TV Pitches
Little League (sitcom)
Chad Robertson, an underqualified “Greek-life” dropout with an over-inflated sense of self- worth, embarks on a mission to recruit and coach a youth baseball team to win the Little League World Series despite his own pitiful athletic and mentoring ability.
Chad Robertson, or independently referred to as the “Chaddy Wagon” or “The Big Chadowski,” is a 33-year-old part-time employee at Roscoe Sporting Goods who – despite any identifiable experience – aims to skyrocket into fame as the world’s greatest youth baseball coach. Chad – clad in his signature self-embroidered tracksuit - forcefully elicits the help of Fremont Elementary P.E. teacher, and former childhood best friend, Donovan Dillons, to string together the best group of 8 to 10-year-old athletes Aurora, Colorado has to offer. A group he believes will take him all the way to the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. On his radar is local little league legend, and pre-pubescent “Chad incarnate,” Keegan Tillies. Besides age, the only thing separating Chad and Keegan is that Keegan is well...really good at things...baseball being one of them. It also doesn’t hurt that Chad desperately needs someone to pay for this scheme and the local – and poorly named – white water rafting company, “Tillies’ Tied Tubes” is owned by Keegan’s workaholic and (keyword) single mother, Joanna Tillies, and they pick one youth team to fund every year. So, let’s run down the list: The look? Check. The coaching staff? Double-check. The team? Almost check. The funding? Also almost check (see previous.) But a positive-winner attitude? Well...we’ll work on it. But what matters is Chad, Keegan, and...the rest...have one-like goal in mind – Williamsport – and will stop at nothing to achieve it. Even if it means a bunch of 9-year-olds fundraising bail to get their coach out of jail after he framed a rival team for arson immediately before the playoffs. Like I said, we’re working on the attitude.
My Naked Roommate (sitcom)
Three Pacific Point University incoming freshmen Gwen, Sadie, and Winnie feel they’ve won the randomly assigned college roommate lottery after they find themselves instantly falling into a promising friendship. That is until a surprise 4th roommate, Amelia, shows up, throws up, and strips down (literally) making their blooming college experience spin into something no one else will ever believe.
Based on a series of unfortunately true events, three college freshmen and randomly assigned roommates, Winnie Doherty: the music major, Sadie Deacon: the psychology major, and Gwen Calloway: the-undeclared-but-only-because-I’ll-be-famous-by-the-spring major find out the college dorming experience isn’t quite what they’ve been told. In fact, it’s somehow worse. As if communal bathrooms, drunk lacrosse boys, and M.I.A. R.A.’s weren’t enough, they have to grapple with Amelia Naquin, an accounting (question mark?) major who, unknown to the trio until move-in day, is their surprise 4th roommate. Amelia – on top of being a (generously labeled) part-time amateur nudist – can’t decipher the difference between a toilet bowl brush and a shower loofa, creates “battle forts” around her bunk, and – thanks to an unnecessarily detailed theory concocted by Sadie and Gwen – may not actually be enrolled as a Pacific Point University student at all. Winnie isn’t convinced, but that doesn’t stop her from partaking in the madness...among both Amelia and “Gw-adie” party lines.
Currently Untitled (drama)
Adelaide Forester has just become the first documented human case in scientific and medical
history to receive a successful life-saving partial-brain transplant operation.
At 17-years-old Adelaide Forester was only given 6 months to live due to a debilitating brain condition which attacked her limbic system and hippocampal region of her brain. Defying the odds, not only did Adelaide survive, but 10-years later she makes an emergency move to San Francisco upon receiving a biological brain match from the suddenly deceased Viola Albom. Immediately after the move, Adelaide becomes the first human case in history to receive a successful brain transplant operation conducted by the incomparable Doctor Ina Marley-Kitcher. However, as Ina furthers her study, she realizes a second chance at life is not all Adelaide received. Unbeknownst to herself, Adelaide has begun to receive memories, emotions, and thoughts which formerly belonged to Viola. Adelaide’s identity slowly becomes lost inside of her own mind as the boundary between her existence and Viola’s existence blurs. Meanwhile, against approval from Ina, Viola’s former fiancé, Bellamy Patowski, in desperation to heal from his loss, reaches out to Adelaide. But – as his relationship with Adelaide grows - Bellamy soon finds himself psychologically and morally paralyzed between the contradictory realms of science, nature, and fate.