Path to Psycho

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Think you have seen enough craziness in the first 3 seasons of A&E’s “Bates Motel”? Just wait. Season 4 of the contemporary prequel to Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho premieres Mon at 9pm with 10 new eps and things will go from bad to worse to awful. Very awful, as Norman’s continued downward spiral makes Norma increasingly fearful and desperate for help. “This season lives very much more in the psychological terrain of Psycho. Norman is navigating in a world where realities are increasingly merged. His relationship with his mother is as intense as ever, but more strained as a result. Perception and reality are key elements in the storytelling. The velocity of Norman’s dark journey is full throttle. We have our foot on the gas,” exec producer Kerry Ehrin told us. While the main characters are up to no good, at least most of the time, the story was told in a way that makes you engage and even root for them. And that’s what the production team wants to achieve. “We want to give people a great ride but also to affect them emotionally and intellectually. We want to challenge preconceived notions of what a “horror” prequel “should” be. Along with genuine suspense and thrills there is a mission to do it in the best, most intelligent, most sophisticated way possible,” Ehrin said. Like previous seasons, the mother-and-son relationship will be the main focus of the storytelling. “As Norman falls deeper into his disorder it stands to reason that his state will, of course, impact his relationship with the most important person in his life—the person who loves and cares for him beyond anything. As Norma sees who her son is, she has to fight her own instincts to protect him,” said Ehrin. The new season features changes for other characters as well. Norma’s love interest Sheriff Romero’s private life has always taken place off screen. “This season that will change and we will meet a woman who has been involved in his life,” Ehrin said. – Joyce Wang –

Originally published at: http://www.cablefax.com/programming/path-to-psycho#sthash.KRpQgT3S.dpuf

MTV’s New Show “White People”

I wrote short story on MTV’s new documentary “White People” today. Here’s the full story on

http://www.cablefax.com/programming/mtv-white-people-reviews

MTV ’s provocative documentary “White People,” a collaboration with Pulitzer Prize winner Jose Antonio Vargas, could very well be one of the most controversial projects the net has done. The trailer on YouTube generated nearly 1.8mln views as of Thurs morning, receiving more than 3 times the amount of “thumbs down” versus “thumbs up.” Some critics slammed the show for racism and shamming white people. The documentary follows 5 white millennials with different backgrounds (e.g. white guy in black-majority college, white girl in Indian Reservation) as they experience and discuss the issue of race and white privilege. Vargas, a creator and host of the show, told us that it’s important to show the stories of young people who are already living what will ultimately become real life: a country in which whites are the minority. Vargas, a former Washington Post reporter who was born in the Philippines and raised in the US from the age of 12, revealed in a NY Times Magazine story in 2011 that he’s an undocumented immigrant. The show is part of MTV’s ongoing “Look Different” campaign, launched last year to illuminate biases on the basis of race, gender and sexual orientation. “When we set out to make the documentary, it was a top priority to make all participants feel safe to honestly share their experiences,” Vargas said. “I was amazed by how forthright young people were not only in opening up, but in challenging the pre-conceived notions they’ve carried for the vast majority of their lives.” Despite the often uncomfortable subject, Vargas wants to make people feel comfortable in openly discussing ways to move the race debate forward. “The Millennial generation believes in fairness and equality more so than any past generation in this country’s history. We hope this will open doors to push the dream of a fair and equal society into a reality.” – Joyce Wang