Minor apocrypha though it may be, I find the uncertainty that seems to be accepted revolving the cancellation of Lost In Space's 4th season to be of compelling interest. Not so much that the show's still considerable audience, myself included, was denied the opportunity for a continuation and consequently proper finale sometime down the road, but because an interesting, though perhaps unlikely mechanism to accomplish this was apparently never considered.
LIS was cancelled in April 1968. From what I've read and understood, the actual rationale for the action is not clearly known or just hasn't been revealed by anyone directly involved. There are commonly accepted alternatives which are usually bandied about.
1. CBS wanted to cut the already considerable budget, one which been bumped up even more by virtue of increased cast salaries, if nothing else.
2. Irwin Allen wanted to increase the production budget. Space was still a respectable draw and it's possible that creative ideas Allen had for the fourth season would have argued for an increased price tag.
3. Certain CBS executives, especially the man in the big chair, loathed the show and had always done so. If declining ratings couldn't readily be used as the sticking point, folderol or misdirection about the reality of the budget as a driver would certainly have been convenient.
4. Not that I have encountered this being cited, but I wonder how much Allen was committed to actually keeping the production going. He was always thinking, always moving and had a history of multiple shows either in development or on-air simultaneously, but perhaps his attention was tightly drawn to his next project, the less said about the better, but one that was premiering in the fall.
What this well known speculation has led me to ponder is another direction Allen could have taken if he was genuinely serious about producing the 4th season. I have not seen anything mentioned along these lines, but couldn't Allen have pursued shopping Space to another network, specifically NBC? It had already been a few months since Trek's return had been made public. I'm either not well versed enough or have forgotten whether NBC claimed that there in fact, had never been any clear decision to have given the show the axe, either before or after the Trimble's remarkable campaign. Regardless, if Allen had approached the network, wouldn't it have been at least worthwhile for the execs there to consider the idea of programming a sci-fi block that might have had the chance of bolstering Trek's well thought of, but too small audience demographic, by having the considerably more highly rated Space as a lead-in? I'd have to think that Allen would have forcefully argued for that as a novel and winning strategy.
However disdainful and loathsome the wide majority of ST fans might have seen any association with LIS, I think there would have been some carryover of viewers that would have brought some pickup to the former's abysmal ratings, regardless of the Freiberger Effect. More significantly, the network might have thought that with a clever and catchy promotional campaign ("---day's are out of this world,etc"), this combo would have provided the opportunity to capture more of the eyes that were making sci-fi in films an increasingly popular genre, rather than their likely expectation/hope that Trek was something they were carrying but would almost certainly turn out to be DOA. This chance would have been further enhanced by having an appealing chaser like Night Gallery following the pair at 10 (yes, I know that didn't show up until the following year).
These are fanciful musings I know but a path that I don't think would have been out of bounds or dismissed out of hand, if for no other reason than the fact that even then there was a history of shows succeeding after changing ports of call. It would just be interesting to know what Irwin Allen's genuine thoughts about LIS were at this point. Maybe he would have at least broached the idea of a network move, but was concerned that the show's continued presence might take away some luster from his soon to arrive new project that I believe he thought was going to be a real winner. Or that catastrophe might occur if by some chance they wound up running against each other in the same time slot.
Finally though, such a pairing eventually might very well have not escaped the black hole of winding up on "Death Night" with the probable result that both would bid adieu in "69. Personally, I definitely wanted another year of Space, even though I've read of plans that sound like it would have resulted in a return to the silliness of Season 2. At least there would have been an actual closeout rather than the junk that we literally last saw. To say nothing of witnessing one more year of the maturation of Angela Cartwright!!! To my eyes, she had already put Marta Kristen in the shade.
Thoughts, criticisms, scorn????
LIS was cancelled in April 1968. From what I've read and understood, the actual rationale for the action is not clearly known or just hasn't been revealed by anyone directly involved. There are commonly accepted alternatives which are usually bandied about.
1. CBS wanted to cut the already considerable budget, one which been bumped up even more by virtue of increased cast salaries, if nothing else.
2. Irwin Allen wanted to increase the production budget. Space was still a respectable draw and it's possible that creative ideas Allen had for the fourth season would have argued for an increased price tag.
3. Certain CBS executives, especially the man in the big chair, loathed the show and had always done so. If declining ratings couldn't readily be used as the sticking point, folderol or misdirection about the reality of the budget as a driver would certainly have been convenient.
4. Not that I have encountered this being cited, but I wonder how much Allen was committed to actually keeping the production going. He was always thinking, always moving and had a history of multiple shows either in development or on-air simultaneously, but perhaps his attention was tightly drawn to his next project, the less said about the better, but one that was premiering in the fall.
What this well known speculation has led me to ponder is another direction Allen could have taken if he was genuinely serious about producing the 4th season. I have not seen anything mentioned along these lines, but couldn't Allen have pursued shopping Space to another network, specifically NBC? It had already been a few months since Trek's return had been made public. I'm either not well versed enough or have forgotten whether NBC claimed that there in fact, had never been any clear decision to have given the show the axe, either before or after the Trimble's remarkable campaign. Regardless, if Allen had approached the network, wouldn't it have been at least worthwhile for the execs there to consider the idea of programming a sci-fi block that might have had the chance of bolstering Trek's well thought of, but too small audience demographic, by having the considerably more highly rated Space as a lead-in? I'd have to think that Allen would have forcefully argued for that as a novel and winning strategy.
However disdainful and loathsome the wide majority of ST fans might have seen any association with LIS, I think there would have been some carryover of viewers that would have brought some pickup to the former's abysmal ratings, regardless of the Freiberger Effect. More significantly, the network might have thought that with a clever and catchy promotional campaign ("---day's are out of this world,etc"), this combo would have provided the opportunity to capture more of the eyes that were making sci-fi in films an increasingly popular genre, rather than their likely expectation/hope that Trek was something they were carrying but would almost certainly turn out to be DOA. This chance would have been further enhanced by having an appealing chaser like Night Gallery following the pair at 10 (yes, I know that didn't show up until the following year).
These are fanciful musings I know but a path that I don't think would have been out of bounds or dismissed out of hand, if for no other reason than the fact that even then there was a history of shows succeeding after changing ports of call. It would just be interesting to know what Irwin Allen's genuine thoughts about LIS were at this point. Maybe he would have at least broached the idea of a network move, but was concerned that the show's continued presence might take away some luster from his soon to arrive new project that I believe he thought was going to be a real winner. Or that catastrophe might occur if by some chance they wound up running against each other in the same time slot.
Finally though, such a pairing eventually might very well have not escaped the black hole of winding up on "Death Night" with the probable result that both would bid adieu in "69. Personally, I definitely wanted another year of Space, even though I've read of plans that sound like it would have resulted in a return to the silliness of Season 2. At least there would have been an actual closeout rather than the junk that we literally last saw. To say nothing of witnessing one more year of the maturation of Angela Cartwright!!! To my eyes, she had already put Marta Kristen in the shade.
Thoughts, criticisms, scorn????