Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jan 22, 2021 · Katherine Beattie, a producer on NCIS: New Orleans, sits on set during production. Katherine Beattie. Beattie was hired as the script coordinator for the show, which she did for three years before ...

  2. Beattie, who was born three months prematurely, has spastic quadriplegia cerebral palsy. The disorder, which primarily impacts her legs and arms, causes muscle tightness and fatigue and makes walking difficult. In spring 2021, Beattie said, she was sad about the cancellation of NCIS: New Orleans, which she and her fellow producers had hoped ...

  3. Katherine Beattie chats with ABILITY Magazine's Eileen Grubba about her blossoming career as a television writer for NCIS and the emerging sport of WCMX. Katherine is the first woman to do a backflip in a wheelchair.

  4. Apr 14, 2019 · Below is an interview with Katherine Beattie, a writer for the CBS series NCIS: New Orleans. Katherine shares the behind-the-scenes story of an episode she wrote this season featuring a number of disabled characters played by disabled actors. You’re not only a badass extreme athlete, but you’re also a writer for television and film.

  5. Feb 15, 2023 · Katherine Beattie ’08 Leads On as a wheelchair motocross participant, TV writer/producer and advocate for disability representation in media. 150stories.tcu....

    • Feb 15, 2023
    • 756
    • TCU
  6. People also ask

  7. Feb 10, 2023 · Katherine Beattie, a 2008 graduate of Fort Worth's Texas Christian University, has lived a life story worth telling. Now TCU has helped celebrate it with a huge mural in Los Angeles—one of a series of murals nationwide highlight alumni who are "leading on" in extraordinary ways. Beattie has spastic quadriplegia cerebral palsy, a condition that makes walking extremely difficult and led to her ...

  8. Dec 12, 2023 · Though Katherine Beattie ’08 never set out to be a disability advocate, she has fully embraced the role.As a wheelchair user who has spastic quadriplegia cerebral palsy, a disorder that makes walking difficult, Beattie has combined her lived experience with a passion for storytelling to increase disability representation on TV screens across the country for almost 15 years.

  1. People also search for