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sunflowers
11-02-2013, 07:48 AM
We hate to say a show is doomed. We really do. But we don't take it lightly, and we've never been wrong.



In the past, TheWrap has predicted that a total of 12 shows would be canceled - and all of them were. This season, it looks like six more are soon to shuffle off, joining fall casualties that began with "Lucky 7."





Networks have a new face-saving way of avoiding the word "cancellation": They'll order shows like "Hostages" or "Betrayal" and call them limited-run series. But that's a hedge, and a shrewd PR move; if a show ends as scheduled, it isn't so much a cancellation as a show peacefully ending its run. And if it comes back, well … the people demanded it.



But let's be honest. There isn't a show on television that networks wouldn't bring back for more if it scored.



"We hope to get not only two seasons, but a lot more," said "Hostages" executive producer Jerry Bruckheimer before his show aired, with refreshing honesty. "So this is not a miniseries for us."





Unfortunately, we think "Hostages" will turn out to be a miniseries after all. Call it "cancelled" or "not returning" or whatever you want, but it leads our latest list of shows we think are doomed. Most are on fourth-place ABC, which can at least take comfort in "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." being a hit.



Here are this fall's unlucky six:



"Hostages" (CBS)


The 15-episode series won't be back for more because NBC's "The Blacklist" is crushing it on Monday nights at 10. It has a 2.0 in the key 18-49 demographic in the live + 7 ratings that generously measure a show's performance over an entire week. CBS isn't known for keeping underperforming shows around, but seems content to let "Hostages" finish its run because of the star power of leads Dylan McDermott and Toni Collette — and perhaps to avoid offending the mighty Bruckheimer.



"Trophy Wife" (ABC)


Tuesday nights start very strong for ABC: "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." has a very strong 4.6 in Live + 7, making it the highest-rated new show of the season. But not even Nick Fury's long coattails help: "The Goldbergs," which follows it, averages a 2.7, while ratings for "Trophy Wife," which follows, plunges to a 1.9 average. (The show that once followed "Trophy Wife," the unlucky "Lucky 7," has already been canceled. Maybe "Trophy Wife" could hold on to more of the fanboy audience if it followed "S.H.I.E.L.D."? After all, star Malin Akerman was great in "Watchmen.") But as it stands, it would take the power of the Avengers, the Watchmen, and the X-Men to keep "Trophy Wife" from becoming an ex-show.



"Sean Saves the World" (NBC)


"Sean" is the lowest-rated comedy on broadcast television that hasn't been canceled yet, except for ABC's "Neighbors." Why is it still on? Because NBC has a good relationship with its star, Sean Hayes, who broke out on "Will & Grace" and produces "Hollywood Game Night." Hayes may have tested that relationship last week when he blamed NBC's low ratings for his low ratings in an interview with The TV Page. One problem with his assessment was that NBC is in first place this season, and his show is its biggest remaining weak spot. The others have been cancelled. The upside for Hayes? His show isn't bad. Maybe NBC will give it time to find an audience, despite its 1.4 rating.



"Betrayal" (ABC)


We wondered over the summer if American audience would root for a female protagonist who has an affair. Turns out the answer is no. "Betrayal" is another "limited-run series," and unfortunately, its prospects do indeed look limited. ABC plans to air the entire season, but don't hold your breath for more after that. It has a lowly 1.4 rating in Live + 7, so this is the end of the affair.



"Neighbors" (ABC)


ABC kept its aliens-next-door comedy alive for a second season by moving it to the no-man's-land of Friday, where the stakes are low. But "Neighbors" is low-rated even for a Friday show, averaging a 1.2. As we mentioned above, that makes it the lowest-rated comedy on TV. We hate to rub it in with a corny joke, but hey, it's probably our last chance: The neighbors are moving out.



"The Carrie Diaries" (CW)


We hate to put this endearing show on this list. But its second season debuted to an anemic .2 rating Friday, which is low even by CW standards. (The young network notes that much of its 18-34 target audience watches shows online rather than live.) Even the show's "Sex and the City" connections don't feel sufficient to keep it alive.

BeanieLuvR
11-02-2013, 03:29 PM
I see Dylan McDermott being back on American Horror Story. I watch Hostages because I like him. I knew it couldn't be a ratings hit. On the other hand I love The Blacklist and figured it was a hit. Even my husband watches it and the only other two network shows he watches are Person of Interest and NCIS:LA.

Jolie Rouge
05-08-2014, 05:30 AM
Fox has canceled three freshman comedies, including the most critically bashed sitcom of the season.

The network confirms that Seth MacFarlane’s Dads is dead. This is actually a bit surprising. The industry tom-toms began to drum in recent weeks that the series starring Giovanni Ribisi and Seth Green was, against the odds, looking very likely for a renewal. Recently, however, the caustic comedy’s fortune suddenly reversed. The axing is win for the critics — Dads only averaged a score of 15 of of 100 on Metacritic.

In addition, Surviving Jack is canceled too — that’s definitely not a surprise. The single-camera sitcom based on best-selling author Justin Halpern’s autobiographical book, I Suck at Girls, is a coming-of-age story set in the 1990s featured Christopher Meloni as a dad trying to raise his teenage kids. The show struggled in the ratings on Thursday nights.

Lastly, cult-fav comedy Enlisted is dead. The Friday night freshman military comedy starring Geoff Stults and Chris Lowell was always a long shot for a renewal, but the feel-good series had plenty of fans and defenders who hoped it would get a second chance.

In the ratings, Dads averaged 4.2 million viewers and a 1.8 rating including DVR playback, Surviving Jack had 5 million and a 1.4 rating and Enlisted had 2.7 million and a 1.0 rating.

Fox is not commenting on whether Greg Kinnear legal drama series Rake is canceled, but nobody seems to expect the show to return for a second season either.

Earlier this year, Fox announced renewals for Tuesday comedies New Girl, Brooklyn Nine-Nine and The Mindy Project.

Also, for those tracking this stuff, Fox has passed on comedy pilots No Place Like Home, Fatrick and Dead Boss.

This is the first of what’s sure to be many cancellations over the next several days as broadcasters prepare fro their upfront presentation to advertisers. Last week, Fox pulled the plug on drama Almost Human. http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/04/29/almost-human-canceled-fox/

Fox is pulling the plug on Almost Human. The robot cop drama will not return for a second season.

Almost Human starred Karl Urban and Michael Ealy as two cops, at least one a robot, who fought crime in the future. The freshman drama struggled in the ratings on Monday nights, where the last few episodes averaged about 5.6 million viewers and a mere 1.5 rating among adults 18-49 in the overnight numbers. The somewhat similarly premised CBS freshman drama series Intelligence, which stars Josh Holloway as a crime fighter with a cyber-wired brain, is still on the bubble for a renewal after likewise struggling on Mondays this season.

The decision came down on the same day Almost Human executive producer J.J. Abrams announced the cast for one of his other sci-fi projects — Star Wars: Episode VII.

http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/05/07/fox-cancels-dads/

I really liked "Almost Human" and "Intelligence"

Jolie Rouge
05-08-2014, 07:47 PM
CW cancels 3 shows plus 'Supernatural' spinoff
By James Hibberd on May 8, 2014 at 3:00PM

Every CW drama returning next season please take a step forward — not so fast The Tomorrow People.

The CW has lowered its youthful, chiseled, well-coiffed ax on three current shows: The Carrie Diaries, Star-Crossed and, yes, The Tomorrow People will not return next season.

If those cuts didn’t represent enough on-screen romances cut cruelly short, another project is being gunned down at the starting gate: The Supernatural spin-off. Tribes, or Bloodlines, or whatever the title — it’s dead.

The Supernatural project was one of the highest-profile pilots this year, spun off from The CW’s 9-year-old veteran Supernatural, with a pilot that went on the air this season. So initially, Bloodlines (which changed its name from Tribes) was considered very likely to move forward, yet fan reaction to the pilot was largely negative — EW’s own informal poll showed only a third of viewers thought it was worth continuing. Sources say The CW is leaving open the possibility of spinning off Supernatural in another concept down the line.

As for the current shows, their ratings were … not good. Carrie Diaries averaged 1.1 million people, Star-Crossed 1.3 million, and Tomorrow People averaged 1.9 million (see our interview on the producers’ plan for a season 2 that now won’t happen).

http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/05/08/cw-cancels/

Now for the good news: You want to know which two CW shows just got renewed, as well as which pilots are being turned into series? That story is here. http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/05/08/beauty-beast-the-flash/


CW renews 'Beauty and the Beast,' orders 'Flash'
By Lynette Rice on May 8, 2014 at 3:00PM

CW is bringing back three fan favorites and ordering a pair of comic-book inspired dramas for fall.

Beauty and the Beast and Hart of Dixie will make a comeback, as will the freshman drama The 100. They join the previously announced renewals of Supernatural, The Vampire Diaries, The Originals, Arrow and Reign.

CW also picked up four new series in anticipation of its fall presentation to advertisers next week. They are The Flash, Jane the Virgin, iZombie, and The Messengers. Here are the official descriptions of the new dramas:

THE FLASH: Based upon characters published by DC Comics. Through a freak accident, scientist Barry Allen is given the power of super speed that transforms him into the Fastest Man Alive. Cast: Grant Gustin (Barry Allen); Jesse L. Martin (Det. West); Tom Cavanaugh (Harrison Wells).

ZOMBIE: A med student-turned-zombie takes a job in the coroner’s office to gain access to the brains she must reluctantly eat to maintain her humanity, but with each brain she consumes, she inherits the corpse’s memories. With the help of her medical examiner boss and a police detective, she solves homicide cases in order to quiet the disturbing voices in her head. Based on the characters created by Chris Roberson and Michael Allred, and published by DC Comics’ Vertigo imprint. Cast: Rose McIver (Liv).

JANE THE VIRGIN: Adapted from the successful Venezuelan telenovela. A series of surprising and unforeseen events causes a hard-working, religious young Latina woman to be accidentally artificially inseminated. Gina Rodriguez (Jane); Justin Baldoni (Rafael).

THE MESSENGERS: When a mysterious object crashes down to earth, a group of seemingly unconnected strangers die from the energy pulse, but then awaken to learn that they have been deemed responsible for preventing the impending Apocalypse. Cast: Shantel VanSaten (Vera); Diogo Morgado (The Man).

Jolie Rouge
05-10-2014, 06:49 AM
'Revolution' over: NBC cancels apocalyptic drama
By James Hibberd on May 9, 2014 at 2:35PM

NBC’s Revolution has come to an end.

Sources confirm the ambitious apocalyptic drama series will not get a third season, along with two other NBC drama cancellations that came down Friday. The final season averaged 7.3 million viewers and a 2.3 rating among adults 18-49 on Wednesday nights. That’s actually much better than the second season of Friday night’s Hannibal, which just got a pickup — which goes to show that there are many other factors that go into these decisions other than the overnight rating. Revolution followed a band of survivors 15 years after America had lost electric power.

UPDATE: NBC has also axed the short-lived Sunday-night dramas Crisis and Believe. It’s not been a great season for J.J. Abrams-produced shows, in addition to Believe and Revolution, Fox’s Almost Human was also axed. Only CBS’ Person of Interest remains. But we hear Abrams has some big movie project he’s working on anyway.

http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/05/09/revolution-canceled/

Jolie Rouge
05-10-2014, 06:40 PM
CBS renews 'The Mentalist' (but cancels 5 others)
By James Hibberd on May 10, 2014 at 2:08PM

CBS made their toughest calls of the season Saturday, rendering pickup verdicts on six bubble shows.

The good news: Long-running crime procedural The Mentalist will continue to a seventh season. The drama has struggled on Sunday nights in the ratings, but this season the series had a creative reboot which moved the show’s setting from Sacramento to Austin, Texas, after killing off Patrick Jane’s (Simon Baker) longtime nemesis Red John. Showrunner Bruno Heller will now serve double-duty on Mentalist and his new Fox series, Gotham.

Then there was CBS’ other moves. Monday night dramas Intelligence and Hostages will not come back (the latter launched in the fall and was long presumed not to return, but this is the first time CBS has confirmed this). On the comedy side, midseason launches Bad Teacher and Friends with Better Lives are both canceled, which is not too surprising.

Finally, freshman comedy The Crazy Ones is axed. The Thursday night sitcom starring Robin Williams and Sarah Michelle Gellar was considered the bubble comedy with the best odds of returning.

The verdicts follow CBS ordering several new shows, including a spin-off of NCIS and a spin-off of on the drama side, and on the comedy side two new shows, including a reboot of The Odd Couple starring Matthew Perry. The much-buzzed about spin-off of How I Met Your Mother has not been picked up, despite media reports (including ours) touting a pending order. It’s not yet clear if CBS will pick up any more shows for next season.

http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/05/10/mentalist-renewed-canceled/

The cancellations bring the list of axed shows this week to a total of 22.

That full list is here. http://insidetv.ew.com/2014/05/09/broadcast-ax-canceled-shows/

It’s been a brutal week in Hollywood. Broadcast networks have killed 17 22 23 shows, the bulk of the executions going down in the last 36 hours. NBC’s Revolution? Put down. ABC’s Trophy Wife? On the shelf. Fox’s Dads? Retired. Below is the full list of newly canceled shows, how long each lasted and their ratings season to date including DVR playback. See Death Watch for a complete list of show verdicts for the 2013-14 season.

NBC

Believe / 1 season / 6.8 million viewers, 1.7 rating among adults 18-49
Community / 5 seasons / 3.8 million viewers, 1.5 rating
Crisis / 1 season / 6.2 million viewers, 1.6 rating
Dracula / 1 season / 5 million viewers, 1.8 rating
Growing Up Fisher / 1 season / 7.3 million viewers, 2.0 rating
Revolution / 2 seasons / 7.3 million viewers, 2.3 rating
Verdicts to come on: Parenthood,


ABC

Mixology / 1 season / 4.8 million viewers, 1.7 rating
Neighbors / 2 seasons / 4.8 million viewers, 1.2 rating
Suburgatory / 3 seasons / 5.4 million viewers, 1.6 rating
Super Fun Night / 1 season / 6 million viewers, 2.3 rating
Trophy Wife / 1 season / 4.3 million viewers, 1.4 rating

FOX

Dads / 1 season / 4.2 million viewers, 1.8 rating
Enlisted / 1 season / 2.7 million viewers, 1.0 rating
Rake / 1 season / 4.7 million viewers, 1.2 rating
Surviving Jack / 1 season / 4.9 million viewers, 1.4 rating

The CW

The Carrie Diaries / 1 season / 1.1 million viewers, 0.5 rating
Star-Crossed / 1 season / 1.3 million viewers, 0.4
The Tomorrow People / 1 season / 1.9 million viewers, 0.7

CBS

Bad Teacher / 1 season / 7.1 million viewers, 1.7 rating
Crazy Ones / 1 season / 9.8 million viewers, 2.7 rating
Friends with Better Lives / 1 season / 6.8 million viewers, 2.3
Hostages / 1 season / 7.6 million viewers, 2.0 rating
Intelligence / 1 season /10.2 million viewers, 2.2 rating

UPDATES TO COME…

FreeBnutt
05-11-2014, 03:53 PM
It's almost to the point I don't want to watch a new show, because it may only have 6 episodes, and doomed for failure before its even Premiered. Why not just give a show a half season of 13 weeks. There have been shows for the first three shows at the start took that long to decide, do I, or don't I?

I'm so tired of shows with just six episodes, and you're hooked! They are no longer. Cancelled!