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NBC moves to year round programming.

techs

Lifer
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02...adco.html?ref=business

Ending Tradition, NBC Dismisses Fall Debuts

NBC Universal took a big step toward undoing one of the television industry?s oldest traditions by announcing Tuesday that it would move to a year-round schedule of staggered program introductions.
The move is intended to appeal to advertisers, who crave fresh content to keep viewers tuned in.

And if it succeeds ? and leads other broadcast networks to shift from their focus on a mass introduction of new shows ? it could alter an American cultural cycle that extends all the way back to the days of radio, when families gathered around the Philco every September, as the school year began, to sample the new entertainment choices.

NBC plans to announce a 52-week schedule in April, a month before ABC and CBS will unveil their fall lineups at splashy presentations known as upfronts. The decision means that NBC will be committing to a new lineup of shows earlier than any of its competitors, while also inviting advertisers to build marketing plans around specific shows and perhaps to integrate brands and products into the plots of the shows themselves.

?We absolutely think this is going to change the industry,? said Michael Pilot, the head of sales for NBC. That was one of the goals cited by Jeff Zucker, the president and chief executive of NBC Universal, in comments he has made recently about how the strike by Hollywood writers could create opportunities to change some of the ways networks do business.



On the one hand I can see them being at a disadvantage during the Christmas holiday season when the other networks will have their full slate of shows while NBC won't. However, on the other hand, it is possible that without the fall time constraints NBC might make better shows.
No matter how you look at it, its the end of era.
 
About time in my opinion. I think this will dilute the overall concentration of quality shows on any given week compared to fall lineups, but in the end there will be decent shows on year round 🙂
 
Originally posted by: techs
On the one hand I can see them being at a disadvantage during the Christmas holiday season when the other networks will have their full slate of shows while NBC won't. However, on the other hand, it is possible that without the fall time constraints NBC might make better shows.
No matter how you look at it, its the end of era.

I assume you mean November mainly, since don't US shows all stop for a couple of months over Christmas anyway?
 
They are not the only ones. On the radio, they said that the writer's strike really shook things up, in regards to the television "season." They said most, if not all networks were planning to move to year-round debuts now.

Now if we can just get FOX to quit showing episodes of new shows out of order, and cancelling them when ratings drop because they put them in a different time slot each week.
 
How did the current schedule come to be? I always vaguely figured it was to make sure kids, college students and their parents were at home and able to watch. i.e. Key demographics are available during school semesters, gone for holidays, and outside or on vacation in the summer.

Yes/no?
 
Originally posted by: ShotgunSteven
Now if we can just get FOX to quit showing episodes of new shows out of order, and cancelling them when ratings drop because they put them in a different time slot each week.

You can't do that, it's in their blood.

 
TV will still suck, so I don't care what they do.

What we need is for the NFL to add a spring/summer football season to balance out the year. Two Superbowls a year! Yay!
 
staggered show schedule FTW! i'm all for having more shows to watch during breaks of the other shows i enjoy.
 
Thank god. I hate the summer draught. Once I actually started watching TV for "real", it's always been deathwatch-May until happy-September. Not EVERYONE goes away for 4 months during the summer.
 
Good. Just a week ago I was thinking how it would be nice if certain Time slots was always a new Episode or Show. Kinda got the idea from Sci-fi and their Friday night SG-Atlantis Rerun then New Episode setup. People will watch reruns, but they usually prefer New Episodes. Why not guarantee new Episodes for certain time slots, then show reruns in other slots? You could get more play out of the more successful series or maybe use successful show reruns as a Lead-in for a new show, hopefully helping the new show succeed.
 
Glad to see it. Unofficially it's kinda been happening already (cable, midseason shows, etc). I like the idea of releasing new shows throughout the year.
 
Originally posted by: reeserock
Glad to see it. Unofficially it's kinda been happening already (cable, midseason shows, etc). I like the idea of releasing new shows throughout the year.

Some cable networks have been releasing some good shows in the summer, but I think the vast majority of programming has been geared towards a massive full scale fall release.

I'll be interested to see this in action (literally, yay new programming year round)
 
It's already happened, this is just an "official" announcement of a concept that's been in practice for several years. The cable networks introduce new programs year round and the networks followed suit several years ago. Up until now it's been primarily reality shows like Big Brother that air in the summer, but there have been a few normal sitcoms and dramas mixed in for a while now.
 
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