![]() ![]() Owusu-Breen has loved supernatural and horror since she was a child, she said, evident from her successful career in television as either executive producer, co-executive producer, supervising producer, producer, co-producer, executive story editor, writer or a combination on shows such as “Lost,” “Fringe,” “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D,” “Revolution” and “Alias,” as well as the family drama “Brothers & Sisters.” Executive Producer Monica Owusu-Breen on Saturday, Octofrom the Javits Center in New York, NY NBC / Charles Sykes/NBC “I think that’s where we get our power and metaphor.” “In this country we’re so angry and separated it’s a reminder that we all live in the same space.” NBC was open and encouraging about making it a diverse cast, she said. It’s a theme that is “hopeful and lovely,” Owusu-Breen said. We’re sitting there in Albuquerque all of us, and we all felt that we’re the ‘midnighters’ in the middle of a world that feels different.” “We all got that – feeling that you don’t fit in the regular world. ![]() ![]() She includes the show’s actors in that tribe. “There’s not very many half-Spanish, half Ghanaian women in the world, so I get this idea of feeling different and finding your tribe, finding the people who, whether or not you’re exactly the same, you get one another.” “I’ve never walked into a room and felt completely like I fit in,” she told NBC News. For Monica Owusu-Breen, executive producer and show runner of “Midnight, Texas,” which airs on NBC, that theme feels familiar. ![]()
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