Dearth of new TV shows
NEW YORK (AP) — Jimmy Kimmel knows how to deliver an industry joke with some sting, as he proved to advertisers getting a first look at ABC's fall schedule last week.
"Here at ABC we are very excited about both of our new shows," Kimmel said to knowing laughs.
Both. One is a game show produced by Ashton Kutcher, the other an adaptation of a series done by the BBC. It's hardly a burst of creativity from a network that proudly introduced eight new series last fall.
The fall schedules rolled out with limited fanfare provided evidence of how deeply network television was hurt by this winter's writers strike. The pain from those wounds will linger into next season precisely when the networks — already haemorrhaging viewers — can least afford it.
Premiere time in September was once like a week of Christmas mornings for fans of television, and it's steadily becoming less special.
"The viewers are going to be going away for the summer, and the networks can't just presume that they are coming back," said David Bianculli, a veteran television critic who operates TVWorthWatching.com.
Judging by what he's seen, Bianculli said he's looking forward only to two new series next season, both on Fox and one not debuting until January 2009.
ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox and the CW have collectively promised 16 new shows in the fall. Last fall, those five networks debuted 27. Take CBS and the CW — with the same, very traditional corporate owners — out of the mix, and the decline is 18 to eight.
The "new" fare includes remakes of "Beverly Hills 90210" (on the CW) and "Knight Rider" (on NBC). There are a handful of ideas taken from formats that have already succeeded elsewhere in the world (including CBS' "The Ex List," from Israel, and NBC's "Kath & Kim," from Australia). There are big-name producers you've heard from before (Jerry Bruckheimer, David E. Kelley, J.J. Abrams).
Fantasy continues to be hot, too, and several series require a willing suspension of disbelief. ABC expects you to follow a detective transported to the 1970s by a car crash; CBS a woman who has turned her life upside down because of a psychic's prediction.
The writers' strike fell during the networks' development season, when ideas are incubated. ABC and Fox executives both admitted that really hurt, and forced cutbacks. While its rivals occasionally ordered series based only on scripts or a quick 20-minute film about an idea, it was a route ABC entertainment President Stephen McPherson refused to follow.