I still don't buy the contention that shorter is some guarantee of quality. All you need to do is compare the regular-length O
nce Upon a Time, which is entertaining every week, with shorter-run misfires like
The River and
Alcatraz, which were never entertaining regardless of their length.
If a network needs to have a 22 or 26 or whatever episode season for financial reasons, they need to greenlight shows with big, open-ended premises like
Once Upon a Time. The "secret" of that show's success is simple - they haven't limited themselves with a small premise.
They can bring in characters from any fairy tale, or even Greek mythology, Lewis Carroll, etc. There's really no end to the tales they can spin out of this huge cosmos, and the possibilities have
really expanded since the Mat Hatter episode (no spoilers, but people who've seen it will know what I mean.)
Alcatraz had a too-limited format, combining boring cop show tropes we've seen a million times with a vague, hand-waving mystery that turned out to be nothing by the end of this season, and gave no indication that it would improve in future seasons, so it's no great loss that there will be no future seasons.
Grimm has been a modest success by taking the cop show tropes and subordinating them entirely to a
OUAT type ever-expanding mythology. It's not so painful to have to sit through the cop show stuff if we're also going through a fascinating process of discovery. And actors are a big factor here as well, with both
Grimm and
OUAT benefiting from some very charismatic performances.
It's interesting to see whether networks have learned their lesson at all, about the need to greenlight premises that have some legs on them.
Here's where you can find lists of all the network pilots.
There's the
OUAT/Desperate Housewives strategy - an open-ended situation, basically the soap format where you take (hopefully interesting) characters and just build stories around them. There are a lot of them this season:
666 Park Avenue, Devious Maids, Americana, Scruples, Gilded Lilys,
Beautiful People, The Frontier, The Selection.
There's the
Grimm strategy (which was also the
Alcatraz strategy, so this is very execution-dependent), where you take a cop show and add genre elements. Not so many of that this year -
Gotham qualifies.
Do No Harm is the doctor-show equivalent.
And then there's the ever-popular and 100% fatal
Lost strategy, which has never succeeded since
Lost went off the air, yet keeps getting resurrected - base everything on some epic mystery and hope the audience doesn't start to feel like they're being played yet again.
The Last Resort, Revolution, Midnight Sun, Zero Hour, Dark Horse.
The new trend in shows about serial killers is the one that puzzles me. That seems like an inherently limiting topic.
Dexter got away with it for several seasons, but it had the advantage of being fresh (telling the story from the killer's point of view) and having short cable seasons, and it's recently become clear that the premise is worn out and the show is running on fumes.
Cult, Hannibal and the one with Kevin Bacon are in this category.
Or you could go for the CBS strategy: endlessly regurgitate the formats that have worked in the past.
Making one 26 episode series is cheaper than making two 13 episode series. Economies of scale.
But is cheaper better? A 13-episode season lets you put more time, care, and money into each installment, giving a better result, which could get stronger ratings. Sometimes a larger investment nets a larger payoff. Plus, you know, quality.
Cheaper is much better when it comes to renewal time. That 13 episode series better have much better ratings than the less expensive 22 episode one that the network might keep instead. But how can a 13 episode series get better ratings when it's going 39 weeks out of the public eye and the audience could very well forget it or be distracted by another show in the meantime? That's a huge handicap to have to overcome in such a competitive process.
The answer is, choose a premise and cast the roles in such a way that it's possible to make 22+ strong episodes.