Wednesday, September 06, 2017

Upcoming Telenovelas: Stevey's Notes (Pt. IIB) – September 6, 2017

PART IIB – TELENOVELAS IN THE NEAR FUTURE
Here we go with the rest of the telenovelas that are now in production.

PRODUCTION #6 – ME DECLARO CULPABLE   PRODUCER: ANGELLI NESMA MEDINA
**No broadcast date for Mexico announced yet, but in production.**
I'm excited about THIS story!! The name 'Univision' is already being associated with this production (i.e. a 'Televisa/Univision' production). You guys might be surprised to hear there is one country that isn't Brazil (or, of course, Mexico) that has produced some really terrific novelas, most especially in the new millennium. Indeed the number of productions that have been produced in Mexico that were actually remakes of Argentinian originals is really quite staggering, including some that I think a lot of people would consider so intrinsically Mexican so as to be a part of the culture and country (Simplemente Maria is the one that comes most immediately to mind), as well as some very prominent or popular novelas from closer to our time (such as Amores Verdaderos, Alma de Hierro, Rebelde, Muchacha Italiana Viene a Casarse, Una Familia con Suerte, Un Gancho al Corazon, and I could go on).  This decade, especially, I don't know how or why, but Argentina has come out with telenovelas that are absolutely Awesome (you'll please note that's capital “A'' awesome), and a true credit to the genre. Giselle Gonzalez's next project is a remake of a recent Argentinian telenovela and so is this one of Angelli Nesma Medina.


This is a remake of an Argentinian original called Por Amarte Así, and it's a pretty kick-ass story, if you ask me. The central issue around which all of the drama will center is one I don't think anybody could possibly guess, as it's something that hasn't really been touched upon at all in Mexican genre. Go on, take a guess! Did any of you guess euthanasia?? I know I sure as hell didn't, but well, that's where we are! While euthanasia is not really the “theme” of this story like, say, fatherhood is in the aforementioned Papá a Toda Madre, it is unquestionably the “thing” about which every aspect of our story revolves. I will explain, but first the cast.
 
Angelique Boyer, remember, was “confirmed” as the woman in prison. You will note that “confirmed” is in quotations because after all of this confirmation, Srta. Boyer said "see ya!" to the network, so Mayrin Villanueva was cast instead, as the character Alba.  As to the male lead, Diego Olivera (who seems to be sprouting up everywhere nowadays, leading me to wonder if he has compromising photos of our Lord High Rosy Ocampo doing unspeakable things to farm animals somewhere) was apparently TOTALLY confirmed. But, perhaps to show Americans what “Fake News” REALLY is, it was revealed that of all people, Juan Soler would be our male lead, Franco. This then would mark his return to Televisa after a seven year absence (his last lead here was in Cuando Me Enamoro since Reina de Corazones was a Telemundo production). YAY!! No reasons were given for this switch, but I think it's a good one, to take nothing away from Sr. Olivera. Sr. Soler does both “sophisticated” and “sensitive” remarkably well and he has a well-earned legion of fans who I'm sure will be thrilled at his return. I can't help but wonder, also, whether the fact that Sr. Olivera is playing a complete asshole in En Tierras Salvajes might have factored into producer Nesma Medina's decision. (But then, I wonder about a lot of things. That's why I drink! :-)) Our young protagonists? Irina Baeva (looking drop-dead stunning, not that it's hard for her) will, hopefully, be given a lot more interesting things to do than Jose Alberto Castro gave her in Vino de Amor (as well as pretty much everybody else in the cast with the exception of Veronica Jaspeado and Kimberly dos Ramos to do in VeA), will be Natalia (and, having seen shots of how she's going to look for this production, really do have to marvel at how almost impossibly stunning she is). Juan Diego Covarrubias, having escaped from the mediocrity of Lucero Suarez and her production of De Que te Quiero te Quiero, will be our other young actor.
 
I'm excited about the villains in this one!  I mean, MORE so than usual!! We've got two absolutely KICK-ASS broads being the source of all of the trouble in this one. (My apologies to all of the ladies who are reading this who might be offended at my use of such a term, but really, how better can one describe Daniela Castro and Sabine Moussier when it comes to supplying villainies??) Sra. Castro will be Roberta, the wife of Franco, she of the many childhood issues and our main antagonista. Sra. Moussier (in her fourth production with Angelli Nesma Medina) will be Ingrid,  the vindictive and vengeful aunt who will likewise be supplying a lot of messiness and problems. Oh, and did I mention (and this is a departure from the original), Ingrid will be schizophrenic and not the kind that takes her meds regularly (which, considering how well Sra. Moussier can chew the scenery, ought to REALLY be interesting!!)? If you couple that with the fact that Roberta's irrationality has already been described as being bi-polar in some press announcements AND evil (as Daniela Castro herself has referred to her), will apparently be both bi-polar, and you've got the makings of the best kind of s**t storm imaginable, if you ask me!!! :-)
 
There is also a male villain in here somewhere in regards to the main adult cast, one Tizano, played by Ramiro Fumazoni and his impossibly gorgeous blue eyes (in their first main villain role). I have no idea how or what he's going to do, as God knows Sras. Castro and Moussier are perfectly capable of doing it all themselves. There of course will also be an evil antagonist among the younger generation. This will be Natalia’s boyfriend, played by the personification of masculine virility, Pedro Moreno (Iñaki in TVA), in the role of Julian. Also, staying with the villains, Roberta's rich, abusive elderly father is also very much a player in this story in ways one wouldn't necessarily expect. He will be played by Enrique Rocha.
 
Awesome support here, as well, with names familiar to many of Sra. Nesma Medina's productions—Alejandro Avila (sympathetic, I think he's playing a lawyer), Lisset (sympathetic, playing the best friend of Alba), Alejandra Garcia, Marco Mendez, and, a name from the somewhat past, Margarita Magaña (lately Esmeralda in Lo Que La Vida Me Robó).
 
This production is already being marketed by Univision, so I think it's pretty safe to assume that this one WILL be coming to your homes at some point in the near future. Nauseatingly, Producer Medina has reached out to the public about their feedback on changing the name of this novela from Me Declaro Culpable to something else.  These are the alternatives she wanted feedback on: No Me Juzgues, El Amor Todo Lo Cambia, Culpable Por Amor y Nacidos Por Amor.  I, personally, throw up in my mouth a little every time I read them [ed. note: Anita gags, too, only because the alternatives don’t seem to reflect the premise as well as the original does—Amor? Where does that fit. Give me a break.] However, I have been buoyed by the fact that, everywhere I look, people overwhelmingly seem to be voting for the original, but we'll have to see. I cannot WAIT for this one!!!
 
Oh!  And here's a picture of our leading man and his villana wife (Juan Soler & Daniela Castro). They look f**king fantastic, if you ask me!!!  https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DIA7i0cVoAARFfg.jpg
 
àThe central figure in this story (meaning the person connecting everyone in the story), Franco, is NOT a chiseled guapo a la William Levy or Cristián de la Fuente, nor a bombshell heroina, but what I guess we could call a “mature” galán. He is a successful and prestigious lawyer who's in a died-long-ago marriage to a beautiful and successful woman (but one with issues stemming from childhood abuse she suffered) and father to a teenage daughter who is rapidly growing up. As such he has money, prestige, social standing, and success in his legal business, but is gradually recognizing that none of that matters if one is not happy, or making a difference in life. Remembering the idealism he once had that caused him to go into law in the first place, he is contacted by woman from prison who asks for his help, in spite of it seeming like a hopeless cause. He agrees to take her case which, upon doing so, NOBODY could ever understand WHY, as it's a case that NOBODY really wanted, and with good reason. The case is about a woman going on trial for the murder of her husband and the woman's guilt is not in any doubt. In spite of, or perhaps BECAUSE of this, on hearing the story Franco is determined to become this woman's one believer and then, hopefully, her champion and ultimate savior. Because the woman insists that the murder of her terminally ill husband who was suffering, was not an act of malice, but one of love, and mercy. Heavy stuff, eh? We're just getting started!
 
As I mentioned before, the lawyer and his beautiful, socially prominent wife have a young teenage daughter, capricious, rather selfish, and basically someone who, though she may soon TECHNICALLY be a grown-up, hasn't really grown up at all. She has an immature relationship with an immature boyfriend and, after yet another fight with said boyfriend, she tears off in a state and in so doing runs over a young man who has always been hard-working, determined, and focused on attaining his dream of becoming a professional soccer player. Through all of the years of his hard work, dedication,  determination, and belief in himself, Santiago is now considered to be one of the most promising young stars in the entire sport—until his unexpected encounter with the grill of our immature princess’s car, leaves him a paraplegic (hmm, shades of Un Refugio Para el Amor?). His chances of ever being the soccer player he was right on the cusp of becoming are as shattered as his legs are now. The second arc of the story, then, is about these two young people who, for varying reasons, share one event that has completely shattered their lives, but who have to go on from there.
 
Now, to bring this all together, you may notice that, in these two story arcs that involve two very different pairs of people in two very different situations, there IS one thing that they have in common, and this will be the third point that makes up both of our two triangles. In regard to the lawyer's beautiful and socially prominent wife, who is also, of course, the young girl's determined and protective mother, Roberta is determined, after her daughter's accident, that, as tragic the circumstances and whatever the end result for the young soccer player may be, in no way can her only daughter's young life be destroyed before it has even begun. In regards to her husband, it's a little more complex, as the wife, being the other half of the power-couple they are, decides to champion him and his case with this imprisoned woman, determined that he won’t lose and the woman will gain her freedom. But her motives are different from theirs. She wants her husband to WIN and succeed. The woman's freedom is merely what must happen for this to come to pass. The story of the woman on trial, her husband's story, the whole element of mercy killing, and the plight of the terminally ill and those caring for them, do not even register as blips on her radar, as they do on theirs. What then, will she do, when this moral estrangement between the two of them and herself begins to become more and more apparent? Lawyer and client become closer and closer, brought together by their sharing of the same sense of values, morality, and ideals that nobody else, most especially the wife, seem to share. Couple that with the woman's own emotional issues, irrationality resultant of such a strong and determined character, we have our triangle.
 
In addition to this, there is one really cool, really HUGE twist to the dynamic that these three share that I really don't feel I should comment upon, only because in the ORIGINAL it was an acknowledged plot point from the get-go, but only for the viewers. Meaning that the viewing audience became privy to it well before the characters do. I shall refrain from saying anything because it's the kind of thing that would be both very easy and completely justifiable for producer Sra. Medina to change, in terms of the way the twist is presented. If she would rather make it something that we viewers only become aware of as the characters themselves do, though I'd reeeee-ally like to and though it may be somewhat neurotic of me to fret over the right thing to do, knowing the way that most of you feel towards spoilers on this site, I feel I had better err on the side of caution lest I reveal something that I shouldn't, especially if producer Medina has a different way for us to learn about it than was done in the original.
 
So there are our two basic triangles--totally different from the normal, wouldn't you say? Well, we're not done yet!  There IS one other, very important, arc to this story that absolutely must be mentioned. For, if we have a WIFE in prison for having “murdered” her suffering HUSBAND, wouldn't it stand to reason that there would be OTHER people who were affected by this dramatic turn of events? In this case, yes of course there is and this makes up the rest of our story. The accused murderer and her terminally ill husband have a young child, a daughter, now in the care of her only aunt on her father's side, a woman who was passionately devoted to her now-deceased only brother. And though she presents herself as a sympathetic presence in her sister-in-law's life, in reality she is devastated by her brother's death and bears an immense and seething bitterness and hatred towards the woman responsible for it. And, seeing as she is now the one in possession of the woman's only child and a reason for living, she is prepared to use this to her every advantage, as well as ensure that the woman who took her brother from her gets exactly what she deserves. I think it's an awesome story—the stuff of high drama for sure.
 
PRODUCTION #7 – LA BELLA Y LAS BESTIAS – PRODUCER:  W STUDIOS
**No air date yet, but in production.**
I mentioned earlier about a new 'Univision' production (meaning that it's originating from the American bastard-sister of Mexican telenovelas as opposed to the other way around, a relatively new phenomenon--kind of like La Piloto, which had the same production team as this one). This is it. Esmerelda Pimentel is going to be the star, after Altair Jarabo, who had been hired for the lead role, was unceremoniously fired. The producers (the amorphous-sounding “W Studios,” is actually the name producer Patricio Wills uses for stuff he does, for some reason) used a rationale that instantly made me hate them, as much as I will admit that La Piloto was a very good production, considering it was its first effort. Apparently, Srta. Jarabo wasn't thought to be a big enough draw, "No name recognition," that kind of thing (you will be forgiven for wondering, as I did—THEN WHY THE HELL DID YOU HIRE THE POOR GIRL IN THE FIRST PLACE??). So, because she had never had a STARRING role, they decided not to give her one. Nice, huh?
 
Anyway, this production is going to be called La Bella y las Bestias (cool title, huh?).  It's going to be a revenge-type telenovela (Steve Boudreaux, make sure to sharpen all your pencils for the Body Count for this one) in the vein of Kill Bill or The Lion King.
 
Perhaps because it's a Univision production, there's not much press on it (there wasn't for La Piloto either until it was about to make it's Televisa debut). But I can say a couple of things. One of the things I'm finding interesting with these new Univision-produced telenovelas is how casting seems to be an interesting mish-mash of new faces, old faces, new faces to us, old faces from way back or another network (or country)! And this one is no exception--in addition to Srta. Pimentel as our leading lady, Osvaldo Benevides will be our galán, his second lead galán role after the first etapa of A Que No Me Dejas. Supporting roles will be taken by Leticia Huijara (a co-lead in Despertar Contigo), Arturo Barba (who many of you--be you Televisa/Univision watchers or Telemundo watchers--will probably recognize, lately as Zeky in La Piloto), among others.
 
This will also mark the television return of the actress Lorena Meritano, most famous as the evil Dinorah Rosales in the classic Pasión de Gavilanes, which then spawned FELS on Televisa and more recently, Tierra de Reyes on Telemundo. It will be a wonderful thing to see her, as Sra. Meritano was diagnosed with terminal cancer (it started as breast cancer). But after seemingly years of chemo and the loss of both breasts, she has beaten it. Perhaps because of all this, her role will be a limited one. She will be playing the mother of Sra. Pimentel's lead, I'm assuming in flashbacks, but I wanted to share that with you in the hopes that you all may get a little bit more joy in watching this actress just do her job knowing what she went through to be able to do it.
 
In a story like this, it stands to reason that the villains will be particularly loathsome (like Zulima in La Piloto). I know of three names that are confirmed for the leaders of the evil group of parent-killers. The lead main baddie will be Sebastian Ferrat (the cop Christian Palacios in Reina de Corazones) and the evil pair of women played by two classic Telemundo vixens, Jessica Mas (was Dulce in La Fantasma de Elena and Cobra in Reina de Corazones) who will be La Joyera, and, as the big boss, Aylin Mujica, I'm assuming, considering that her character will be named La Madame.
 

àThe story revolves around Isabela Leon, a lovely, hard-working young lady, founder of a mixed martial arts training centre, who returns to the land of her childhood (Mexico, natch) with one goal, to find the people (seven men and two women) responsible for the murders of her parents 'lo those many moons ago, and make them pay.

PRODUCTION #8 SIN TU MIRADA – PRODUCER:  IGNACIO SADA
**No broadcast date announced, but in production** [ed. note—Caution: if you haven’t seen Esmeralda, Stevey starts us out with a short recap which might be a spoiler if Sin tu Mirada is a true remake.]
After the big success he had with Mi Adorable Maldición (it's finale got a share of 28.5 points, which is terrific, especially given its late-afternoon time slot), the network is giving Ignacio Sada more freedom.  So for his next project, he's chosen to redo one of the classics, Esmeralda—the story about a blind girl and the man she falls in love with, neither of them realizing that (in a stunning example of how small the world really can be) they had been switched at birth and each is living the life the other was supposed to have. That telenovela, named after the eponymous heroine, was an original story by "the mother of the Latin American telenovela,” Delia Fiallo (she’s 93 now and still alive), originally produced in Venezuela in 1970, starring Lupita Ferrer and remade by Salvador Mejia in 1997 starring Leticia Calderon as the blind heroine, Fernando Colunga as her dashing galán, and Laura Zapata as a classist bitch (with a lot of presence and a bad attitude, in other words, Laura Zapata), and won tons of awards. These are big shoes to fill, then…and…well…I guess we'll see now, won't we?
 
This remake is tentatively called Sin tu Mirada. For the lead, Sr. Sada has gone with Claudia Martin to play Andrea. Why? Who knows?  She’s the protagonista's sister in Enamorandome de Ramón, currently airing on Univision and whose first acting credit of any kind was in Un Camino Hacia el Destino (Vicky, one of the “Mean” girls). Before that she was working in the Wardrobe Department at the network, as a costume designer (meaning that I think it's pretty damn awesome that she's now going to be STARRING in one of the novelas alongside people that not a year-and-a-half ago she was figuring out what they were going to wear). At least it cannot be said of Sr. Sada that he is of the same (lesser) moral and professional ilk than Patricio Wills at W Studios, who fires the woman he hires because, in spite of her acting half of her life in important television roles, she isn't an interesting enough name to warrant hiring after all.
 
Gonzalo Peña, a Spaniard, beat out all of the other actors for the role of her galán, pretty big shoes to fill considering that the galán in the original was a very young Fernando Colunga. Unfortunately, then the tragedy in Barcelona occurred, and young Sr. Peña couldn't resist chiming in with his two cents, saying enlightened things like how all Muslims should be kicked out of Spain, stuff like that. Well, say what you will about Televisa, it prides itself on its inclusiveness and doesn't take too kindly to people working for the network bearing such extreme and un-inclusive opinions. (I guess it's easier to overlook Laura Zapata's rampant and very ugly homophobia because she's been with the network for so long and people have long known what a b**ch she is.) All of a sudden the offer was rescinded from Sr. Xenophobe. Of course, as soon as this happened, both he (and, of course, his agent) went into hyper-drive with deletions, damage control and mea culpas. So, Televisa decided to play rather deliciously sly about this. They said, NO, it wasn't AT ALL about those comments, they just all decided that they needed to think about it a little longer, so all of the finalists were asked to please audition again, “starting from scratch,” as it were. And what do you know? Osvaldo de Leon (lately as Erasmo in Sueño de Amor) was chosen! I guess they “saw” something in this LAST audition that was overlooked before in the casting process. ;-) So there are the two leads. Apart from that? WELL! We have Eduardo Santamarina in the pivotal role of the father (that would be 'his father,' apparently…but in reality 'hers'), Claudia Ramirez in the role of the mother, and Ana Martin back in the role of (what else?) the beloved and treasured family nanny, Angustias.
 
àYou will note, however, that this particular nanny role is rather an important one, as it is she who, with the best of intentions, does the ole’ switcheroo of the babies, with the help of the other baby's midwife (in case you're already confused, the short version is that Mr. Rich Father has always wanted a child (read: son), and his wife has always wanted a child (any child) so they're quite happily pregnant. But when the pregnant Mrs. Rich goes into labour and delivers herself of our heroina, everybody thinks that she's born dead.  BUT…at that EXACT SAME TIME our nanny finds out that a friend of hers who's a midwife just NOW delivered of a healthy baby BOY whose mother (and only parent) died in labour! SO, one dead baby with one dead mother, one healthy boy to the childless rich couple and everybody's happy with none the wiser. But OOPS!! Just after the switch is made, our supposedly dead baby girl comes back to life!
 
What are two well-intentioned nannies/midwives to do now? In this case, it's to have the midwife raise the baby girl as her own, with help from our suddenly “what the f**k have we done?” nanny. So that's Ana Martin. Of course there has to be a nasty piece of business in this family (isn't there always?). In this case it's an aunt, a woman whose husband didn't leave her nearly the money that she'd like to have and as such would, of course, like other people’s. This is the role played by Laura Zapata in the original, marking her fourth consecutive classic “evil classist bitch” in a row (following those she played in Rosa Salvaje, Maria Mercedes, and Pobre Niña Rica). A very fun name is making her return to the network in this pivotal villain role—the gorgeous Frances Ondiviela (you might remember her as Julieta in Un Refugio Para el Amor, and her wonderfully evil Octavia in Accorrolada sometime back).
 
ed. note: Here is a link to a Wikipedia page that lists ALL the telenovelas produced by Televisa since 2010 and their original air date in Mexico – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_telenovelas_of_Televisa_in_2010s
 
END PART IIB, but stay tuned for Part III

Labels: , , ,


Comments:
Here's the rest of Stevey's notes on the productions that are on the storyboards and/or filming.

There just aren't going to be enough hours in the day to watch all of these productions, especially if they overlap. With Stevey's seductive narrative, how will anyone decide which one to toss aside. Decisions, decisions.

Among these, so far, I'm going to be looking forward to all three.
 

I love telenovelas, watch them on Univision and Telemundo here in the US. I don't speak Spanish so I rely on Closed Caption in English. Unfortunately for me and others like me, Univision has discontinued using closed caption in English for all televised novellas. After spending 3 weeks trying to get an answer from Univision I finally got a response from a local technician who finally was able to make contact with Univision and he passed along the very upsetting news, no more cc in English . He said that they, Univision, has no future plans of bringing closed caption back in English . To any of you who are upset by this change maybe you have better resources then me to pass along your complaints and upset. Thank goodness for Telemundo.
 

Me Declaro Culpable will replace EnTierras Salvajes in November.

Sin tu Mirada will replace EVDLV also in November.
 

Gracias Stevey.

It's also rumored MaPat (La Sombra del Pasado) had a production canceled but was picked up again for November and will be remaking Mariana de la Noche with Ana Brenda as Marcia Montenegro (Angelica Rivera for those who didn't remember.)
 

Gracias, Stevey. I will have to read this over tomorrow because some of it was just too astonishing....
 

Hi everybody!

I just left a little note on the comments section of part 2A), but hope it's okay if I repeat some of it here...
First off, I'd like to thank anybody that would like to come and post any thoughts, comments, questions, or remarks that you might have about anything that I've posted, as well as to everybody who may have read this but for whatever reason doesn't want to comment. My first encounter with this quintessentially Latino entertainment medium was shortly after I first moved down to Central America ('Heridas de amor'... I've been a Diana Bracho fan ever since!). I fell in love with them- perhaps BECAUSE they were so different than anything that I- a white Canadian guy- had ever known, that me trying to become as well-acquainted with them as I could made me feel akin to an outsider doing his best to gain entry and fit in with an exclusive country club that most of my ilk don't even know about!
Anyways, through this website I've been so happy to find like-minded people, of all shapes, ages, sexes, and sizes. I look at the television now (which I do rarely), and see the likes of ilk such as "Two Broke Girls", "NCIS- Akron" (or whatever), and the 14th (or whatever) season of 'Criminal Minds' and (nothing against them, however), it just speaks less and less to me. Also, this medium has been great for me in terms of keeping up with my Spanish, so as I don't get rusty whenever I'm up here in Toronto (yeah, I'm a Canuck).
As such, recognizing that the people that generally speaking come on here are as passionate or even 'interested' in this genre as I am, I've gone back into way of thinking of "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you". I'm fortunate that, subsequently, I've been able to amass not only a wealth of knowledge about the genre, but also some pretty cool contacts as well... and so, I thought that whenever I could, I'd try and share some of it with you all- just because if I were in that situation, I'D love it if someone 'in the know' could 'fill me in', as it were!
Anyways, with that having been said, I apologize to everybody for my long-windedness, and thank everybody for your indulgence. Please, feel free to post any thoughts or whatever that you might have- even if it's just about the projects that pique (or don't pique) your interest- but, even if not, thanks for reading and for being a part- however silent- of this wonderful, quirky little community. Siate felice! :-)
 

Thanks Stevey!

Giselle's and Angelli's projects are the only projects I'm interested in. Juan Soler was incredible in Reina while Castro is a walking thunderstorm eliminating anything that crosses its path with tears and snark. Sabine, the Orange-Faced demon on is also great. Meds are overrated!

Remaking Esmeralda is damning proof of uncreativity. Sorry but no one will top the performances of Colunga and Calderon. I won't be watching that. Regarding Sr.Pena it's quite hypocritical of Televisa to act all-inclusive when they are still airing La Rosa De Guadalupe, a 'show' that has more episodes than Keeping Up with the Kardashians(La Rosa has 1014 episodes while Kardashians has a mere 195). Not to mention that La Rosa shoves Christianity , racism, sexual abuse and homophobia at every corner.

Esmeralda Pimentel's next show peaks my interest but I just don't buy her as a mafiosa. But then again the same was said about Livia Brito.
 

When you realize you've wasted your entire life working at Televisa:
https://imgur.com/a/KnZCr
 

Thanks, Stevey. Glad to hear about new Mexican TNs in production. With Univision running dubbed Brazilian TNs in prime time, I was wondering if it was because Televisa was slowing down on producing new TNs of their own. I pretty much watch the first few days of every new TN that airs here to see if it grabs me. I never know which TN, if any, will move me to keep watching it. Like on paper I don't care for narco TNs, but La pilota (and the excellent La reina del sur) grabbed me and I watched to the end. So I will check out all new productions you described if/when they come here.

I do worry that Televisa is not staying contemporary and cutting edge to draw millennials. What will they do when their current crop of viewers age out? So I give credit to Rosy Ocampo for putting some real-world, contemporary issues in La doble vida de Estela Carrilo and thought the coming-out-of-the-closet storyline was well done.
 

Countx, What in the world caused that look on her face? The monster from Predator or Aliens? lol
 

Niecie , my guess is a mixture of weed, LCD, horse manure finished with a drop of laxative :)
 

But then again she's from La Rosa De Guadalupe. She doesn't need to drug herself. Simply being present on the set can cause long enduring traumas.
 

Hi everybody! Thanks for the comments! I'll write more later, but I've had precious little sleep and should probably hit the proverbial hay before it (meaning, 'me'), gets ugly. (lol)

But, remember what I said earlier about me wanting to make SURE that anything that I told you guys was fact-based (NOT 'fake news' or anything like that)? Well, I think I also said that these things ALWAYS seem to be evolving, changing, etc., etc.,...

So, along BOTH of those lines, regarding the 'Esmeralda' remake, 'Sin tu mirada' (no comment here, but Count, let's just say that you and I speak the same language), Frances Ondiviela is OUT as the lead villain (Laura Zapata's character in the original), Luz Elena Gonzalez is IN. CONFIRMED! Also, Scarlet Gruber will be either the Nora Salinas character or the Ana Patricia Rojo character (Graciela or Georgina... I'm betting on Graciela, because Telemundo was sorta beginning to market her as a 'star', and Gracielita is a much 'starrier' young role than that of Georgina).

I just wouldn't have been able to sleep without correcting that for you guys... (I need help, don't I?? (lol)

Catch you guys after a few Zzzzz's! :-)
 





<< Home

Newer›  ‹Older

© Caray, Caray! 2006-2022. Duplication of this material for use on any other site is strictly prohibited.

Protected by Copyscape Online Plagiarism Finder