Ghostwriter (TV series): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:Ghostwriter_(logo).jpg|thumb|300px]]
{{quote|''"[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|He's a ghost, and he writes to us]]: [[Title Drop|Ghostwriter]]."''|'''Jamal Jenkins''', ''Ghost Story''}}
{{quote|''"[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|He's a ghost, and he writes to us]]: [[Title Drop|Ghostwriter]]."''|'''Jamal Jenkins''', ''Ghost Story''}}


Surreal, quirky mystery/educational series on [[PBS]] and [[The BBC]] from 1992-1995. A group of middle-school kids in Brooklyn, New York are the only ones who can see a benevolent, [[Ghost Amnesia|amnesiac ghost]], whom they dub Ghostwriter. He can only see and communicate through writing, and he uses his abilities to help the kids solve mysteries. The show never made it clear who Ghostwriter was, or why he chooses to help people. Although some episodes implied that the ghost retained more memories than he claimed to, Ghostwriter's true identity was never revealed.
Surreal, quirky mystery/educational series on [[PBS]] and [[The BBC]] from 1992-1995 produced by [[Sesame Workshop]]. A group of middle-school kids in Brooklyn, New York are the only ones who can see a benevolent, [[Ghost Amnesia|amnesiac ghost]], whom they dub Ghostwriter. He can only see and communicate through writing, and he uses his abilities to help the kids solve mysteries. The show never made it clear who Ghostwriter was, or why he chooses to help people. Although some episodes implied that the ghost retained more memories than he claimed to, Ghostwriter's true identity was never revealed.


His abilities, by contrast, [[Functional Magic|were extremely well-defined]]. For example, when the kids take a comic book as evidence, Ghostwriter can't see anything in it except the speech balloons. His spying often made the perp obvious very quickly, but the kids then had to find other evidence that would be admissible in court -- with a few exceptions. Each mystery was a four-part episode, except for the premiere and "To The Light," which were five-parters.
His abilities, by contrast, [[Functional Magic|were extremely well-defined]]. For example, when the kids take a comic book as evidence, Ghostwriter can't see anything in it except the speech balloons. His spying often made the perp obvious very quickly, but the kids then had to find other evidence that would be admissible in court -- with a few exceptions. Each mystery was a four-part episode, except for the premiere and "To The Light," which were five-parters.


Presumably because of PBS censorship codes, [[Gory Discretion Shot|almost all violence on the show happened off-camera]]. This made the show painfully slow and talky most of the time. But some scenes were truly scary nail-biters. For instance, in the "Who Is Max Mouse?" climax, the only chance the heroes had to solve the case was making a high-stakes bet with the perp, and losing it would result in a guaranteed prison term for one of the kids. In an equally scary arc, one of the kids suffered chemical poisoning from improperly discarded dry-cleaning chemicals near a playground that the characters frequently visited and her friends discover in their research that the effects of this poison are potentially lethal. The villains ranged from eccentrics to raving nutcases, and were fascinating -- too much so, as [[Flat Character|they made the heroes look bland]]. Some episodes managed elaborate mysteries without any villain at all.
Presumably because of PBS censorship codes, [[Gory Discretion Shot|almost all violence on the show happened off-camera]]. This made the show painfully slow and talky most of the time. But some scenes were truly [[Nightmare Fuel|scary nail-biters]]. The villains ranged from eccentrics to raving nutcases, and were fascinating -- too much so, as [[Flat Character|they made the heroes look bland]]. Some episodes managed elaborate mysteries without any villain at all.


Not recommended for anyone over the age of twelve, but worth seeing just for how the writers managed to come up with tension without much on-screen violence or if you grew up with the show and see well it was back then to now. And keep an eye out for [[Special Guest|Julia Stiles, Samuel L. Jackson, and Spike Lee in guest roles]].
Not recommended for anyone over the age of twelve, but worth seeing just for how the writers managed to come up with tension without much on-screen violence or if you grew up with the show and see well it was back then to now. And keep an eye out for [[Julia Stiles]], [[Samuel L. Jackson]] and [[Spike Lee]] [[Special Guest|in guest roles]].


If you're looking for the trope that could have gone here, see [[Playing Cyrano]]. Not to be confused with a ''literary'' [[wikipedia:Ghostwriter|ghostwriter]], defined by [[That Other Wiki]] as "a writer who writes books, articles, stories, reports, or other texts that are officially credited to another person". Also not to be confused with the film ''[[The Ghost Writer]]''.
If you're looking for the trope that could have gone here, see [[Playing Cyrano]]. Not to be confused with a ''literary'' [[wikipedia:Ghostwriter|ghostwriter]], defined by [[That Other Wiki]] as "a writer who writes books, articles, stories, reports, or other texts that are officially credited to another person". Also not to be confused with the film ''[[The Ghost Writer]]''.

{{tropelist}}
{{tropelist|page=Ghostwriter}}
* [[Adult Fear]]:
* [[Adult Fear]]:
** The "Over a Barrel" arc. Your kids helping out in an inner-city community garden can only be good, right? Except when they're getting sick from toxic waste and the government's dragging its heels over cleaning it up.
** The "Over a Barrel" arc. Your kids helping out in an inner-city community garden can only be good, right? Except when they're getting sick from toxic waste and the government's dragging its heels over cleaning it up.
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* [[Breaking Bad News Gently]]: This is usually the first reaction that the team has when a new kid first sees [[Ghostwriter]].
* [[Breaking Bad News Gently]]: This is usually the first reaction that the team has when a new kid first sees [[Ghostwriter]].
* [[Bond Villain Stupidity]]: Spoofed in one episode.
* [[Bond Villain Stupidity]]: Spoofed in one episode.
* [[Brother Chuck]]: Craig.
** The second episode (which was Craig's first, and only, appearance) was actually the pilot of the show; producers would later shoot a new premiere episode to better explain the origins of Ghostwriter.
* [[Can't Get Away with Nuthin']]
* [[Can't Get Away with Nuthin']]
* [[Chekhov's Gunman]]: Tina was around in the first arc, but didn't see Ghostwriter until the second.
* [[Chekhov's Gunman]]: Tina was around in the first arc, but didn't see Ghostwriter until the second.
* [[Chuck Cunningham Syndrome]]: Craig.
** The second episode (which was Craig's first and only appearance) was actually the pilot of the show; producers would later shoot a new premiere episode to better explain the origins of Ghostwriter.
* [[City of Adventure]]: Usually Brooklyn, once London, seeing as the BBC co-produced the series.
* [[City of Adventure]]: Usually Brooklyn, once London, seeing as the BBC co-produced the series.
* [[Cliff Hanger]]
* [[Cliff Hanger]]
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* [[Revival]]: 1997's ''The New Ghostwriter Mysteries'', which aired on CBS, replaced the entire cast, and made a number of other changes to the series ([[Hey, It's That Guy!|Hey, it's that girl from]] ''[[Harriet the Spy]]''!).
* [[Revival]]: 1997's ''The New Ghostwriter Mysteries'', which aired on CBS, replaced the entire cast, and made a number of other changes to the series ([[Hey, It's That Guy!|Hey, it's that girl from]] ''[[Harriet the Spy]]''!).
* [[The Rival]]: Calvin.
* [[The Rival]]: Calvin.
* [[Shell-Shocked Veteran]]: Rob's homeless friend Double T is strongly hinted to have PTSD from his time in the Vietnam War.
* [[Sesame Workshop]]: Produced this show.
* [[Shell Shocked Senior]]: Rob's homeless friend Double T is strongly hinted to have PTSD from his time in the Vietnam War.
* [[Shout-Out]]:
* [[Shout-Out]]:
{{quote|'''Gooey Gus''': [[Sesame Street|"It's not easy being purple!"]]}}
{{quote|'''Gooey Gus''': [[Sesame Street|"It's not easy being purple!"]]}}
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[[Category:American Series]]
[[Category:American Series]]
[[Category:Ghostwriter (TV series)]]
[[Category:Ghostwriter (TV series)]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]

Revision as of 18:27, 22 December 2016

"He's a ghost, and he writes to us: Ghostwriter."
Jamal Jenkins, Ghost Story

Surreal, quirky mystery/educational series on PBS and The BBC from 1992-1995 produced by Sesame Workshop. A group of middle-school kids in Brooklyn, New York are the only ones who can see a benevolent, amnesiac ghost, whom they dub Ghostwriter. He can only see and communicate through writing, and he uses his abilities to help the kids solve mysteries. The show never made it clear who Ghostwriter was, or why he chooses to help people. Although some episodes implied that the ghost retained more memories than he claimed to, Ghostwriter's true identity was never revealed.

His abilities, by contrast, were extremely well-defined. For example, when the kids take a comic book as evidence, Ghostwriter can't see anything in it except the speech balloons. His spying often made the perp obvious very quickly, but the kids then had to find other evidence that would be admissible in court -- with a few exceptions. Each mystery was a four-part episode, except for the premiere and "To The Light," which were five-parters.

Presumably because of PBS censorship codes, almost all violence on the show happened off-camera. This made the show painfully slow and talky most of the time. But some scenes were truly scary nail-biters. The villains ranged from eccentrics to raving nutcases, and were fascinating -- too much so, as they made the heroes look bland. Some episodes managed elaborate mysteries without any villain at all.

Not recommended for anyone over the age of twelve, but worth seeing just for how the writers managed to come up with tension without much on-screen violence or if you grew up with the show and see well it was back then to now. And keep an eye out for Julia Stiles, Samuel L. Jackson and Spike Lee in guest roles.

If you're looking for the trope that could have gone here, see Playing Cyrano. Not to be confused with a literary ghostwriter, defined by That Other Wiki as "a writer who writes books, articles, stories, reports, or other texts that are officially credited to another person". Also not to be confused with the film The Ghost Writer.

Tropes used in Ghostwriter include:

Jamal: It was his first time. We all know what that feels like.