This was from an earnings conference call with verifiable information - and it's not the sort of information that would draw site traffic like mention of a specific show in any event.TV by the Numbers also did a report on how Fox was interested in doing Firefly TV movies.
They make things up to get hits on their site.
This morning, the top Comcast execs in an earnings conference call admitted to Wall Street that NBCUniversal, which the company just purchased, is a fixer-upper and, in the short term, a money pit. NBCU chief Steve Burke says the company plans to spend $200 million more this year on NBC’s primetime schedule than General Electric did last year when it owned the network. (Burke is looking at 21 pilots, about the same number NBC ordered in 2010.)
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Meanwhile, Burke also says he plans to spend $100 million more this year on programming NBCU’s cable networks. He expects a “very strong” upfront ad sales season.
There are always well written shows that viewers ignore. There's no solid link between quality and ratings (though we'd all wish there was). The problem with broadcast is a business problem, not a creative problem.Money isn't the issue, story / writing is.
I'd like to see it too but the premise seems gimmicky, hinging entirely on the mystery of why the people from the 30s (or whenever) came back. That's the kind of gimmick that can quickly wear out. Whereas Locke & Key has a comic book behind it, so there's a plotline that's already proved itself worth reading. I'd have more confidence that it wouldn't run into the ground quickly.
The Civil War drama series (as yet untitled) developed by Carlton Cuse for ABC didn't progress beyond the script stage. That's the end of it unless it's redeveloped for the 2012/2013 season.Isn't there another Civil War era show in the pilot stages? I think it was somehow involved with writers/producers from Lost?
What are the odds that you'd see two new shows this season set in the 1860s? crazy.
The Civil War drama series (as yet untitled) developed by Carlton Cuse for ABC didn't progress beyond the script stage. That's the end of it unless it's redeveloped for the 2012/2013 season.Isn't there another Civil War era show in the pilot stages? I think it was somehow involved with writers/producers from Lost?
What are the odds that you'd see two new shows this season set in the 1860s? crazy.
There's another post-Civil War western that did get ordered to pilot, namely NBC's Reconstruction.
Not everyone wants to commit the time and focus that following a serialized show requires. Episodic shows are easy viewing and viewers can dip in and out of watching them on a weekly basis as the mood suits or other engagements allow.I just don't get why audiences eat up procedurals these days--there is no surprise--you introduce guest stars, there's a crime usually a murder and the investigation leads to a group of suspects before the person you think behind it turns out to be behind it. Plus you have a limited number of crimes to cycle over and over. Then there is the usual male/female sexual tension that drags on until it finally happens in the final waning years of a series.
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