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Why isn't there more sci-fi on American TV?

TalkieToaster

Lieutenant
Red Shirt
Doctor Who is huge right now, and Canada has Continuum and Orphan Black, but to me there doesn't seem to be much sci-fi on American TV right now. Even "Syfy" has apparently decided that sci-fi is for losers(ironic, since nerd culture is more mainstream than ever). Why the reluctance by American networks to do more sci-fi shows?
 
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Mostly due to it being seen as niche, and expensive, I would think. The special effects and stunts required for a scifi show can vastly outstrip things like "reality" TV.
 
Actually there's a ton of genre shows on US television these days, although the majority of them are fantasy or supernatural. Here's a list from another thread, with over two dozen genre shows slated for network airings in the 2014-15 season. Of those, the specifically science-fictional ones include:

Agent Carter
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Arrow
Beauty and the Beast
Extant
The Flash
Heroes Reborn
The 100
Person of Interest


(I'm not counting Gotham, since I assume the more SF elements of Batman will be avoided.)

And that's just on the US broadcast networks, not counting cable. Of Syfy's scripted series in the works for next season, the ones that are more SF than fantasy are:

"Pax Romana" -- Based on Jonathan Hickman's graphic novel, "Pax Romana" follows a Special Forces team back in time to ancient Rome. The future soldiers are trying to alter history in order to avoid World War III by battling the Roman legions.
...
"Clone" -- From Robert Kirkman ("The Walking Dead"), "Clone" is based on a graphic novel and follows retired soldier Luke Taylor as he navigates a vast conspiracy centered on a secret biotech program. It all begins when Luke investigates his wife's kidnapping and a break-in perpetrated by his own clone.

"Letter 44" -- Another graphic novel adaptation, newly elected President Stephen Blades receives a letter from his predecessor, revealing a mission to the asteroid belt to investigate a secret alien construction project.
...
"Killjoys" -- This 10-episode space adventure will premiere in 2015. "Killjoys" follows a trio of fun-loving interplanetary bounty hunters who chase down deadly warrants in a system on the brink of a bloody and interplanetary class war.

So I don't see a shortage of science fiction at all. On the contrary, having grown up in a time when the number of genre shows on prime-time TV could be counted on one hand, I'm amazed to see such a glut of genre programming today. I don't think SF and fantasy have ever dominated the dial as thoroughly as they do now.
 
Really, TalkieToaster?

Odd that this question would be framed as comparing American broadcasters to British and Canadian ones, since the US-market produces a literal order of magnitude more such series. No, it's not fair to compare the UK/Canada with the US networks, who have billions more to spend on such things. That, however, only serves to highlight the strangeness of the question.

Indeed, the US appetite for and the networks' desire to produce such outings far outstrips most every other Western country's combined*, probably in multiplicity.

This question is kinda silly. I find it difficult to believe that anyone could look at the British or Canadian sci-fi landscape and conclude that there's a dearth of same on US television.

* = In quantity, though not necessarily in quality.
 
Doctor Who is huge right now, and Canada has Continuum and Orphan Black, but to me there doesn't seem to be much sci-fi on American TV right now. Even "Syfy" has apparently decided that sci-fi is for losers(ironic, since nerd culture is more mainstream than ever). Why the reluctance by American networks to do more sci-fi shows?
I live an America and watch Continuum and Orphan Black on American TV. I also recall watching Revolution, Being Human, Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, Grimm, Once Upon A Time, Defiance, Falling Skies, and Under the Dome, on American TV.
 
Doctor Who is huge right now, and Canada has Continuum and Orphan Black, but to me there doesn't seem to be much sci-fi on American TV right now. Even "Syfy" has apparently decided that sci-fi is for losers(ironic, since nerd culture is more mainstream than ever). Why the reluctance by American networks to do more sci-fi shows?
I live an America and watch Continuum and Orphan Black on American TV. I also recall watching Revolution, Being Human, Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, Grimm, Once Upon A Time, Defiance, Falling Skies, and Under the Dome, on American TV.
Revolution and Being Human have both been cancelled, and of the rest you mentioned, I'd say most of those are fantasy/horror.

I admit I'm not totally informed about what's on TV, so when I was talking about there being a lack of American sci-fi TV I was mostly going by popularity/buzz, not quantity. I'll admit the situation isn't as dire as I thought.
 
Doctor Who is huge right now, and Canada has Continuum and Orphan Black, but to me there doesn't seem to be much sci-fi on American TV right now. Even "Syfy" has apparently decided that sci-fi is for losers(ironic, since nerd culture is more mainstream than ever). Why the reluctance by American networks to do more sci-fi shows?
I live an America and watch Continuum and Orphan Black on American TV. I also recall watching Revolution, Being Human, Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, Grimm, Once Upon A Time, Defiance, Falling Skies, and Under the Dome, on American TV.
Revolution and Being Human have both been cancelled, and of the rest you mentioned, I'd say most of those are fantasy/horror.

I admit I'm not totally informed about what's on TV, so when I was talking about there being a lack of American sci-fi TV I was mostly going by popularity/buzz, not quantity. I'll admit the situation isn't as dire as I thought.
Its all the same, just with wizards instead of scientists. Aliens instead of demons.
 
There have been a lot of new sf series in recent years: Terra Nova, Revolution, The Starcrossed, The 100, The Forever People, Falling Skies, Defiance, Flash/Forward, Intelligence, etc. And coming up we've got Ascension, Extant, The Flash, and others

Granted, many are short-lived, but that's true of any genre. Most freshman sitcoms don't survive their first seasons either. Ditto courtroom dramas, historical dramas, etc.

If anything, we've officially reached the point where there are more sf/fantasy/horror programs than any one person can watch . . ..
 
If anything, we've officially reached the point where there are more sf/fantasy/horror programs than any one person can watch . . ..

Heck, we've even reached the point where a large percentage of genre shows on the air, perhaps even a majority, are ones I don't bother to watch, which is something I never would've believed possible for most of my life. It used to be that genre shows were so rare that I watched whatever I could find. Now I wouldn't have time to watch all the genre shows even if I wanted to.
 
Lots of shows from comedies to sci-fi in the United States don't even last a full season.

The way I understand British film/tv production (not sure if Canada works the same way), is most seasons are already in the can before an episode even airs. In the U.S., episodes are filmed sometimes mere months before their air dates so that writers can tweak the series based on viewer reaction. So if a show is taking a nose dive, it might get cancelled after only 4 or 5 episodes have aired.
 
^It's not really about how many episodes have been made. The production company still has to meet its contract and produce the agreed-upon number of episodes, but there's no guarantee the network will air them all. So a lot of those shows that have gotten pulled from the air after only a few episodes still had longer seasons, episodes that finally debuted overseas (e.g. American Gothic), in syndication or cable (e.g. Threshold), or on home video (e.g. Firefly). They may not get more episodes ordered beyond the initial contract, but they still have to finish the amount they've agreed on. (The quickly-cancelled CBS series Century City had its full season up on Hulu for a while, and I'm mad at myself that I put off watching them all so long that they vanished from Hulu before I got around to it.)

Note, though, that it's only the broadcast networks that cancel shows with episodes unaired. In first-run syndication and cable, the broadcasters purchase the entire season and are obligated to air every episode that's been produced -- although sometimes if a show's ratings are bad enough, they'll move it out of its prime-time slot and burn off its episodes in a late-night slot. For instance, the only series that Sci-Fi/Syfy has ever cancelled without airing the full season have been reruns it acquired from other networks or countries.
 
This is one of the reasons I no longer watch any Sci-Fi series on TV.

Two series I was having a blast watching: V (the reboot) and FlashForward. And just when they start getting good, BAM! cancelled?

Fucking networks, how am I supposed to trust your "brand new show" that it won't leave me hanging the same way or worse than before?
 
I still think it's a shame Police Squad! only got 6 tv episodes. The network's complaint was there was too much going on, forcing viewers to pay attention to it.
 
Doctor Who is huge right now, and Canada has Continuum and Orphan Black, but to me there doesn't seem to be much sci-fi on American TV right now. Even "Syfy" has apparently decided that sci-fi is for losers(ironic, since nerd culture is more mainstream than ever). Why the reluctance by American networks to do more sci-fi shows?

Falling Skies airs on TNT on June 22nd which is starting its 4th season. And while not strictly Sci-Fi, Under the Dome is also airing later this summer.
 
Doctor Who is huge right now, and Canada has Continuum and Orphan Black, but to me there doesn't seem to be much sci-fi on American TV right now. Even "Syfy" has apparently decided that sci-fi is for losers(ironic, since nerd culture is more mainstream than ever). Why the reluctance by American networks to do more sci-fi shows?
I live an America and watch Continuum and Orphan Black on American TV. I also recall watching Revolution, Being Human, Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, Grimm, Once Upon A Time, Defiance, Falling Skies, and Under the Dome, on American TV.
Revolution and Being Human have both been cancelled, and of the rest you mentioned, I'd say most of those are fantasy/horror.

I admit I'm not totally informed about what's on TV, so when I was talking about there being a lack of American sci-fi TV I was mostly going by popularity/buzz, not quantity. I'll admit the situation isn't as dire as I thought.
Defiance just started back up (or will soon). Falling Skies returns for S4 on June 22.

As stated, there's lots of Genre shows, and several SciFi shows. The weak point is Space Opera, but, there's a couple of those that are possibly coming. SyFy, actually, has recently stated they want to move more back into actual SciFi.
 
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