Re: Fox to Fringe fans: 'We have no intention of screwing with the sho
I think most shows have solidified their fanbase by the end of their first season...
That doesn't negate what I said. Just because a show is being regularly watched by a solid, loyal fanbase does not mean that it isn't
also being watched by casual viewers who only tune in occasionally and aren't looking for anything more than a self-contained story to occupy them for an hour. The viewing audience is not monolithic. Different types of people watch TV in different ways.
and I doubt being all mythology like LOST is really going to hurt a show like Fringe.
Actually it's hurt a lot of shows over the years. Look at all the series that have tried to emulate
Lost's heavy serialization in recent years. Look at how many of them have failed. Too much serialization
does alienate viewers -- maybe not the loyal viewers, but definitely the more casual viewers who make up a large segment of the viewing audience. Even
Lost and
Heroes were subject to complaints for being so hard to get into.
Now, I'm not saying this is right. I'm not saying serialization is bad or that an episodic approach is better. I'm not talking opinions, I'm talking the facts on the ground. Whether you or I like it or not, the fact is that a lot of television viewers are alienated by heavy serialization. And network executives aren't running a charity, they're running a business, and so they have to try to appeal to the largest possible number of viewers in order to maximize their profits. It's not an issue of what we believe should be the case, it's an issue of what concretely is the case.
Did doing filler help nBSG ratings? I don't think so. Did switching from episodic to an arc in S3 of ENT do it any harm? I would argue no-if anything it helped keep viewers it was losing.
It's just oversimplistic to assume you can make a show succeed by doing only
one thing, by embracing only
one factor. Reality is not that elementary. You can't say that the same formula is guaranteed to succeed or fail in every case. There are too many factors that influence ratings, too many different degrees and ratios of serial and episodic elements, to be able to reduce the issue to a simplistic either-or question like that.
From what I've heard, apparently
Fringe does have a fair-sized complement of viewers who do indeed enjoy the standalone episodes. Just because you don't agree with them doesn't mean they don't exist or that FOX should ignore them.