Re: Terra Nova: 1x04 - Unknown Pathogen Plot 4223(A) - Discussion/Spoi
Well, it's frustrating not that the game went over into prime time it went over by several hours. I tuned in to watch the news which was supposed to start at 6:00 (Central) after the game and the game was only in the 7th inning!
It's a good thing that I do, sort-of, like baseball and could watch the last four innings of the game otherwise I would be pretty upset. The problem largely is that it's a situation most DVRs cannot compensate for so they're not going to record right. I had to set my DVR to "over-record" Terra Nova and House by an hour and it freaked out saying that it'd interrupt other recordings. A more dynamic system for dealing with these types of situations would be nice.
Further we live in a much more digital and dynamic age. You'd think TV stations could set something up where people who want to watch regular local, or network, program could take that option and people who want to keep watching the game can keep doing that. I'm sure it'd be possible for a local TV station in the digital world to have a "shadow station" to operate like that during times like this. (It wouldn't have to be active all of the time, just during games.)
Further situations like these discourage viewers of a new series and really mess things up. Joe Blow out there would have had no idea what was going on when he first tuned in (and if he didn't stay through a commercial where the announcers gave the updated schedule when they came back.) To it's credit, House did send out the change of schedule through it's Facebook feed.
It just makes things a little more complicated to have games like this run over and muck up a nights schedule and can't be any picnic for local news stations vying for viewers to lose not only their 5:00/6:00 news cast but also their 6:00/7:00 news cast (and in Fox's case their 9:00/10:00 local topics/magazine segment.)
Yellow Sub:
I agree. (Although this wasn't exactly a DNA re-writing pathogen just a memory mucking up one) The bigger problem that is going to stem from this is probably the same thing that largely hurt Voyager and Enterprise and TNG wrestled with for it's entire run and DS9 for part of it's early season. Episodic television, which in this day and age is foolish to do.
Voyager was made to be very episodic, one episode's events didn't lead into another's; the argument being that in syndication the episodes would make more sense seen out of order than they would if they were serialized. In today's market that's old-school thinking as syndication isn't as big as it once was and DVD sales are where it's more at. There's no reason to not make the show more arc-heavy. (And having the occasional wink-wink or nod to a under all theme or story line doesn't entirely count.)
Next week we'll never hear about this virus, the nickel-eating raptors again. We've never heard of the "slashers" from the first episode, or the effects of those events and so on. (What became of the two injured teenage red shirts?)
This show is being to episodic. Not everything needs to be as serialized as most other dramas are or have been, but it needs to take its own premise and theme a touch more seriously. What happened in this episode should have real impact on the characters, who they are and what they do. Next week it'll probably be like none of this ever happened.
On the baseball front--Playoff baseball games almost always last longer than regular games. They have longer commercial breaks between innings and team slow things down by overthinking between pitches and finding creative ways to use every single relief pitcher in one inning. I hate to see what would happen if someone didn't like baseball and tried to watch a playoff game.
Well, it's frustrating not that the game went over into prime time it went over by several hours. I tuned in to watch the news which was supposed to start at 6:00 (Central) after the game and the game was only in the 7th inning!
It's a good thing that I do, sort-of, like baseball and could watch the last four innings of the game otherwise I would be pretty upset. The problem largely is that it's a situation most DVRs cannot compensate for so they're not going to record right. I had to set my DVR to "over-record" Terra Nova and House by an hour and it freaked out saying that it'd interrupt other recordings. A more dynamic system for dealing with these types of situations would be nice.
Further we live in a much more digital and dynamic age. You'd think TV stations could set something up where people who want to watch regular local, or network, program could take that option and people who want to keep watching the game can keep doing that. I'm sure it'd be possible for a local TV station in the digital world to have a "shadow station" to operate like that during times like this. (It wouldn't have to be active all of the time, just during games.)
Further situations like these discourage viewers of a new series and really mess things up. Joe Blow out there would have had no idea what was going on when he first tuned in (and if he didn't stay through a commercial where the announcers gave the updated schedule when they came back.) To it's credit, House did send out the change of schedule through it's Facebook feed.
It just makes things a little more complicated to have games like this run over and muck up a nights schedule and can't be any picnic for local news stations vying for viewers to lose not only their 5:00/6:00 news cast but also their 6:00/7:00 news cast (and in Fox's case their 9:00/10:00 local topics/magazine segment.)
Yellow Sub:
I agree. (Although this wasn't exactly a DNA re-writing pathogen just a memory mucking up one) The bigger problem that is going to stem from this is probably the same thing that largely hurt Voyager and Enterprise and TNG wrestled with for it's entire run and DS9 for part of it's early season. Episodic television, which in this day and age is foolish to do.
Voyager was made to be very episodic, one episode's events didn't lead into another's; the argument being that in syndication the episodes would make more sense seen out of order than they would if they were serialized. In today's market that's old-school thinking as syndication isn't as big as it once was and DVD sales are where it's more at. There's no reason to not make the show more arc-heavy. (And having the occasional wink-wink or nod to a under all theme or story line doesn't entirely count.)
Next week we'll never hear about this virus, the nickel-eating raptors again. We've never heard of the "slashers" from the first episode, or the effects of those events and so on. (What became of the two injured teenage red shirts?)
This show is being to episodic. Not everything needs to be as serialized as most other dramas are or have been, but it needs to take its own premise and theme a touch more seriously. What happened in this episode should have real impact on the characters, who they are and what they do. Next week it'll probably be like none of this ever happened.