Marc Cherry Defends Season 2 Writing on Desperate Housewives
Posted on October 20, 2005
Critics and fans have been less than thrilled with the first few episodes of Season 2 of Desperate Housewives, and have been quite vocal about how the writing on the show has gone downhill. The show's creator, executive producer, and lead writer Marc Cherry defended the show and its storylines to the Associated Press.
"Yes, we're trying some new stuff," Cherry tells the Associated Press. "Some of it might work. Some of it might not. This, of course, is the nature of episodic television. They can't all be gems."The show is seen by an average of 27.2 million people, which is above the 23.7 million average for all of last season, so the ratings aren't suffering yet. We think the whole Zach storyline needs to die an untimely death. And we want Rex brought back from the dead immediately.This season, all the critics seem to be finding are zircons. "The writers seem to be drawing some of the characters too broadly," squawked USA Today, while New York's Daily News complained, "The show still doesn't seem to have any traction. Even the twists aren't as twisted as they used to be."
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Perhaps the problem, the critics suggested, is that Cherry has yet to write any of this season's episodes. (They also complain that there has been no subplot or even scenes in which the housewives are linked.) But Cherry � who's been signed as a co-executive-producer of a humorous new murder-mystery series to be called Kill/Switch � calls the critics' claim "patently untrue. ... I am as involved in the writing process as I've ever been. I help come up with the story lines, I give notes and, indeed, I rewrite things constantly. I take the credit and the blame for everything that goes on the screen," he says.
Furthermore, "I'm paying attention to my audience's response and am trying my darnedest to please them," he insists. "And I will continue to do so as long as I've got that executive producer credit above my name."