News: Girlboss, Downward Dog cancelled; George RR Martin’s Nightflyers adaptation; + more

Internet TV

Australian TV

International TV

US TV

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

News: Kimmy Schmidt renewed; Paradise Lost TV series; + more

Internet TV

International TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV show casting

  • Sam Morgan to recur on Paramount’s American Woman
  • Sandra Oh to star in BBC America’s Killing Eve

News: US Misfits and Brown Girls remakes; Canadian Fubar adaptation; + more

The Daily News will return on Tuesday

International TV

Canadian TV

  • CityTV green lights: adaptation of Fubar: The Age of the Computer, with David Lawrence and Paul Spence

US TV

US TV show casting

  • Jacqueline Bisset to guest, Sarah Baker to recur on Epix’s Graves
  • Trevor Einhorn and Brittany Curran promoted to regulars on Syfy’s The Magicians
  • Tale Ashe joins The CW’s DC’s Legends of Tomorrow

New US TV shows

  • Freeform green lights: pilot of adaptation of E4 (UK)’s Misfits, with Ashleigh LaThrop, Tre Hall, Allie MacDonald and Jake Cannavale
  • HBO developing: adaptation of OpenTV’s Brown Girls

The prosaic world of renaming TV shows for the international market

We’ve discussed before – albeit ever such a long time ago – the prosaic art of renaming things for international markets. There’s always a lot lost in translation, anyway, but when you’re going for maximum impact in as short a period of time as possible, as you are with a TV show title, then direct translation probably isn’t the best course. 

Street Hawk translated into French? Faucon de rue, literally, but that’s really more or less Boulevard Falcon all the same. Which is silly and not at all cool. So in the end Street Hawk became Tonnerre mécanique or ‘Mechanical Thunder’, which is a bit more evocative at least.

But even when there’s no translation involved, sometimes things don’t translate, because while your audience might well speak English reasonably well – as they do in Germany, zum Beispiel – they might not get all those idioms that pervade the English language. 

Take Doctor Doctor, a warm-hearted Australian show about a hot shot heart surgeon who ends up being sent back to his home town in disgrace where he has to face up to his family and his past. The word ‘doctor’ is pretty basic, but ‘Doctor, Doctor’ is the start of an entire class of English-language joke, which is why the show is so-called.

Can we expect Germans, Austrians, the Swiss, Czechs et al to know this, though? Probably not. And Artz, Artz just isn’t the same in German – there are no ‘Artz, Artz’ jokes.

So oddly, Doctor Doctor has now been retitled for the German-speaking markets as… The Heart Guy. Yep, still in basic English that anyone who can claim English as a second language (ie everyone in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the Czech Republic et al) will understand. But now no idioms and everything’s self explanatory. People will know what The Heart Guy is about and they might even spot the slight subtext that “he’s full of heart”, too. But that’s not vital.

Yet despite everything, something’s been lost in translation from English into International English, don’t you think?