Sesame Street, thinking that Big Bird was real), and the fact that the progenitors were in stasis when they left 21st-century Earth so act like our compatriats would do, with all their morals and norms.
The terraforming has not gone particularly well and people actually die now and then, but there is hope for the future. There are no emergency food drops and there never will be. For all they know, everyone on Earth is dead. Life is hard. Crops fail or thrive in unexpected ways - some good, some bad. The kids always wonder why their parents left Earth and sometimes their parents do too, but there’s no going back.
Roughly the plot of Niven & Pournelle’s Legacy of Herot . Not a TV show, but the example does show how hard it is to be truly new.
The_Hamster_King:
I think I’ve mentioned this idea on the board before:
Titanic, the TV series
Every week the boat sinks. There’s a cast of regulars in major roles like the captain or the head purser. But every week there’s a new group of guest stars and a new story that unfolds aboard the sinking ship. Sometimes the guest stars live and sometimes they die – you never can be sure how an episode will play out. And you plan the episodes out in advance so sometimes you see something happening in the background that doesn’t make any sense until you see a later episode.
It’s like The Love Boat . But it sinks.
I like it. With the help of “flash backs” you could also cover stories pre sailing day too.
I just looked that up and it doesn’t sound very similar at all, but I’m sure there is some book out there that is close to my outline. No TV show, though, so I guess it would be new.
I don’t have an idea for a series, but I have an idea for a recurring bit in a sit com or dramatic series. It would be background music coming to the forefront and the actors dealing with it.
A. During a conversation, the actors become aware of the background music, look around puzzled, then one of them gets up and turns off the stereo.
II. Some of the cast are walking outside in a determined fashion to do something or other. The background music is “Eye of the Tiger” or something like that. They stop, look around, and wait for the flatbed truck with the band performing on it to drive by and the music to fade out.
Cast member hires someone to walk 12 feet behind him with a ghettoblaster playing “Theme From Shaft.”
During a sad moment, they become aware of “Hearts and Flowers” being played on a violin in the background. One of them gets up, walks off camera, the music stops, and the cast member returns holding a violinist by the ear and walks the musician to the door and tosses him outside.
Similar scenes with a string quartet, jazz, rock, or blues ensemble practicing in the kitchen. Or off camera until the actors notice the music and the camera pans over to the group playing in the other corner of the bedroom, living room, etc.
Or the cast noticing someone with a boom box playing the music and turning it off.
Just Scraping By is about as original as it gets, starting on post #62
There’s actually a lot of examples of Left the Background Music On .
I feel I should put forth Dave Barry’s idea:
Joey_P
April 19, 2014, 5:44pm
94
Not listed there (that I saw) but there’s an episode of Family guy where Peter had his own theme music that the other characters could hear, much trouble ensues because of it.
Mislav
April 19, 2014, 6:09pm
95
Mislav:
I did come up with ideas for first several episodes. I doubt that cases are more original than those shown in an original CSI, but I would like to know what you guys think.
Episode 1
Case 1: Two friends are hiking together, but relaxing hiking trip turns into a nightmare after a masked gunman shots the girl and wounds the boy. Who would do such a thing and how is that linked to an accidental death of a well known criminal-that may not be accidental at all?
Case 2: A young man on a date with his new girlfriend goes to use the bathroom and never returns: somebody followed him inside and stabbed him to death. But who?
Episode 2
Case 1: A teenage boy is found dead in his neighbour’s yard, next to a swimming pool, bludgeoned to death. Victim, his neighbour, claims that she was swimming in the familie’s swimming pool late at night and that he attacked her when she went to get dressed, trying to rape her, leaving her no choice but to kill him in self defense. However, some of the evidence doesn’t add up, making the self defense story very unlikely. The case turns out to be even more complicated when a rookie police officer who was originally called to a scene dies on that crime scene-apparently in a tragic accident.
Case 2: A woman was raped and beaten, then simply left on an abandoned field near the highway. She has no recollection of the crime and the attacker did his best not to leave any evidence, so our team needs to do their best to catch him.
Episode 3
Case 1: Three people were apparently murdered in a local High school overnight: body of a teenage girl found stuffed in a locker belonging to a student with a bad reputation (she was shot to death); gym teacher found bludgeoned to death in a gym; and a young unidentified woman found stabbed to death in the school’s garden, gun found on the ground near her body. What happened there that night? Are the deaths connected?
Case 2: In 1988, serial killer serving five consecutive life sentences in a federal prison was stabbed the death. The case was never solved. Now, almost thirty years later, our team needs to reopen the case and find a killer after a new DNA evidence is found.
Also, I like to think that that show could have ninety minutes long episodes and still have twenty four episodes per season, but I know that they would have to reduce it to like ten episodes per season. Unless they make two part episodes, each forty five minutes long, although I don’t see it being good that way.
etv78
April 20, 2014, 3:10pm
96
SciFiSam:
“My Two Moms.” An ordinary sitcom with two mothers, co-parents in a lesbian relationship. Nothing groundbreaking about that except the two mums as central characters, which I don’t think has actually been done before. awaits link refuting this Having the two parents both be female would change things a little, just enough to make it different, but it would also mostly be about normal family stuff.
“Home.” A show about living on a terraformed planet so far from Earth that there’s no contact with Earth beyond the DVDs they constantly watch (the adults like Friends and The BFamily. ang Theory and the kids are very confused by Sesame Street, thinking that Big Bird was real), and the fact that the progenitors were in stasis when they left 21st-century Earth so act like our compatriats would do, with all their morals and norms.
The terraforming has not gone particularly well and people actually die now and then, but there is hope for the future. There are no emergency food drops and there never will be. For all they know, everyone on Earth is dead. Life is hard. Crops fail or thrive in unexpected ways - some good, some bad. The kids always wonder why their parents left Earth and sometimes their parents do too, but there’s no going back.
Most of the people on the ship were scientists, farmers, people who’d be expected to do well in such an environment, but for a wildcard you could throw in a stowaway and his/her kid. They shouldn’t be unexpectedly and unrealistically more capable than all the people chosen for their capabilities, though; they’re just there to provide an audience surrogate. And they always they know that they’re the most expendable.
Sam-Your 1st idea airs on ABC Family. It’s called “The Fosters”.
Ranger Jeff writes:
> 3. Cast member hires someone to walk 12 feet behind him with a ghettoblaster
> playing “Theme From Shaft.”
That’s a running joke in the movie I’m Gonna Git You Sucka , including this final scene:
Andy_L
April 20, 2014, 5:46pm
98
I managed to dredge this up from my memory http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_television: Basically, it’s a sketch comedy show, “reviewing” imaginary television shows (I particularly remember Angie Dickinson in “Crystal Balls: New Age Detective” CRYSTAL BALLS NEW AGE DETECTIVE from ON THE TELEVISION - YouTube )
Celebrity Exhumation. Reality show that visits a celebrity’s grave where they open it up and let people view the remains.
I imagine getting permission from descendants or the estate would prove difficult. Maybe if they paid them…
I bet the ratings would be high for the morbidly curious.
“Next week on Celebrity Exhumation; W.C. Fields”.
You wanted original, right?
A down on his luck drug dealer becomes a chemist teacher.