The Revolution was Televised: The Cops, Crooks, Slingers and Slayers who Changed TV Drama Forever

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Alan Sepinwall, 2012 - Television plays - 388 pages
A mob boss in therapy. An experimental, violent prison unit. The death of an American city, filtered through a complex police investigation. A lawless frontier town trying to talk its way into the United States. A corrupt cop who rules his precinct like a warlord. The survivors of airplane crash trying to make sense of their disturbing new island home. A high school girl by day, monster fighter by night. A spy who never sleeps. A space odyssey inspired by 9/11. An embattled high school football coach. A polished ad exec with a secret. A chemistry teacher turned drug lord. These are the subjects of 12 shows that started a revolution in tn drama: The Sopranos. Oz. Th Wire. Deadwood. The Shield. Lost. Buffy the Vampire Slayer. 24. Battlestar Galactica. Friday Night Lights. Mad Men. Breaking Bad. These 12 shows, and the many more they made possible, ushered i a new golden age of television--one that made people take the medium more seriously than ever before. Alan Sepinwall became a tv critic right before this creative revolution began, was there to chronicle this incredible moment in pop culture history, and along the way "changed the nature of television criticism," according to Slate. The Revolution Was Televised is the story of these 12 shows, as told by Sepinwall and the people who made them, including David Chase, David Simon, David Milch, Damon Lendelof and Carlton Cuse, Vince Gilligan and more.

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About the author (2012)

Alan Sepinwall is an American television reviewer and writer. He gre up in Pine Brook, N.J. He studied at the University of Pennsylvania, where he began writing television reviews during his sophomore year in 1993. Sepinwall began working as The Star-Ledger's television columnist in 1996. He spent 14 years there until leaving the newspaper in 2010 to work for the entertainment news website HitFix. He reviews as many as 15 television shows each week.

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