ONTD

10:12 pm - 02/08/2013

Has NBC Passed the Point of No Return?

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It's impossible to exaggerate just how bad a 2013 NBC is having. Over the last four weeks, the network has debuted three new series (1600 Penn, Deception, Do No Harm) and watched as viewers rejected each of them. New Tuesday comedies Go On and The New Normal, which seemed to be finding an audience in the fall, have seen their demo ratings cut nearly in half since losing their lead-in of The Voice. And then there's Smash, which NBC Entertainment chairman Bob Greenblatt last summer called "an unqualified success" and top lieutenant Jen Salke labeled "highly anticipated by its fans": It returned this week down nearly 40 percent from its May 2012 finale, and more than 70 percent versus its premiere a year ago. In less than 30 days, whatever slow momentum NBC seemed to be building since Greenblatt's January 2011 arrival has almost completely vanished. Once again, NBC seems destined to finish the season an also-ran, just as it has every year since Friends went away in 2004. It's time to ask the question: Is it possible to save NBC, or has it passed the point of no return?

Yes, the media are always rushing to write obits for broadcast networks: Before the dream season when ABC launched Desperate Housewives, Grey's Anatomy, and Lost, that network was declared a hopeless mess; prior to Leslie Moonves's arrival at CBS nearly twenty years ago, some were sure the Tiffany network was permanently tarnished. "It's a cyclical business," TV analysts love to declare, and they've generally been right. But that TV truism was coined in an era before hundreds of cable networks, DVRs, VOD, and Emmy-caliber series that arrive thirteen episodes at a time and exist in a cloud somewhere. ABC's 2004 megarally came back when barely 7 million TV homes had DVRs; now nearly 50 million do. Netflix Instant didn't even exist. And while original programming on basic cable has been a factor for years now, past network comebacks occurred before cable shows started outdrawing everything else on broadcast (as AMC's The Walking Dead did this winter among key demo groups). It was far easier to climb out of the Nielsen basement when there was just a handful of legitimate competitors. Now NBC is fighting for eyeballs at a time when millions of viewers don't even watch TV on TV.

This should become clear in late March, when The Voice and Revolution both return. NBC's ratings will see an immediate lift on Mondays and Tuesdays, but the network will likely remain a dead zone for most of the rest of the week. For this, NBC can still blame Jeff Zucker and Ben Silverman: Even though both left the Peacock long ago, their legacy of seeking short-term fixes and not investing in quality programs has left NBC without a basic foundation on which to stand. Take a look at CBS, currently TV's No. 1 network in both viewers and adults under 50. It's actually had a disastrous year in terms of launching new shows (Partners and Made in Jersey are dead; Vegas now loses half its NCIS: Los Angeles lead-in). But it has such a sound structure, with established and very long-running successes on almost every night, that it's been able to brush off these failures.

Read the rest at the Source.
fauxkaren 8th-Feb-2013 10:26 pm (UTC)
Everyone was going into season 4 of Community expecting it to be canceled, so lol. I bet the season 4 finale is going to have a sense of FINALE FINALE to it and then if they get renewed it'll be really weird.
ms_mmelissa 8th-Feb-2013 10:30 pm (UTC)
I think it would be either horrible or really, really awesome because everyone will have (hopefully) graduated. And no Pierce already puts them at an advantage.
fauxkaren 8th-Feb-2013 10:34 pm (UTC)
Idk how they would really manage it though.

Bc they'd need to come up with some reason for the study group to regularly be spending a lot of time together. But Jeff would be working as a lawyer. And the other members of the group would be working at other jobs and... yeah...

They'd need to find something to center the group around.

And then you KNOW they'd probably try to shoehorn Dean Pelton and Chang in.

It'd be a mess.

Maybe season 4 wont' end with graduation and instead it'd end with the end of the first semester of senior year because when they were writing the episodes they were thinking it was going to run from Oct-Jan.
ms_mmelissa 8th-Feb-2013 10:48 pm (UTC)
If they get renewed for season 5 they'll have to figure something out. The best way to solve it imo is:

1) Have the group decide to keep taking 1 course a semester just as a fun thing they do together to stay in touch and have the show spin off from there, so that they all have real life stuff but are anchored by the course.

2) Forget about Greendale completely and just have everyone working in little clumps together for whatever contrived reasons. Hell, as long as they have Shirley they can have her open a restaurant and it becomes the new group hang out.
jaimelannister 8th-Feb-2013 10:51 pm (UTC)
Yeah, that's what I'm hoping (re: just the first semester). The finale is the Christmas episode, so maybe??

Then if they have a fifth season they can stretch out the other two semesters.
kimit 8th-Feb-2013 10:39 pm (UTC)
They filmed the finale before Chevy left the show
ms_mmelissa 8th-Feb-2013 10:45 pm (UTC)
Yeah, but I'm saying if they got a season 5 he wouldn't be back which would (IMO) be an advantage because he's such a buzzkill.
jaimelannister 8th-Feb-2013 10:34 pm (UTC)
18. In fact, the finale was rewritten to ensure it wasn’t necessarily a season finale. “I’ll spoil a teeny bit, but nothing that actually ended up in the episode,” writes Bobrow. “Early on, we had this vision, a really heartfelt tearjerking montage that we knew we wanted to do if it was the season ender. A kind of flash-forward, but way more than that. It was going to make you all cry rivers of tears. And we wrote a version of it. Then, two things happened. One, we realized that to do it right it would take like five whole minutes, which we really couldn’t spare. And two, NBC just didn’t want to do a final FINAL montage because what if there’s a Season 5? It’s a weird moment as a writer when you find yourself wanting to do an ending but being told, well this might not be the ending. Anyway, point being, we did not end up doing that tearjerker montage. But we did do a kickass finale. One that could be a very satisfying end to the whole journey, but one that also could just be the end of another year at Greendale. You’ll see.”

from: http://www.flavorwire.com/369522/x-things-we-learned-about-community-season-4-from-the-writers-reddit-ama

ALSO: Megan Ganz says she wasn't completed happy with how it turned out. AND two versions were shot.

Edited at 2013-02-08 10:36 pm (UTC)
fauxkaren 8th-Feb-2013 10:40 pm (UTC)
I have no idea how to feel about this. IDK IDK.

COMMUNITY JUST MAKES ME REALLY ANXIOUS NOWADAYS.
jaimelannister 8th-Feb-2013 10:44 pm (UTC)
I haven't watched the preview clip for next week but I saw gifs and they made me a bit more hopeful.

I just want my show back, you know?
fauxkaren 8th-Feb-2013 10:49 pm (UTC)
Yeah the gifs from the preview clip made me laugh so... I'm trying to be optimistic!
jaimelannister 8th-Feb-2013 10:52 pm (UTC)
Me too
squirtodile 8th-Feb-2013 10:47 pm (UTC)
Yeah I was thinking the same. Like, I love Community and all but if the season doesn't turn out to be somewhat good I don't think I want renewed.
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