TVLine Items: Jokers Renewed at truTV, Peacemaker Adds Judomaster and More TVLine 4/02/2021
truTV is keeping the laughs coming, renewing
Impractical Jokers for Season 10, ahead of the show’s Season 9 premiere tonight, Feb. 4 at 10/9c.
The news comes as the stars Joe Gatto, James “Murr” Murray, Brian “Q” Quinn and Sal Vulcano, collectively known as the comedy troupe The Tenderloins have signed a first-look deal with WarnerMedia to develop and produce original unscripted and scripted programming for TNT, TBS, truTV and HBO Max.
More from TVLine HBO Max’s forthcoming
Kroll Show) to recur as the DC Comics character Judomaster, our sister site Deadline reports.
Martin Gero, Brendan Gall Set Wilderness Survival Drama Series Breathe at Netflix (EXCLUSIVE)
Joe Otterson, provided by
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Variety has learned exclusively.
The six-episode series is titled “Breathe.” When a small plane crashes in the middle of the Canadian wilderness, a lone woman must battle the elements and odds to survive.
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Gero and Gall are co-writing and executive producing the series, with Gero executive producing under his Quinn’s House Production company. Warner Bros. Television will produce. Gero and Quinn’s House were previously under an overall deal at WBTV before he moved over to Universal Television last year.
The entertainment industry s response to the pandemic resulted in some great TV and a sitcom by Norman Wilner on December 13th, 2020 at 10:00 AM 1 of 3 2 of 3
The weight of COVID-19 has touched every aspect of human behaviour, up to and including the way we make TV shows. And it’s not just a question of how a given show is produced, but whether that show will even acknowledge the pandemic affecting its production.
Some series are incorporating the coronavirus into their narratives NBC’s
Superstore and the Vancouver-filmed
The Good Doctor (which continued shooting while two cast members tested positive in real life), ABC’s Grey’s
The year’s most compelling COVID TV shows
The entertainment industry s response to the pandemic resulted in some great TV. And a sitcom By Norman Wilner
NBC Universal
NBC s Connecting. was the first network sitcom to tackle the pandemic. It lasted four episodes.
The weight of COVID-19 has touched every aspect of human behaviour, up to and including the way we make TV shows. And it’s not just a question of how a given show is produced, but whether that show will even acknowledge the pandemic affecting its production.
Some series are incorporating the coronavirus into their narratives – NBC’s Superstore and The Good Doctor, ABC’s Grey’s Anatomy – while others, like CBS comedy The Unicorn, aren’t acknowledging it but just happen to have a lot more scenes taking place outdoors this year.