BrokenVisage
Lifer
- Jan 29, 2005
- 24,771
- 14
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In the WTF department, The Tick renewed via Amazon.
SPOONl!!
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In the WTF department, The Tick renewed via Amazon.
Good news for the Comic Fans; CW just renewed their entire schedule. Only thing not covered is one Summer show, and B&B which is entering it's already announced final season.
No hurry for that phone booth, Saul can get back to you after next season.
CBS finally confirms what we've known, POI goes flatline after this season.
Fuck. How the hell are over 10 million viewers not enough for a show to keep going?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person_of_Interest_(TV_series)
Oh, and it's getting the Unforgettable treatment: two episodes a week. Ya, a show with over 10 million viewers for 4 seasons is some garbage trash that has to be "burned off."
Sorry...but Unforgettable deserved to die. It started out fairly good...but this last season was horrible.
Fuck. How the hell are over 10 million viewers not enough for a show to keep going?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person_of_Interest_(TV_series)
I don't actually mind their doing that if it's relatively easy for other content producers like cable channel, netflix, etc to pick them up again. What would suck is if they hold on to the rights to the show and don't let anyone else have them. But I have no idea how that normally works.As discussed previously, CBS is quite happy to shelve higher producing shows for ones that are at or slightly above the competition based on their ownership rights of the show. They have pitched this big syndication & streaming revenue streams to the investors so if the show isn't a CBS production or you agree to sign CBS on as co-producer unless you are a breakout show (big bang), they are happy to use you as filler stock for the first 3-5 year assuming you produce well at which point cast salaries would start to go up and syndication rights would become valuable so they decide to jettison it.
As discussed previously, CBS is quite happy to shelve higher producing shows for ones that are at or slightly above the competition based on their ownership rights of the show. They have pitched this big syndication & streaming revenue streams to the investors so if the show isn't a CBS production or you agree to sign CBS on as co-producer unless you are a breakout show (big bang), they are happy to use you as filler stock for the first 3-5 year assuming you produce well at which point cast salaries would start to go up and syndication rights would become valuable so they decide to jettison it.
I'm kinda worried about freshman show Blindspot.
pilot was 10.x ratings.
episode 12 (last week) was down to 6.x![]()
If you ask me, Kings and Prophets was in the wrong day slot.Thar be plunder to be had as we've slain your liege!
Vikings renewed for a 5th while Of Kings and Prophets reaches the end of the plank after 2 episodes.
Of Kings and Prophets opened with a dismal 0.8 Live+same day rating in adults 18-49. That was below the underwhelming start of Wicked City (0.9) in the hour last fall (it launched against the opening game of the World Series) to mark a new low for a non-Friday series premiere on the Big 4 networks this season. Then Of Kings of Prophets dropped almost -40% to a 0.5 18-49 in its second outing earlier this week, a ratings level rarely seen for an original program on a Big 4 network.
ABC LogoOf Kings and Prophets downward ratings trajectory was similar to that of Wicked City, which was cancelled after dropping to a 0.4 a record low for a Big 4 telecast this season in Week 3. (ABC again used Beyond the Tank as a fill-in when Wicked City was yanked.)
As discussed previously, CBS is quite happy to shelve higher producing shows for ones that are at or slightly above the competition based on their ownership rights of the show. They have pitched this big syndication & streaming revenue streams to the investors so if the show isn't a CBS production or you agree to sign CBS on as co-producer unless you are a breakout show (big bang), they are happy to use you as filler stock for the first 3-5 year assuming you produce well at which point cast salaries would start to go up and syndication rights would become valuable so they decide to jettison it.
Thar be plunder to be had as we've slain your liege!
Vikings renewed for a 5th while Of Kings and Prophets reaches the end of the plank after 2 episodes.
Is this partly because of the streaming platform they are starting, or is it unrelated?