Murmur - hobbyjay's Content http://murmur.com Murmur - hobbyjay's Content Murmur http://murmur.com/images/content_medium_default.gif http://murmur.com Murmur They Cancelled My Favorite Show! They Suck! http://murmur.com/tv_film/they_cancelled_my_favorite_show_they_suck.html by: hobbyjay<br/>Save your shows now! Slam the ones that suck!<br/><img src='/images/content_medium_default.gif'><br/>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I'm sitting here pondering through the doldrums of summer and man, I miss TV. &nbsp;Of course there are a few new shows here and there such as <em>The </em><em>Philanthropist</em> which I could care less about. &nbsp;All of my favorites are gone though until late August, September, or heaven forbid December or January. &nbsp;No new <em>Chuck</em>, <em>Reaper</em>, or <em>My Name is Earl</em> for months. &nbsp;What's that? &nbsp;Both <em>Reaper</em> and <em>My Name is Earl </em>have been cancelled? &nbsp;<em>Chuck</em> is barely holding on as a upcoming midseason replacement? &nbsp;Go figure. &nbsp;I get attached to a show, the stories, and most importantly the characters and the evil network execs go and axe it to spite me. &nbsp;What a rip! &nbsp;I would kill to be able to watch all my favorite shows go on forever until the point that the suck and I want them cancelled, but NO!. &nbsp;I'll just sit in my room and pout about it and boycott TV for the whole season. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We've all had that same shock and sinking feeling when a show we vested ourselves and our time in is on the "bubble" or is actually cancelled. &nbsp;Usually the feeling passes and you move on. &nbsp;In some rare instances, the feeling lingers for a long time and &nbsp;you always remember what could've been. &nbsp;The shows listed above are examples of both. &nbsp;I really enjoyed <em>Reaper</em>, especially Ray Wise as Satan. &nbsp;That guy was hilarious. &nbsp;I also liked <em>My Name</em><em> is Earl</em>, but more so for Jason Lee's killer mustache. &nbsp;Will I miss these shows? &nbsp;Yes. &nbsp;Will it keep me up at night? &nbsp;No. &nbsp;<em>Chuck</em> on the other hand is a different story. &nbsp;Any show with that great a cast, Scott Bakula, Chevy Chase as a bad guy, and tons of <em>Spies Like Us</em> references (Emmett Millbarge, GLG20 chips, "Doctor/Doctor") has to stay on TV. (Search the web for other cool Chuck Easter eggs. &nbsp;I got the one for <em>Weekend at Bernie's</em>) &nbsp;Had it been cancelled, I would've held a grudge for a while. &nbsp;Eventually, I would've gotten over it. &nbsp;I got over <em>Jake 2.0</em> right? &nbsp;Right?! &nbsp;This close call (or temporary stay of execution) with <em>Chuck</em> brought up some questions in my mind about the merits of cancelled TV shows and more importantly what can be done to save them and with whom that responsibility lies. &nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The first part of the salvation equation lies with the writers and creators of the shows themselves. &nbsp;Make something of quality. &nbsp;Make something that people care about. &nbsp;Now this isn't always a guarantee for success. &nbsp;Some of the best shows on TV were cancelled before their time. &nbsp;Off the top of my head <em>Veronica Mars</em> and <em>Serenity</em> come to mind. &nbsp;Those shows were great and people (myself included) still love them voraciously today. &nbsp;If you start off making crap, most people will treat it as such. &nbsp;Yet even so, there are a lot of crap shows on TV. &nbsp;I wouldn't know which ones they are, I don't watch those.<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Second part, writers and creators listen up again. &nbsp;Have an idea where you want to start and where you want to end. &nbsp;Now I'm sure that everyone says they have this in mind, but who sticks to it? &nbsp;Rob Thomas, creator of <em>Veronica Mar</em>s, has said he had future plans for the series (Veronica at Langley, etc.), but he didn't stick to a proven formula long enough. &nbsp;In the final season, <em>Veronica Goes to College and Has Sex</em>, he took away Veronica's bite and made the great season long mysteries of old a midseason dud. &nbsp;Now you can say that this was the network execs fault. &nbsp;That they pressured Thomas to make those changes to save the show and make it more "accessible and friendly." &nbsp;In the end though, Thomas made the concessions and the show suffered and was cancelled anyway. &nbsp;A fine example of doing it right is the braintrust on <em>Lost </em>(<em>Heroes</em> braintrust take note). &nbsp;After the show began to suffer, they sat down and planned out the rest of the series to the end in spite of the network. &nbsp;The show has been great ever since. &nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Third (or 2b) part is for the network executives. &nbsp;Stay out of the way. &nbsp;The best way to let a show succeed is to just write the checks. &nbsp;Now I'm sure there's much more to being on the network side of things. &nbsp;There's marketing, scheduling, revenue streams, and a bunch of stuff I have no clues or cares about. &nbsp;I'm sure you know lots more about the "TV bizness" than I ever will. &nbsp;One thing I do know is that if you pigeon hole a creator by trying to fix a show your way, it will fail. &nbsp;Support it the best you can through the things you know: &nbsp;marketing, scheduling, revenue streams, etc. &nbsp;As I said, just write the checks. &nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fourth and final part is for me and you and you and me. &nbsp;The audience, the viewers. &nbsp;Watch the shows you love. &nbsp;Don't give excuses like "It's on Friday nights" or "I was washing my hair." With DVR's and almost any show available somewhere on the internet, there's plenty of ways to watch. &nbsp;Talk your favorites up and spread the word. &nbsp;In a day with Facebook and Twitter, you can tell thousands if not millions of people how great <em>'Til Death</em> is (Not!). &nbsp;Start cancellation campaigns early. &nbsp;Instead of wasting time trying to save a show by sending Subway sandwiches or Mars candy bars to the networks, start writing the networks now telling them that some shows suck and need to be canned. &nbsp;I'm starting mine on <em>American Idol </em>right now (Not! &nbsp;My wife would kill me). &nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The hard truth of the matter is that good and sometimes great shows are going to be cancelled. &nbsp;What makes it worse is that the crap shows are still going to keep going along clogging the tubes. &nbsp;You're rarely ever going to see a show get saved for more than one season, if that. &nbsp;If you're really, really lucky, you may see them come back after cancellation like <em>Family Guy</em> or <em>Futurama</em> (Yeah! for Comedy Central). &nbsp;More likely, you'll just end up crying yourself to sleep or griping about it on the Interweb. &nbsp;Like me.<br><br> Sat, 27 Jun 2009 20:17:48 GMT http://murmur.com/tv_film/they_cancelled_my_favorite_show_they_suck.html 2009-06-27T20:17:48Z