Assuming ENT had gone a full seven seasons, like the last three series before it, that would've taken it into the 2007-2008 TV season.
For those who don't recall, in late 2007 the writer's union, the WGA, was attempting to negotiate a new deal with the studios since the shows and movies they wrote were now being presented on new media like DVD's and online streaming and felt they deserve appropriate compensation. Negotiations failed and WGA members went on strike for several months before an agreement was finally reached in early 2008.
There were a number of consequences for TV series, with shows stopping production for months at a time. Once the strike ended, some shows like "LOST", "Cold Case", and "The Office" resumed production and finished out the season(albeit with a reduced number of episodes). Others like "Prison Break", "Heroes", "Chuck", "Pushing Daisies", and "The Sarah Connor Chronicles" did not start up again and no new episodes would air until the fall. (Sadly, in the case of the latter two shows, it made it much harder for them to build an audience and neither would get a third season).
How the producers of "Enterprise" would've dealt with this is particularly interesting, given that it presumably would've been in its last season. Would we simply have gotten a season shorter than the rest? Might they have produced some episodes for an abbreviated eighth season? Would they have simply dropped a planned two-to-three-episode arc or two (assuming they were still doing those at that point)?
What do you think?
For those who don't recall, in late 2007 the writer's union, the WGA, was attempting to negotiate a new deal with the studios since the shows and movies they wrote were now being presented on new media like DVD's and online streaming and felt they deserve appropriate compensation. Negotiations failed and WGA members went on strike for several months before an agreement was finally reached in early 2008.
There were a number of consequences for TV series, with shows stopping production for months at a time. Once the strike ended, some shows like "LOST", "Cold Case", and "The Office" resumed production and finished out the season(albeit with a reduced number of episodes). Others like "Prison Break", "Heroes", "Chuck", "Pushing Daisies", and "The Sarah Connor Chronicles" did not start up again and no new episodes would air until the fall. (Sadly, in the case of the latter two shows, it made it much harder for them to build an audience and neither would get a third season).
How the producers of "Enterprise" would've dealt with this is particularly interesting, given that it presumably would've been in its last season. Would we simply have gotten a season shorter than the rest? Might they have produced some episodes for an abbreviated eighth season? Would they have simply dropped a planned two-to-three-episode arc or two (assuming they were still doing those at that point)?
What do you think?