Is the Earth still round in this world?
The premise says there is science in that world - as a threat. Somehow, the world can run on magic, or be flipped around to run on science, which is what the bad guys want. How it is possible to have a world where the laws on which it is based can change, I haven't a clue, probably will just be part of the premise and we have to accept it's the way things are.
My hunch is that 17th Precinct will do the usual post-premiere swan dive, but it might turn out to be more watchable than Kings, which was severely hampered by having a block of wood cast in the lead role. One thing we know for sure about 17th Precinct, the cast can carry a show.
I hope this makes it.Wanna see SMG back in action on TV.
Looks like Fridays 8pm could be the most likely destination for the SMG drama. Hope it has better luck than Medium and Chaos![]()
I ws part of a discussion on this forum, about a sitcom, where two men posed as women, to move into an apartment complex.
http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2011/04/tv_pilots_2011.html#photo=25x84691
Ill avoid it
At best, I can see it pulling a Chuck - latching onto a smallish but loyal audience. Assuming NBC continues to have a pack of flop shows, maybe not-much-better-than-skiffy numbers will be good enough?True, the cast can. But, I wonder if a show like this will last on a network that might have a higher number demand than SyFy does.
And lastly, I love the way the article describes 17th Precinct as "a sci-fi detective show set in a magical city, starring Smallville's Kristin Kreuk." Good gort, with that cast, they highlight her? I forgot she was even in it!It's conceivable that the network, in such a shambles, could put on a new face by picking up more than half its 26 scripted pilots, about twice the normal slate of new shows.
"NBC this pilot season seems about being bold, making real bets on things that feel loud and don't feel so conventional," said Zack Van Amburg, one of two presidents of programming and production for Sony Pictures Television.
...
Image will be more than personal at Comcast, seen first and foremost as a TV company, than it was at G.E., known for lightbulbs and refrigerators.
"NBC's prime-time lineup is its public face," said Craig Moffett, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein. "Comcast won't get full credit for its purchase until the Peacock climbs out of the cellar."
Re 17th Precinct and Kings: the former at least has a much more straightforward and easily understood hook in its alternate world premise compared to the latter. I don't know if 17th Precinct will be successful, but it has a better shot than Kings in my opinion.
^^^
The overall concept of a world ruled by magic and where science is seen as dangerous is easy to grasp. There likely won't be a complicated magic system - nothing beyond the sort of thing people are used to seeing in Harry Potter movies - so that aspect shouldn't be a problem.
Here's the problem: people like procedurals because they like all the gritty details (at least that's how I understand it - I don't like the genre myself). If the details are made up and arbitrary, will people still care long enough to learn the new fake rules?
That sounds like a death sentence for a network show.I think the show will be more for people who are fans of genre.
Neither of which ever got ratings that a halfway respectable broadcast network would tolerate. (So it all depends on whether NBC becomes a halfway respectable broadcast network ever again).But, I do see the people who watch maybe Supernatural or the Dresden Files being interested.
For example, power plants... are literally plants that supply your home with power.
ABC: A reboot of Charlie's Angels starring Minka Kelly, another Shonda Rhimes drama, and the dubiously titled Good Christian Bitches seem like sure things, although the latter's title is a nonstarter. The head-scratcher here is Poe, which casts the dipso author as a private dick. Quoth the Raven: WTF?
CBS: J.J. Abrams reunites with Lostie Michael Emerson (Person of Interest), Sarah Michelle Gellar returns to the tube in Ringer, and Robert De Niro’s Rookies could pair nicely with on-the-bubble Blue Bloods. A comedy developed by ranty ESPN Radio jock Colin Cowherd? No shot.
NBC: The nerd herd squawked about Adrianne Palicki’s duds, ensuring buzz for David E. Kelley’s Wonder Woman. Period piece The Playboy Club will get sampling, and word on My Life as an Experiment has been terrific. A detective show based on a book of old fairy tales sounds Grimm indeed.
Fox: Kiefer Sutherland returns with the supernatural drama Touch, while Steven Spielberg's sci-fi epic Terra Nova has fanboys licking their chops. Simon Cowell's The X Factor is as close to a sure thing as you’ll see all year. Meanwhile, despite not having much luck with live-action comedy (Raising Hope is the exception), Fox has ordered a slew.
The CW: Zombies get the Twilight treatment in The Awakening, Kevin Williamson gets witchy with Secret Circles, and The O.C.'s Rachel Bilson relocates to Mayberry (Hart of Dixie). The angelic attorney strip Heavenly? Hellish.
That sounds like a death sentence for a network show.I think the show will be more for people who are fans of genre.
Neither of which ever got ratings that a halfway respectable broadcast network would tolerate. (So it all depends on whether NBC becomes a halfway respectable broadcast network ever again).But, I do see the people who watch maybe Supernatural or the Dresden Files being interested.![]()
Pushing Daisies was a detective/fantasy show, and struggled in the ratings despite being of very high quality in every way. I am very skeptical whether there are enough fantasy or sci fi genre fans to support the 10M viewership level needed for network survival.
For example, power plants... are literally plants that supply your home with power.
That sounds cute in a Pushing Daisies kind of way, but I doubt that sort of thing will get viewers to tune in every week.
10 million as the viewership level to support network survival? Did you post this from 10 years ago?...to support the 10M viewership level needed for network survival.
Powers is in development at FX, so it'll have a much better shot at success given that ratings standards are much lower on cable. I think we're transitioning to a point where more esoteric programming will have a better shot on the broadcast networks, too, as cancellation thresholds are drifting ever lower, but that sort of programming needs to be rooted in a clear premise and backed up with engaging characters played by a charismatic cast - one or both of those elements have been lacking in a lot of the SFF shows the networks have tried out in recent years. Also, the networks should try out more SFF shows that are episodic rather than fully serliazed, since episodic shows generally have a better shot at success on broadcast television.If it airs, I'll check it out. Like Grimm, Powers, Poe. It'll be sad if they have high expectations... they have to know they can't possible be realistic expectations.
10 million as the viewership level to support network survival? Did you post this from 10 years ago?
Powers is in development at FX, so it'll have a much better shot at success given that ratings standards are much lower on cable.
Also, the networks should try out more SFF shows that are episodic rather than fully serliazed, since episodic shows generally have a better shot at success on broadcast television.
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