The depiction of the pilots wasn't the greatest. I don't know what the reality was back then, but these days airline pilots have massive experience requirements. You don't get to even be a first officer or flight engineer without a large number of pilot-in-command hours under your belt on noncommercial aircraft, so the age of the pilots was a bit unlikely. Also, the "they wanted a real pilot" line when the Captain showed up may have been intended as bantering but it didn't play well considering their mutual experience.
I hope the show sticks around long enough to address Kennedy's death and having a black attendant.
Maybe this show does belong on cable, in the sense that it can't pull network-survival numbers. But if a smart, entertaining, classy show can't make it on broadcast, then maybe broadcast itself is the problem (its business model only allows the survival of the most broad-taste types of shows).Pan Am (1.9/5, 6.4 million) tumbled 27% in 18-49 from last week, becoming the latest new drama this season to drop to dangerously low ratings levels.
Definitely. I was going to say in an earlier post that this show is too good for TV, but I didn't want to jinx it.If Pan Am and Terra Nova also go down in flames like Playboy Club did, that's a very bad sign for broadcast networks.
On the morning news the locl TV critic (is that still a television job?) was discussing the season and referenced Pan Am as having tumbling ratings, but it's "safe" in his eyes because enough people are DVRing it to watch later. He said that Sunday was far too crowded as a viewing night and people are shifting towards comedies and police procedurals because you can watch them without thinking; then you record the FUN stuff for watching when you can sit and enjoy them. He also referenced Fringe as being successful BECAUSE it's on the Friday death slot, but half of the audience DVRs it. Apparently, the networks have finally woken up to the value of +7 ratings and of streaming media.
Truth?
Mark
He also referenced Fringe as being successful BECAUSE it's on the Friday death slot, but half of the audience DVRs it. Apparently, the networks have finally woken up to the value of +7 ratings and of streaming media.
Truth?
I watched...and out of all the new shows this season I think this is one I might actually stick with. The whole CIA spy story may get tiresome fast, but at least it's only one facet of the show.
It's funny...I didn't really like Mad Men because of the blatant sexism and everything that went along with the time period in ad offices (and it was deadly dull anyway, but that's beside the point), but I didn't mind it so much on Pan Am.
I liked the scene at the end where the pilots were looking at the table of stewardesses and commenting that they're a new breed of women and they didn't even realize it along with the shot of the young girl watching them admiringly the next scene. That and the bravery shown during the flash back to the Cuba evacuation. It's putting a good spin on how women were overcoming limitations and stereotypes while working within them.
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