LOGLINE:
BREAKFAST WITH SCOT is a contemporary comedy that tells the
story of an ‘alternative’ family finding its feet...and
its heart.
SHORT
SYNOPSIS:
Eric (Tom Cavanagh) lives for all things hockey. Now in his
thirties, he’s managed to turn his stint as an ex- Toronto
Maple Leaf into a full-time gig as commentator for sports TV.
He’s living the dream! But when Eric’s boyfriend
Sam (Ben Shenkman) announces that they’re to become temporary
guardians of a young boy, Eric’s comfortable world shatters.
Enter Scot (Noah Bernett) -- a recently orphaned, swishy 11-year-old
sissy-of-a-boy -- and Eric’s mirror opposite. Freaked
out by Scot’s ‘joie de vivre’, Eric and Sam
gently nudge Scot away from scented hand cream and all things
pink, towards a more ‘acceptable’ pastime –
hockey. But after Scot’s disastrous first game, Eric begins
to rethink the compromises he’s made in his own life in
order to be ‘accepted’.
LONG SYNOPSIS:
Eric (Tom Cavanagh) and Sam (Ben Shenkman) have been in a gay
relationship for four years. Eric's a former Maple Leaf hockey
player turned sports caster, Sam’s a corporate lawyer.
They live discreetly on a tree-lined street in Toronto. All
this changes when they receive news that Sam's brother Billy
(Colin Cunningham)’s ex-girlfriend has died, leaving custody
of her son Scot (Noah Bernett) to Billy. But adventure-seeking
Billy is somewhere in South America, and that leaves Scot without
a guardian. Until Children’s Aid and the insurance company
can locate Billy, they ask Sam if he can take temporary custody.
Much to Eric’s disapproval (he’s never liked kids),
Sam agrees to take Scot in - convincing Eric that it is only
for a short period. Enter Scot - a swishy, mincing, 11-year-old
sissy-of-a-boy who is Eric’s mirror opposite. Dressed
in vibrant colours, his mother’s charm bracelet and with
a penchant for musicals and Christmas carols – he’s
not quite the ‘boy’ they expected. Their household
is thrown into confusion as Eric and Sam try to deal with the
realities and expectations of their flamboyant charge and realize
that he is much more ‘gay’ than they are. Each deals
with his own issues while observing the behavior of a queeny
kid being joyously and unashamedly himself. At school Scot begins
to make friends and even manages to win the company of the neighborhood
bully. But Eric decides Scot needs toughening up and signs him
up for local Pee Wee hockey. Eric becomes recruited as the team’s
assistant coach and begins to build a relationship with Scot.
But after Scot’s disastrous first game, Eric begins to
rethink the compromises he’s made in his own life in order
to be ‘accepted’.