Y'know, I've had an idea for ages where it's a ghost hunter/paranormal investigation series like you tend to see on extremely scientific cable channels, where a crew of amateurs goes out to rumored sites with rudimentary equipment and journal their time spent seeking the unknown.
The twist in this case would be for them to actually find something, and eventually the entire crew gets abducted/slaughtered by whatever force they pursued a bit too closely, only to appear in a new adventure on the next episode as though nothing had happened.
So it's like Ghost Hunters, except a bit less pandering to the camera to make up for ghosts not existing, and a bit more vindication at the end.
So, my question... How awesome would that be?
it sounds interesting but I think the gimmick might wear thin quickly, I think it might be better if it starts out as a normal ghost show but then they get abducted by a group and the show becomes the crew/actors trying to survive. just my two cents though, the original could work if handled correctly but it has a very good chance to be handled poorly
It's basically just a matter of entirely not approaching the subject of previous episodes, so you can use the same crew to investigate completely different phenomena and cover the gambit of cryptozoology and paranormal investigation without having to overhaul the framework of the show.
I mean, people watch things like Blair Witch which outright states at the outset that everyone involved is dead and/or gone, as is the case with most found-footage type affairs... There's still some interest in seeing
when and
how everything goes to shit. The idea is to emulate the "real" investigative shows enough to set up the setting and get our suspension of disbelief piqued, and then the end satiates the craving for
something to happen, which isn't going to happen with the nonfiction shows for obvious reasons. Killing everyone off in the end is more just because you might as well; there's not supposed to be any continuity between episodes anyways.
But yeah, the specifics of building each story and making sure the thing doesn't grind itself into utter dullness is a catch, but that kinda goes for anything.
In an unrelated question, I've got a .7 bottle of Valhalla-brand mead on my booze shelf, and while the bottle is indeed pretty cool, I'm considerably less than impressed with the contents. It's sickly sweet and tastes like slightly yeasty pear cider enhanced with concentrated elderberry extract, finished off with an aftertaste akin to biting down on a big spoonful of raw honey. No carbonation. Any ideas of something I could mix this stuff with to make it a bit more drinkable? It's like a really schizophrenic, really sugary dessert wine.