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Merlin's Return?

maybe not just for Merlin, but if the US networks aired more UK imports, BBC Am might start getting aggressive in getting the rights to them, at some point making the channels seem worth subscribing to
First, Merlin has more chance of being seen on NBC than on BBC America. NBC is available in 99 percent of American homes. BBC America is somewhere around 60 percent.

Second, cable and satellite is not a la carte, though the companies would love that; they could charge more for each channel individually than they could when they bundle them into tiers. (That seems counter-intuitive, but it's not. Someone not watching a channel is subsidizing the people who do on their tier. If you had to pay for each channel individually, the cable companies would claim that they need to charge more because it costs more to serve each channel separately.)

Third, while there may be that sort of cultural shift in imported programming, we're at the beginning of the process. Imports simply haven't made broadcast network television here in years. Perhaps if imports take root, then we might see what you're talking about with series "migrating" to other channels in the 500-channel universe. But it's unlikely. An American network would be likely to tie up the rights for an imported series for several years, either outright or with options on first-refusal.

Basically, wamdue, this is a long way of saying, "I get what you're saying, but it doesn't work like that." :)

Channels here aren't "Al la carte" either but I guess tiers over there are more expensive than the "Genre" packages here, 1 package costs £18 (I think) then for the next 5 packages it's an extra £1 per package, then it's movie channels and sports that cost a lot.

But that is how it works here, mainstream channel makes a show popular. 24, House, Lost for example, then when the rights contract runs out Sky/FX/Living/whoever buy it and stick it on their channel hoping to draw more viewers/subscribers (in the case of Sky since they own the pay TV market more or less here).
 
Some of the news wires on the IMDB -not always reliable, of course- they say its doubtful Merlin will get picked up again by NBC. The UK articles, of course, paint Merlin as a serious break out hit set to return this weekend. Go Fig.
 
to be fair if the show is not a hit for NBC you cant expect them to keep it just because it has been a hit for the BBC and other places in the world.
 
Agreed. But between 3 and 5 million summer viewers is somewhat respectable. I'm out of the loop with the big numbers, but don't most shows average less than 10 million viewers?
 
looking at ratings on wikipedia, it would seem that it started well 5.46 million, had it not dropped below 4 million (which it did in the last 4 episodes) I would figure NBC would keep it.

Still I think if I had been the person at NBC who makes these decisions, I think I would have given it a 2nd chance, assuming there wasnt a bidding war with anyone.
 
They could have trebled there numbers if they could have just bared down against JK's lawyers with a tag like "There were boy wizards playing it hard well before that Potter kid."
 
No thread on the first ep of Season 2? I saw it online. I wonder how that factors into viewership? What's the tally across the pond? I really liked this opener. Things were perfect, but it was still witty and amusing.
 
No thread on the first ep of Season 2? I saw it online. I wonder how that factors into viewership? What's the tally across the pond? I really liked this opener. Things were perfect, but it was still witty and amusing.
There's a thread in TV&Media only a few of us posted in there though.

As for ratings
Merlin (BBC One)
Also on Saturday, family drama Merlin returned for its second series, airing in a pre-Strictly slot at 6.40pm. It went on to average 5.08m (27%) over 45 minutes, the show's second lowest audience to date. It did beat ITV1's The Cube, however, and was comfortably in range of the series one average of 5.74m (25.4%).
 
Thanks guys. I was looking for the fancy titles like Season 2, Ep 1 and all that. For supposedly being such a global hit as the BBC likes to tout Merlin, I can't find many fan sites about it. There are other boards about but most of the threads are drivel like 'Arthur or Merlin who's hotter?' and 'I hate Gwen ppl'. Some of the language is so cheap and slangly that I can't understand it anyway!
 
Merlin was a rather large flop in the US. The only thing that may save it on NBC is if the license cost was very low from BBC.

Also, I'm pretty sure only BBC is airing season 2 right now, so UK residents are the only ones who could be commenting right now.
 
Still I think if I had been the person at NBC who makes these decisions, I think I would have given it a 2nd chance, assuming there wasnt a bidding war with anyone.
Bidding war? Whiskey tango foxtrot? American networks don't do "bidding wars." :)
 
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