General Hospital head writer Bob Guza is out according to ABC Soaps In Depth and other tweets on Twitter Thursday afternoon.
Ingo Rademacher tweeted: "Bob Guza is done as head writer of Gh. Thanks for a great 15 yrs Bob. Good luck to u in the future."
Jason Thompson added: "Well its official. Bob Guza is no longer our Gh head writer. Welcome Garin Wolf! Pretty crazy."
Garin Wolf will take over as head writer of the show. He previously worked at As The World Turns and wrote for Night Shift before joining Gh and winning three Emmys as part of the show's writing team.
In 2008, the WGA published a list of writers who resigned from the guild during the strike by filing for financial core status. Wolk was on the list, as were Maria Arena, Marlene Poulter Clark, John F. Cosgrove, Cwikly, Esensten, Jeanne M. Grunwell, Dena Higley, Mark Christopher Higley,...
Ingo Rademacher tweeted: "Bob Guza is done as head writer of Gh. Thanks for a great 15 yrs Bob. Good luck to u in the future."
Jason Thompson added: "Well its official. Bob Guza is no longer our Gh head writer. Welcome Garin Wolf! Pretty crazy."
Garin Wolf will take over as head writer of the show. He previously worked at As The World Turns and wrote for Night Shift before joining Gh and winning three Emmys as part of the show's writing team.
In 2008, the WGA published a list of writers who resigned from the guild during the strike by filing for financial core status. Wolk was on the list, as were Maria Arena, Marlene Poulter Clark, John F. Cosgrove, Cwikly, Esensten, Jeanne M. Grunwell, Dena Higley, Mark Christopher Higley,...
- 5/19/2011
- by We Love Soaps TV
- We Love Soaps
Tuned In; A Sampling of Good, Clean Angst
By Lee Margulies
Los Angeles Times
February 2, 2002
If anyone has it easy when it comes to counter-programming the Super Bowl, it's public television: Everything they show qualifies as alternative fare to the annual football extravaganza.
Still, the folks at Kcet have put some thought into it this year and come up with something that has all the requisite female appeal: a three-part documentary on soap operas.
"Never Ending Stories--How Soap Cleaned Up" (2:30-5 p.m. Sunday, Kcet) explores the history, methodology and extraordinary influence of this often denigrated yet enduringly popular dramatic form.
There's just one catch. It's a British program, produced for the BBC in 1999.
The result is that it's divided about evenly between British and American programs and personnel, meaning U.S. viewers are going to find out a lot more about Coronation Street and Eastenders than most of them ever wanted to know.
By Lee Margulies
Los Angeles Times
February 2, 2002
If anyone has it easy when it comes to counter-programming the Super Bowl, it's public television: Everything they show qualifies as alternative fare to the annual football extravaganza.
Still, the folks at Kcet have put some thought into it this year and come up with something that has all the requisite female appeal: a three-part documentary on soap operas.
"Never Ending Stories--How Soap Cleaned Up" (2:30-5 p.m. Sunday, Kcet) explores the history, methodology and extraordinary influence of this often denigrated yet enduringly popular dramatic form.
There's just one catch. It's a British program, produced for the BBC in 1999.
The result is that it's divided about evenly between British and American programs and personnel, meaning U.S. viewers are going to find out a lot more about Coronation Street and Eastenders than most of them ever wanted to know.
- 5/7/2011
- by We Love Soaps TV
- We Love Soaps
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