3 posts tagged “upfronts”
It's been officially confirmed -- Moonlight has been canceled.
Let the hysterics begin.
Look, I know what one likes or doesn't like is purely subjective, but it makes me snicker when I read some of the comments on Kristin's announcement saying how Moonlight is the best-written show they've ever seen, better than Angel, etc. Um...yeah, not so much.
I watched the show and enjoyed it for the most part, but I'm not particularly heartbroken about its cancellation.
I will, however, miss seeing Alex O'Loughlin on a weekly basis.
ETA: New CBS news from Ausiello -- The New Adventures of Old Christine and How I Met Your Mother have been renewed; Shark has been axed. Still no word on Moonlight.
More Upfront stuff, this time via an interview with ABC boss man Steve McPherson (courtesy of Kristin Dos Santos.)
I am so excited about Life on Mars. I saw the pilot of the British version and loved it. I'm quite happy about Jason O'Mara playing the lead. I'm just slightly worried that David E. Kelley is behind it -- his erratic behavior and tendency to bail on his shows halfway through is legendary -- and that the guys behind the recently canceled October Road are going to showrun it. It's landed itself in a prime spot, though -- Thursday nights after Grey's -- so if it can't make it there, well, it probably can't make it anywhere.
Also, if Sarah Chalke is coming to HIMYM full-time, I'll have to brush up on Seasons 2 and 3.
Scrubs Is Moving to ABC (Duh): In the reveal of what is perhaps the worst-kept secret in the industry, McPherson announced that ABC will air 18 episodes of Scrubs this fall. "Given the fact that it's been moved 17 times and still doing better than any other NBC comedy on Thursday than The Office...We think it's really a great addition for us." Holler.
Ted on How I Met Your Mother Is Screwed: McPherson confirms that Sarah Chalke is most definitely back on Scrubs for the new season on ABC. Full time. Stelllllaaaa! If she is the mother, Ted's gonna have to wait.
Men In Trees and October Road Are Gone: On behalf of all you heartbroken fans (I feel your pain), I asked McPherson if this call was made purely from a ratings standpoint. "It was, yeah," he replied. "It was a really hard decision. I think both shows were incredibly well done and we have a fantastic relationship with (Men in Trees creator) Jenny Bicks. We're hoping to do some great things with her. But even when we gave it a pretty decent run on Thursday, I would have loved to see it pop."
As for October Road: "It was like the little engine that could. It was a pilot that was picked up late and the series was picked up late. It was a terrific show it just had a very, very small but dedicated core audience. [Road producers Josh] Applebaum and [Andre] Nemick and [Scott] Rosenberg are going to work on our new drama Life on Mars and have some great ideas about this version. So we love the people but it's just unfortunate that we couldn't find the kind of audience that would make it worth keeping."
McPherson Calls the New Fall Schedule "Incredibly Stable": With only one new drama and two new unscripted series, there isn't much change at all. Still, he adds that there are 17 pilots still in development for midseason, so clearly, thanks to the strike, there wasn't a lot of grooming time this year.
Life on Mars Looks Pretty Awesome: Cherry-picked as the only new scripted series coming to ABC this fall, this British import about a cop who gets sent back to 1972 actually looks pretty engaging. (They showed a clip.) Jason O'Mara (most recently McDreamy and Meredith's latest brain-tumor patient on Grey's) stars and the series is produced by David E. Kelley and the brain trust behind October Road (Applebaum and friends). It will air after Grey's on Thursday nights at 10.
Also Coming to ABC: Opportunity Knocks, a game show from Ashton Kutcher which McPherson describes as "Extreme Home Makeover meets Millionaire" (the show comes to your house with a truckload of prizes and asks you to answer trivia about your own family and community) and an untitled Ashton Kutcher/Tyra Banks reality show, which is "a beauty pageant like you haven't seen before" that McPherson says "we are keeping under wraps for now at their request."
Ugly Betty Is Most Definitely Moving to NYC: Says McPherson, "The pilot was shot in New York. The show is based in New York. And the studio made the decision that given the current climate in New York that it made a lot of sense to move it back. We're excited from a production standpoint to have that real NY quality because as much as people try to cheat NY it's really hard to do so. So I think it's sort of funny that people are taking issue with the fact that it's cheaper to do a show in New York about New York." McPherson also says all cast members will be on board, but that Rebecca Romijn has "left the show." When asked why, he says Rebecca's run was always supposed to be a limited engagement and now that run is over. (Something tells me that's news to Rebecca.)
Ugly Betty Is Getting Back to Betty: "Silvio [Horta] is very smart to do what he's doing. I think that on Ugly Betty, there was sort of a flight of fancy that was going on there and it was funny but I think it got away from the core that really is the heart of the show. And some of the episodes at the end of this year have gotten back to that." Also, LL will be back. "[Lindsay Lohan] is going to do more episodes next year. I don't know that the New York move will affect that but she is doing more than one episode next season."
Is Edie Gone from Desperate Housewives? When asked if Nicolette Sheridan will return, McPherson initially gives a firm "Yes." When pressed for clarification, given that Marc Cherry was just quoted as saying that's the last we're gonna see of her for years, McPherson just smiles and says "Maybe." Hmmm…
Pushing Daisies Love: My beloved Pushing Daisies, which will back next season in its old time slot, is still all about the love. The ABC new-season video they showed us featured Lee Pace talking about how, "I've fallen in love with Anna Friel," and how that's a good thing because they can't touch on the series so they really have to sell the love through their eyes. Awww...
Grey's Anatomy Is Planning Something Big: "Grey's has got a big idea for next year that Shonda's getting ready to launch on people," says McPherson, but wouldn't go into further detail (shocker). "But the other shows we feel like are firing on really good waves so there's no big kind of shift." (Read into that transition what you will.)
Why Eli Stone Got the Pickup (Hurrah!): "In comparison to the big shows we have it's not particularly expensive," McPherson explains. "And we just felt like it had a very tough launch amidst the strike without our original programming to really launch it. And creatively we felt like it grew from the beginning to the end of the first 13, so we really feel like it's got a big up side… We also think we have a better lead-in for it with Dancing with the Stars." As for the big twist in the 13th ep, Mcpherson says: "That was always Greg Berlanti's design of where it would go.
Lost Timeslot for Midseason? TBD, according to SM. "At this point we still like this 10 p.m. on Thursday and we could move Life on Mars at that point. But it's also been a great 9 p.m. performer and 8 p.m. performer, so I think some of that quite honestly we have to see how the fall plays out."
ETA: About two minutes after I posted this, Kristin updated her site stating that Moonlight was suddenly trending negative -- according to reliable sources, CBS is high on a number of its new drama pilots and so there's not much room for the uneven Moonlight. I'm glad I was never that sold on it in the first place.
The Upfronts are taking place as I type this, so I'll be posting tidbits about next season, such as cancellations, renewals, the new shows being greenlit by each network, etc.
The following is incomplete and has been cobbled together from preliminary reports from Kristin and Ausiello:
Renewals:
- The Sarah Connor Chronicles, FOX (yay!)
- Friday Night Lights (on DirecTV, with NBC getting the rerun rights)
- Chuck, NBC (More Zach Levi. Yum.)
- Pushing Daisies, ABC (More Lee Pace. Yum.)
- Heroes, NBC (I am so close to not even caring anymore)
- Eli Stone, ABC (woohoo!)
- Boston Legal, ABC (although with a drastically reduced cast, ala the The Practice firings)
- Miss/Guided, ABC (can't bring myself to watch anything involving Ashton Kutcher)
- The Unit, CBS (but it's being moved to Fridays at 8 -- could spell trouble for Moonlight)
- Gossip Girl, CW (I'm so glad I stopped watching, especially after seeing the previews for tonight's -- Serena's too great of a character to be ruined by these cheap soap opera-ish plotlines)
- Smallville, CW (Lex and Lana are gone, and rumor is that Chloe's on her way out now -- hasn't Lois and Clark already been done?)
- Supernatural, CW
- One Tree Hill, CW (seriously? I suppose I shouldn't be surprised, but...seriously? Could this show get any more horrible?)
- Everybody Hates Chris, CW
- The Game, CW
- America's Next Top Model, CW
- 'Til Death, FOX
- Scrubs, ABC
- Reaper, CW
- Scrubs, NBC (that's right, you read correctly -- NBC canceled Scrubs, but ABC picked it up.)
- Women's Murder Club, ABC
- Aliens in America, CW
- Pussycat Dolls, CW
- Beauty and the Geek, CW
- New Amsterdam, FOX
- Back to You, FOX (although there's talk of CBS picking it up)
- Moonlight, CBS
- The New Adventures of Old Christine (although ABC will probably scoop it up if CBS passes)
- How I Met Your Mother, CBS
- 90210, CW (And Jennie Garth has signed on to reprise Kelly Taylor, albeit in a recurring role)
- Surviving the Filthy Rich, CW (formerly known as How To Teach Filthy Rich Girls: it's another Gossip Girl. Without Josh Schwartz or Blake Lively. Joy.)
- Stylista, CW (yet another Tyra Banks reality show. Contestants compete for an editorial job at Elle.)
- The Mentalist, CBS
- Game Show in My Head, CBS (yet another Ashton Kutcher reality show)
- Sit Down, Shut Up (new animated show from Arrested Development creator Mitch Hurwitz and featuring the voices of AD alums Jason Bateman, Will Arnett and Henry Winkler, among others.)
- Dollhouse, FOX (Joss Whedon, Eliza Dushku, Amy Acker, etc., etc. Will be a mid-season show.)
- Fringe, FOX (from the awesome JJ Abrams; pilot cost $10 million to make; very X-File-ish; can't WAIT)
- Eleventh Hour, CBS (from Jerry Bruckheimer; more X-File-ish stuff; awesome)