full season-related stories
Posted Nov 8th 2008 6:03PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming, Pickups and Renewals, Reality-Free
"What's this stuff?"
"Some TV show...supposed to be good for ya."
"Did you try it?"
"I'm not gonna try it, you try it."
"I'm not gonna try it."
"Hey, let's get Mikey...""Yeah."
"He won't watch it...he hates everything!"We give a lot of depressing news here at TV Squad. News about shows being canceled, shows put on hiatus, shows delayed, episode orders on shows cut, shows moved to a bad time slot, characters killed off of shows, etc. So it's good when we actually have some good news about a show, especially one that isn't a huge hit.
NBC has given a full season order to Life, the quirky detective show that seems to be on a different night each week. It started the season on Mondays at 10, and we've seen it on both Fridays and Wednesdays. But the Peacock Network seems to have faith in the show and wants a full 22 from Charlie Crews and crew.
This is good news. One, the show isn't a reality show. And two, it's a good show.
Posted Oct 6th 2008 3:06PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming, Pickups and Renewals, Reality-Free

Looks like CBS has a hit on its hands.
The Mentalist, the Tuesday night Simon Baker drama, has just been
given the green light for a full season. The show is averaging 15.4 million viewers an episode, which is great considering it's in its first season and there are 22 other police procedurals on the network right now.
But
The Mentalist is a bit different than those shows. This show runs completely on the personality of Baker, even if he does have a team of investigators that he is part of. The show is really counting on Baker to sell this character, to be charming and intelligent and funny and all that. Plots and scripts can take a show to great places, but if the lead character doesn't work it can really tilt a show out of balance. Baker makes this character work.
Continue reading The Mentalist gets a full season
Posted Oct 23rd 2007 4:59PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Industry, OpEd, Pickups and Renewals, Pushing Daisies

Some interesting news coming out of ABC today, one of which is a surprise, the other of which isn't:
First the non-surprise: Both
TV Week and Kristin Dos Santos at
E! Online are reporting that
Pushing Daisies has been picked up for the rest of the season. That means 22 episodes of non-contact cuteness from Ned and Chuck. Ratings for the first three episodes have been solid, and -- at least based on
the fun third episode -- worries about how the show might operate with budget restrictions have been so far unfounded.
The surprising ABC news: The former Ms. Veitch
is also reporting that three more scripts have been ordered for
Bruce McCulloch's Carpoolers, bringing the total order to 12 episodes.
Despite the pedigree, the show hasn't been all that impressive so far either in quality or in the ratings. This makes me wonder if ABC is ordering more scripts
in case there's a writers' strike.
Posted Jan 17th 2007 1:20PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Other Comedy Shows, NBC, Industry, Law and Order, My Name Is Earl, The Office, Heroes, Pickups and Renewals, TCA Press Tour

NBC Entertainment president Kevin Reilly started his network's portion of the TCA press tour by announcing full-season renewals for four shows:
My Name Is Earl, Heroes, Law & Order: SVU, and The Office. This means all four shows will be back for new seasons in the fall. Reilly called those shows, and a number of others, "tent posts" that he thinks will bring the network back to a much stronger position than it has been in recent years.
In other news, Reilly announced the pickup of a new improv pilot called
Thank God You're Here, where improv comics will don a costume unknown to them, enter a scene, and attempt to improvise through it. It will be hosted by David Alan Grier, and the improv comic's skills will be "judged" by Dave Foley. Where does the name of the show come from? Well, when the comic enters with his costume on, the other comics in the scene will say, "Thank God You're Here!" Clever, ain't it?
More on the executive session later today.
Posted Oct 12th 2006 6:15PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, CBS, OpEd, Jericho, Pickups and Renewals

TV Squad HQ just got a press release from CBS; they've decided to pick up a full season of their most popular new show,
Jericho.
According to the press release, the show has averaged 11.3 million viewers, a 48% increase from Wednesdays last year, and all the desirable demographics are up. Overall, the show is helping the network see its biggest single-day ratings growth compared to last season. So, even though the show is not a "hit" by normal standards (
Grey's and
CSI, for instance, each drew over 20 million viewers last week), it's doing well enough to warrant a full season.
At the very least, we'll get a chance to see the entire "town stranded in a nuclear war" plot play out. I'm especially intrigued by that Hawkins guy; not sure if he's a good guy or a bad guy yet, but his character is keeping me interested in the show. The press release is after the jump.
Continue reading Jericho gets a full season from CBS
Posted Jul 24th 2006 10:10AM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, Industry, Programming, Battlestar Galactica, Stargate, Sci Fi

The Sci Fi Channel knows where its bread is buttered. Sure, people love both
Stargate shows and the new show
Eureka is getting good reviews. But the channel's most popular show is
Battlestar Galactica. That's why Sci Fi is reportedly deciding to put all of its original shows on a six-month hiatus so it can run the entire third season of
BSG without reruns. The goal, according to programming executive Mark Stern, is to have original programming throughout the year. So, according to this plan,
Stargate SG-1 and
Stargate Atlantis will take a break in September and return in March, and
BSG's season will run from October to March.
More information can be found
here. Of course, Sci Fi might change its mind. But this info came from Comic-Con, and if there's any place where you can find reliable information about the Sci Fi channel, it's there.
[thanks to reader Mack Swift for the tip.]