Doug Molitor is a Los Angeles native who enjoys traffic, brushfires and earthquakes. His first writing jobs were on comedies like Sledge Hammer!, The Lohman & Barkley Show, You Can't Take It With You and Police Academy. He has also written for sci-fi/fantasy/adventure series like Sliders,...
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Doug Molitor is a Los Angeles native who enjoys traffic, brushfires and earthquakes. His first writing jobs were on comedies like Sledge Hammer!, The Lohman & Barkley Show, You Can't Take It With You and Police Academy. He has also written for sci-fi/fantasy/adventure series like Sliders, Mission: Genesis, Adventure Inc., Young Hercules, F/X and the western comedy Lucky Luke. In animation, he has been writer and/or story editor for 190 episodes of such series as The Wizard of Oz, Happily Ever After, X-Men, The Future Is Wild, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventures, Where on Earth is Carmen Sandiego?, Sabrina, Class of the Titans, Roswell Conspiracies, Sinbad, Beetlejuice and Captain Planet. For the latter, he won two Environmental Media Awards and was nominated for the Humanitas Prize. His 2008 musical election spoof (with Hillary Clinton and Obama dueting on "Anything You Can Do, I Can Do Better") has reached 2.4 million hits on YouTube.He is a former Jeopardy Champion, having appeared for a total of thirteen days on two versions of the show. He also lost $2,000,000 on another game show. (Please don't ask, it only depresses him.) http://www.dougsdozen.com/MemoirsofaTimeTraveler.htmlTwitter: @DougMolitorWed Feb 27, 2013:It’s my honor to participate in “The Next Big Thing” Interview Series, thanks to the recommendation of the gifted, startling and passionate poet Cynthia Schwarztberg Edlow. TNBT: What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book? A wild, amazonian tourist from the future drags a young archaeologist of today on a chase through time, tracking down a maniac who's erasing history.TNBT: Where did the idea come from for the book? I’m fascinated with trying to imagine our future. Rather than depict the usual bleak Armageddon aftermath, I wanted to start with society achieving a 22nd century paradise, then ask myself how that could go haywire...in a comedic way. Looking at how we behave as tourists, and how inaccurate history is in most of our popular entertainment, I thought that if science gave our descendants recreational time travel, it seems almost certain they’d come crashing back into our era and wreak all kinds of havoc. TNBT: What genre does your book fall under? Science-fiction/adventure/humorous. (Subgenres: Time travel/alternate history.) TNBT: What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?Let’s face it, you need a star to make a movie. For David, he must project smarts, be good-looking in glasses, and be able to play romantic comedy. A modern Cary Grant. Ryan Gosling is a big star who can play anything. But if I were the director, I’d consider casting someone shorter and expert in comedy (like Seth Green) and surround him with actors the same height. Because if you hire a 6-foot David, casting Ariyl (who’s 6-3) would be tough.Most actresses are petite. Ariyl’s the product of a century of genetic one-upmanship: She’s tall and voluptuous, and strong as an ox. I can’t think of a current star who’d be right. I’m sure the next Julie Newmar is out there; she’s just not famous yet.Having met the man, I wrote the part of the elderly physicist Sven with Eddie Bracken (Hail the Conquering Hero) in mind; alas, Eddie passed away before I turned the script into the novel. TNBT: How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript? Four months. But of course, I’ve been rewriting ever since, so add a few years for the polish.TNBT: Who or what inspired you to write this book? I’ve known an Ariyl or two. And I’ve always loved history, science-fiction and comedy. So I wrote a TV pilot that combined all those elements: a rom-com about a sexy, powerful but naive time-tourist who needs a lot of help to get back home. The teleplay visited Santorini, Atlantis, L.A., and the dystopic future. When a producer took interest in it as a feature and suggested the idea of an antique baseball, I added the Ty Cobb part, plus the Philadelphia scenes. And after reading an article about The Magnificent Ambersons, I rewrote the script as a novel, with the Hollywood subplot that became its centerpiece.TNBT: What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest? The legendary comedy writer Larry Gelbart vetted my 1945 Hollywood chapters, then asked to read the rest and gave me that wonderful blurb. I give thanks to him, and as well to writer/director/Oscar-winning FX artist Randall William Cook and sci-fi author Steven Paul Leiva, and the other authors and SF fans for all their kind reviews on Amazon.com.“Memoirs” is the first volume of a trilogy. If you can’t wait for the next one, I also have a second novel out soon, Full Moon Fever. It has the same quirky humor, but in the paranormal romance genre. An excerpt of it is in the upcoming anthology Love and Other Distractions, edited by Christiana Miller. Links to these upcoming books will be found (shortly) at my webpage: http://www.dougsdozen.com/MemoirsofaTimeTraveler.html If you'd like to see my TV credits, and/or if you enjoy political comedy (and are not exactly convinced that W Bush was our best president ever), please check out my site: www.DougsDozen.comwhich includes links to my satirical webseries Doug’s Dozen on FunnyOrDie.And if you like all that, please friend me on Facebook!
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