Sorry to bet the bearer of bad news but I just found this on Nikkin Finke's Deadline Hollywood Daily:
I really liked the show and the characters a lot. As much as I supported the writer's strike, I can't help but feel that it was the long hiatus that was the main factor in the audience going away.
I don't see any info on how many shows might be left to air or if it'll be effective immediately.
Jan
Ax Falls On 3 Shows In ABC Primetime
Today, Dirty Sexy Money, Eli Stone, and Pushing Daisies were all cancelled after posting season lows among adults 18-49 this week. But ABC did order five more episodes of its new series (based on the British drama) Life On Mars. All the axed shows were marginal at best, and two were interrupted by the writers strike. Warner Bros' Pushing Daisies was an expensive experiment. It began airing with big buzz but also had early budget and production problems from trying to sandwich 70 to 170 visual effects into every episode -- so many that people considered it an unsustainable show. ABC Entertainment prez Steve McPherson called Bryan Fuller with the news: "We gave it the best shot we could." This was also the show that ABC decided not to preempt for Barack Obama's half-hour campaign commercial which every other major network aired.
I really liked the show and the characters a lot. As much as I supported the writer's strike, I can't help but feel that it was the long hiatus that was the main factor in the audience going away.
I don't see any info on how many shows might be left to air or if it'll be effective immediately.
Jan