Jump to content

September 8-12, 2008


Toups

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 65
  • Created
  • Last Reply
  • Members

I kind of feel badly for GL fans. Knowing that the show is basically a goner must feel terrible; I know I went through it with Sunset Beach, Port Charles and most recently Passions. I am loving Y&R now too. Also, I find AMC a lot more humorous which is a very good thing. AMC will rise once Chuck's stuff gets popping.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

It's been hinted the reason no changes are being made at GL is because it will be canceled next year with ATWT to follow. It's obvious P&G doesnt care about their soaps. All the other soaps are having writing and EP changes except the P&G soaps. What a shame.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Sing it! Ratings do not equal quality. They MIGHT equal promotion.

My perspective on Y&R is a bit different than yours. I agree with the improvements. But notice the drop from the heavily promoted Sudden Impact arc. There has NOT been extensive promotion (certainly not out of the daypart or off-network). Imagine if they DID invest, at least for 6 months or so, in regular promotion (with story quality to back it up). THAT could really rebuild the show's audience (say, in the modern era, at 4.3 or something). Sadly, they do not invest.

For Y&R, the problem is still lack of consistency in ratings. They need to work at getting more of those 3.9s every day. The way to do that is to plan explosive story beats on Wednesday/Thursday, and to PROMOTE THE HECK out of them. I know that takes $$...but I think it would be a worthwhile investment. "Don't miss this Wednesday!..."

B&B...I cannot explain those ratings. I can only bear to FF 1 or 2 times a week, it is SO awful. Further proof that quality and ratings have no association. Unlikely you, I cannot find a single entertaining thing.

Did you see Canadian TV Guide on this issue? Nelson is explaining why there is no regime change at GL (and, by inference, ATWT too). His perspective is that cancellation is imminent, and the lack of change reflect NOT "confidence in a stable vision", but "not sinking another dime into this soon-to-be-cancelled franchise".

On this note, I wonder if Goutman's recent interview (where he argues ATWT should be on 3 days a week) is the beginning of the gambit for the next renewal cycle. Don't CANCEL ATWT/GL...but have the two shows share a single timeslot. I'm wonderin'.....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

NOW THIS IS HOW A RATINGS ANALYSIS SHOULD BE DONE!! (Sorry to shout). Bravo Angela!!!

The weeklies are irrelevant. But this shows the unassailable trend. What this shows is a clear linear decline trend. It shows that each time the show falls, it never regains. The loss of a quarter million viewers, give or take, in just four months time says EVERYTHING.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Actually, the GL loss is more painful than all the other shows. It is not NEW. It has a 70 year history. This is the end of a long, and mostly productive life.

At the same time, it is a mercy killing to come. Indeed, as the ratings show, there will be little sadness and little hue and cry at the cancellation. The recent changes HAVE helped to accelerate an audience that was already in freefall-attrition.

Yes. That was a very insightful thing for Nelson Branco to report.

No, I do not agree. Well, I do sort of....let me explain:

GL was on cancellation track NO MATTER WHAT. The cancellation was imminent, because the low numbers could not bear the high cost.

I totally applaud Wheeler for the experiment. With the experiment, we KNOW that the cheaper production model WILL NOT WORK, at least not with a legacy show. Had the experiment not been tried, the show would have died a year earlier, and we might have "wondered". Now we know (since MORE INVESTMENT was OFF THE TABLE) that the show could not have been saved on the budget it was allowed.

[Naysayers will say 'more talented people could have accomplished more on the low budget'...maybe...but those more talented people would have cost money. Regardless, that is not the course P&G chose... They chose to use an MTV-style production model, and now we know that that model--by itself--cannot succeed].

The net gain was that TRUE GL diehards got an extra 12 months or so of their show. For some people, those final glimpses of Alan and Reva and Josh were worth it. Those are the diehard that watch the show out of loyalty and legacy and because it has always been in their lives.

That the show is an unrecognizable shell of its glory days is...sad. That the show at closing bears really NO connection to what Irma created 70 years ago is ... sad. There seems little doubt that the show needs to die. That makes it no less tragic....even the loss of an older, infirm relative still usually provokes sadness.

I think the resolution that the industry needs to strike--if and when there is ever a new serial like this again--is that these shows CANNOT be allowed to live indefinitely. Have a defined plan (7 years? 5 years?) and stick to it. If a show is really still on top after the 5 or 7 year span, spin it off with a few key characters and plots. That article that Steve Frame has on Soapsweb (an old Time magazine profile of Irma...who CANCELLED a show at the top of the ratings because it had accomplished everything it could...it had reached "logical saturation"...so it was time to move on) was so eye opening.

It is time, I think, to turn our back on this old model..."worlds without end"....to something more like "brief incursions into continuing worlds".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Another sad thing is how close GL always came to striking rating gold, but always having the rug pulled out from under it. Like back in the 80s when GL was at one time the number one watched soap, or in the 90s when GL seemed to be gaining viewers and a comfortable spot int he ratings, only to have that progress ruined by the death of Maureen Bauer.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • He comes pretty close, talkin' about how Reva is full of love and joy, blah blah....which is bilge considering he was the one responsible for throwing her out of Josh's life over working with Alan. 
    • Just watched the episode concerning Olivia's drug use and Abby's persistence, etc. Donna Mills did stellar work in this episode, as did Tonya Crowe and Brian Austin Green (Brian).
    • But by Dinah and Hart...Hart especially looked as if he could not tie his own shoes!  Ed, Holly, Alan, Alex Henry and Vanessa among others were not able to put Roger down....Dinah???
    • The preaching seems to end before the Barnes settle in late December, 1981. The stuff that felt overly religious (the Davidsons believing a miracle will save Lori rather than a surgeon, Jeff's miraculous recovery from a beam of light) was quickly nixed because it wasn't working. The closest thing that you get to that under the Barnes is when Dennis Fraser, the drunk driver who killed Nora and Scott, turns his life over to god. The born-again redemptions out of nowhere seem to stop fairly early into the Barnes' run. I do think Miriam's transformation was much more delicately done with her turning on her bestie Nancy because Nancy was seducing Charles, Miriam's wealthy father, so Miriam offers to testify for the Davidsons in the trial against Nancy over possession of Nora's house. In turn, Nancy repays the favor by pumping an emotionally distraught Miriam with barbituates while Miriam carries on her affair with low level thug turned political aide Norm Elliott. Miriam is used by everyone into her life and finally lands herself in the hospital becasue she has become so addicted to the pills. At the hospital, it is the friendship and kindness of the Davidsons that brings Miriam to a more peaceful place. The Davidsons ability to forgive is both appealing and, at times, dramatically limiting. In this case, the Davidsons lead Miriam to her new Mama, Ione Redlon. Now, under Vinley, Miriam is determined to reconnect with her son, Frederick, and her ex-husband, Paul.   My bigger issue with the Barnes' writing is that they write the storylines with twist endings that sorta come out of nowhere. I know the resolution to the Kate Carrouthers mystery sorta plays out like that so I am curious to see how I feel about that.  The biggest change throughout the writing teams has been the view of morality. Winsor had many characters who could be viewed purely through the lens of black and white, but others explored the shades of gray (often younger people). The brief head writerless period was much better at embracing an action doesn't make a person and there characters were much more gray or at least evil at a more local level (Nancy, in this period, only flirts with her brother-in-law where as later she is actively providing pills to Miriam to keep her addicted and away from her own father). The Barnes, for the most part, seem to embrace this level of political corruption that seems to permeate throughout the show making it clear that power (as well as money) is the root of evil. Even criminal Vince Cardello is presented as less evil than Charles Carpenter, though Carpenter's murder of a resident of his complex was rewritten to relieve Carpenter of any responsibility in the matter. Vinley's work seems more into exploring the why or delving deeper in general. Babs Farley, the hooker who is looking to reclaim her life, is such an intriguing character. She is given such meaningful monologues regretting her decisions and desperately trying to keep away from the hands of her former pimp, Ron Washington, who hasn't appeared yet. Monk and Fernandez seem to be wrongly accused of Lori's attack and there seems to be hints of racism that the show is looking to address. Marianne confronts Gil about his feelings towards God in relation to their mother's death years earlier.  There does seem to be a layer of misogyny to Vinley's work, but it's early so I'll be curious to see how this plays out. There are a lot of attacks on women (Lori is nearly raped, Babs was beaten, Nancy is on the verge of being blackmailed for sex by Tab, and the Russ / Marianne / Gil scenario has hints of toxic masculinity. It's very early so it'll be neat to see if that is maintained.  Jerry TImm lasts about a year I think (March, 1982 - March, 1983). One of the episodes on TouTube has a comment suggesting that Timm was fired by CBN because he had done something in his past that came to light. It didn't seem to be clear what that was.  I like what I've seen of Timm as Gil. He has such a presence that it covers up some of his weaker acting choices. It's unfortunate that he didn't get to play as much of the Gil - Stacey - Amber triangle as his replacement does.  
    • I believe it was Mark Arnold's family that taped all the shows. It was the same with Ariane Muneker - her mother bought a video recording machine in the 1970s, at a time when that type of technology was really expensive John Wesley Shipp's parents also taped all his shows, and has a complete library of every single episode of every soap JWS has appeared on. Same for Cynthia Watros. When the Soap Actors parents pass away, and there are all these VHS tapes in dozens of boxes, it is shame to waste all that. 
    • Personally, I felt that the deletion of the original music from the girls' slumber party episode, and the axing of REM's Losing My Religion from the ep featuring Brenda and Dylan breaking up, were the most painful. The changes really damaged those episodes. I dropped the DVDs after season two, but I've been told by other viewers who kept going that tunes from all the seasons continued being replaced, and the situation only got worse as the DVD releases progressed. Yes, penny-pinching from those in charge was the principle issue, but I wonder how much better the DVDs would have sold if such poor choices had not been made in the name of cost cutting. On the other hand, when Time-Life put out the Vietnam-war era classic China Beach, they dug deep into their pockets and ended up clearing the rights to a whopping 268 (!!!) of the original tracks. This represented 96% of the total. TPTB said that when they were not given permission to use a few of the remaining pieces, they substituted different singers' versions of the exact same songs, in order to preserve the show's integrity as much as possible. The CB set was expensive as heck, to be sure, but to me it was worth it.
    • Oh I knew it was common (I did not realize Muenker's channel was gone - I'm glad I saved all those videos). I just didn't realize it was the case with the rape episode.  I never really felt like she dominated the show in her second stint either, although I can see where she probably did. I can feel it more in some of her first run, because the show was much different before she came in and suddenly a woman we'd seen for a year was [!@#$%^&*] and marrying an entire family.  In that sense Reva is more like Babe than Erica Kane. One of the more infamous AMC lines was, "Babe is love." You just know HB would have said that line about Reva at some point.
    • I disagree; if this were Chris Clenshaw, then I would be worried. But it's a new producer coming in to clearly create the canvas they want to create, and I'm okay with that. Re-introducing characters to shake things up and possibly take some other ones out of the canvas. It'll be interesting to see the finished product.
    • I am ready for our first full week in what feels like a while! They worked Sweeps month!
    • Beyond the Gates: A The Bold and the Beautiful: F Coronation Street: B Days of Our Lives: B- EastEnders: A+ Emmerdale: A- Hollyoaks: B+ General Hospital: C Neighbours: C+ The Young and the Restless: F For me, Beyond the Gates, EastEnders, and Emmerdale led the pack during Sweeps month, with Coronation Street and Days of Our Lives following. General Hospital and Neighbours sit in the middle with what I'd call a "take it or leave it" kind of Sweeps month, and the Bell soaps bombed (per usual).
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy