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Posts tagged as “Behind the Scenes”

Hanging on

FX is the network that just can’t let go.
Why am I saying that?
The cable network just announced they’re planning to order additional episodes to the 2010 18-episode season of Rescue Me.
Also, there’s this Nip/Tuck thing where the whole show, including its series finale, has been shot for months now and they’re holding on to it until 2011!
This is crazier than SciFi with Battlestar Galactica‘s fourth season.

Obviously, they don’t want to let their “hit” shows die.
I’m also including Damages in the lot, hence the use of quotation marks. Despite poor ratings the show will still have a third season earlier next year and no changes will be made to garner more interest.
Even FX prez John Landgraf declared:

I was plainly disappointed with the ratings last year. It’s a really demanding show. You’re either in or you’re out. That type of programming doesn’t suit the current programing environment. Viewers are more interested in dating than marriage.

They can’t seem to face the fact that AMC is their own little Showtime…

As for the various premiere dates, Sons of Anarchy returns on Sept. 8, Philly on the 17th, Nip/Tuck on Oct. 14, Archer later during the fall, Damages‘ third season in January, and Lawman (not Lawnman) in March.

True that

As the Emmy shift fallout is continuing to make waves (#emmysfail was yesterday the second hashtag on the Twitter trend topic list), this little post by theonetruebix on the Whedonesque forum sums it all up nicely with various links leading to other articles talking about the important issues at hand here.
Will there be a boycott of the Emmy ceremony when the time comes?

There’s also some new details that have emerged regarding Avatar day (August 21).

Well, it’s actually more about what’s going on in France for Avatar Day but I would assume the same thing is going to go down elsewhere, including the States.
Basically, the 3-D 15-minute preview will be shown for free every 30 minutes, starting at 6PM.
More info should come out around the 19th.

In the meantime, Time Magazine has a great piece by Richard Corliss on Thirst and how it shows that “Vampires Beat Zombies”.

There’s also a couple of TV announcements with Bryan Singer producing and writing another Syfy mini following The Triangle in 2005. This 6-hour limited series will be about the 2012 myth and the Mayan calendar predicting the end of the world.
USA also revealed a huge list of projects, including a lot of cop shows.
Good Cop, Bad Cop, Busy Bodies, Gourmet Detective, you name it.
There was as well a show entitled Hotel Dix written and produced by…Tom Fontana.
Yes. A Tom Fontana show on the USA Network.

NBC sans Silverman (TCA edition)

In important TV news today was the NBC panel over at the TCA press tour.

What a hilariously sad presentation by Angela Bromstad that was!
A few highlights:

To start us off, Bromstad blames the lack of any real summer shows on the fact that they’re not “on brand”. In case you’re wondering what the hell is NBC’s brand, apparently it’s a mix of 30 Rock and Heroes.
And I’m serious. Case in point with this quote:
Heroes is on brand, Office, 30 Rock, SVU… those live up to the legacy of what NBC has always stood for.

What especially got a big laugh in the crowd was her comment on Ben Silverman:

I think this has always been Ben’s plan. It’s always been Ben’s plan to transition back to his entrepreneurial roots. He brought Paul and I in, and I think that was part of putting everything in place.

About Leno, Bromstad defines the show’s future success as depending on “a lot of things”. Are they going to declare victory whatever the ratings?
Clearly, the exec didn’t want to give straight-forward answers regarding Leno, Conan, or any of the shows. 
But supposedly, they’ll take into account the whole 52-week ratings for the show.
I’m assuming now that Leno is going to be on during the whole year 5 days a week.
This is utterly crazy.

Regarding the rest of the shows:
Friday Night Lights didn’t have the ratings “to justify [it’s presence] on the fall schedule,” so it’s premiering during the summer. But didn’t you just say that summer shows are not really “on brand”?

Explaining why Kings got canned, she said:

In a really crowded marketplace, people want to know what something is about.

She also described the show as too “difficult” and “high-brow”.
The show can’t be sold in 30-second spots so it gets canceled.
How can you sell Lost in 30 seconds?
Or…The Wire?

Be wary of Southland‘s new season. Apparently, some “creative adjustments” were made. Also, the show is on Friday nights so probably no third season.

Speaking of, Chuck will most likely also get a summer ending. NBC knows that the fans are now ready to follow the show wherever it is like good lil’ puppies… Or so Bromstad implies:

We have talked about ‘Is Chuck something that we allow to run over into summer and be part of our summer programming?’ […] It is something we can move around.

Nice touch there.
The show not being a replacement of Parenthood instead of Mercy really show the Peacock’s confidence.

Oh, and Heroes is supposedly “is doing exceptionally well creatively” without Bryan Fuller.

And last but not least, don’t except a second season for the future-event show Day One that premiers around the Olympic Winter Games next year.
Says Angela Bromstad:

We’ve always looked at ‘Day One’ as a big event for us and not necessarily a show that would be a returning for a second season. The serialized nature [of genre shows become] tougher to sustain on broadcast.

Did I forget to point out that Jesse Alexander says Day One is such a serialized show that he compares it more to Fringe, X-Files and even China Beach than, say, Lost or Alias?
And, indeed, the pilot really tends to imply that the show will be more “crisis of the week” à la Jericho (first half of Season One) than huge mythological cliffhangers.

NBC without Silverman seems all too familiar…