By Angie Han/Oct. 26, 2011 12:30 pm EST
As Goyer himself points out, his background in superhero tales make him an ideal choice to adapt a tale about the “near-mythic figure.” “After working with characters like Batman and Superman, it made a strange kind of sense for me to dive into the facts and legends swirling around his origins.” he said in a press release. Starz exec Carmi Zlotnik adds, “If modern day has Tony Stark, the Renaissance had da Vinci.” Moreover, Goyer’s got plenty of television experience under his belt already — his last small-screen gig was ABC’s FlashForward, which he co-created with Brannon Braga. [Deadline]
Michael Bay’s ethos seems to be “bigger is better,” but for his next project he’ll be going small (screen). Bay is set to executive produce Outsiders, an hourlong drama for The CW by writer Adam Glass (Supernatural). The story revolves around “a quirky sociology professor with an almost savant-like expertise in subcultures” who teams up with an uptight female detective to solve crimes involving the underground youth subcultures of Los Angeles. If Outsiders makes it to air, it’ll be the first television project for Bay — though he’s been attached to TV projects in the past, none made it past the pilot stage.Outsiders is part of an effort on The CW’s part to target viewers outside its current core demo of females 18-49. Bay’s involvement is expected to bring a larger male audience to the network. [Variety]Scrubs writer Tim Hobert and his younger brother Michael Hobert (Comedy Central Roast of Donald Trump) will collaborate on a new NBC comedy based on their own experiences working together in television. The untitled single-camera series will follow a twentysomething named Mike who thinks he’s getting a lucky break when his older brother Tim, a commercial director, hires Mike to be his assistant. However, instead of the dream job Mike had envisioned, the gig actually consists mostly of pitching in with Tim’s busy home life. The premise is inspired by actual events in which the real Tim hired his aspiring writer brother Michael to be his assistant, only for Michael to wind up doing mostly household chores and babysitting — all on the NBC payroll.
The midlife crisis premise doesn’t sound all that original, but I’ll be curious to see if the new series does a better job than Unhitched did at translating the Farrellys’ humor to television. All five will executive produce, with Pappas, Bernier, and Barnett writing and Peter Farrelly directing. [Deadline]