CBS ANNOUNCES DEVELOPMENT OF “DANCING ON THE STARS,”
AN EXCITING AND COMPLETELY ORIGINAL REALITY PROGRAM THAT OWES ITS CONCEPT AND EXECUTION TO NOBODY AT ALL
Los Angeles, June 21, 2012 – Subsequent to recent developments in the creative and legal community, CBS Television today felt it was appropriate to reveal the upcoming launch of an exciting, ground-breaking and completely original new reality program for the CBS Television Network.
The dazzling new show, DANCING ON THE STARS, will be broadcast live from the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, and will feature moderately famous and sort of well-known people you almost recognize competing for big prizes by dancing on the graves of some of Hollywood’s most iconic and well-beloved stars of stage and screen.
The cemetery, the first in Hollywood, was founded in 1899 and now houses the remains of Andrew “Fatty” Arbuckle, producer Cecil B. DeMille, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Paul Muni, Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel, George Harrison of the Beatles and Dee Dee Ramone of the Ramones, among many other great stars of stage, screen and the music business. The company noted that permission to broadcast from the location is pending, and that if efforts in that regard are unsuccessful, approaches will be made to Westwood Village Memorial Park, where equally scintillating luminaries are interred.
“This very creative enterprise will bring a new sense of energy and fun that’s totally unlike anything anywhere else, honest,” said a CBS spokesperson, who also revealed that the Company has been working with a secret team for several months on the creation of the series, which was completely developed by the people at CBS independent of any other programming on the air. “Given the current creative and legal environment in the reality programming business, we’re sure nobody will have any problem with this title or our upcoming half-hour comedy for primetime, POSTMODERN FAMILY.”
“After all,” the spokesperson added, “people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.”
Source: CBS


Ha! CBS FTW
ReplyDeleteWTF is that all about?!
ReplyDeleteCBS are currently trying to sue ABC for copying Big Brother with their own "Glass House" reality show
ReplyDeleteHa, this is funny.
ReplyDeletelol...What tickles me about the whole law suit is that it's not like CBS created the 'watch strangers living under the same roof' genre. Real World anyone? The show they're arguing about came from a British show.
ReplyDeleteI knew this was a joke good one!
ReplyDeleteLOL forever at this. A+, CBS.
ReplyDeleteThis is all kinds of awesome. I love it when networks have a sense of humor (see Fox regarding Fringe moving to Friday and NBC regarding Community returning after the hiatus).
ReplyDeleteoh! makes sense now... :) CBS has a great sense of humor... :D :D
ReplyDeleteand I am sure CBS took the rights of the show before making the American version.
ReplyDeleteWow, who would have thought the networks had a sense of humor? Especially CBS.
ReplyDeleteHa! CBS has a sense of humor,who would have thunk it! Nice going!!
ReplyDeleteErr.. Big Brother was originally a Dutch show. ;)
ReplyDeleteFunny! Made me smile! xD
ReplyDeleteWow... That was hilarious.
ReplyDeleteBwah! I think there should be a new reality show called "Network Fights." All the big disputes both at the network level and at the show-level (Harmon vs Chase anyone) are fought in a battle of wit - the winner being chosen by people texting their vote a lot.
ReplyDeleteGlad I was not the only one that found this hilarious! XD
ReplyDeleteEven if CBS needs to admit that every network has ripped off ideas from other networks..... This made my night before I went to bed! XD
Oh I would watch that and I'm not that fond of reality tv ;)
ReplyDeletehahahahahahaha.
ReplyDeleteBahaha! This made me laugh for half an hour! I love you CBS! You entertain both on TV and in your magnificent press release. Hahaha! :P Oh God, I'm gonna laugh all the way into September on this alone!
ReplyDeleteAs the biggest grammar perfectionist on the Web, I have to correct you: "Thought", not "Thunk". Nothing personal, I just can't bare to see it without commenting! :)
ReplyDeleteYou, sir, are a genius! I'd watch that and I have never watched reality TV! :D
ReplyDeleteIt was done intentionally,it is an expression some of us use every once in a while.I know how to spell and what words to use,thanks! :}
ReplyDeleteAhh okay, my bad!
ReplyDelete2012/6/21 Disqus
Well, in ABC's defense, CBS has been literally stealing shows from ABC since TV was invented (Wonder Woman, Step by Step, Family Matters being some of the few right off the top of my head) not that it ever worked out for them with maybe the exception of Wonder Woman.
ReplyDeleteIt's not really stealing if they pay for them to air them. (Which I'm reasonably sure they had to do.) And CBS isn't the only one to do it - ABC picked up Scrubs from NBC, TBS got Cougar Town from ABC, etc.
ReplyDeleteThere's also the caveat that you can't steal an "idea" it's the execution that matters quite a bit in Am. copyright law. I'm not a lawyer, but in so far as it has been explained to me. You can't copyright "cameras watch people as they live in a house". I'm guessing what they're arguing over is the 'challenging', 'voting people off' and details like that. I would be stunned if the team of lawyers at ABC haven't combed over the details with that in mind. (I used to work at Disney. I couldn't download opensource software until the lawyers had studied it thoroughly.)
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone remember the stink over an internal ABC memo about the fact that several Japanese shows were fair game because of some legal loop hole?
My personal opinion is that CBS one on two fronts...(1) the ratings for Glass House tanked and (2) this little piece was a hoot.
It's "bear," not "bare." Just so we're clear.
ReplyDeleteHahaha well played sir! :D
ReplyDelete2012/6/23 Disqus
Or ma'am, as it were ;)
ReplyDelete