
Online Soap Opera Network May Fold Ending ‘OLTL’, ‘AMC’
Sad news for soap fans just before Thanksgiving — One Life To Live and All My Children won’t get a second life online. Prospect Park, the company,
which in July signed a licensing deal with ABC to keep canceled daytime dramas in production for online distribution, will not proceed with its plans for an online soap network anchored by the two shows. The decision comes after Prospect Park principals Rich Frank and Jeff Kwatinetz spent the past few months trying to shore up financial backing for their Online TV Network, secure the talent and writers from the departing ABC series as well as sign agreements with the Hollywood unions. Accomplishing all three, especially the last one, on a tight deadline as continuing the soaps would only make sense if they could be relaunched close to their finale dates on ABC, proved impossible to do. Prospect Park’s surprising deal with ABC in July led to AMC producers changing the planned ending for the September finale on ABC so the series could have another chapter. Now their OLTL counterparts will likely do the opposite, making the January ending more permanent. Here is Prospect Park’s statement:
After five months of negotiations with various guilds, hundreds of presentations to potential financial and technology partners, and a hope that we could pioneer a new network for the future, it is with great disappointment that we are suspending our aspirations to revive “One Life to Live” and “All My Children” via online distribution. It is now becoming clear that mounting issues make our ability to meet our deadlines to get OLTL on the air in a reasonable time period following its January 13, 2012 ABC finale impossible.
We believed the timing was right to launch an Online TV Network anchored by these two iconic soap operas, but we always knew it would be an uphill battle to create something historical, and unfortunately we couldn’t ultimately secure the backing and clear all the hurdles in time. We believe we exhausted all reasonable options apparent to us, but despite enormous personal, as well as financial cost to ourselves, we failed to find a solution.
While we narrowed in on a financial infrastructure, the contractual demands of the guilds, which regulate our industry, coupled with the program’s inherent economic challenges ultimately led to this final decision. In the end, the constraints of the current marketplace, including the evolution and impact of new media on our industry simply proved too great a match for even our passion.
In our opinion, new models like this can only work with the cooperation of many people striving to make them happen, and we would like to thank and praise the numerous people who tried to help and showed us incredible support. We are extremely grateful to the fans and media who showed great support to us through this process, to ABC who did everything in their control to help, and we are especially grateful for the support and encouragement from many of the Soaps’ cast and crew themselves.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


Sad news. The U.S. daily dramas are coming to an end. With only a few left, it is just a matter of time. Funny how in other countries daily dramas thrive. Even latin soap operas that air here in the U.S. are beating some of our prime shows. It’s all about greed. Shame on the networks & advertisers.
I won’t watch anything ABC or Disney related again. They have proven they have no respect for all their viewers, just a certain group of viewers. I also have to add that the guilds have a huge hand in this. Guilds = unions. The actors were willing, the writers were willing, the production people were willing, cameras, grips, sound, sets, etc., everyone but NOT their guilds!
Wow, That’s not what I expected to see:( I watched AMC for about 32 yrs. I hope we can continue to see what all these great actors are doing in the future.
I bet you those actors and actresses are calling their agent to get them on Y&R, B&B and DOL.
I can’t believe that anyone would leave fans hanging when some of us watch AMC for forty years. Can’t they at least produce a suitable finale?????
Oprah declined the soaps several months ago via YouTube. She’s not changing her mind. The only realistic option left is to get streaming access to all the old episodes from 1979 to the present.
This makes me very sad. I was looking forward to finding was who JR shoot
the idea of cable is the only sensible way to go … oprah does what SHE wants … and she doesnt watch soaps. prospect patk will lose out just like ABC because some smart alternative will pick these shows up. and if both shows are too expensive drop AMC … i watched it for years but it is past its prime …dusty and antiquated … and @ elly-bianco-colon … WHAT are you talking about???
Soapers, please give it a rest. Stop begging for Oprah to save your shows. Stop whining and blaming every Tom, Dick and Brian. Soaps are expensive to produce. They have huge casts who command large salaries. They employ large crews, producers writers. But they were not getting the audience to justify the losses. Networks charge advertisers based on the number of viewers they guarantee will see their ads. And when they don’t hit those numbers, they have to make it up to the advertiser. So DVR viewership means nothing when viewers are fast forwarding through their ads. The shows cost millions to produce, but were not earning enough to offset the costs. The genre died because not enough people are watching. If you want to blame anything, blame the ratings system that today allows instantaneous collection of information. Thanks to electronic information gathering we now know almost immediately how a show is performing. And these shows were not. It’s unfortunate for fans. But it is a sign of the times. Whining about the end of the soap opera is like grieving the loss of the Model T.
They don’t have to cost a fortune. Soaps are thriving on the net right now. If the networks understood what they had, and used the soaps to groom new talent, they could cross daytime & primetime audiences back and forth. A prime example would have been Ingo Raddemacher & his character “Jax.” You have a good looking guy with a big fan following and a character who is a rich, jet-setting interntaional businessman with a penchant for trouble. That could’ve been spun into a latter day “Heart to Heart,” with Vanessa Marcil as a recurring “Brenda.” As to not justifying costs, they certainly used to. I don’t see why they can’t again.
all my children: the movie
20 mil opening weekend guaranteed
I agree. Some producer should make a One life to Live, All My Children Movie… Limited but familiar characters facing a crisis. The audience is there. It could be a movie franchise with a frenzied fan based audience that would give anything to see their favorite stars again.
This is just too sad…there is going to be alot of cable subscriptions cancelled. Most of what we watch is reality shows and cooking shows..and after 2.a.m. most of cable is paid infomercials. T.V. has become rather boring.
Hopefully YouTube or Netflix will jump in.
This just makes me hate the morons running ABC’s Daytime even more.
Honestly I’ve turned ABC off! Why?? You see I’ve watched AMC since I was 20 yrs. old, now 52 and all of a sudden it was gone! Made me very angry cause this was my favorite show. I miss all of the actors and I truly wish them the best in the future. I’m sure this hurt them badly too. Bye ABC
Prospect Park should instead have produced “All My Children” and “One Life To Love” for syndication.
I’m sure there would have been TV stations out there with struggling daytime schedules that would gladly have picked them up.
It was great the Prospect Park tried…but there’s more to the story than what’s being said. And in any case, I don’t think their model would have succeeded.
For one thing, they should never have announced this as a definite go before they had funding in place. That seems incredibly odd to have done. I know deals are financed “as they go” in some cases, but there’s usually at least some funding. PP announced this with zero bucks in the bank, so to speak.
It was also a folly for them to say that they were going to continue at the same budgets and length. Many soaps are failing because no one has an hour anymore to spend watching them. Had PP aimed to put 30 minute episodes together – 25 minutes of content and 5 minutes of interstitials – I bet the funding model may have looked more manageable, and certainly the sell through of a shorter show would have been bigger. I would have promoted the hell out of it as something to watch on your commute….
People can piss on soaps all they want, but stories like this have been around since Shakespeare’s time and we can still make money (and sometimes, art) telling them. But the old hour long Irna Phillips model of soaps is in hospice care.
The fact that PP even THOUGHT about moving the soaps online is saying something.
There are tons of shows I would have loved to see live on forever but the point is shows get canceled and end. It’s a sad but honest part of television.
Boo hiss to PP, they got our hopes up even though it was obvious that they couldn’t pull through financially.
And f*** you to ABC, instead of cancelling them they should have just replaced the idiots behind the scenes like Brian Frons and Anne Sweeney.
How stupid to cancel the #3 soap that is the only soap to gain like 200,000 viewers over the past year. Idiots.
I am very upset that All My Children is no going to be available for online viewing!!!
I still say NBC should pick up OLTL and air it with Days. OLTL is too good to go away like this! yeah its campy and over the top sometimes but come on, its a soap and its entertaining! ABC is never going to get almost 3 million viewers with The Revolution 5 days a week when people can watch the Biggest Loser once a week! and yeah i know they are cheaper to produce, but if ABC put a quarter of the marketing that they spent on the Spew for OLTL maybe more people might be interested into checking it out. NBC wake up try to get OLTL and build up your daytime programming again!!!!
Very sad day indeed. I wish ABC would have done what they were initially planning to do to wrap up the storylines. Giving us the teasers or cliffhangers did not work out for us die hard fans who were left hanging now with AMC. So sad. I hope OLTL is able to wrap up storylines to give us closure before it’s end date.
What a wretched disappointment! After all those promises and all the build-up and GETTING AMC TO CHANGE THEIR FINAL SHOW…NOW we get nothing! Nada! Zip! Zero! Somewhere Brian Farthead is rubbing his hands together in glee; I hope he gets a lump of coal in his stocking! AMC and it’s fans get shafted w/that crappy “Who did JR shoot?” but at least OLTL may, MAY…get a proper and respectful send-off. I hope PP has to pay EVERY SINGLE OLTL ACTOR THEY SIGNED!
To be perfectly honest, I’m getting pretty sick of reality shows. I just want ABC to know I will not watch that station no matter what show they put on in the time slots of All My Children and One Life to Live and I think all of the fans of those shows should do the same.
I am NOT surprised that they didn’t accomplish their GOAL! I truly don’t believe they even really intended to do anything to begin with…I hope everyone on both AMC and OLTL have BACK-UP plans for the future…I will absolutely MISS THEM ALL…my family says I will have to get a life now…WHOA IS ME!
Then there were 3. Is it just a coincidence that the ones left (B&B, DOOL & Y&R) have sold & are watched the most outside of the U.S?
Disappointed does not even begin to describe how I
am feeling. I am hoping for some sort of positive resolution for us, the fans.