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Here’s what 10 television writers are bingeing on during the pandemic

- By Thea Glassman

Liz Feldman had planned on taking a trip after she finished working on the most recent season of “Dead to Me,” in hopes of sparking some creative inspiratio­n. But now, stuck at home during a pandemic, the Emmy-winning TV writer has discovered the next best escape: “Too Hot to Handle.”

Shot on the beaches of Punta Mita, Mexico, and starring a cast of scantily clad contestant­s, the Netflix dating show has become Feldman’s new obsession. “I’m sort of just leaning into it,” she said. “In the past I was a little bit snobby about reality television.”

With the coronaviru­s shutting down most production­s, TV makers are now primarily TV watchers, holed up indoors with time on their hands, indulging in soothing rewatches and adding new discoverie­s to their queues. (Showrunner­s: They’re just like us!) From period pieces to foreign thrillers, here’s what 10 of them are bingeing.

Liz Tigelaar was a writer on “Nashville” and “Casual,” among other shows, before creating Hulu’s high-profile literary adaptation “Little Fires Everywhere.”

In her spare time, she usually likes to dive into sharp single-camera comedies like “Better Things,” “Fleabag” and “Catastroph­e,” but those haven’t been doing it for her lately. Instead, she has turned to the high drama and deadly stakes of “Homeland.”

“I’m actually enjoying getting sucked into something that’s bigger than what we’re going

through,” Tigelaar said.

The writers really know how to “arc out a season,” she said, and make it “so twistyturn­y and action packed and compelling.” She dreaded the show’s final episode, which aired on April 26, and might start again from the beginning now that it’s done, she said.

Dan Levy created “Schitt’s Creek” with his father, Eugene, and served as showrunner, star, writer and occasional director for the beloved Canadian comedy, which wrapped its final season in April.

During production, he would take mental breaks by plowing through British crime television (“Happy Valley,” “Broadchurc­h,” “Sherlock”). Now, he’s finding a new kind of breather with the Japanese dating series “Terrace House.”

“It’s a reality show about six young men and women who share a house or an apartment with the intention of coupling up, and it’s very slow in a way that’s incredibly calming for me,” Levy said. “I’ve gone, I think, 36 episodes into a single season and none of them have even kissed.”

Dahvi Waller’s writing résumé includes “Desperate Housewives” and “Mad Men,” as well as “Mrs. America,” her new critically acclaimed FX miniseries. “Mrs. America” chronicles the real-life battle over the Equal Rights Amendment and the soul of feminism. But when it came time to shelter in place, she preferred the lighter side of television.

“I didn’t want anything that was too realistic or dystopian,” she said. “I’m definitely looking for an escape.”

Waller discovered “Schitt’s Creek” during quarantine and is glad she did. “First off, I’m from Canada, so watching a show filmed in Canada is very comforting,” she said. “It’s also just so funny.”

“You can digest three or four a night,” she added. ”It’s really going to get me through.”

Liz Meriwether made her splash in TV as the creator, writer and producer of “New Girl.” She went on to run ABC’s “Bless This Mess,” a comedy about newlyweds who relocate from New York City to a small town in Nebraska, co-starring Colorado’s Pam Grier.

Before the pandemic, whenever she was working and found herself losing comedic steam, she would tune in to late-night talk shows to get in the right mindset. These days, her television consumptio­n has turned into a steady diet of “lush BBC miniseries adaptation­s of novels and dark, moody spy dramas.”

Meriwether wants entertainm­ent that transports her to another time and place, like “Little Drummer Girl,” the AMC miniseries based on the John le Carré novel, and “Deutschlan­d 83,” the Sundance thriller about an undercover spy living in 1983 West Germany.

“A good spy drama is always a little bit lonely; the spy lives with a secret that separates him or her from the rest of the world,” Meriwether said. “Instead of wanting to watch comedy where I can pretend that everything is happy and fine, I seem to want to watch something that meets me where I am — a little lonely and sad.”

Dan Goor got his writing start in late-night

(“The Daily Show With Jon Stewart,” “Late Night With Conan O’Brien”) and moved to scripted television, where he wrote for “Parks and Recreation” and co-created “Brooklyn Nine-Nine.”

When he isn’t holding virtual writers room meetings for the eighth season of “Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” Goor is caught up in the world of Netflix’s “Money Heist,” in which a ragtag group of thieves rob the Royal Mint of Spain.

“The plotting is fantastic, the set pieces are great, really excellent cliffhange­rs,” he said. “I watch it while I walk on a treadmill. It gets your heart rate going.”

For lighter fare, Goor has been bingeing “30 Rock” with his oldest daughter, who’s discoverin­g the show. “It’s really fun to watch it through (her) eyes,” he said. “I had forgotten those early episodes, and they’re great.”

It’s a cliché to call someone “the hardest working person in show business,” but if anyone has a legitimate claim on the title, it’s Greg Berlanti. The executive producer of more than 20 shows, he also has recent writing credits on shows like “You,” “Titans” and “All American” and is responsibl­e for the CW’s sprawling Arrowverse, including the concluded “Arrow,” “The Flash” and “DC’s Legends of Tomorrow,” among other series.

So it’s surprising to discover that there are corners of television where he has never ventured before. Namely: survivalis­t reality shows.

“My husband and I have watched every season of ‘Alone,’ ” he said, “Survivalis­ts get placed somewhere horrible and alone and see how long they can survive off of whatever they can forage.”

Berlanti recommends starting with the second season, his favorite, which features “a really emotional ending.”

He has finished the series, and the streaming algorithms have started offering up darker reality fare; Berlanti has moved on to “60 Days In,” about people who go undercover in prisons.

“We’re looking to be gripped by things, in its purest form,” Berlanti said. “Stuff that can actually do the job of making us forget for a minute or two.”

Courtney A. Kemp got her start in television writing for “The Bernie Mac Show” and went on to work on “The Good Wife” before creating the popular Starz crime saga “Power.” She isn’t ordinarily a reality TV person, but these days she’s making an exception.

“‘TooHottoHa­ndle’is something that was recommende­d by a friend, and I ate it up,” she said. “It’s the best silly reality show for this particular time.”

The concept is apt for our socially distanced era: Attractive people who usually have sex first and ask questions later are brought together, and then forbidden from touching each other.

“They have to struggle with trying to relate to each other without the universal language, and it’s pretty amazing,” Kemp said. “If you’re a writer, get ready for some great dialogue.”

As a creator, with Bill Hader, of HBO’s “Barry,” Alec Berg has spent two seasons weaving comedy from assassinat­ions, sensitive Chechen gangsters and at least one feral young martial artist. But even he was stunned by what he saw in “Tiger King.”

“Whatamenag­erieof lunatics — it was kind of awesome,” he said. “They’re talking about making it a dramatic limited series and I’m sort of like, what do you do to make it more compelling than it already was?”

Berg, who has spent much of his career writing and producing acclaimed sitcoms (“Silicon Valley,” “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” “Seinfeld”) also found time to finally finish watching TV’s reigning Emmy winner for top comedy, “Fleabag.” It was the rare show that he found himself bingeing, he said, thanks to its terrific pacing and Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s performanc­e.

“As much of a bummer as it is to go to the Emmys and lose every damn year like I do,” he said, “to lose to that show didn’t bother me at all.”

After two years writing for “The Ellen DeGeneres

Though these days she spends more time writing articles and books, Nell Scovell is best known as a TV comedy writer whose credits include “Late Night With David Letterman,” “Murphy Brown,” “The Muppets” and “Monk.”

But her viewing of choice tends to be thrillers. Right now that means “Money Heist” and “Kingdom,” a South Korean series about a zombie plague and a battle for the throne.

“Ionlywatch­TVwhen I’m working out — that’s my rule,” she said. “I prefer showswithl­otsofactio­n, suspense and not much dialogue.”

The most recent season of “Kingdom” was more satisfying than the final season of “Game of Thrones,” she added, and “Money Heist” is the perfect show to distract from a grueling bike session.

“You’re pedaling and they’re breaking down the doors in the bank in Spain,” shesaid.“Theplotjus­t barrels.”

 ?? Pop TV ?? The cast of “Schitt’s Creek.”
Pop TV The cast of “Schitt’s Creek.”
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Channel ?? Above: Jonas Nay as Martin experienci­ng a Bonn supermarke­t in “Deutschlan­d 83” on
Sundance Channel.
Laura Deschner, Sundance Channel Above: Jonas Nay as Martin experienci­ng a Bonn supermarke­t in “Deutschlan­d 83” on Sundance Channel.
 ?? Taylor Jewell, Invision ?? Right: Alexander Skarsgård, left, and Michael Shannon in
New York in November 2018. They were promoting their
AMC series “The Little Drummer Girl."
Taylor Jewell, Invision Right: Alexander Skarsgård, left, and Michael Shannon in New York in November 2018. They were promoting their AMC series “The Little Drummer Girl."
 ?? Amy Sussman, Getty Images ?? Liz Feldman accepts the “Outstandin­g Script Episodic Comedy” award for “Dead To Me” at the Writers Guild Awards in Beverly Hills on Feb. 1.
Amy Sussman, Getty Images Liz Feldman accepts the “Outstandin­g Script Episodic Comedy” award for “Dead To Me” at the Writers Guild Awards in Beverly Hills on Feb. 1.
 ?? Amy Sussman, Getty Images ?? Dahvi Waller of “Mrs. America” during the Winter TCA Tour in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 9.
Amy Sussman, Getty Images Dahvi Waller of “Mrs. America” during the Winter TCA Tour in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 9.
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Guests attend the red carpet of the third season of “La Casa De Papel (Money Heist)” by Netflix on July 11, 2019, in Madrid, Spain.
 ??  ?? Dan Levy created “Schitt’s Creek” with his father, Eugene. He’s now bingewatch­ing the Japanese dating series “Terrace House.”
Dan Levy created “Schitt’s Creek” with his father, Eugene. He’s now bingewatch­ing the Japanese dating series “Terrace House.”
 ??  ?? Director Kim Seong-hun (center) attends the Netflix “Kingdom” premiere on Jan. 21 in Seoul.
Director Kim Seong-hun (center) attends the Netflix “Kingdom” premiere on Jan. 21 in Seoul.

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