Pretender-related stories
Posted Oct 28th 2009 10:00AM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Industry, Programming, OpEd, Reality-Free

For the longest time, I've kvetched about the fact that the television industry has stopped programming for Saturday night. For years, Saturday was a great night of television. I remember
M*A*S*H and
The Mary Tyler Moore Show, not to mention guilty pleasures like
The Facts of Life and
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman. Even NBC's thrillogy,
The Pretender and
Profiler were fun. All those shows were Saturday night hits (some bigger than others).
Well,
I'm not alone in missing Saturday TV; Oscar-winner Barry Levinson feels the same. Levinson is also a TV producer -- he did
Homicide: Life on the Street and
The Philanthropist -- and he thinks the networks are making a big mistake by not seizing on Saturday primetime. He knows the business pretty well and he's confused by the networks' strategy.
"I don't think the answer is to retreat," he told the New York Daily News. "When you give up Saturday night, you open the door for people to go somewhere else. Basically, they're shrinking their own audience."
Continue reading Barry Levinson urges TV to take back Saturday night
Posted Aug 25th 2008 12:22PM by Brett Love
Filed under: Sports, Programming, Commercials, Chuck, Life, Reality-Free

If you've been watching NBC's Olympic coverage, you must have seen all of the promotion they have been doing for their fall season. New shows
My Own Worst Enemy, Crusoe, Knight Rider, Kath & Kim, and
America's Toughest Jobs have all had plenty of play. As have the returning
Chuck and
Life. Given that the latest Olympiad is closing in on becoming
the most watched television event of all time, you might think those promo spots were pretty valuable.
Apparently, not so much. The Hollywood Reporter runs down the
record for the network promoting new shows during past games. In 2004, the Athens games led to one show,
Joey, making it beyond its first season. Likewise for the Sydney games in 2000, which brought us
Ed, and nothing else. Things were a little better in 1996 from Atlanta.
Profiler, The Pretender, and
Suddenly Susan all lasted another four years. Not a stellar track record and it leaves you thinking that those precious spots might have served the network better pitching more beer. It has the makings of a good poll though. After the jump, place your vote for the one new show that will make it out of season one.
Continue reading What are all those Olympic promos worth?
Posted Dec 3rd 2007 10:42AM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, Pickups and Renewals, Casting
From 1996-2000, NBC had a modest hit on their hand with The Pretender, a show in which main character Jarod used his abilities to assume other people's identities to help those in need. Kind of a Quantum Leap with identity theft instead of bodysnatching. Creators Steven Long Mitchell and Craig Van Sickle, also of Tin Man, reportedly told SCI FI Wire they'd like to bring back the show in the digital medium. The relaunch, or continuation, could even feature original star Michael T. Weiss in the title role again.
They've reportedly brunched Weiss and begun laying the groundwork for the project, so it seems it's a done deal, just what exactly it means and when and where we'll be able to see it remains unclear.
Continue reading The Pretender to return in new digital format?