
Will Americans laugh at a sitcom about outsourcing their jobs to India? With our country reeling from the deepest recession and the largest job losses in
decades? NBC certainly thinks so. The network just bet big on the premise by picking up the provocatively titled Outsourced as its first new primetime comedy series order for next season. By tackling such a touchy subject, NBC is guaranteed free publicity because of the inevitable controversy over its new comedy series. And that may distinguish it in next fall’s cluttered landscape where more than 90% of new shows fail.
According to NBC’s official description, the set-in-India workplace series “centers on the all-American company Mid America Novelties whose call center has suddenly been outsourced to India and a manager, played by Ben Rappaport, is being transferred to India to run the operation.” Supposedly, the socio-economic aspects of exporting American jobs to India are not expected to be front and center story-wise. Instead, the series is billed as “the Midwest meets the exotic East in a hilarious culture clash”. The sitcom is based on the 2006 romantic comedy by the same name which won the best film award at the 2007 Seattle International Film Festival.
In the movie, a Seattle retail manager Todd Anderson, is told to travel to Gharapuri to train his replacement. Once there, he encounters a bunker-like call center filled with willing novices who are supposed to learn how to sound American. (They mispronounce his name “Toad”.) “Todd just lost his job. Now he has to find his life… Call centre chaos… What really happens at the other end of the line!” were some of the movie tag lines. Todd finds that he must learn about the Indian culture before he can even think of Americanizing his subordinates with help from the new assistant manager who becomes his love interest.
Though the timing of the TV series seems intentional, NBC first developed Outsourced more then 2 years earlier. That series pilot was initially scripted by Seattleites John Jeffcoat (director/co-writer of the film) and George Wing (co-writer). This season’s pilot was given a rewrite by LA-based scribe Robert Borden,and Jeffcoat and Wing told the Seattle Times a few days ago that a credit arbitration is currently ongoing. “George and I always felt that the show shouldn’t be a carbon copy of the movie,” Jeffcoat told the Seattle Times. “There are a lot of changes. The comedy is definitely broader than in the movie, so that’s going to be interesting to see how people respond to it.”
Recession-themed comedies were popular last pilot season and one, ABC’s Hank starring Kelsey Grammer as a Wall Street executive losing his job, made it onto the air — but then lasted only a handful episodes. In that case, it’s safe to say the demise came because the show wasn’t good, but the recession overtones might have been a contributing factor. This year, NBC has another hot comedy pilot that touches upon the economic downturn, This Little Piggy, about adult siblings moving in with their older brother after falling on hard times. But both Hank and Piggy reflect the recession’s impact on American families, while Outsourced goes to the heart of a sensitive economic and social issue. Normally, social issues resonate deeper with people in the more conservative middle and southern regions of the country. But NBC’s upscale workplace comedies which Outsourced will join, like 30 Rock and The Office, tend to draw most from the more liberal coasts.
But outsourcing is actually a subject that touches a nerve even in largely liberal and open-minded Hollywood. Sony Pictures Entertainment recently became the latest studio to ship most of its IT operations to India, resulting in mass layoffs. And the making of subtitles for American DVDs has now been largely outsourced to India as well. On the other hand, each broadcast network still has to depend on American audiences to tune into its TV shows for successful ratings. Because, at least for now, those viewers can’t be outsourced.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


I will be very curious to see how this does. Would it succeed on HBO/Showtime? Probably. But NBC? No clue.
“Largely liberal and open-minded Hollywood”…What planet do you live on?
It’s bitterly funny. NBC/GE’s vast accounts payable, expense, and IT help desk is routed through Mumbai, or at least it was when I worked there. Conan did a whole show taped at the GE Call center there.
How many NBC homers are on this site? No matter how much pimping you do this show is going to fail miserably. YOU DON’T GET IT.
This will be less successfull than 1986′s ‘Gung Ho’. What a disaster of a concept. The network brass are apparently totally isolated from the real world. I wonder if any of them know what a gallon of milk costs, or how a bardcode scanner at the grocery store works. They are that out of touch.
As a former network and cable and studio programmer and producer, I’d have to side with lonnie’s take.
Gung Ho was probably the closest to this (and it flopped too) but without the added burden of being set in a foreign country. Have yet to see that work in a network sitcom.
Hahahahahaha!
Let me get this straight. You have what’s basically economic warfare being waged on Americans, and NBC wants to shove a so-called “positive portrayal” of these thieves in our faces?!
Talk about bad taste NBC.
Jesus Christ what the hell is going on at that network?! It’s like One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest on qualuudes or some shit! Did Silverman leave some blow in the building before he left?!
ATTENTION NBC: YOU ARE STRONGLY ADVISED NOT TO MAKE IMPORTANT CREATIVE DECISIONS WHILE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE! THIS WILL RESULT IN A BATCH OF AWFUL SHOWS THAT NO ONE WANTS TO WATCH! JUST LIKE YOUR CURRENT LINEUP, ASSHOLES!
Hahahahahahahahaha!!!
I think the funniest part of the show will come when the programmers guild, the teamsters, the AFL-CIO, and the United Steelworkers of America boycott your fucking advertisers!
Whoops! There goes someone’s bonus!
programmers guild?? really programmers guild… along side AFL-CIO..
PG is a joke..
offensive on oh so many levels..NBC which cancelled Medium , in a time of RECORD UNEMPLOYMENT in the US is pushing an OUTSOURCING sit com?? one that manages to insult both the Indian workers and the American workers all at once. niiice work there NBC….cna we outsource that network to MARS? Sorry martians!
Everyone here who has commented that ‘they’ve seen/read the pilot’ are Insiders. Y’all are not ‘the street.’ Where those whose lives are directly, and negatively, affected by outsourcing much needed menial jobs to any human willing to work for pennies-a-day without medical insurance, union protection, worker safety rules, or environmental controls.
Ask any Hollywood crew-member, for example: You know what would be funny? A show about a Producer who goes to Canada to make American films with only Canadian crews in order to enrich the corporate bottom line! While he’s there, he learns to like Canadians and ice hockey, too!
Fail.
This show is going to be a gem
Think that some people will try to spite and pull it apart even before it starts. Some have the need, because of jealousy or any the reason to want to break up or do third party interference so a good team might crack. Some may do it for selfish reason of competition, to get another show there, to get the time slot, to put someone else, to bull bait. So my advice to any people from outsource that is out there is to not listen to the put downers, nay sayers and keep doing what you know is best and what worked for you. Do not let spiteful vindicators pit u against each other, doubt yourselves, question your intentions as to what type of humor and guess work. Don’t let yr acting abilities be questioned
or doubted by those who say “oh people trying to find new group to to make fun.” If u know the truth, keep that truth, be confident and go forth and entertain.
Sara Jane from Technical Support?!?! I remember when you had me on hold for an hour when my hard drive failed; that was a *RIOT*!!!!
I want to know and see the story unfold when I watch it. I don’t want to know what the actors are going to do like mispronounce(the character’s name). That’s part of the show and I would rather discover it for myself.
In today’s world there are no surprises. Networks and shows try to spoon feed the audience thinking that we are stupid. We are not stupid, we can understand what is happening when watching a show.
They do not have to explain the joke before it happens. Let us enjoy it will you?
I do not want to know about the assistant manager and reactions and feelings on an article, I would rather see what happens when I watch it. Why would I watch it if I already know the story? A synopsis of the show is fine, a brief summery of the episode is fine, discussions after viewing is fine but do not treat the audience like a bunch of morons and do line item explanations.
Outsourcing to India! Hahahahaha! With cute Indians and naive Americans!
What’s next, a sitcom about a guy who gets displaced by an Indian, losses his job, starts beating his wife, can’t get a job, and ends up going postal? Hahahaha!
How about an American computer programmer that can’t find work and flies his plane into an IRS building. HAhahahahaha! Loads of laughs. Wait, that is a true story.
Uh, are you off your meds again??
Its a goddamn show!! fiction != reality, comprende?
I wish someone would develop an ethnic comedy with Russell Peters. His popularity is worldwide– he routinely sells out his shows everywhere– US, Canada, Dubai, Europe. Check out his DVD Outsourced, or any of the clips on youtube.
I didn’t see the original but the new show may shed light on a very important issue: Americans are being discriminated against at home while media continues to romanticize and make jokes.
When citizens abroad look at us they see how we have been duped thoroughly by 24-7 media which unfailingly turns away from the truth–only to make a buck and a joke. I can assure you the Indian government would not allow its citizens to have their jobs stolen so easily. Here it’s anything goes until the next catastrophe.
Maybe the Americans who are the real butt of this fantasy will have a wake up call. I hope it starts a real conversation about laws right here at home which allow business to set aside jobs for foreign workers, which we cannot even apply for.
LOL, looks like attack of the nerds from some computers guild on here
I just heard about this new show today. As a victim of job loss due to outsourcing to India, im incredibily offended. I will not watch anything on nbc until this show is removed from the network! Dig the knife a little deeper, why dont you nbc??!!!!!
I agree with you. I tossed out the tv yesterday. At least I’m saving money–no more damx cable bill..my job was outsourced to Inida and we had to train these rods.
OFFENSIVE… especially to those of us who are the VICTIMS of outsourcing. I plan on boycotting the show, and I’m thinking about starting a Facebook page. I’ve already posted a suggestion on my own FB page, asking friends to boycott it. NERVY, and NOT FUNNY, NBC!
Even with it not being the most appropriate theme for a TV show during this time, I think it could be successful if they changed a few things around.
They should have casted an Aziz Ansari type guy to be one of the leads. None of the Indians seem to have that type of on screen dominance and ability to take a show over. Comedies succeed because people fall in love with at least one of the characters. There’s a lot of funny Indian guys like Kumar, Russell Peters, Abed from Community. I see those two guys from Outsourced as a more watered down Raj from the Big Bang Theory. Sure he’s got his moments, but he doesn’t take a scene over.
Then there’s the issue of looks. People give a show more of a chance if they have some eye candy. The non-quiet Indian girl is pretty hot, but I think they should have casted the quiet one as a cuter girl. She isn’t ugly ugly, but she doesn’t have that heartwarming cuteness her character should have. Also, it wouldn’t hurt to have a good looking Indian guy there either. The only one I can name off the top of my head is Mohinder from Heroes, and that show is cancelled, so he’s free.
If I were NBC, I’d make them recast, tinker with the jokes a bit more, and refilm. Maybe have it start off in the winter instead of spring, and by then the economy may have gone up enough to make some people not as resentful towards the show.
Little Mosque on the Prairie is a popular show around the world because they have everything I named above. There’s a lot of strong characters who are fleshed out, and can take over a scene and show off their comedic skills. They aren’t just a bunch of caricatures of their ethnicities.
If NBC doesn’t rework the show, I don’t see it lasting very long.
Since we haven’t seen the show, How do you we know how the whole show will be? Can you make an assumption based on the trailer or have you seen the show?
Having had my engineering job outsourced, then spending 6 years looking for another full time job, despite advanced degrees, stellar reviews, and international awards; nobody wanted to hire a middle-aged engineer. There are thousands of us in the same situation in my area. We are well-educated and experienced and expect more than 8/hr on 1099! I guess now is the time to shp around my script for “Slumdog Engineer”. It’s the story of a poor, but honest American who works hard, gets advanced engineering degrees and looses his job to an Indian just out of an Indian trade school. The series follows our engineer through the breakup of the marriage, foreclosures, bankruptcies, and even our engineers’ adventures as a former engineering manager turned street person. A real howler don’t you think? Come on, NBC, stop pandering to a new GE market and think about the Americans you are offending. I am sure there are people who think this is funny. They probably think car crashes are a riot.
I’ve been out of work now for over 2 years and as no surprise replaced via the “Outsource” factor. When unemployment is low and jobs plentiful, I might find a show with this subject matter amusing, but in today’s climate – this is VERY poor taste on NBC’s part. If this show makes it to the airways – you can bet I’ll boycott ALL NBC shows.
Just occurred to me that the people calling the shots at NBC may not be of American origin and therefore find something like this very amusing…………..
While you’re boycotting, be sure to write to the *SPONSORS* of this show and let them know you why you won’t be buying their products anymore. Advertising dollars drive every decision at the networks; it’s the only thing they understand.
Their advertisers are also on the outsourcing bandwagon.. just keep spreading the word about the show and don’t watch NBC programming… that includes TBS, CNBC, MSNBC..
Ain’t funny. Ain’t watchin it. Tasteless.
Instead, NBC should air a documentary about outsourcing and what an all around destructive practice it is. I know every little bit of dirt there is to know about this practice. Sony execs can never take enough baths to get the stench off of them and the Wipro’s and TCS’s..anyone around them should wear a HazMat suit.
What’s offensive is the corporate methodology that inspires this show.
This is just horrible! I know of three companies now outsourcing to Mexico, India, and Costa Rica. When will it stop? There will be no more jobs for American people. We are in a mess and this show will not be funny to anyone who knows anyone who has lost their job since the economy went under in 2008. What has happened to American standards these days? So many on unemployment because of something like this and you want to make fun of it!
I run an outsourcing company (easyoutsource.com) and I’ve spent a lot of time in India, so I was pretty excited when I heard about this show. Unfortunately, this looks to be a TERRIBLE show. Big missed opportunity by NBC.
You are one of the companies that killed us Americans. We all hate you. You are no good pal.