Premium cable includes shows like The Sopranos, Deadwood, Big Love, Californication, that Larry David show, In Treatment, Hung, Queer as Folk, The L Word, Stargate SG1, Jeremiah, Odyssey 5, Weeds, Rome, The Wire The Tudors, True Blood. There are basic cable shows like Breaking Bad, Extras, Stargate SG1, Outer Limits, Damages, The Closer, Burn Notice, The 4400, It's always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Shield and so on. I doubt anyone has seen all of them, but most people have seen enough to get an idea of their basic level of quality.
It is usually claimed that cable has more innovative programming.
Recalling broadcast programming, though, such series as Cop Rock, Wonderfalls, Pushing Daisies, Kings, In Justice, The Evidence, FlashForward, The Book of Daniel, Wonderland, Jericho, Brisco County and other series had their debuts on broadcast networks. Most of these series are quite innovative, so innovative they couldn't win a mass audience and were canceled. Other innovative series that did win a massive audience (even if popularity makes you forget how fresh they were upon arrival,) were shows like Hill Street Blue, ER, CSI, the original Law & Order, Picket Fences.
Cable has more realistic, aka vulgar language, and cable has more sex. And cable doesn't have commercial breaks. But most cable programming is written as though it has to break for commercials! That alone makes me seriously question whether cable programming is really so much more innovative than broadcast.
Any discussion?
It is usually claimed that cable has more innovative programming.
Recalling broadcast programming, though, such series as Cop Rock, Wonderfalls, Pushing Daisies, Kings, In Justice, The Evidence, FlashForward, The Book of Daniel, Wonderland, Jericho, Brisco County and other series had their debuts on broadcast networks. Most of these series are quite innovative, so innovative they couldn't win a mass audience and were canceled. Other innovative series that did win a massive audience (even if popularity makes you forget how fresh they were upon arrival,) were shows like Hill Street Blue, ER, CSI, the original Law & Order, Picket Fences.
Cable has more realistic, aka vulgar language, and cable has more sex. And cable doesn't have commercial breaks. But most cable programming is written as though it has to break for commercials! That alone makes me seriously question whether cable programming is really so much more innovative than broadcast.
Any discussion?