One thing that has been bugging me about TNG and DS9 is the fact that usually the last 2 episodes of the season, including the usually highly-anticipated season finale, have debuted in June.
This is the case for TNG with Seasons 3, 4, 5, 6, and also for Season 2 (though the writer's strike extended the season into July after starting 2 months late) and DS9 with Seasons 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and I think 7 too depending on the schedule of the local station.
Normally, tv seasons end in May. They used to end whenever the show ran out of episodes, which was usually sometime between March and July, but with shrinking season sizes over the '60s, it pulled it into March to May. By the late '80s, May as season finale month/sweeps month was already in place.
Nowadays, new episodes debut year-round (well, maybe not anymore in late December/very early January), and cable series commonly air in the summer months, but back in the '90s when all these Star Trek seasons aired, the only episodes that aired between June and August were cancelled series episodes being burned off or an occasional rare stray episode that never aired for whatever reason. Regular June episodes season after season was odd. Voyager & Enterprise aired on networks and they always wrapped up in May. Airing episodes in June seemed counter-logical as most in television avoided new programming in the summer months because of lower ratings because people were more likely to be doing things outside (well, that was the rationale), so airing episodes, including the season finale, in June seemed odd.
I was wondering, did anyone know why all syndicated Star Trek productions aired new episodes into June?
This is the case for TNG with Seasons 3, 4, 5, 6, and also for Season 2 (though the writer's strike extended the season into July after starting 2 months late) and DS9 with Seasons 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and I think 7 too depending on the schedule of the local station.
Normally, tv seasons end in May. They used to end whenever the show ran out of episodes, which was usually sometime between March and July, but with shrinking season sizes over the '60s, it pulled it into March to May. By the late '80s, May as season finale month/sweeps month was already in place.
Nowadays, new episodes debut year-round (well, maybe not anymore in late December/very early January), and cable series commonly air in the summer months, but back in the '90s when all these Star Trek seasons aired, the only episodes that aired between June and August were cancelled series episodes being burned off or an occasional rare stray episode that never aired for whatever reason. Regular June episodes season after season was odd. Voyager & Enterprise aired on networks and they always wrapped up in May. Airing episodes in June seemed counter-logical as most in television avoided new programming in the summer months because of lower ratings because people were more likely to be doing things outside (well, that was the rationale), so airing episodes, including the season finale, in June seemed odd.
I was wondering, did anyone know why all syndicated Star Trek productions aired new episodes into June?