You touched on time slot changes that can happen to a series. What goes through your mind when you get that call?
âBonesâ was ordered by [former Fox chairman] Gail Berman and then she left. That means that âBonesâ was an orphan. The new network head did not make the show so they don't love you as much as a show that they bring in. At first, I was irritated and cranky. And then there was a perverse pride, like, âYeah, sure, go ahead, move us.â Even this year, I understood that the network had to remove âBonesâ from the post-âIdolâ slot in order to try and make âTouchâ catch.... So they said they were moving us to Mondays at 8 p.m. â" and I took a huge gulp because you're up against âThe Voice,â CBS comedies and a dancing show. That's a brutal slot. But it's just another time that survived and thrived. I was very proud of us, a couple of weeks in, to discover: This is not going to be our death knell, going into this slot.
Does all this make you reconsider your field? Why not stick to writing?
Yes, every day. Every single day. I think being a second-in-command on a show is a great job because when you're done, you go home at night and you can sleep. I always think, âWell, I'm not going to develop next year.â And then something starts tugging at you. I had lunch with Michael Thorn, who is the head of development at the studio that owns me, and he says, âWhat are you thinking?â And I find myself saying, âWell, this could happen and this could happen.â And I want to tell myself, âShut up! Just stop!â
âThe Finderâ was based on a book that has fans -- do you find that itâs almost essential to have an established community for a show, given how quick networks are to pull things?
Itâs a very nerve-wracking thing for them for me to create a show and for them to invest millions and millions of dollars in it. But I think the fact that a universe exists and thereâs a market out there helps. Kathy Reichs had a ton of readers when we started âBones,â and I think that helped us. That, and David Boreanaz. On âThe Finderâ they touted it as being from âthe creator of âBones.ââ But with âBones,â they werenât going to say "from a guy you never heard of who invented a show in Canada."
I would totally watch it if they had marketed it like that.
Right. Itâs counter-intuitive marketing.
Youâre someone who hates spoilers, right? Talk about the difficulty of keeping things under wraps in the Twitter era.
Yeah, I hate it. I hate the fact that fans and people who write about TV on websites and print feel like they have to tell us whatâs going to happen. To me, it feels like youâre gouging out a chunk of why people tune in. Iâm terrified if I give a spoiler -- "Booth and Brennan are going to sleep together this seasonâ -- people are going to go, âWell, I donât have to watch.â I donât know what little magic thing makes someone choose a TV show so I hate to chip away at it. Itâs a curse....
There's been a lot of talk about Booth and Brennan and their relationship. You sort of blew off the âMoonlightingâ curse with them. How did you decide to do away with having a couple madly in love?
In Season 6, we knew that Brennan and Booth would sleep together.... But then Emily, God bless her, came and whispered into my ear that she was pregnant. I thought, "This is not a good show for hiding a pregnancy." I worked on "Judging Amy" when Amy Brenneman was pregnant and she could just wear big black robes and sit behind a desk. But we couldn't hide it, so I realized we should just make her pregnant.
The âMoonlightingâ curse is, you watch a couple go back and forth in a romantic comedy way -- vacillate over whether theyâre going to sleep together; then they do, and then they become something that I hate, which is a googly-eyed, Iâm-in-love, Iâm-the-only-person-who-has-ever-been-in-love, I've-never-been-so-happy type of person. I donât even want to go to dinner with people who have recently fallen in love because you just want to kill them.Â
I realized, "Oh, we don't have to do that." We are going to slam them into a relationship because of the baby and I think in our season ender this year, Brennan says something to Booth that is very, very profound about their relationship.
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-- Yvonne Villarreal
Top photo: David Boreanaz and Emily Deschanel in "Bones." Credit: Ray Mickshaw / Fox. Bottom photo: Hart Hanson. Credit: Fox Studios.
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