More people would have watched = more advertising $$.
How the hell would they have trimmed the budget of SGU? They already sit around on the set in complete darkness and whine about their lives for 42 minutes.![]()
Actually, they only do that for 40 minutes followed by a 2 minute montage of basically the same thing.
According to Robert Carlyle, the budget was $2 million per episode.SG-1 and Atlantis years ago cost $2.5 million an episode, Universe was probably closer to $3.5 million if not even more.
More people would have watched = more advertising $$.
No way did SG-A SG-1 ever go above 2 million a episode and Universe costing 3.5 million per episode, on what ? most of it is set on the frickin ship.
More people would have watched = more advertising $$.
Except quality is entirely subjective. So when people say write a better show, what they really mean is something with more lowest common denominator appeal.
More people would have watched = more advertising $$.
Except quality is entirely subjective. So when people say write a better show, what they really mean is something with more lowest common denominator appeal.
More people would have watched = more advertising $$.
Except quality is entirely subjective. So when people say write a better show, what they really mean is something with more lowest common denominator appeal.
No, they don't.
Sorry, but no Stargate show ever filmed was too intelligent or sophisticated for the average television viewer - that's not in the Franchise DNA, and pretentiousness about "dumbing it down" is just that.]
When we say "write a better show" we mean exactly that - smarter, more entertaining, worth making more than a casual effort to watch in order to kill an hour.
When we say "write a better show" we mean exactly that - smarter, more entertaining, worth making more than a casual effort to watch in order to kill an hour.
A set of criteria that are entirely subjective.
SGU has a much larger cast with more high profile actors,
SGU has a much larger cast with more high profile actors,
Larger cast, yes, but higher profile actors? Robert Carlyle is of high profile, yes, but the rest of the main cast isn't really high profile. Hell, I hadn't even heard of most of them before watching SGU.
SGU has a much larger cast with more high profile actors,
Larger cast, yes, but higher profile actors? Robert Carlyle is of high profile, yes, but the rest of the main cast isn't really high profile. Hell, I hadn't even heard of most of them before watching SGU.
SGU has a much larger cast with more high profile actors,
Larger cast, yes, but higher profile actors? Robert Carlyle is of high profile, yes, but the rest of the main cast isn't really high profile. Hell, I hadn't even heard of most of them before watching SGU.
SGU has a much larger cast with more high profile actors,
Larger cast, yes, but higher profile actors? Robert Carlyle is of high profile, yes, but the rest of the main cast isn't really high profile. Hell, I hadn't even heard of most of them before watching SGU.
Ming-Na
Lou Diamond Phillips
Plus guest stars like Rhona Mitra and Robert Knepper probably don't come cheap either.
More people would have watched = more advertising $$.
Except quality is entirely subjective. So when people say write a better show, what they really mean is something with more lowest common denominator appeal.
Even in my most cynical moments I would never have imagined such a thing. People are dumb but not quite that dumb.Sorry, but no Stargate show ever filmed was too intelligent or sophisticated for the average television viewer
Cable = niche. Stargate isn't serving the needs of its niche audience by being the right kind of niche show. Here are a couple examples of more successful strategies:No one said anything about the show being too intelligent or sophisticated, it's just too niche.
Cable = niche.
I think the issue is the recent trend of seeing relationship melodrama become the defining feature of so called "dramas." That sort of thing doesn't really work well in scifi settings because there's usually more interesting things going on in the background and because scifi fans don't really care for relationships being the most prominent aspect of a show. It also doesn't help if shows don't establish the characters as likable and competent (which SGU failed at) and just throws this stuff at you without allowing you to know the characters first (which SGU and Caprica did).Cable = niche.
Sci-fi character drama = niche. The only two other examples I can think of are Caprica and Defying Gravity, both of which were cancelled in their first season. There's an argument for Lost I suppose, but that show avoided the tropes than turn the mainstream off, and probably wouldn't register as genre in many people's minds, let alone science fiction/fantasy.
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