The Future of Television?
May. 8th, 2007 01:02 pmLOST has an end-date.
Forget that giving them a guaranteed three more seasons is extremely generous given the way the show's been not performing for most of its second and third seasons. This is actually a brilliant idea.
Because this is exactly what I like about the way serials are done in other genres, mediums, and (thank you BBC!) countries. There's more you can do when you have the end in sight to set it up and get yourself there without wasting time. For a show like 24, obviously you can do that season-by-season because the plot specifically binds characters in a set time. The action and the seasonal closure of it offset and obscure the fact that this is an endless drama (although not lately, from what I've heard). Having the end game planned means no convoluted who's-really-spying-on-whom shit like Alias devolved into. Means no impossible it's-aliens-except-where-it's-the-government-but-everyone's-really-crazy-anyway X-Files muck.
I think every pitch session to networks should include the span of the show as part of it. Sitcoms obviously bend this rule, but for serialized dramas? Having a distinct, discreet package should be more attractive to studios, not less. Yes, you lose the sure thing if it's a hit and you want to keep it going forever, but on the other hand, if it's a hit and you know you've got three-four seasons max to it, think of how much you can blackmail advertisers for. Imagine if the LOST guys had stated their optimal seasons-long deadline as six years two-three years ago when they pitched it. By the time it was the hot thing of the season, advertisers would probably have paid Super Bowl-worthy prices for ad time. When they were then told (on the down low, of course; deniability is key) that such ad space would be a limited thing, maaaaaaan, the monies! The monies!
But really, I like this for the necessary improvements to pacing that it would require of television shows. Fewer wasted episodes or filler with the way that specific plot developments could be then fixed into the schedule and then the rest built around them. This would make flexibility difficult, but that's what these stupid-ass, useless hiatuses are good for, right?
Forget that giving them a guaranteed three more seasons is extremely generous given the way the show's been not performing for most of its second and third seasons. This is actually a brilliant idea.
Because this is exactly what I like about the way serials are done in other genres, mediums, and (thank you BBC!) countries. There's more you can do when you have the end in sight to set it up and get yourself there without wasting time. For a show like 24, obviously you can do that season-by-season because the plot specifically binds characters in a set time. The action and the seasonal closure of it offset and obscure the fact that this is an endless drama (although not lately, from what I've heard). Having the end game planned means no convoluted who's-really-spying-on-whom shit like Alias devolved into. Means no impossible it's-aliens-except-where-it's-the-government-but-everyone's-really-crazy-anyway X-Files muck.
I think every pitch session to networks should include the span of the show as part of it. Sitcoms obviously bend this rule, but for serialized dramas? Having a distinct, discreet package should be more attractive to studios, not less. Yes, you lose the sure thing if it's a hit and you want to keep it going forever, but on the other hand, if it's a hit and you know you've got three-four seasons max to it, think of how much you can blackmail advertisers for. Imagine if the LOST guys had stated their optimal seasons-long deadline as six years two-three years ago when they pitched it. By the time it was the hot thing of the season, advertisers would probably have paid Super Bowl-worthy prices for ad time. When they were then told (on the down low, of course; deniability is key) that such ad space would be a limited thing, maaaaaaan, the monies! The monies!
But really, I like this for the necessary improvements to pacing that it would require of television shows. Fewer wasted episodes or filler with the way that specific plot developments could be then fixed into the schedule and then the rest built around them. This would make flexibility difficult, but that's what these stupid-ass, useless hiatuses are good for, right?
Re: Love it...
Date: 2007-05-08 06:30 pm (UTC)Which in no way forgives BSG for going on an eight month hiatus instead of the usual one only about half as long, but I do understand how LOST's break was more obnoxious for being mid-season than just a long season-to-season break (I don't think BSG's counts as your average season break, so they're stinky anyway).
Re: Love it...
Date: 2007-05-08 06:54 pm (UTC)Re: Love it...
Date: 2007-05-08 07:09 pm (UTC)I still maintain that networks need to have a two-season schedule, where summer is not just a vast wasteland of reruns and game shows, and then you could have me sucked into TV watching all the time! Heroes is done? Oh, okay, let's turn on the TV for the summer show! A lot of breakthrough hits got their starts over the summer or by lasting past the usual sweeps period on the TV schedule (I'm thinking of The 4400 or Prison Break). Plus, with less competition, slower dramas, especially large-cast ensembles might get a better chance, so it would be a great way to recoup losses on shows that maybe failed the premiere test and give them a second run, see if the summer audience likes them, and then maybe get more made (at the very least, you get more money out of those eps by airing them again).
Re: Love it...
Date: 2007-05-08 07:22 pm (UTC)Know why that is? I've been told that it's for the same reason that Sunday afternoons are full of shite programming. Summer is rerun season because the networks don't want to compete with all the sports that run in the summer. Like BASEBALL. Pft. I know, sounds illogical, but with so many games over the season they don't want to lose ratings because die hard sports fans are watching "THE GAME" instead.
And they wonder why I always ask the cable company for an anime channel.
Re: Love it...
Date: 2007-05-08 07:37 pm (UTC)That's why I relied on cable for the summer, but you're right--soon as a show gets ratings, they bump it back into a more competitive (in all sense of the word) time/season slot for the increased exposure, deliberately thumbing their noses at the people who gratefully made it popular because there was NOTHING ELSE ON.
This is all a conspiracy to make me go out and play in the sun. I know it.
Re: Love it...
Date: 2007-05-08 08:45 pm (UTC)Agreed, most of the summer, I like to watch pretty much ONLY cable TV. It just hurts when all of a sudden the stuff I LOVE is gone and on hiatus for EIGHT months at a time. It makes me want to *gasp* read a book!!
Don't get me started on hating sports broadcasts. I STILL haven't forgiven the Yankees for pre-empting the A-Team and Simon & Simon reruns when I was little. Fucking 5 HOUR rain delay.
Re: Love it...
Date: 2007-05-08 08:49 pm (UTC)I suppose I could read more. Nah, I'll probably just up my Netflix allowance...