Surely people are looking at this the wrong way - talking about "Whedon fans" and whether there are enough of them? There's a reason this guy has a group that can be called Whedon fans - he's really, really good at writing television programmes that people care about. Its not just that his "fans" will accept any old shit that he writes - its that he hasn't yet let them down. That's why its bizarre to anyone that knows his work that a network can't see the asset that they have in him.
Or, Networks haven't wised up to what a liability he is. Let's face it. Whedon is the prime example of the phrase "Failing your way to the top". His first series had a less than stellar final two seasons (by his own fanbase's opinion)
Actually, the majority opinion of Season 7 is that, while it wasn't Buffy's BEST offering, it was still good enough. I don't agree with that opinion, but that's besides the point.
, and a spinoff. The spinoff gets cancelled due to low ratings (antiquated as the system is, ratings still do matter)
As Lindley already said, ANGEL was spun off of Buffy during that series' fourth season, way back in 1999. Also, as Lindley said, the reason that the WB gave for cancelling ANGEL had nothing to do with ratings, and everything to do with some exec deciding to make the boneheaded decision to take the network in a 'new' direction.
and he gets another series.
FOX approached Joss with an offer of another series because of the success he'd had for them with BtVS and ANGEL, which was - and still is - legitimate.
That series gets cancelled after one season,
Regardless of what the FOX executives said, they cancelled Firefly for one reason and one reason only: they got blinded by greed, and when the series didn't turn out the way they thought it was going to, they covered their own asses and cancelled it. The ratings were an
excuse, not a reason.
and he gets a movie greenlit. The movie tanks at the boxoffice,
Mary Parent recognized what the executives at FOX didn't, and gave Joss the opportunity to return to the Firefly universe because of its untapped potential. Also, Serenity didn't tank; in the end, it broke even. While breaking even can't necessarily be considered a success, it's also at the same time not a failure, either.
and after a period of time, he gets another series.
You're conveniently overlooking the fact that Joss wasn't even looking to get back into television at the time he came up with the idea for Dollhouse. Eliza Dushku had just signed a development deal with the new FOX regime, and invited him to lunch so she could get some career advice from him. During their lunch date, they started talking, and the idea for DH just came to Joss out of the blue. Because the idea was created specifically to accomodate Eliza and her deal with FOX, he went with her to pitch the idea to the network, and Kevin Reilly liked what he heard to the point that he greenlit the series based solely on Joss and Eliza's pitch.
Anyone else with this kind of track record wouldn't even work for craft services, let alone be a showrunner. This revelation regarding Dollhouse shows that someone up top is finally wise to his sleight of hand con game. But still, are execs still that attentive to his flock. The sooner they realize that the Cult Of Whedon has as much impact as a gnat on a donkey's balls, the sooner they can put this guy out to pasture or, at the most, keep him in comics and allow him to wallpaper his house with Whedon worship letters.
Like Lindley, I don't know what your problem with Joss is, but, if you're going to take a stand against somebody (which is your perogative), you should try doing some fact-checking. Otherwise, you look like a complete idiot.