Saturday, December 13, 2014

NBC NEW SCHEDULE

NBC is making a dramatic change to its midseason schedule. The net will launch a Thursday drama block, with “The Blacklist” anchoring the night in its new 9 p.m. slot beginning on Feb. 5, after an airing following the Super Bowl on Feb. 1.
“The Blacklist” will serve as a lead-in for new spy drama “Allegiance,” which will air at 10 p.m. starting on Feb. 5, with eight-episode event series “The Slap” taking the 8 p.m. slot beginning Feb. 12.
The Night Shift,” which originally aired on last summer’s schedule, will return to NBC on Monday, Feb. 23, following the season premiere of “The Voice.”
“The Super Bowl gives us a great opportunity on a promotional level to reset the table for midseason,” said NBC Entertainment chairman Robert Greenblatt. “‘The Blacklist,’ which will premiere with a new episode on Super Bowl Sunday and then move to Thursday nights later that week, is a big priority. That will give us the chance to create a first-class night of drama with the addition of both ‘Allegiance’ at 10 p.m. and our 8 p.m. event series ‘The Slap,’ which has an incredible cast and is a terrific way to start the night.”
Dramas “A.D.” and “Odyssey” will bow on Easter Sunday, April 5, at 9 and 10 p.m., respectively.
Added NBC president Jennifer Salke, “On the comedy front, we have two strong multicam series with blue-chip producers that we are going to put behind ‘The Voice’ on Tuesdays in March — Bill Lawrence’s ‘Undateable,’ which was a nice success for us, and Ellen DeGeneres’ ‘One Big Happy.’”
NBC is putting comedies “Marry Me” and “About a Boy” on hold to launch the second season of “Undateable” and new comedy “One Big Happy” in the plum, post-“Voice” spot.
“Undateable” will air at 9 p.m. on Tuesdays beginning March 17, leading into the premiere of “One Big Happy” at 9:30.


Both “Marry Me” and “About a Boy” will return later in the season.

Friday, December 5, 2014

Peter Pan

NEW YORK (Reuters) - More than 9 million people tuned in to watch a high-flying Allison Williams as Peter Pan and a tap-dancing Christopher Walken as Captain Hook in a live television production of the classic musical that drew mixed reactions from fans and critics.
The three-hour "Peter Pan Live!" that aired on NBC on Thursday night on the Comcast-owned network followed last year's live production of "The Sound of Music." It drew half the 18.5 million viewers who saw last year's show, NBC said.
But not everyone was enthralled by the latest version of the beloved children's story about the boy who refuses to grow up and the one-handed pirate.
Viewers who found the production lackluster, wooden or odd turned to social media to vent their disappointment.
"Weird that the 'lost boys' are grown men," tweeted actress Mia Farrow.
"I'm watching #Peter Pan but it looks more like a gay pride parade," comedian Dane Cook said on Twitter.
"Honestly at this point, I'm just sticking around to see that psycho in the crocodile outfit again," tweeted Adam Lusici.
Oscar winner Walken, 71, drew the most varied comments for his laid-back, sashaying portrayal of Hook, which some likened to an aging Jack Sparrow in the "Pirates of the Caribbean" films.
"Christopher Walken can kill anyone on this stage anytime he likes. The only thing stopping him is his lack of interest," said TV viewer Maureen Johnson.

OR JUST     PAN
NBC's "Peter Pan Live!" was no match for last December's "Sound of Music Live!" with ratings falling so hard and dramatically that the network started the morning with a defensive press release and statement from Entertainment Chairman Robert Greenblatt.
These morning ratings stories never include network quotes/blurbs, but this is the first time in my memory that a network has tried to smooth over ratings before 8 a.m. on the West Coast.
"We're very pleased with the 'Peter Pan' ratings and it was a great night for NBC.  We won every hour, which hasn't happened on Thursday with entertainment programming since a year ago.  I'm proud to be part of a company that takes chances and creates big events, and that's exactly what we're going to continue to do," Greenblatt states.

He continues, "We didn’t expect to reach the same rating as 'The Sound of Music' since that was the first live movie event of its kind in over 50 years.  But the high wire act of Peter Pan was a joy for everyone involved and I take my hat off to Allison Williams, Christopher Walken, the entire company, and our incredible directors and producers for three months of the hardest work I've ever seen.  I love these live events and we're already working on putting the next one together."
Quotes and justifications aside, "Sound of Music Live!" averaged 18.5 million viewers and a 4.6 rating among adults 18-49 in Fast Nationals last December. "Peter Pan Live!" averaged 9.13 million viewers and a 2.3 key demo rating in Fast Nationals last night, winning primetime among young viewers, but losing to football-inflated CBS overall.
The most disconcerting thing for NBC is that "Peter Pan Live!" drew an OK audience to start with and then plummeted by the last hour. Some viewers were curious, but they left. Heck, you might say the audience petered out. I wouldn't. But you might.
The quick football-related caveat would be that last year's Thursday Night Football game pitted the Jaguars against the Texans, a fairly weak matchup. Last night's game featured the Bears and the Cowboys and, almost certainly, drew a bigger audience. [CBS had the preemptions in both Chicago and Dallas.] That's not why "Peter Pan Live!"  did half the "Sound of Music Live!" numbers.
On to Thursday ratings...
Among adults 18-49, NBC averaged a 2.3 rating for Thursday night, edging out CBS' preemption bloated 2.2 rating in the key demographic. FOX was a distant third with a 1.2 key demo rating, followed by ABC's 0.8 key demo rating. The CW averaged a 0.6 key demo rating for the night.
Overall, CBS' averaged a sure-to-drop 9.53 million viewers and a 6.0 rating/10 share for Thursday, edging out NBC's 9.13 million viewers and 5.2/9. FOX was third with 4.8 million viewers and a 3.0/5, topping ABC's 2.1/4 and 3.15 million viewers. The CW averaged 1.37 million viewers and a 0.9/2 for the night.
8 p.m. - NBC won the 8 p.m. hour with a respectable 11.09 million viewers and a 2.7 rating among adults 18-49 for "Peter Pan Live!" CBS was second with football-boosted episodes of "The Big Bang Theory" (10.74 million viewers and a 2.3 key demo rating for a repeat) and "Mom" (10.375 million and a 2.5 key demo). FOX's "Bones" was third with 5.97 million viewers and a 1.5 key demo rating, far ahead of the 3.38 million viewers and 0.8 key demo rating for the season premiere of ABC's "The Taste." The CW's "The Vampire Diaries" averaged 1.495 million viewers and a 0.7 key demo rating.
9 p.m. - CBS moved into first with 9.32 million viewers and a 2.2 key demo rating for "Two and a Half Men" and "The McCarthys," numbers so distorted by football that there's no point in breaking out the individual figures. NBC's "Peter Pan Live!" slipped to 9.12 million viewers and a 2.4 rating among adults 18-49 in its second hour. FOX's "Gracepoint" averaged 3.64 million viewers and a 0.9 key demo rating, compared to the 3.23 million viewers and 0.9 key demo rating for the second hour of ABC's "The Taste." The CW's "Reign" averaged 1.25 million viewers and a 0.5 key demo rating.


10 p.m. - Football-inflated "Elementary" gave CBS 8.62 million viewers to win the 10 p.m. hour, finishing second with a 1.8 rating among adults 18-49. NBC's "Peter Pan Live!" was down to 7.18 million viewers and a 1.9 key demo rating in its final hour. ABC drew 2.84 million viewers and a 0.6 key demo rating for a "How To Get Away With Murder" repeat.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Less TV watching and morning increase


Thursday, October 16, 2014

Streaming everyone

The television landscape took a hard shift toward the future this week with announcements from HBO and CBS that they were each launching freestanding video-on-demand services. The moves occurred within 24 hours of each other and have left television watchers wondering who will be begging for their streaming subscription dollars next?
During their announcement on Thursday, HBO pointed to 10 million households in the U.S. that are broadband-only, cutting the cord from a regular cable subscription. TheWrap reached out to other networks to ask if and when they will make similar moves like HBO and CBS and offer programming to consumers who aren't watching traditional broadcast TV.
Showtime, a subsidiary of CBS and HBO's biggest competitor, has been considering a standalone streaming model, it said.
“We are always looking at ways of expanding our audience and it is certainly something that we have been examining for some time,” a Showtime representative told TheWrap. “The subscription model is ideally positioned to take advantage of developing technologies in the consumer marketplace.”
Starz also has no current plans for a standalone streaming venture domestically. In a statement, Starz CEO Chris Albrecht said, ”Premium networks such as STARZ provide immense value to distributors as an [over-the-top] offering on top of broadband services. We support more U.S. and international distributors making these offerings available to consumers.”
The premium cable service launched its streaming service internationally last weekend with an eye toward emerging markets, such as Asia and Africa. It currently has both the platform and the streaming rights to launch in the U.S.
ABC, NBC and Fox all have stakes in the free (but ad-supported) streaming video service Hulu. CBS is the only network of the big four who has no stake in Hulu, making its launch into streaming all that much more critical.
The Wrap also reached out to The CW and NBC about a possible streaming venture. They had no comment.
CBS's All-Access subscription, while commercial free, comes with a monthly fee of $5.99, however.
Robert Thompson, a professor of Television and Pop Culture at Syracuse University, says it's only a matter of time before every network has their own streaming service.
“Oftentimes there's a generational shift of these things that can take 20 years,” Thompson told TheWrap. “I think CBS sees this the same way — why let this all go to Netflix and Amazon Prime?”

Monday, September 8, 2014

TV Old

What aging audience means for the future of network television

Baby Boomers and television came of age together and sustained one another through their prosperous prime. Will Boomers and TV as we know it die together, too? 

New analysis of television viewing trends shows the TV audience is aging much faster than previously believed, as Americans under the age of 50 turn away from network programming, even when DVR-captured delayed viewing is included. 
Media analyst Michael Nathanson of MoffettNathanson Research says the median age of the TV audience in the 2013-14 season rose 6%, or 2.5 years, to 44.4 years, from four years earlier. In the past five years, he says, the age of the typical TV viewer has advanced 5% faster than that of the average American. (The 2012 U.S. Census report has the median age of the American population at 37.2).
This “ratings-weighted average age” has climbed by 7% in the past few years among broadcast networks, to 53.9 years, and 8% for cable networks, to 40 years. 
Tablets and time-shifting
The climb in broad TV audience age is almost entirely due to the rapid decline in traditional TV viewership by younger people – but not only the very young. Nathanson calculates primetime live viewing is down 13% since 2010, yet it has not dropped measurably among those over age 55. Even as older viewers maintain their traditional tube time, a separate Nielsen study found those between 50 and 64 watched 19 minutes of digital video last quarter, up from 11 minutes a year earlier. 
Nathanson's results are based on Nielsen ratings, which capture “live + 7” viewing, or shows watched live or within a week on TV via a digital video recorder or video on demand. They don’t include shows watched on tablets or phones, or those viewed beyond seven days from original broadcast. Yet those live or near-live programs are the ones advertisers principally use to reach the still-large pools of consumers network shows are created for. 
The graying of the TV audience has a few big implications for the media industry. Advertisers and TV executives for years have focused on ratings within “the demo” – people between age 18 and 49 – almost to the exclusion of others. 
Standard wisdom has held that advertisers seek younger viewers because their brand loyalties are still shifting, making them susceptible to marketing messages. Companies still are willing to pay a premium to get at these coveted consumers, but as they become an ever-smaller part of the TV audience, programmers may no longer try to fashion shows for them. 
Nathanson says he was prompted to examine the age breakdown of TV ratings by a reader of his reports “who also happens to be a senior cable network research executive,” who suggested that “more networks are now competing for older demographics and focusing less on the more ‘elusive’ younger demos.” 
While he says he can’t prove such a shift has taken hold, Nathanson figures it’s logical to expect “more ‘Blue Bloods,’ more ‘CSIs,” to cite two typical CBS one-hour police dramas popular with that network’s older loyalists. 
In this way, scripted TV might follow in the path of Broadway theater, a once-broad medium that came to be dominated by global tourists and older folks. Now, most Broadway productions are made specifically for tourists and older people. Similarly but on the other end of the spectrum, Hollywood economics became over-reliant on young men and the global box office,  so comic book vehicles and other effects-laden blockbusters hog studio budgets. 
There are other implications of the slow aging and winnowing of the TV audience. 
- Expect the continued escalation in the cost of sports-league television rights. Live sports in general, and pro football most of all, is the only form of programming that reliably reaches younger eyeballs in real time. 
- Advertisers will turn their attention even more intensely toward Facebook Inc. (FB) and other social networks, which younger consumers increasingly use as their portal to media and pretty much everything else. Facebook's towering $200 billion valuation certainly reflects broad expectations it's becoming the main consumer advertising platform for this century.
- Programmers will be increasingly willing to experiment with alternative distribution platforms for their content. With less risk of cannibalizing one’s core younger audience by offering shows on Netflix Inc. (NFLX), networks will try to cut deals to reach the mobile, “time-shifting” viewer, wherever he or she can be found. 
Time Warner Inc.'s (TWX) Warner Brothers television production division last week sold global streaming rights to its forthcoming "Gotham," Batman-inspired series to Netflix, to begin after the first season airs on 21st Century Fox Inc.'s (FOXFOXA) Fox broadcast network. While an isolated example, the deal shows the big streaming outlets are emerging as a viable alternative to the typical syndication market. 
- In terms of the shows themselves, we might see even more formulaic dramas and sitcoms, more pharmaceutical commercials and more older leading men and women in primetime, to better reflect the core viewing audience, rather than the sleeker, younger people who aren’t paying attention now anyway.  
TV networks, in this way, might take to heart the lyrics of a seminal Boomer tune: "If you can’t be with the one you love, love the one you’re with...”