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Posted
NBC offers escape with new slate

Lineup heavy in fantasy, action series
By JOSEF ADALIAN

With the economy going in the tank, NBC appears ready to bet that viewers are eager for a heavy dose of escapism -- and as few repeats as possible.

Peacock programming chief Ben Silverman will unveil Wednesday his first schedule since taking over the network in June. While the net is keeping a tight lid on specifics, its decision to order projects straight to series, along with the condensed pilot season, makes it possible to outline some broad details of NBC's strategy.

Many of the series in contention for the Peacock lineup boast a fantasy or action element, including one show just added to NBC's 2008-09 roster: "Knight Rider," the Doug Liman-produced actioner whose two-hour backdoor pilot snagged solid ratings in February. Project has been given an episodic order and has been mentioned as a contender for a Friday night timeslot.

What's more, people familiar with NBC's 2008-09 strategy said the net is looking to produce as many hours of original programming as possible next season. That will mean several series will share the same timeslot in some cases.

But it's important to balance any guesses about NBC's new sked with one important caveat: Even Peacock insiders say what will be revealed this week will be written in pencil. Execs have made it clear they'll reserve the right to make changes in order to react to competitors' moves or if promising scripts or pilots take a wrong creative turn.

"We're selling advertisers platforms as opposed to specific shows," said Silverman's partner, NBC Entertainment co-chairman Marc Graboff.

He noted that nets frequently say one thing in May but then make major changes to their skeds over the summer. What's important is not that, say, "Knight Rider" airs Fridays at 9 but that the Peacock delivers some sort of action-drama in that timeslot.

"Advertisers don't care as much about a specific show as opposed to 'Am I getting the kinds of eyeballs I paid for?' " Graboff added.

As a result, NBC plans to guarantee advertisers tonal consistency in timeslots.

"If we say we have a one-hour drama going into a timeslot, and it turns out it's not up to snuff, we'll put on another one-hour drama we have in the pipeline," he said. "What we won't do is put on a reality show."

As for the tone of NBC's programming, Graboff said blue-sky fare makes sense right now.

"People need to escape. Ben's programming strategy is to find some shows where people can tune in and then mentally tune out. That's his directive, and I think you'll see that reflected in the programs."

Graboff spoke to Daily Variety last week in an interview about the Peacock's broader upfront strategy,before the net imposed a cone of silence designed to protect the details of Wednesday's announcements to advertisers and the media.

Exec said he expects to "roll out between seven and 10 new shows," including reality skeins. Graboff also hinted that NBC would announce some "special events" -- i.e., miniseries or limited series designed to further limit repeats.

In addition to the just-ordered "Knight Rider," escapist tag fits with many other projects NBC has already said it's committed to airing this summer and next season.

Anthology skein "Fear Itself" will air on Thursdays this summer, while "Robinson Crusoe" is described as an "adrenaline-charged" update of the classic tale.

Peacock also has a deal in place with a Canadian network for "The Listener," which revolves around a telepathic paramedic.

Another project on NBC's hot list is "Kings," which just landed Ian McShane as its star. Casting, plus the fact that NBC has ordered backup scripts, makes the show a logical bet to end up on Silverman's sked grids Wednesday.

Execs are also keen on "My Own Worst Enemy," a drama whose stock at NBC soared with the casting of Christian Slater in the lead. It's a sort of "Jekyll & Hyde" tale about a suburban man who leads a double life as a spy.

NBC has also shot pilots for a legal drama from director Barry Sonnenfeld and the Brett Ratner-helmed "Blue Blood." Scripts on agency hot lists include two Dick Wolf projects and a Dario Scardapane hour about a sexy former FBI agent that's being produced by Peter Berg and Sarah Aubrey.

On the comedy front, the Molly Shannon-Selma Blair half-hour "Kath & Kim" has already been ordered to series and seems a no-brainer for the net's Thursday lineup.

Pilots shooting soon include the Conan O'Brien-produced "Man of Your Dreams" and the Steven Weber vehicle "Zip."

As for the specific shape of the sked set to be revealed this week, Graboff hinted that NBC would be conservative in the fourth quarter.

"The backbone of our schedule will remain. We're not going to completely shake up things," he said.

Graboff did make it clear that volume would be a key part of NBC's programming strategy.

"Repeats don't work anymore, but we have a finite amount of money to spend," he said. "We're trying to do some things that are cheaper so that we can have more original programming."

Shows returning to NBC next season include "ER," "The Office," "Chuck," "Life," "The Biggest Loser," "American Gladiators," "Deal or No Deal" and "My Name Is Earl." Also a safe bet to be back: "Medium," "30 Rock," at least one "Law & Order" skein and "Friday Night Lights." First-year drama "Lipstick Jungle" could also return.

Read the full article at:
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117983169.html


Start Here

 
Posts: 2490 | Registered: 20 September 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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I'm hoping Knight Rider will air on Fridays... hopefully it will crash and burn there... but if NBC picks up 10 new projects, then they could pretty much air everything they have under a pilot order. I'm hoping they pick up all of their dramas (Kings, Robinson Crusoe, Blue Blood, The Philanthropist, My Own Worst Enemy, untitled Luke Reiter legal thriller), because they all sound pretty interesting. But one or two of those probably wont make it if they pick up a lot of reality shows.

Since NBC has really only casts about half of its shows, I expect the ones that already have full casts or at least leads, will air first. But shows that have already been ordered to series like Robinson Crusoe, so far have no cast.

And as for returning shows, I'm hoping NBC will pair Heroes and Medium, but they may easily try to launch a new drama after Heroes, which could be more successful. Also, they could launch one to two new dramas on Wednesday night too. But I think Tuesdays and Thursdays will pretty much stay the same.
 
Posts: 300 | Registered: 17 October 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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That's an interesting article, but I'm wondering how NBC plans to schedule year-round programming if they're only picking up 7-10 new shows. To do that, they would have to renew almost everything on their schedule, wouldn't they?
And I'm glad that this article says "Medium" is a safe bet to return, (though I've learned that Variety is not to be entirely trusted), but Yahoo is reporting that NBC is still "mulling the future of Medium". They are also saying that "Lipstick Jungle" looks "unlikely to return". I've also read elsewhere that NBC has been thrilled with Medium's performance this season, particularly in the demos, and that it is almost certainly returning. So who do you believe?

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080331/people_nm/nbc_dc

So what do you think? What are your bets for NBC's returning shows?




 
Posts: 93 | Registered: 19 February 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Picture of xwiseguyx
Posted Hide Post
I wish 1 vs. 100 would return. Then I'd be set with all of the shows I care about on NBC.


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Posts: 5891 | Location: Chicago, IL | Registered: 20 September 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
I wish_________________would return that way I would be set with all my NBC shows. Big Grin





 
Posts: 12696 | Registered: 23 September 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Picture of TV-aholic
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Also a safe bet to be back: "30 Rock,"
How in the world can this be a "Safe Bet" to be back?

The show has been averaging about 5 million viewers the first two years. I guess its time slot will be on that NBC promises only 4-5 million "eyeballs" Wink


===========================================================================


 
Posts: 15163 | Location: Indiana | Registered: 20 September 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by TV-aholic:
quote:
Also a safe bet to be back: "30 Rock,"
How in the world can this be a "Safe Bet" to be back?

The show has been averaging about 5 million viewers the first two years. I guess its time slot will be on that NBC promises only 4-5 million "eyeballs" Wink


Even if it only pulls 5 million, it averages about a 2.6 or 2.7 demo ranking and pulls in the rich folks so NBC's probably happy with it until they find something else to fill holes. I would move that and Scubs (which NBC is likely to still renew) and put them on Tuesdays at 9 after Biggest Loser where NBC comedies have done well before. That would allow for Earl and the Office to develop two more overrated comedies.





 
Posts: 12696 | Registered: 23 September 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Knight Rider? 30 Rock? Lipstick Jungle? FNL? Life? ER? Roll Eyes
NBC should once and for all get rid of these shows.
 
Posts: 348 | Registered: 29 February 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by mushu_jj:
quote:
Originally posted by TV-aholic:
quote:
Also a safe bet to be back: "30 Rock,"
How in the world can this be a "Safe Bet" to be back?

The show has been averaging about 5 million viewers the first two years. I guess its time slot will be on that NBC promises only 4-5 million "eyeballs" Wink


Even if it only pulls 5 million, it averages about a 2.6 or 2.7 demo ranking and pulls in the rich folks so NBC's probably happy with it until they find something else to fill holes. I would move that and Scubs (which NBC is likely to still renew) and put them on Tuesdays at 9 after Biggest Loser where NBC comedies have done well before. That would allow for Earl and the Office to develop two more overrated comedies.


Why is it OK for 30 Rock to pull 5 million on Thursday and not OK for Las Vegas to pull over 7 million on Friday?
 
Posts: 348 | Registered: 29 February 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by TV-aholic:
quote:
Also a safe bet to be back: "30 Rock,"
How in the world can this be a "Safe Bet" to be back?

The show has been averaging about 5 million viewers the first two years. I guess its time slot will be on that NBC promises only 4-5 million "eyeballs" Wink


Because Silverman thinks 30 Rock is the best show on television.
 
Posts: 689 | Registered: 05 November 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by CaseyM:
Why is it OK for 30 Rock to pull 5 million on Thursday and not OK for Las Vegas to pull over 7 million on Friday?
Las Vegas was a borderline show, but cost a lot to produce. Life got slightly better ratings and costs less to make so it is renewed and Las Vegas was cancelled.

30 Rock - people mention demo. Clearly, demo and critical acclaim are what the show has going, since viewer ratings are in the toilet.

Lipstick Jungle - another close call. One where I would have put the show in the cancel column.
 
Posts: 7543 | Registered: 16 November 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by TV-aholic:
quote:
Also a safe bet to be back: "30 Rock,"
How in the world can this be a "Safe Bet" to be back?

The show has been averaging about 5 million viewers the first two years. I guess its time slot will be on that NBC promises only 4-5 million "eyeballs" Wink


Because of the following:

"We're selling advertisers platforms as opposed to specific shows," said Silverman's partner, NBC Entertainment co-chairman Marc Graboff.

"Advertisers don't care as much about a specific show as opposed to 'Am I getting the kinds of eyeballs I paid for?' " Graboff added.

As a result, NBC plans to guarantee advertisers tonal consistency in timeslots.


NBC is guaranteeing a comedy, not how many people watch. It's about tonal consistency. Wink


Start Here

 
Posts: 2490 | Registered: 20 September 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Obveeus:
quote:
Originally posted by CaseyM:
Why is it OK for 30 Rock to pull 5 million on Thursday and not OK for Las Vegas to pull over 7 million on Friday?
Las Vegas was a borderline show, but cost a lot to produce. Life got slightly better ratings and costs less to make so it is renewed and Las Vegas was cancelled.

30 Rock - people mention demo. Clearly, demo and critical acclaim are what the show has going, since viewer ratings are in the toilet.

Lipstick Jungle - another close call. One where I would have put the show in the cancel column.


Granted Las Vegas costs a lot. NBC could've aired it on a better night and the ratings would have been higher. On the other hand Lipstick Jungle, Life and 30 Rock all have better timeslots than Las Vegas. So they should have higher ratings and demo than Las Vegas but that's not 100 % the case.
 
Posts: 348 | Registered: 29 February 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Zedman2:
quote:
Originally posted by TV-aholic:
quote:
Also a safe bet to be back: "30 Rock,"
How in the world can this be a "Safe Bet" to be back?

The show has been averaging about 5 million viewers the first two years. I guess its time slot will be on that NBC promises only 4-5 million "eyeballs" Wink


Because of the following:

"We're selling advertisers platforms as opposed to specific shows," said Silverman's partner, NBC Entertainment co-chairman Marc Graboff.

"Advertisers don't care as much about a specific show as opposed to 'Am I getting the kinds of eyeballs I paid for?' " Graboff added.

As a result, NBC plans to guarantee advertisers tonal consistency in timeslots.


NBC is guaranteeing a comedy, not how many people watch. It's about tonal consistency. Wink


And here I am thinking it is about how many people are watching the shows Roll Eyes
 
Posts: 348 | Registered: 29 February 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Zedman2:
NBC is guaranteeing a comedy, not how many people watch. It's about tonal consistency. Wink
I think NBC intends for 'tonal consistency' to mean 'consistent eyeballs', not consistent TV show genre. So, NBC is simply trying to assure advertisers that there will be good 18-49 demo numbers (and maybe good high income demo numbers) in that timeslot. So, if 30 Rock goes on break, it will be replaced by Celebrity Apprentice, not DoND.
 
Posts: 7543 | Registered: 16 November 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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