| TITLEPAGE.TV
Series debut: March 3, 2008
Contact: Angela Hayes, 212-446-5104
"Titlepage"
will Debut March 3
New Online Literary Conversation Program
Long-Time New Yorker Editor,
Author,
and Recent Random House Editor-in-Chief Daniel Menaker Will Host
NEW YORK, NY (February 11, 2008) - Eight months after
leaving Random House, Daniel Menaker is returning to the book world,
hosting an Internet show that will feature interviews with authors
of all kinds, the first of its type on the web.
The show, "Titlepage," for which Menaker
will serve as host and editorial producer, will feature a group
of writers discussing their new books in a roundtable format. The
debut season will include 6 episodes, the first of which will go
live on www.titlepage.tv
on Monday, March 3, 2008.
"’Titlepage’ is the perfect way to share my enthusiasm
for books and their authors--in an instantly and permanently accessible
format--with as many readers as possible," said Menaker. "I've
always sought out literary conversations, and I think we can make
them surprising and entertaining for anyone who might want to stop
by. Editors, particularly editors who are also writers, like nothing
more than to share their love of books with others --although the
occasional royalty check is also pretty enjoyable."
"Titlepage" is the result of a collaboration
between Menaker and Brown Hats Productions, headed by Odile Isralson
and Lina Matta. It draws its inspiration from the classic French
program "Apostrophes", PBS’s "Charlie Rose,"
and "Dinner for Five," the actor's roundtable discussion
seen on IFC.
Isralson and Matta feel that bringing the program
to viewers on the net made more sense, and was clearly more cutting-edge,
than producing it for network or cable television. "The line
between screens has become blurred," Matta said. "Computer,
TV, iPhone, iPod—they are all the same. People catch their
shows whenever and wherever they can. The Internet allows viewers
to manage their own entertainment and cultural resources in ways
that traditional TV just can't match--such as interactive participation,
watching supplementary content, selecting content according to one's
own very specific interests, all of which add up to advantages for
sponsors and advertisers."
"In other words," Menaker added, "They
can choose to fast forward from Steve Martin to Martin Amis."
Isralson made the point that "one shouldn't have to have to
live in New York City and pay $150 to some elite festival in order
to be part of literary culture. From now on, if we have anything
to do with it, you can be having dinner in Gillette, Wyoming, and
enjoy a great hour of conversation about writing with your dessert
and coffee. And thanks to Daniel, ‘Titlepage’ will be
provocative, smart, and fun. I think we'll demolish a great many
rules about what a book program should look and sound like."
"Titlepage" will be produced as though for
television broadcast, making its quality far superior to most online
video programs. Each new episode can be watched on the program's
website—in its entirety or in parts—and can be downloaded
and viewed on an MP3 player, or transferred to a home theater system
for viewing.
To take advantage of the instant responsiveness of
the net, the Titlepage.tv
website will also offer links to online vendors so that viewers
can purchase the books being discussed, and other books by these
writers, with a click of their mouse. Visitors can also interact
with the show's hosts and guests through comments, discussion forums,
and e-mail.
"Authors with new books of all kinds will appear
on the program in the coming months," Isralson said. “We
are aiming for the greatest possible diversity and variety. We are
looking to have poets, novelists, journalists, Americans, foreigners
-- we will talk to anybody, about anything to do with books, as
long as it strikes us as worth talking about, timely, and deserving
of a wide audience's attention.”
|
|