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Limp Bizkit’s Fred Durst developing drama for the CW

Singer Fred Durst of the band Limp Bizkit, performing in 2009, is developing a one-hour music drama for the CW based on his life.
(Isaac Brekken / Los Angeles Times)
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Fred Durst is developing a one-hour music drama for the CW based on his life, according to TV guide.

“The Noise” will follow the rise of a young frontman in the 1990s who escapes a volatile home life and launches a successful band with a unique sound.

Sound familiar? Durst launched his nu-metal band Limp Bizkit in the mid-90s and exploded during the “Total Request Live” days thanks to smash hits such as “Break Stuff,” a cover of George Michael’s “Faith,” and “Nookie,” which has soundtracked countless drunken hookups.

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The drama is being developed through CBS TV Studios, with Durst serving as co-executive producer on a script written by Miles Field. Eric Tannenbaum and Kim Tannenbaum are executive producers.

This isn’t Durst’s first swing at a fictional series. In 2011 the rocker developed a sitcom called “Douchebag” with the Tannenbaums about an aging rock star balancing his celebrity and family life. The show never made it to the air, but a rough – and we do mean rough – sneak peek lives in a sad, dark corner of the Internet.

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Durst has also directed films, helming 2007’s “The Education of Charlie Banks” and “The Longshots” in 2008.

And Limp Bizkit fans shouldn’t worry. The band is hard at work on a comeback album after securing a deal with Cash Money Records last year. A new album is expected to arrive in 2014, so dust off those fitted caps and stock up on black T-shirts and cargo shorts.

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