We at Triangle Park Entertainment take great pride in our ability and willingness to take our ideas or those of our clients from the first twinkle of a thought to the final vision that we offer to the audience. We have created projects from just a scratch on the head. We have built on ideas presented to us, preparing the script for the pitch. We have run ahead with ideas that were ready to fly and packaged top crew and talent for financing.

Whatever the stage of your project, we can help with the writing, packaging, and production. Take a look at some of the things we have our eyes on.

Reality Racing (Reality Show)
A spin-off from our documentary, "Drill Team", this action-packed reality show takes a one hundred year-old racing tradition and turns it into 21st century TV drama. Volunteer Fire Departments from the state of New York compete for the ultimate prize in Fire Racing: a brand new, state-of-the-art "C-class" race truck. Every week, we follow the Snails as they prepare for the season and each tournament. A gaggle of cameras cover the action on race day as we keep track of the point leaders. Each week also includes a challenge set up by the producers (that's us) that pits each team against each other outside of racing. You don't need to be the best drill team to score points at challenges, that's for sure! Hot action, intense competition. May the timid stay home!

The Good Thief (Feature, Comedy)
An unlikely mastermind of bank robbing gets hit with the power of the Lord and decides to turn himself in. He and his brothers eluded detectives for so long, there is no way the precinct cops are going to believe this dim-wit off the street is their guy...until he proves it. Once he does, it's a race against his brothers to get his mind straight and the cops to get him-and his brothers-behind bars. Written by David Occhino.

Tin Ear (Feature, Drama)
A fifteen year-old boy learns the ways of a dangerous world while he works his summer job on a construction site. His mother's live-in boyfriend is a Teamster foreman, or "Uncle Jimmy", as the boy is told to call him at the site. The boy tries to cope with growing up fast, his mother tries to cope with her knowledge of where he is heading, and Jimmy tries to recruit him into his world of organized crime. Written by Joseph D'Albora

South Tunnel (Feature, Drama)
Screenplay by Gary Lowery and Joseph D'Albora

At the age of 18, Willful Swann comes home to find his brother-in-law once again beating his sister while his 6 month-old niece sleeps in the next room. After making sure his sister and niece are safe, Will takes justice into his own hands. On his 33rd birthday, Will is released from the Atlanta Penitentiary with nowhere to go and no one to turn to. A mysterious letter about his father's suicide some 25 years earlier sends him into the heart of Tennessee on a journey into his past, to the town of his childhood, and ironically to his future.

In the small, almost forgotten town of South Tunnel, tucked way in the hills of Tennessee, Will meets a philosophical mechanic who "happens to wear dresses", a single mother who runs the local boardinghouse and is raising her dauntless 8 year-old son on her own, a drunken country songwriter who sells his hit songs for 25 bucks and a beer, and a host of other local yokels. In this unlikely yet true-to-life mix of characters, Will learns a thing or two about acceptance, courage, reparation, and coming home.