That's pretty standard for headliner shows on Toonami.
Every adult who has living parents or grandparents knows someone who watches NCIS.
Mostly reruns, but NBC only channel with anything over 1.0
Does anyone watch Scorpion? Me and the GF recently found it and figure it could kill some time for us.
APB seems okay so far nothing amazing, it's a nice gimmick at least.
So Trial & Error is a hit? Interesting. I love me some John Lithgow.
Does anyone watch Scorpion? Me and the GF recently found it and figure it could kill some time for us.
APB seems okay so far nothing amazing, it's a nice gimmick at least.
Unfortunately, it's a slide show, but they are thorough with the list of network shows here.At this time last year, there were fewer than 40 broadcast shows still on the bubble. This year? Nearly 70. While The CW has given early pickups to nearly every one of its shows, the other four networks have renewed only a select few, leaving the fates of many series up in the air with less than two months to go before the networks make their 2017-18 schedule announcements.
To determine which of those shows look safe, and which are in danger of cancellation, we have surveyed a variety of experts. Below, browse the resulting renew/cancel odds for over 60 scripted shows still on the bubble (listed in alphabetical order).
Yeah. I've been watching it. A lot of silly stuff in it and I watched it as something stupid but have come to enjoy it a decent amount.
Metacritic: Renew/Cancel Odds for TV Shows Still on the BubbleUnfortunately, it's a slide show, but they are thorough with the list of network shows here.
Yeah, obviously the scenarios are completely unbelievable but I like the characters, so I continue to watch it. Funny that you basically have to turn your brain off watching a show about geniuses. It's dumb fun.
Did I just get a sneak preview of the thread title when Agents of Shield gets cancelled?
If Scream Queens gets renewed in any fashion then Ryan Murphy's power has grown too strong. It deserves nothing but death.They should move Scream Queens to FXX. And always air it around Halloween.
Wouldn't they want to keep Shield on at least one more year to pimp that Inhumans show?
If Scream Queens gets renewed in any fashion then Ryan Murphy's power has grown too strong. It deserves nothing but death.
Wouldn't they want to keep Shield on at least one more year to pimp that Inhumans show?
Wouldn't they want to keep Shield on at least one more year to pimp that Inhumans show?
I do not see anything on that list about Lethal Weapon from FOX. Any word on that, it wasn't half bad.
How dare you claim No Tomorrow and Frequency are cancelled? Netflix is saving them.
Slides are just the worst.Did they really have 64 pages for that? What fucking assholes. lol
Their predictions:
Emerald City: Canned
Once Upon a Time: Mixed -- but apparently if it's renewed they will fire the whole cast
Really? I knew Rick & Morty had been crushing it when it was airing originals but I had no idea Adult Swim could pull in those sorts of numbers, especially on a Saturday night.
They are not officially canceled. They did not get extra episode pickups so everyone assumes they're either dead or will be shopped around.How dare you claim No Tomorrow and Frequency are cancelled? Netflix is saving them.
Watching the OC, looking at that time shows had 27-episode seasons.
Despite its popularity, throughout its run the production was hampered by a very low budget. Until 1953, Captain Video's live adventures occupied only 20 minutes of each day's 30-minute program time. About 10 minutes into each episode, a Video Ranger "communications officer" showed about seven minutes of old cowboy movies described by the officer, Ranger Rogers, as the adventures of Captain Video's "undercover agents" on Earth.
The reason is that the westerns originally had been purchased by DuMont to be shown in their entirety, hosted by Captain Video, but the format was flip-flopped to become a show about Captain Video occasionally interrupted by clips from the old westerns. Despite the incongruity of mixing the two genres, it was done so the cash-strapped channel would not waste the money spent acquiring the broadcast rights to the westerns.
Even for its time, when early television productions often were thrown-together affairs, the quality of the show often is considered crude or low-budget,[6] owing much to the fact that the show was done live and DuMont had a meager budget to work with
In the early days of the series, the show featured often incoherent scripts, along with jarring plot shifts to old cowboy movies. This led to derision of the show by the critics of the day, although it always was wildly popular with kids and many adult.
Few special effects were evident until the team of Russell and Haberstroh was hired in September 1952. For the rest of the program's episodes, they provided effective model and effects work, prefilmed in 16 mm format and cut into the live broadcast as needed.
The actors were paid so little they actually made more money from appearing in character at supermarket openings, county fairs and the like than they did from their salaries. The original star Richard Coogan left the show in 1950 partially because the show's producers refused to cut in the cast members for a percentage of the licensing dollars from the sale of Captain Video merchandise. Bram Nossen, who played Dr. Pauli, dropped out in 195, after suffering a nervous breakdown from having to appear on TV six days a week, was replaced by Hal Conklin, and in 1954 Stephen Elliott assumed the role. The jarring change in actors who looked nothing like each other was explained by saying that the villainous Dr. Pauli had undergone plastic surgery to outwit Captain Video.
Really surprised at Flash's numbers. I expected higher based off the buzz from the internet.
The Flash gets really good ratings for the CW, I think it might actually be the highest rated show on the network.
Yeah, they're gonna have to recast Peyton List from that pilot she just signed on for!
Didn't Peyton List sign up for a new pilot?
If Frequency isn't dead that is signalling hard that it will be.
List's casting is in second position to the Warner Bros TV-produced Frequency.
They are not officially canceled. They did not get extra episode pickups so everyone assumes they're either dead or will be shopped around.
Here is an example of TV in the mid-1950s:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Video_and_His_Video_Rangers
- Primetime
- Aired 6 nights a week
- 40+ weeks a year
- 1,537 episodes produced in 6 years
yuuuup
Hard not to believe OUAT getting some sort of bump from Beauty and the Beast and the inevitable Disney rush, plus it seems like a safe show to test out new Disney princess ideas and/or theme park tie ins.
The Flash gets really good ratings for the CW, I think it might actually be the highest rated show on the network.
Oh, I know that. It's been on a downward trend lately, though. Before a few weeks ago it had never gone fractional in the ratings.
In the final, adjusted scorecard it went up to a 1.0 from its .9 in the fast nationals. Still, I expected a bit more with the reaction the show was getting from Twitter at the time.
Oh my god.Here is an example of TV in the mid-1950s:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Video_and_His_Video_Rangers
- Primetime
- Aired 6 nights a week
- 40+ weeks a year
- 1,537 episodes produced in 6 years
yuuuup
CBS has given early renewals to 16 returning series for the 2017-2018 season: 5 comedies (returning Life In Pieces and Mom, freshmen Kevin Can Wait, Man With a Plan and midseason entry Superior Donuts); 8 dramas (returning NCIS: Los Angeles, NCIS: New Orleans, Hawaii Five-0, Blue Bloods, Scorpion and Madam Secretary, and freshmen Bull and MacGyver); 1 reality series (Survivor); and 2 newsmagazines (60 Minutes, 48 Hours).
They join CBS previously renewed top comedy The Big Bang Theory and top drama NCIS for a total of 18 CBS series already picked up for next season.
What is missing from the list? Veteran dramas Elementary and Criminal Minds, comedy 2 Broke Girls and reality stalwart The Amazing Race as well as third-year comedy The Odd Couple, sophomore Code Black and Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders and freshmen The Great Indoors, Pure Genius, as well as midseason entries Doubt and Training Day.
Empire's return kind of came out of nowhere for me, but seems to keep decently]
Cinemax has made it official Steven Soderberghs The Knick will not produce more seasons beyond the two that already had aired. Clive Owen, who starred in the first two seasons, had said that he was done, though the network had left the door slightly open for another installment with a new lead actor. Cinemax will now focus completely on its re-callibtated identity as home of high-octane action dramas, most of them international co-productions. Here is the statement by Cinemaxs programming chief Kary Antholis:
After a critically acclaimed two-season run of THE KNICK on Cinemax, we will not be going forward with additional episodes of the series, said Kary Antholis, president, HBO Miniseries and Cinemax Programming. Despite our pride in and affection for the series, as well as our respect for and gratitude towards Steven Soderbergh and his team, we have decided to return Cinemax to its original primetime series fare of high-octane action dramas, many of which will be internationally co-produced.