I'm wondering... what would happen if a show (any show, not only SGU) gets cancelled mid-season, but the ratings of the last episodes suddenly skyrocket into the stratosphere?
I can't think of any time that actually happened [...]
Sounds familiar. But how are we supposed to explain that the later seasons of Earth: Final Conflict and Andromeda actually had viewers?Desperation drives much of my TV viewing. If there were more good shows around, I wouldn't stoop to watching shows I know are crap.![]()
Desperation drives much of my TV viewing. If there were more good shows around, I wouldn't stoop to watching shows I know are crap.
See I don't think I have ever watched anything out of desperation. I don't understand that at all. Heroes, I lasted two episodes and then went and did something more interesting.
I have to say Blood and Chrome had better be good or there'll be a loud wail heard over the interwebs.
And this is really sucks hard. With Supernatural and Fringe probably getting canceled too.
And what's wrong with that? If you ask me, the constant presence of TV shows with multi-year arcs that take forever to explain anything is getting tiresome. I don't mind some continuity between episodes, but damn it if you have to include two to three minute recaps at the beginning of every episode explaining everything that's happened so far, it's possible you may be making the show too complicated for its own good.
I love shows with long story arcs, but there need to be smaller pay-offs along the way. I actually believe Atlantis's first season was a great way to introduce the show. It had an exciting pilot where they discovered the city and learned why it was in its present circumstance. Throughout the season, we were introduced to various enemies and learned more about the city. And while that was happening, little things were building up to the awesome final episodes where the Wraith attack the city. It was a great mix of standalone and arc storytelling.
They picked up MST3K from whom?
I'm wondering... what would happen if a show (any show, not only SGU) gets cancelled mid-season, but the ratings of the last episodes suddenly skyrocket into the stratosphere?
I can't think of any time that actually happened, but if it did, I guess in theory the show would pique the interest of either the network where it had been airing, or another network, if they thought it was worth the bother to revive.
Sounds familiar. But how are we supposed to explain that the later seasons of Earth: Final Conflict and Andromeda actually had viewers?Desperation drives much of my TV viewing. If there were more good shows around, I wouldn't stoop to watching shows I know are crap.![]()
I'm just happy I'm not that desperate!
Desperation drives much of my TV viewing. If there were more good shows around, I wouldn't stoop to watching shows I know are crap.
See I don't think I have ever watched anything out of desperation. I don't understand that at all. Heroes, I lasted two episodes and then went and did something more interesting.
I have to say Blood and Chrome had better be good or there'll be a loud wail heard over the interwebs.
There's gotta be some little thing that makes me stick around. I liked a lot of the Heroes actors, and the premise. That was enough.
But Blood & Chrome may have frakked up fatally - they just cast an emo twerp as Bill Adama!He's not even Hispanic, good gort, how insulting is that, to recast the characters race? If I watch, it'll be only to root for the Cylons.
![]()
Sounds familiar. But how are we supposed to explain that the later seasons of Earth: Final Conflict and Andromeda actually had viewers?![]()
I'm just happy I'm not that desperate!
See I don't think I have ever watched anything out of desperation. I don't understand that at all. Heroes, I lasted two episodes and then went and did something more interesting.
I have to say Blood and Chrome had better be good or there'll be a loud wail heard over the interwebs.
There's gotta be some little thing that makes me stick around. I liked a lot of the Heroes actors, and the premise. That was enough.
But Blood & Chrome may have frakked up fatally - they just cast an emo twerp as Bill Adama!He's not even Hispanic, good gort, how insulting is that, to recast the characters race? If I watch, it'll be only to root for the Cylons.
![]()
Hispanic isn't a race.
Having some Spanish heritage doesn't make you a race. There wouldn't even be a distinction but for how racism American society is. If you're Hispanic, chances are you're white, you're just not the right type of white for some people...
What the fuck does any of this have to do with Stargate?
What the fuck does any of this have to do with Stargate?
SGU is identical to BSG, so therefore making news about BSG relevant to discussion about SGU's cancellation.
What the fuck does any of this have to do with Stargate?
SGU is identical to BSG, so therefore making news about BSG relevant to discussion about SGU's cancellation.
Identical? They might share some common traits but they're hardly identical.
Um, adult Bill Adama isn't hispanic - his character, if anything, is Tauron and they don't seem to have a single racial identifier.
The actor playing Adama has hispanic heritage, but that's irrelevant to the character.
What the fuck does any of this have to do with Stargate?
Louis Ferreira is Portuguese, so is he hispanic? Doesn't this term apply only to spanish descendent whites? He looks pretty white to me.
Anyway, back on topic, so SGU is cancelled, MGM has money spared for continuing the franchise, and it looks like from various other posts around here that Wright and Co. are intent on finishing SGU before they ever do another SG-1 movie, the SGA movie, or another series. Finishing SGU's story is top priority as far as they are concerned. I, for one, am glad that this is the case as I don't want SGU's legacy to be an unresolved cliffhanger season finale.
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