Is it ever going to be back on NBC?
Is it ever going to be back on NBC?
If NBC's lineup continues to be a train wreck and assuming Merlin is a dirt-cheap buy for them, I could see it returning as summer fodder.
Here are the ratings. Crappy, but pretty stable. I think a lot depends on how cheap the show is for NBC. They could always use the ratings to hammer the price down even lower.
Is it ever going to be back on NBC?
If NBC's lineup continues to be a train wreck and assuming Merlin is a dirt-cheap buy for them, I could see it returning as summer fodder.
Here are the ratings. Crappy, but pretty stable. I think a lot depends on how cheap the show is for NBC. They could always use the ratings to hammer the price down even lower.
Given those ratings I have to wonder if BBCA will outbid NBC. NBC clearly could pay more, but given those ratings why should they?
There's an article in today's Washington Post that's rather on point. NBC is trying to rewrite the "rules" of television, basically. They're not looking for ratings wins. They're looking to fill the hours cheaply, fully expecting low advertiser dollars. Plugging a show like Merlin, which they're buying on the cheap, puts a quality, polished program in the schedule. They don't need great ratings for it. They don't even need good ratings for it. The show performed to expectations. Like the new Jay Leno show, Merlin is the model for NBC's future.Given those ratings I have to wonder if BBCA will outbid NBC. NBC clearly could pay more, but given those ratings why should they?
I finally got BBC America last year, and outside of 2 am occasional airings of Absolutely Fabulous that were a pain in the ass to DVR, there hasn't been anything on the channel I like. If Merlin comes to the US again, I wonder if it would be better off on stupid Syfy-another channel I'm not thrilled with recently. There at least the NBC numbers look like Gold.
There's an article in today's Washington Post that's rather on point. NBC is trying to rewrite the "rules" of television, basically. They're not looking for ratings wins. They're looking to fill the hours cheaply, fully expecting low advertiser dollars. Plugging a show like Merlin, which they're buying on the cheap, puts a quality, polished program in the schedule. They don't need great ratings for it. They don't even need good ratings for it. The show performed to expectations. Like the new Jay Leno show, Merlin is the model for NBC's future.Given those ratings I have to wonder if BBCA will outbid NBC. NBC clearly could pay more, but given those ratings why should they?
The conundrum is that more people get NBC than they do BBCA. Maybe it would have a greater audience there, but BBCA simply isn't in every American household.
The conundrum is that more people get NBC than they do BBCA. Maybe it would have a greater audience there, but BBCA simply isn't in every American household.so navie.
if only US shows were sold on the idea that, its better to be on a channel with more viewers, than to sell it to the highest bidder.
again you are being navie, many US shows have been removed from large audience on freeview TV channels to air on the Sky One PayTV platform, 24, Nip/Tuck, Lost, Prison Break & House to name a few.The conundrum is that more people get NBC than they do BBCA. Maybe it would have a greater audience there, but BBCA simply isn't in every American household.so navie.
if only US shows were sold on the idea that, its better to be on a channel with more viewers, than to sell it to the highest bidder.
Shows are sold to the highest bidders. Networks can pay more based on how many people will watch the show. Excluding premium channels that have high subscription fees, the more viewers that a network has, the more it can and will spend on a show. If NBC could expect 10 million viewers it would outbid every cable channel. If it's only getting 1 million viewers then cable channels have a chance to outbid depending on how many of those viewers are expected to have the cable channel also.
Remember, Merlin isn't a new show trying for the largest audience possible anymore. It had a full season on NBC and knows what its audience is/will be.
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