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Darcy: There are so many rumors about the Gossip Girl finale going around! Care to share any scoop on what’s really going down?

We totally would…if we could get anyone to actually talk about it. “There’s so many spoilers out there right now that I really feel like I Can’t talk about it!” Stephanie Savage tells us, though she confirms that there are either flashbacks or flash-forwards in the final hour. As for Josh Schwartz, his lips were also sealed (“There’s a lot that’s already out there unfortunately, and I will leave it at that!”) but did tell us that the show did take steps to throw people (including the pesky paparazzi) off. Translation: Don’t believe everything you hear and see!

(source)

The cast of “Gossip Girl” has been pretty outspoken about looking forward to the end of the series. Was it difficult to keep them interested in the show these last few seasons?
They’re looking for motivation, the same way the writers are looking for motivation. Any time you’re into season five or six or more — that’s a long time to be playing the same part or writing the same stories. That’s part of the challenge of TV. But the cast still shows up every day and gives it their all. There’s not a scene that Leighton Meester is not showing up for and crushing. Their excitement about the show ending is the same way you felt about college ending: You loved it, it was a blast, it changed your life, and the excitement is about what’s coming next. They’re going to have great careers.

(read the whole article here)

What is it about the secret life of American teens that intrigues producer-writer-director Josh Schwartz? “Everything at that age feels like life and death,” he says. “And you never get your heart broken like you do as a teenager.”

In his big-screen directing debut, “Fun Size” (opening Friday), Wren (Victoria Justice) has to track down her oddball little brother when she really just wants to go to the huge Halloween bash thrown by a guy she’s crushing on.

Schwartz also filled us in on the last moments of his show “Gossip Girl” and gave us scoop on his new series “The Carrie Diaries,” the “Sex and the City” prequel show based on the books by Candace Bushnell with Anna­Sophia Robb as the new Carrie Bradshaw.

1 What should we know about “Fun Size”?

It has universal appeal because at one point everybody was a teenager. It doesn’t matter if you were a rich kid, poor kid or middle-class kid. I wanted “Fun Size” to show that what everybody is going through is timeless. Who didn’t have a sibling where all you wanted was for that sibling to get lost? When she loses her little brother, she realizes how important her family is to her.

2 What did you like about Victoria Justice?

I think she was excited with this script because it was a little edgier and more adult than what she has done before in her career. She has a lot of young fans from her show “Victorious.” I think she still embodies a lot of characteristics that made her a role model. She’s still sensitive and caring, but in a PG-13 movie.

3 Are you upset that “Gossip Girl” show is ending?

Everything has to come to an end. We ended [my earlier shows] “The O.C.” and “Chuck.” I’ve gotten used to having these voids after the shows leave. Everything good comes to an end. Shows aren’t designed to stay on the air forever. All I can tell you is the finale is immensely satisfying. Any question you’ve ever had about “Gossip Girl” will be answered. Even if you haven’t watched the show in years, you should come back.

4 What can you tell us about “The Carrie Diaries?”

The show comes on in January, and it’s the prequel set in Connecticut. Amy Harris, who wrote the pilot, was a writer on “SATC.” This show is its own show. Anna is so good, and those are big Manolos to fill. She embodies a teenage version of Carrie.

5 Will we also see Samantha, Miranda and Charlotte?

That remains to be seen. We looked at it in the same way “Smallville” was able to fill in some of the origins of the Superman story. Carrie is really the female Superman. She is as important to women as Superman is to men.

Writers / Producers

Directors

Costume

Music

Showrunners 2012: ‘Gossip Girl,’ ‘Hart of Dixie’s’ Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage

From their obsessive rituals (Peppermint Patties! Oatmeal! Bruce Springsteen!) to the parts of their jobs they hate most (killing characters off, dealing with agents), TV’s most influential writer-producers featured on The Hollywood Reporter’s annual list of the Top 50 Showrunners come clean about the people, things and quirky habits that keep them — and their shows — alive. 
Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage, Gossip Girl, Hart of Dixie (CW) 
The show that inspired me to write:Schwartz:The Muppet Show. Family Ties.
My big break:Schwartz: My retrospective on the career of Steven Spielberg for my camp newsletter when I was seven.  When you are not a gifted athlete you must find other ways to impress the campers.
My TV Mentor:Schwartz: Bob DeLaurentiswas hired to help me run my first series, The O.C.  He taught me about balancing the insanity of television with the sanity of life. Also, Stephanie Savage has taught me a ton over the years. Her taste and work ethic are simultaneously daunting and inspiring.Savage: John McNamara, Bob DeLaurentis, Shaun Cassidy. And Josh Schwartz gave me my first script, which is the job that changed my life. 
My proudest accomplishment this year:Schwartz: That would have to be Stella, my nine-month-old daughter.  Also I directed my first movie Fun Size, which comes out in October for Paramount. Both have been tremendous experiences for growth and learning. Only one requires diaper changing at 6:30 in the morning. Savage: Gossip Girl finishing, The Carrie Diaries starting and our movie Fun Size coming out — all in the same week. 
My toughest scene to write this year:Savage: The final scene of Gossip Girl. Tears make it hard to see the keyboard.
My most absurd note I’ve ever gotten:Schwartz: Pitching the pilot story of [NBC’s] Chuck to a network executive who just looked at me when I finished and said, “Why would you want to write that?”Savage: “Could one of them be a cop/doctor/lawyer?” Writing serial dramas, we actually get that a lot.
The aspect of my job as showrunner that I’d rather delegate:Schwartz: I am a firm believer that the key to surviving showrunning is delegating. On all our Fake Empire shows, we have incredible showrunners in place who are passionate, talented and surrounded by good people.Savage: Anything that requires appearing in front of the camera.
My preferred method for breaking through writers’ block:Schwartz: Asking someone else to write it.Savage: Writers’ block is not really an option when you’re shooting eight pages a day, five days a week, nine months a year.
The show I’m embarrassed to admit I watch:Schwartz: I make teen dramas, I’m not embarrassed to admit I watch anything.Savage: I don’t believe in “guilty” pleasure.  MSNBC’s Lockup, My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding, every single show on Discovery ID — if it feels good, do it.
The three things you need in order to write:Schwartz: An idea, some time and the knowledge that failing to deliver could result in a network airing color bars.Savage: I’ve written with a broken wrist, with pneumonia. I finished a script sitting at a bus stop on Banff Avenue during a snow storm. So long as I have headphones, a playlist and my laptop, I’m good.
If I could scrub one credit from your resume, it would it be:Schwartz: I think the healthy answer to this is they have all been learning experiences.  Savage: None. You fall in love with everything you make.

Showrunners 2012: ‘Gossip Girl,’ ‘Hart of Dixie’s’ Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage

From their obsessive rituals (Peppermint Patties! Oatmeal! Bruce Springsteen!) to the parts of their jobs they hate most (killing characters off, dealing with agents), TV’s most influential writer-producers featured on The Hollywood Reporter’s annual list of the Top 50 Showrunners come clean about the people, things and quirky habits that keep them — and their shows — alive. 

Josh Schwartz and Stephanie SavageGossip GirlHart of Dixie (CW) 

The show that inspired me to write:
Schwartz:The Muppet Show. Family Ties.

My big break:
Schwartz: My retrospective on the career of Steven Spielberg for my camp newsletter when I was seven.  When you are not a gifted athlete you must find other ways to impress the campers.

My TV Mentor:
Schwartz: Bob DeLaurentiswas hired to help me run my first series, The O.C.  He taught me about balancing the insanity of television with the sanity of life. Also, Stephanie Savage has taught me a ton over the years. Her taste and work ethic are simultaneously daunting and inspiring.
Savage: John McNamara, Bob DeLaurentis, Shaun Cassidy. And Josh Schwartz gave me my first script, which is the job that changed my life. 

My proudest accomplishment this year:
Schwartz: That would have to be Stella, my nine-month-old daughter.  Also I directed my first movie Fun Size, which comes out in October for Paramount. Both have been tremendous experiences for growth and learning. Only one requires diaper changing at 6:30 in the morning. 
Savage: Gossip Girl finishing, The Carrie Diaries starting and our movie Fun Size coming out — all in the same week. 

My toughest scene to write this year:
Savage: The final scene of Gossip Girl. Tears make it hard to see the keyboard.

My most absurd note I’ve ever gotten:
Schwartz: Pitching the pilot story of [NBC’s] Chuck to a network executive who just looked at me when I finished and said, “Why would you want to write that?”
Savage: “Could one of them be a cop/doctor/lawyer?” Writing serial dramas, we actually get that a lot.

The aspect of my job as showrunner that I’d rather delegate:
Schwartz: I am a firm believer that the key to surviving showrunning is delegating. On all our Fake Empire shows, we have incredible showrunners in place who are passionate, talented and surrounded by good people.
Savage: Anything that requires appearing in front of the camera.

My preferred method for breaking through writers’ block:
Schwartz: Asking someone else to write it.
Savage: Writers’ block is not really an option when you’re shooting eight pages a day, five days a week, nine months a year.

The show I’m embarrassed to admit I watch:
Schwartz: I make teen dramas, I’m not embarrassed to admit I watch anything.
Savage: I don’t believe in “guilty” pleasure.  MSNBC’s LockupMy Big Fat Gypsy Wedding, every single show on Discovery ID — if it feels good, do it.

The three things you need in order to write:
Schwartz: An idea, some time and the knowledge that failing to deliver could result in a network airing color bars.
Savage: I’ve written with a broken wrist, with pneumonia. I finished a script sitting at a bus stop on Banff Avenue during a snow storm. So long as I have headphones, a playlist and my laptop, I’m good.

If I could scrub one credit from your resume, it would it be:
Schwartz: I think the healthy answer to this is they have all been learning experiences.  
Savage: None. You fall in love with everything you make.

marvd85: Chillin’, like a villain on penicillin, with Ed Westwick,Michelle Trachtenberg and Josh Schwartz. Second day at the Gossip Girl set was…!! (September 14)

Stephanie and Josh are on set!