Thursday, November 5, 2009
Season 2 News: The Actor's Return
@thereeleddiemcc Tomorrow, we have our first meeting with the writers, for Season Two of Warehouse 13. Let's get back to work, people!!!
Monday, November 2, 2009
Season 2 Begins: The Writers Return!
@b0bg00dman Warehouse 13 writers room resumes tomorrow morning to begin season two. Hope y'all like what we whip up! #Warehouse13 #WH13
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Cast panel at London MCM Expo
@SCIFI_channel http://twitpic.com/ms35r - SCI FI's WAREHOUSE 13 cast panel at London MCM Expo with Allison Scagliotti, Eddie McClintock and Joanne Kelly.
@SCIFI_channel http://twitpic.com/ms2gl - WAREHOUSE 13's Allison Scagliotti, Eddie McClintock and Joanne Kelly at London MCM Expo for SCI FI UK
@SCIFI_channel http://twitpic.com/ms2gl - WAREHOUSE 13's Allison Scagliotti, Eddie McClintock and Joanne Kelly at London MCM Expo for SCI FI UK
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Thursday, October 22, 2009
Vote for Warehouse13 on Peoples Choice
WAREHOUSE 13 has been nominated for a 2010 Peoples Choice Award for best new Sci-Fi show. GO VOTE PEOPLE!
Visit: Peoples Choice Award
Visit: Peoples Choice Award
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Saturday, October 3, 2009
13 (episodes per season) is ok by the showrunner
Syfy has upped its order slightly from 12 to 13 episodes and will bring the show back at the same time of year. “Thirteen episodes is plenty,” says showrunner Jack Kenny. “If we had 22, I don’t know what I’d do. I’d just as soon we stake out the summer; it’s turned into this really fertile breeding ground for hit shows.”
Just how much does Warehouse 13 cost? According to Variety the budget is a “high (but not outrageous)” $2 million per episode. Warehouse 13 got an additional marketing boost because its launch was coupled with the network’s re-branding from Sci Fi to Syfy, which the network sunk a lot of money into promoting.
“I’ve never worked on a show with so much promotion,” Kenny says, which today you really just have to do — there are so many eyeballs and so much product out there.”
See the full story at tvbythenumbers.com
Just how much does Warehouse 13 cost? According to Variety the budget is a “high (but not outrageous)” $2 million per episode. Warehouse 13 got an additional marketing boost because its launch was coupled with the network’s re-branding from Sci Fi to Syfy, which the network sunk a lot of money into promoting.
“I’ve never worked on a show with so much promotion,” Kenny says, which today you really just have to do — there are so many eyeballs and so much product out there.”
See the full story at tvbythenumbers.com
Friday, October 2, 2009
Summer hit 'Warehouse 13' draws high ratings
When Sci Fi Channel rebranded itself as Syfy in July, the name change drew some derision.
But the effort to broaden its appeal beyond nerddom is paying dividends in the case of lighthearted summertime adventure show "Warehouse 13," which has mushroomed from a successful off-season placeholder into a bona-fide hit.
The series, which follows a pair of bickering FBI agents seeking to track down otherworldly artifacts, has become the highest-rated show in Syfy's history, occupying eight of the top 10 slots on the net's list of most-watched shows. The numbers get bigger as time passes, with the most recent episode -- the Sept. 22 season finale -- at the top of the heap.
"Warehouse," which started out with a healthy cable aud of 4.2 million total viewers in July, finished its 13-episode season with a possible murder, a spy revealed -- and 4.4 million viewers. The show's audience has gotten younger, too, with significantly more viewers in the 35-54 category (43% at the end of the season vs. 37% at the beginning) and new eyeballs comprising 16% of the ratings for the season finale.
See the whole article at: www.variety.com
But the effort to broaden its appeal beyond nerddom is paying dividends in the case of lighthearted summertime adventure show "Warehouse 13," which has mushroomed from a successful off-season placeholder into a bona-fide hit.
The series, which follows a pair of bickering FBI agents seeking to track down otherworldly artifacts, has become the highest-rated show in Syfy's history, occupying eight of the top 10 slots on the net's list of most-watched shows. The numbers get bigger as time passes, with the most recent episode -- the Sept. 22 season finale -- at the top of the heap.
"Warehouse," which started out with a healthy cable aud of 4.2 million total viewers in July, finished its 13-episode season with a possible murder, a spy revealed -- and 4.4 million viewers. The show's audience has gotten younger, too, with significantly more viewers in the 35-54 category (43% at the end of the season vs. 37% at the beginning) and new eyeballs comprising 16% of the ratings for the season finale.
See the whole article at: www.variety.com
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