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...and people here think that ER 'needs' to be cancelled.
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quote: Originally posted by Obveeus: ...and people here think that ER 'needs' to be cancelled.
When you factor in cost of what it is to make ER and what it costs to make a new show that could probably pull those types of numbers then it is time to retire. Those numbers are no better than the two telecasts of Raines, which I have no doubt was much cheaper. It's time to move on. I suppose next we'll be hearing about how ER fans won't watch NBC if its cancelled. As if anyone's watching right now the way it is...
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They might pull in worse numbers in the winter/spring than FOX does in the fall. quote: Originally posted by himymfan22: NBC will be in bigger trouble than it already is when football is gone.
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| Posts: 15770 | Location: Indiana | Registered: 20 September 2006 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by mushu_jj: quote: Originally posted by Obveeus: ...and people here think that ER 'needs' to be cancelled.
When you factor in cost of what it is to make ER and what it costs to make a new show that could probably pull those types of numbers then it is time to retire. Those numbers are no better than the two telecasts of Raines, which I have no doubt was much cheaper.
I liked Raines, but its demo number was a full point lower than what ER got, so don't pretend it did just as well in the timeslot. Take a good hard look at Bionic Woman, Chuck, Life, Journeyman, and Cane before making the claim that NBC can come up with a new show that would do as well as ER is doing.
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quote: Originally posted by Obveeus: quote: Originally posted by mushu_jj: quote: Originally posted by Obveeus: ...and people here think that ER 'needs' to be cancelled.
When you factor in cost of what it is to make ER and what it costs to make a new show that could probably pull those types of numbers then it is time to retire. Those numbers are no better than the two telecasts of Raines, which I have no doubt was much cheaper.
I liked Raines, but its demo number was a full point lower than what ER got, so don't pretend it did just as well in the timeslot. Take a good hard look at Bionic Woman, Chuck, Life, Journeyman, and Cane before making the claim that NBC can come up with a new show that would do as well as ER is doing.
The lead in was a full point lower in the demo and about 2 million less in viewers too.
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Definitely worse...and probably worse than last spring was. quote: Originally posted by TV-aholic: They might pull in worse numbers in the winter/spring than FOX does in the fall. quote: Originally posted by himymfan22: NBC will be in bigger trouble than it already is when football is gone.
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| Posts: 7642 | Location: Houston, TX | Registered: 19 November 2006 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by Bruce: A tale of long-term poor development, the premature dismantling of decent ratings producers, a lack of core genre leading to an almost bizarre array of different offerings that can't be cross promoted, leading to a loss of base audience, leading to a fading brand, ending in viewers having to think what number the NBC affiliate is on their remote......
NBC's problems can't be said any better.
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| Posts: 1831 | Location: New Jersey | Registered: 24 March 2007 |    |
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quote: Originally posted by himymfan22: quote: Originally posted by Bruce: A tale of long-term poor development, the premature dismantling of decent ratings producers, a lack of core genre leading to an almost bizarre array of different offerings that can't be cross promoted, leading to a loss of base audience, leading to a fading brand, ending in viewers having to think what number the NBC affiliate is on their remote......
NBC's problems can't be said any better.
As always, great analysis. I would also add, an idiot in charge for several years who little by little broke down what was a TV whale into a TV minnow.
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quote: Originally posted by Bruce: A tale of long-term poor development, the premature dismantling of decent ratings producers, a lack of core genre leading to an almost bizarre array of different offerings that can't be cross promoted, leading to a loss of base audience, leading to a fading brand, ending in viewers having to think what number the NBC affiliate is on their remote......
Too true. Most of NBC's present-day problems were kickstarted into high gear by Mother Zucker in the 2002-2003 season. He went on a cancellation brigade that season ("Providence"), played musical chairs with the schedule (one ingenious move had Tuesday's lineup preempted so he could show repeats of Thursday's), railroaded a potential Saturday hit by changing its time slot at the eleventh hour and 86ing all promotion for it ("Hunter 2003"), treated a 7-season veteran like complete garbage ("Just Shoot Me"), and gave extremely short leashes to several promising shows ("Mister Sterling," "In-Laws"), all of which were scheduled badly. The ratings fell right after that.
-- I agree.
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