
No, Craig Mazin and Neil Druckmann didn't kill Pedro Pascal. That's just a key messaging point typeI spent a night in the writer's room Thursday night.
Although this is drama Panel, many interesting conversations come from discussions in discussions. typeAdvanced TV station features editor Emily Longeretta. In addition to the "Our Last" creators, the panelists include "Disaster" creator Dan Erikson, "Paradise" executive producer and performer Dan Fogman, "Peter" creator R. Scott Geinmill, "Doc" creator Barbie Kligman, "Yellow Jjackets" Co-Contors" Co-Contors Ashley Lyle Lyle Lyle and Bart Nickerson and "Bart Nickerson and "Crossor" Crossor watkins.
Meanwhile, while discussing the pressure of the second season - Mazin and Druckman were in the ups and downs.
"This happens when you roll the first season on a mountain on a real thing. If you're alive, it's a huge achievement. If it's a show, it's amazing." "Season 2 expects so much, we do learn a lot of lessons. Then, you have to be responsible for these lessons. You no longer allow you to make these mistakes again. It's tragic, it's tragic. You do feel a little stressed, you do feel something satisfying what people want, but you're giving you a surprising topic right now. In your discussion, you're going to give us something new. 1-Now we kind of fuck ourselves."
Druckmann added that like the second chapter of creating a video game, it "can feel very scary." “People have a very strong reaction to any controversial story decisions we make,” he said.
"He did one thing. Everyone lost shit and then I had to do the same thing because he did it," Mazu said of death. “The big complaint I got was, ‘Why did you kill Pedro Pascal?’ I kept explaining that we didn’t kill him, he was still alive.
The group also discussed plans to plan ahead as they go into a season and knew how many seasons their show will last. Fogelman said he made “Paradise” a three-season show because he had a three-year plan — and always did that in the room — but plans can always change.
"I know, in general, how many episodes I want to do, but once you have these marks, you say, 'That's Act One, that's Act 2, that's Act Three," he said. "If you set this up, that's a very lucky place, but even 10 seasons, it might help."
One of the larger themes played by the writer is that carrying out a successful show and continuing a successful show is not overwhelmed. But before creating "Pitt, Gemmill's performances in "ER" and Showran "NCIS: Los Angeles" seemed to have figured it out - a big laugh at others.
“I’ve been doing it for a long time and I also think that, at the end of the day, I’m not saving the kids’ lives. I’m doing a fucking TV show. It’s Gilligan Island. “It would be great if I’m still airing after 50 years of death.” "I'm so lucky to be paid to not let people shoot me or encounter burning buildings."
When Nickerson pointed out that Gemmill was right, he also asked a follow-up question: "What we need to know is how you grasp this view and framework when you live in the blanks within, threatening to eat everything you think you might or should be."
Gemmill's reaction was perfect: "You've never tried ketamine?"
Watch the full panel above.