Jump to content

The state of NBC


wingwalker

Recommended Posts

  • Members

It is.

I watched "Once Upon a Time" yesterday (recorded of course) and was more impressed by how they tried for the broadest audience than I was with the content of the show. I have to applaud them for trying. The next 3 or 4 years are going to see changes that make this discussion irrelevant.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 33
  • Created
  • Last Reply
  • Members

Honestly, the only things I ever watch or sample on NBC are their tentpole shows: Days of Our Lives, The Today Show, The Tonight Show, and Saturday Night Live.

I think ABC has potential in their Wednesday night block (I watch Modern Family, Suburgatory, and Revenge), and it seems they're putting forth effort in scripted dramas (i.e. 2 new dramas on Sunday with DH sandwiched in between). I see hope in ABC. NBC? Yeah, not so much.

Also, isn't Tim Allen's new comedy doing well? Talk about a throwback to the 90's...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I think CBS has done a better job having a broader group of shows to work with. NBC had a handful of hits and they milked those hits dry. CBS has a few older hits but they aren't relying on those. There was also a lot of arrogance from NBC in their heyday, which I haven't heard as much about from CBS. It may not be great at CBS, but during NBC's heyday, people were fleeing the network due to NBC's need to control everything.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Well and there's the problem. They want to try to compete with the cool factor of cable shows, yet still get as broad an audience as possible. And that's why we have flops like Playboy Club (love or hate Made Men, and I personally love it, it has a cult fanbase--tons of people are aware of the show, its aethetics, who don't watch and it would obviously have died on network tv). Every so often a high concept show breaks through (while I wasn't a fan by the end, Lost is I suppose the proverbial goal they all want to aim for) , but it seems less and less likely especially with how so many people will just turn to cable first anyway. But I do give props to ABC in particular for somewhat trying this year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Here is the thing tho, out of all those shows you mentuoned... they either are mediocre at best or not really a new concept (Smash? Revenge? These are nothing new).

CBS may not try to do odd shows, but they do not have to. They know what works for them and they go with it. They do funny comedys and good legal/investigation shows with interesting cases that run for years and do very well in reruns for them. And they so go more outside the box than given credit for, they have pretty much always had a scifi/supernatural show (touched by an angel, early edition, ghost whisperer, etc). They also embrace their older and male audience, unlike other networks. Not to mention they did try to go more soapy this season with Ringer, but it was seriously awful so they passed. The Good Wife is a good mix of legal episodic and soapy drama. Even their typical episodic shows are full of interesting characters with great dynamics that keep the audience watching, namely Criminal Minds.

ABC is a down phase right now with dramas, but they are doing well on comedies. As long as they can be strong in comedy and work on drama then be strong on drama and work on comedy they will do OK.

At this point NBC is honestly nearly hopeless. I do not see any change coming soon or anything turning it around. I question how much longer they can be a viable network, much like The CW.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Administrator

I'm not saying they should abandon what is working for them. I'm just saying I don't really "respect" CBS because they don't really "try" - they just do what works, same old, same old. CBS will always be my fifth ranked network. LOL Though I do watch 5 shows on CBS. smile.png The only show I "respect" is HIMYM because it's heavily serialized, they do call backs, flashbacks, showing the future, quick witty lines and it's written like a single cam comedy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

It's funny, I had a stupid "fight" with a friend who hates laugh tracks and loves HIMYM (a show I rarely watch, but do have a sort of arespect for too, for the reasons you said--I think it strives for more than most of these shows, particularly on CBS do). Hw was sure that he was right that the show didn't have a laugh track--I guess he manages to just tune it out (it really doesn't need one...)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I've always been a CBS boy, so probably a little biased, but I think very unfair to say that CBS doesn't try. Maybe in terms of having shows with more diverse casts (CBS's record for gay characters is abysmal), but CBS may rely heavy on crime dramas, but not sure how that's different than FOX's over-reliance on singing competition shows. How is giving up 3-4 hours of fall programing for an American Idol Clone "trying"? Or ABC's reliance on DTWS and "soapy" shows like Desperate Housewives, Brothers & Sisters, Revenge, and Good Christian Belles trying? Like JackPeyton said, CBS always has at least one or two "outside the box" shows a season just like the other networks, Ghost Whisperer, Joan of Arcadia, Touched by an Angel, Moonlight, Jericho, Swingtown, Harper's Island...

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

    • I better hear "The Emmy goes to Ambyr Michelle" come Emmy time lol    
    • yep.

      Please register in order to view this content

    • I love this more than any theory I've seen yet
    • I wonder what Dana and Hayley's first scene will be like. Dana has fear/contempt for Bill, but I can imagine Hayley being curious to meet her.
    • Daphne was just FANTASTIC today. I know people wanted histronics and it may still come but she was pitch perfect today. As much as I like Maurice she's gonna need someone just as strong now and it's just not him   
    • Today's episode was one of my favorites so far! TT's Anita standing up to Dana was perfect. I was surprised with how restrained Dani was, in some scenes, I forgot she was there. The ending "Amazing Grace" montage was brilliant. I like how Vernon's reason complements Anita's emotion. DD was terrific portraying her mixed sense of betrayal and humiliation. I liked her comment about how she condescended to Dani after her breakup with Bill, unaware that she was also married to a cheater. I am going to miss MJ as Ted and I don't agree with the criticisms of his acting. His conduct on social media is a different story. I agree that BC's Martin has come into his own. He and MM have also discovered some chemistry which allows them portray a believable couple. Eva is the most empathetic character for me. Seeing get locked out of the apartment was heartbreaking. I also liked that the writing for Kat has been much more nuanced than one might have expected just weeks ago. I liked the expression on Kat's face at the end when she was embracing Nicole. Kat has probably never seen her calm, poised mother so upset. CM's face portrayed a sense of discomfort now that the carer/child roles have been somewhat reversed. I believe now more than ever that Kat is Ted and Dana's child. Eva is Ted and Nicole's child. Dana switched them as insurance - if Bill came after her to take or harm Eva, Dana would reveal that Eva was actually a Dupree, giving her some protection. She would also be secure in the fact that her birth daughter Kat was ensconced in the privilege and security of the Dupree family. The way Dana raised Eva - "weaponizing" her instead of nurturing her as a loving mother - also aligns with this theory. 
    • @Paul Raven - thanks for reviewing the content for accuracy.  You know, the nice thing about AI is that you can teach it things, so I am having it review the classic AMC Tumblr to increase its accuracy.
    • If you begin where they suggested (#6077), it's VERY easy to follow because it's right at the beginning of a new storyline.   Another story is winding down, but it's fairly easy to catch on. The central characters in both stories (the one that's ending & the one that's beginning) are members of the Madison family.  The Madisons have recently moved from Hollywood to Monticello.  The father (Owen Madison) is an ex-movie producer.  The mother (Nola Patterson Madison) is a washed-up, alcoholic actress who can no longer get a part in a film.  Owen has a daughter named Paige Madison, and Nola has a son named Brian Madison.  The Madison family left Hollywood primarily because the daughter (Paige) had gotten involved with a group of "renegade" young political activists who stole some guns to furnish to South American revolutionaries.  Paige Madison is being targeted for assassination by various members of the group (known as "the Tobias gang").  As a result, Paige has a full-time body guard, a former Monticello policeman who resigned from the police force because he accidentally shot & killed a 14-year-old boy who was armed with a cap pistol.  As the new plot (a movie called "Mansion of the Damned") takes shape,  the existing plot about Paige, the assassins, and the bodyguard comes to a conclusion.  The other characters on the show are all playing supporting roles to these storylines, and it'll be easy to figure out who they are and how they come into play.  
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

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