Well nobody's saying it's been a commercial failure. And if they're talking about an S5 despite the appalling Nielsens - even by NBC standards, they're now marginal - that means they're raking in the bucks from DVD, foreign sales or something.Again, though, no one can rationally call any SF series that has made it to Series 4, with a 5th more likely all the time - thanks, Jay? - a complete failure
If only it had made it to "series" 4. You just reminded me of the unhappy fact that like Star Trek, Heroes had the potential for a spinoff franchise. Those don't come along every day.

Why? It's open-ended. The basic dramatic tension is unresolvable: mutants struggling to control their powers so they can live with the world and live with themselves. Like Star Trek, it's a premise that doesn't depend on certain characters, certain places or the resolution of a problem like "get off the island" or "find Earth." Like Star Trek, it could have gone many seasons and spun off several series. When most series suck, that's too bad but with Heroes, we lost more than just one show.I do think that the concept of Heroes was one that I couldn't see stay strong for longer than a season.
I can't, probably because if the producers are stretching a premise beyond the breaking point, I'll bail on it.This is for a different thread, but I bet most people could name a number of series that might have been stronger creatively, and perhaps more successful commercially, if their producers and networks had had the discipline to say 13 episodes, no more or 22 episodes or 2 seasons, and that's it.

I will however, agree that premises have inherent run-lengths built into them. Chuck, 24, BSG and Dexter are examples of shows that have narrowly defined premises that demand shorter runs; Heroes and Star Trek are at the opposite end of the spectrum (and shows that open-ended are very rare).
BSG was the right length. If Dexter runs for five or six seasons, tops, that will be a good length and as much as we could have hoped to be sucked out of that premise (more than I would have expected, too). Chuck has changed its premise to hang on for another season, which I think has damaged the show but hey, it's still well worth watching so another year or two won't hurt anything. And even if I thought it was too damaged to be worth watching - and the first two episodes really made me wonder - I'll just stop watching and not begrudge other people their right to continue to see the show. 24 is past its expiration date and Jack needs to die this year.
I don't care how the episodes are divvied up per season. The real issue is that the story runs 100 episodes and then stops. Or 50, or 500. Depends entirely on the premise.
DS9 was the right length. If they'd gone to S8, then I would have started to complain. ENT never even got off the ground, since it was a misfire from the start. They needed to rethink the premise before knowing how long it should run for. A true Birth of the Federation/Romulan War premise could have merited the full seven season run. V has a plain-vanilla approach that suggests it will wear out its welcome quickly and the producers better not plan for grand things - it'll be lucky if the ratings hold up enough to get it an S2. With a different approach, it would have the potential for several seasons.Some shows that come to mind for me include both DS9 and Enterprise in the Star Trek arena, the Terminator series, and much as I'd like to see Morena Baccarin's Louise Brooks hair bob for years on end, I'd be just as happy to see the new V planned out for 30 episodes and that's all.
Outside of the Star Trek culture, nothing of the sort exists. Few Americans give a flying fribble how long any show runs for - that's Hollywood's problem! Americans will of course raise holy hell if their favorite show is cancelled, but that's entirely idiosyncratic.Only in America, really, is there the culture of "entitlement" that seems to demand that all shows must run for 7 years to be considered successful.
Nobody cares how long shows run in the abstract, only that they keep getting more of the specific shows they like. And they'll lobby against shows they don't watch, I dunno why, because they think it will free up a timeslot to protect their favorite shows or maybe on general principle that "stuff I don't watch shouldn't exist"? On other boards, Chuck fans routinely complain that Heroes hasn't been cancelled, as if that would protect Chuck in some way.
No it wouldn't. because most viewers do not follow news about shows. They would not realize there's an end date so the end date would not make them more likely to watch. What makes them likely to watch is 1) if the series gets good promotion and a good time slot and 2) if the series gives them what they want to see at any given time. The decision to watch or bail on a show is an episode-by-episode thing. TV is not important enough to most people for them to bother planning future viewing strategies.I think having predetermined endings for series would, among other things, eliminate the "cancellation panic" fans continually face regarding their favorite shows.
YAY!Hell, I read somewhere that Lost might not end this season after all.

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