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NBC Cuts “Day One” Again

October 5, 2009 By Mike Hickerson 7 Comments

In another cost-cutting measure, NBC has trimmed its initial episode order of next year’s “Day One.”

The series was given a 13 episode order by the Peacock network when it was given the green light last year. That’s now been trimmed to four episodes that NBC will air on the “wait and see” approach. If the episodes are successful, NBC will order more. If not, those four episodes will be it.

The series, from “Heroes” scribe Jesse Alexander, follows a group of survivors in a post-apocalyptic world. NBC had already begun to cast doubts on the series earlier this year when the network said that the series would probably only run for one season.

Two episodes are currently completed and Alexander will now work to make sure the next two tie up loose ends and don’t leave audiences hanging too much.

The producer tried to put an optimistic spin on things, pointing out that “Battlestar Galactica” started out as a mini-series and then went on to run for four seasons.

Filed Under: TV News

Comments

  1. Sam says

    October 5, 2009 at 8:43 pm

    Are we suffering from a batch of execs who graduated 10 years ago with the philosophy that any show that doesn’t gain an audience after 1 or 2 episodes is screwed?

    When are network bigwigs going to learn from the creators of television programming that in order to gauge a show’s success it needs at least 13 episodes and plenty of support advertising from the network?

    Jeez guys….this isn’t rocket science.

    Reply
  2. VyseN1 says

    October 5, 2009 at 8:50 pm

    Agreed Sam.

    If the current network execs were in charge when Seinfeld came out, that show would have been canceled prematurely. They need to give shows a chance before pulling the plug.

    Reply
  3. Sam says

    October 5, 2009 at 9:09 pm

    I can think of many shows that would have ended up on the chopping block if they were using the criteria then that execs appear to off-handedly offer up today.

    As you mentioned Seinfeld is a prime example of a show that took nearly half a season to garner an audience, and now it is considered the greatest sitcom to have ever aired on television. Others include shows now considered the ultimate in groundbreaking and classic television viewing:

    M*A*S*H
    All in the Family
    ER
    Twilight Zone (the original with Rod Serling)
    The Andy Griffith Show
    The Cosby Show
    The Mary Tyler Moore Show
    Bewitched
    My Three Sons
    Laugh-In
    The Dean Martin Show
    The Carol Burnette Show
    The Flip Wilson Show
    Happy Days
    Newhart

    Because execs used a different measuring stick during these show’s debut, they were given at least a half a season, others a few season, to capture an audience and in everyone the dividends paid-off big time in merchandising deals, syndication royalty rights and so much more. Almost all of those listed above are considered true classics and all future shows are measured against them.

    Now we have a list of shows, that if execs were using the same criteria for measuring success would still be on the air today, or at least would have remained on the air for more than a few episodes:

    Firefly
    Arrested Development
    Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip
    Drive
    Defying Gravity
    Sliders
    Farscape
    Dark Angel
    The Invisible Man
    The Tick
    Now and Again
    The 4400
    Kings
    Pushing Daises
    Eli Stone
    Moonlight
    Kyle XY

    I have no doubt many of you could add to this list but I think I’ve adequately made my point.

    Reply
  4. Dave from New Bern says

    October 5, 2009 at 10:26 pm

    What you expect from a network that has Jay Leno coming on every night at 10pm.

    Reply
  5. Lisa from Indiana says

    October 6, 2009 at 1:42 pm

    OK, I hate to sound like a shill for the studios, but…

    Our shows are incredibly expensive to produce. And execs are probably not fans of the genre. So we are expecting execs to pour tons of money into shows they probably don’t get. That’s a tall order.

    Add to that the fact that we scifi fans have a glorious tendency to “eat our own”. Do you remember the initial buzz around “Firefly” and “Defying Gravity”? If I remember correctly, it was a rousing chorus of “Meh”….

    So remember the next time you are tempted to tag a show with “Not nearly as good as Battlestar” or “Quantum Leap was better”, the networks are listening.

    And would it kill you to watch a show live once in a while? You don’t have to be in the room…just let the TV run in the background. I know its stupid, but this is the way the networks keep score. It’s their ball and bat, we have to play by their rules for now.

    Yours for what its worth…

    Reply
  6. VyseN1 says

    October 6, 2009 at 6:12 pm

    Lisa:

    I understand what your argument is, but look at the list that Sam provided of older shows that took a little time to get started. A lot of them are sitcoms, not very expensive.

    Also, the problem with “Firefly” and “Defying Gravity” is that there was how poorly the shows were handled. Fox screwed up the order for “Firefly “episodes, and the only time I heard “Defying Gravity” promoted was on Slice.

    If the execs give a show an honest chance, and it still fails, then by all means pull the plug. The problem is they don’t give genre shows a fair chance.

    Reply
  7. ncc1701dee says

    October 10, 2009 at 9:36 pm

    It sucks that they are scaling it down, for now, but that doesn’t mean it won’t make it in the long run…. I have hope… I really think Day one is going to be AWESOME, and maybe a 4 hr premiere event will be just what it needs to draw in the maximum audience……

    Reply

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