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  1. The TV Set stars David Duchovny as a screenwriter who’s continually thwarted by soulless executives on the set of his very personal TV series during pilot season. The film exists purely as an indictment of studio overreach and comes off as more aggravating than it is funny or relatable.

  2. Mike Klein (David Duchovny), the creator of a TV pilot called "The Wexler Chronicles," learns the hard way about how television shows evolve from concept to reality. Though Mike's concept involves serious subject matter, a network executive (Sigourney Weaver) and her cohorts have other plans to lighten up and dumb-down the show to appeal to a broader audience.

  3. The TV Set has all of the makings of a biting sendup of the TV industry, and you can tell Jake Kasdan is speaking from experience; the guy has been through it, without a doubt. But it's surprisingly bland, given the subject matter, and Kasdan apparently views this film as straight dramedy rather than satire.

  4. www.metacritic.com › movie › the-tv-setThe TV Set - Metacritic

    6 de abr. de 2007 · A hair-raising comedy of art and compromise, The TV Set follows an idealistic writer (Duchovny) as he tries to navigate his TV pilot down the mine-laden path from script through production to the madness of prime-time scheduling -- all while trying to stay true to his vision. Along the way he has to juggle the agendas of a headstrong network president (Weaver), volatile young stars, a pregnant ...

  5. TV Set Library is a controlled-environment library for archive masters. - Can fill up to 25,000 tapes - Secure facilities - 24/7 access if required - Temperature controlled rooms Contact us here via email or phone us on 0207 637 3322

  6. It's TV pilot season in Hollywood. Mike Klein, after fifteen years of struggle, has finally had one of his scripts green-lit for development, this one, titled The Wexler Chronicles, specifically with the Panda Network.

  7. 4 de ene. de 2022 · Starting with the first TV, television broadcasts were always analog, which means the radio wave itself contains the information the set needs to create a picture and sound. Image and sound would be directly translated into waves via “modulation” and then reverted back by the receiver through “demodulation”.