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Drive is a short-lived, Emmy Award-nominated television series created by Tim Minear and Ben Queen and produced by Minear, Queen, and Greg Yaitanes. It aired on the FOX network in the United States, and on CTV in Canada. The series is set across the backdrop of an illegal automobile road race with the central focus being on the competitors and eventually on the puppet masters behind the race. Regarding the tone of the show, Minear has described it as "a secret, illegal, underground road race can be anything from Cannonball Run to The Game to North by Northwest to Magnolia-on-wheels. Ours is all those things."1 Firefly and Serenity star Nathan Fillion, a longtime friend of Drive creator Tim Minear, plays the lead role of Alex Tully in the series. Ivan Sergei played Tully in the unaired pilot.2 The show premiered on April 13, 2007 on CTV in Canada.3 It debuted in the United States on April 15, 2007 on FOX, and moved into its regular time slot on Mondays the next day; in that slot it faced stiff competition from NBC's Deal or No Deal and ABC's Dancing with the Stars. On April 25, FOX cancelled Drive after four episodes had aired.4
Cast and characters
*Note: While referred to in the show as a 1972 model, the vehicle's distinctive front and rear mark it as a 1970 model, markedly different from the 1972-1974 models. RouteThe following are the checkpoints passed, clues and/or instructions before arrival, and the specifics regarding them.
EpisodesA total of six episodes of Drive were produced prior to its cancellation. The series premiered on April 13, 2007 in Canada and on April 16, 2007 in the United States.
Production notesFox greenlit series production on Drive in October 2006. In addition to the series pilot, another twelve episodes were ordered as a midseason replacement for spring 2007.7 Filming locationsDrive was shot in the Los Angeles area, using road footage and green-screen technology. According to Tim Minear, "because of technology, we can actually create a cross-country road race and shoot it all in Santa Clarita."8 This led to geographic inconsistencies in the series, including mountains and desert settings visible during highway scenes set near Gainesville, Florida, when there are no actual mountain ranges or deserts in that area. Highway scenes were shot on Interstate 210 in Rialto, California on the finished but unopened portion between Alder Ave. and Linden Ave.9 The exit for Alder Ave can be seen as the exit in most of the freeway scenes. In the first episode, the Alder Ave. sign for the exit is clearly legible. Scenes at the "Kennedy Space Center" were filmed at the Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena, California. Music
Notes
CancellationThe two-hour premiere of Drive in the United States, broadcast on April 15, 2007 at 8:00 pm, was watched by six million viewers.11 The program did not deliver the ratings FOX desired, and on April 25, 2007, the network announced that it had cancelled Drive.4 The final two remaining unaired episodes of Drive were made available for online streaming on FOX ON DEMAND beginning Sunday, July 15, 2007, in addition to the previously aired episodes.12 All six episodes of the show have been made available for purchase and download on Apple's iTunes13, Amazon's Unbox14 and Direct2Drive 15. FOX initially announced that the final two episodes would air on July 4, 2007. The network rescheduled them for July 13 and later pulled them entirely.16 The two remaining episodes were posted online on July 15, 2007.17 Executive producers Tim Minear and Craig Silverstein subsequently gave an interview that described what might have happened if the series had continued.18 AwardsDrive, while short-lived, is the first series to be nominated for an Emmy Award under the organization's new "broadband" eligibility guidelines. The show's title sequence had originally been submitted for consideration in the category of "best outstanding visual effects in a drama series". However, Emmy regulations require a series to air at least six episodes in order to be eligible, whereas Drive had only aired four episodes prior to its cancellation. After the sequence was posted for streaming on the Internet, it became eligible under the new "special visual effects" category.19 References
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