
EXCLUSIVE: New ABC Family president Michael Riley is making his first development move a month after he took over the cable network following Paul Lee’s move to ABC. ABC Family has greenlighted 3 pilots, Strut, Nine Lives and Switched at Birth. I hear the pickup of a fourth pilot, The Lying Game, is imminent. Two of the pilots, Nine Lives and The Lying Game, hail from Alloy Entertainment, the company behind ABC Family’s freshman hit Pretty Little Liars.
Strut, whose order is cast-contingent, centers on a Las Vegas showgirl who unwittingly gets married to a stranger after a wild night and becomes a high school instructor for a misfit drill team in a small Texas town. Lamar Damon wrote the script and is executive producing with Anna Mastro, Karey Burke, Charlie Stratton and Norman Buckley.
Nine Lives is based on Alloy’s Nine Lives of Chloe King series of 3 young-adult novels by Celia Thomson. Alloy Entertainment is producing the pilot, about Chloe King, a teenager with heightened abilities (super speed, agility, hearing…claws) who discovers she’s being pursued by a mysterious figure. Dan Berendsen (Hannah Montana: The Movie) penned the script and is executive producing with Alloy’s Leslie Morgenstein and Gina Girolamo.
Switched at Birth, written and executive produced by Lizzy Weiss (Blue Crush), is a one-hour drama about two teen girls who discover that they were accidentally switched at birth. Bay Kennish grew up in a wealthy family with two parents and two brothers, while Daphne Vasquez, who lost her hearing as a child due to a case of meningitis, grew up with a single mother in a poor neighborhood. Things come to a dramatic head when both families meet and struggle to learn how to live together for the sake of the girls.
The Lying Game, which Alloy is producing with Warner Horizon TV, is based on the upcoming Alloy book series of the same name by Pretty Little Liars author Sara Shepard, which will be released in December. Its premise is similar to Switched at Birth: it centers on twin identical sisters separated at birth – one rich and one poor. When the rich one goes missing the poor sister sets out to find her. Chuck Pratt Jr. (Ugly Betty) wrote the script and is executive producing with Morgenstein and Girolamo.
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wait – am i reading this correctly? two pilots about twins switched at birth? huh? how does this make any sense? sounds like some bad decision making if you ask little humble opinionated old me.
no, i don’t think you read correctly. One is about people SWITCHED at birth, one is about twins SEPARATED at birth.
Also, one is a mystery while one is a drama (or comedy, don’t know).
Even though there are differences I think they are still too close. Switched at birth and separated at birth. Its all too similar.
“Strut, whose order is cast-contingent, centers on a Las Vegas showgirl who unwittingly gets married to a Texan and becomes a high school instructor for a misfit drill team.” – How does somebody “unwittingly” get married? Also, what happens after the misfit drill team gets, I assume, better? How do you extend this premise beyond one season? (Please don’t compare this show to GLEE. A drill team with drums, brass, and flag girls cannot cover Journey songs)
“Switched at Birth: it centers on twin identical sisters separated at birth – one rich and one poor. When the rich one goes missing the poor sister sets out to find her.” – Okay, once the poor one finds the rich one, then what? How does this get extended beyond one season?
Why do TV series based on one-note movie premises keep getting green-lit?
ABC Family is churning out better shows than any of the big networks right now. I’m a 39 year old, straight, white guy and “Pretty Little Liars”, is one of my favorite shows. We need more mysteries on television. Right now, everything is either reality shows, doctor shows, lawyer shows or cop shows.
Tom, great question. Morons.
Alloy Entertainment: Entertainment for Idiots. Stick with Oxygen, Lifetime, and CW. Their content is one step above Kids Disney fare.
A Vegas girl gone to drill…should be interesting and fun to watch!
lamar damon is a really really awesome writer with one of the best voices in town. good for him. this is truly a “LD” idea and tom is a being a hater.
As a cat lover, I have to say that I find the premise of Nine Lives intriguing. However, ABC Family already had this basic premise – changeling child pursued by a mysterious stranger – and they put it to the sword. Remember Kyle X/Y? I do.
I find that networks that poorly handle fantasy shows generally do not allow them to reach their audience until conclusion (think NBC). Therefore, while I like the idea of this show, I will not invest any time in watching it if it airs on ABC Family.