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There was no elephant in the room during NBC’s executive session at TCA’s winter press tour today because chairman Bob Greenblatt shot it down right away. “We had a really bad fall, worse than I’d hoped for but about as I expected,” was Greenblatt’s first line onstage. “People say the only way to go is up which I believe is true, but there is a long way to get there.” The new NBC chairman made no bones about the network’s poor ratings performance this season, including from NBC’s new shows, which he blamed on a lack of strong lead-ins, an aging returning lineup and major cast changes on flagship series Law & Order: SVU and The Office. But “the good news is that we have new owners willing to invest not only with financial resources but with patience,” Greenblatt said, referring to Comcast and NBCUniversal CEO Steve Burke.
Greenblatt, who came from pay cable network Showtime, attributed the demise of some of NBC’s new shows to the challenges of the the broadcast model, noting that canceled Prime Suspect would’ve been renewed at Showtime after three episodes and would’ve probably run on the cable network for 4-5 seasons. Greenblatt started several sentences with “The beauty of cable”, playing up pay cable’s advantage with a smaller volume of shows that allows all of them to get a significant marketing push and cut through the clutter as well as the different cable economics that allow quality shows to run for years despite low ratings. Greenblatt said that in his first season at NBC he delivered “four times as many good shows as I ever delivered at Showtime” in one year, listing such series as Prime Suspect, Whitney, Up All Night, Grimm and the upcoming Awake and Smash. But he was quick to note that he is not sure if “these shows are enough to turn NBC around. I hope they’re the beginning of new foundation to move us in the right direction.”
Prime Suspect‘s failure to click with viewers “was probably the biggest disappointment,” Greenblatt said. “Was it too cable, was (Maria Bello’s character) too abrasive? Maybe I should say it was the hat and move on.” In the final analysis, it seems like “the audience wanted to be entertained with comedy and fairytales” this fall, “and there wasn’t appetite in the country for a hard-hitting cop show.” Greenblatt was more blunt about NBC’s other canceled new fall drama, The Playboy Club. “Playboy was just a rejected concept,” he said. “We thought going into the period would interest people, but I don’t think people were that fascinated by that milieu and place.” As for the high-profile midseason entry Smash, Greenblatt tried to downplay expectations. “I don’t think it’s a make-or-break show, but it’s a really good potentially long-term asset for us.”
Greenblatt also dispelled any notion that Community has been effectively canceled when the network pulled the cult favorite from its midseason schedule. As to when Communily will return, that is still unclear, but presumably it will be summoned if one of NBC’s six comedies on tap for midseason underperforms. “We have a really tight schedule with comedies, so it’s really going to be a matter of looking at what happens with the six comedies we’ve got at midseason,” Greenblatt said. NBC is not looking beyond Community‘s current Season 3 for now. “We’re just going to look at the success of what pilots yield, what the scheduling needs are and make that decision closer to the upfront,” Greenblatt said about the timing of the Community renewal decision.
Greenblatt also expressed confidence that the addition of shock jock Howard Stern to America’s Got Talent as judge won’t stir controversy. “I’m not worried about that for a second,” he said. “Aside from his radio persona he is a very thoughtful, intelligent person. He is a huge fan of the show and wants to be a very good judge. … I don’t think he wants to be a shock jock judge. … AGT won’t become the Howard Stern Circus.”
Later, Greenblatt addressed the situation with the NBCU-produced Fox drama House, which is awaiting word on its future. There are no talks with star Hugh Laurie or creator David Shore, whose deals are up at the end of this season, Greenblatt said, but the studio is considering ways to bring the cost of the aging series down. However, if Fox opts to cancel the long-running medical drama, don’t expect it to migrate to NBC next season. Greenblatt indicated that picking up a show “at that cost structure in this situation” wouldn’t be a shrewd business move.
Greenblatt ended the panel with another of his thoughts about the differences between cable and broadcast. “The beauty of cable is you could program for 18-year-old twins and get a hit show on cable,” he said. “We have to figure out how to cease up on that and not end up in a narrow place.”
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Way to manage expectations while seeming absolutely unenthusiastic about any of it there, Bob.
Mr. Greenblatt, everybody. The same genius who demanded “Prank Puppets” be changed to “Crank Yankers,” because he said it sounded too antagonistic and the lawyers didn’t like it.
And if you would have given “Prime Suspect” as second season had it been on Showtime instead of NBC, I’m glad you’re gone from that network.
i don’t think Bob had anything to do with CRANK YANKERS as it was a Comedy Central show.
“Whitney” is a better written show than “Seinfeld” or “Curb” IMO. The “Playboy Club” was fantastic as well, I thought it was really great to have a show about Playboy Playmates without nudity or sex appeal of any kind. Because Playboy Playmates are generally extremely compelling, interesting people IMO. Also, “Prime Suspect” was WAY too hard-hitting for me at times, Maria Bello is extremely intimidating and many times I had to turn off the TV when she came on the screen.
I thought Prime Suspect was terrific; and, got better and better with each ep. Bello’s a star, no doubt about it. I applaud his honesty, something you don’t see every day. thought letting Crhis Meloni go was a huge mistake, though I like the new girl a lot.
The main problem for Prime Suspect was it’s time slot. And I think that this will continue to be a problem for them if they don’t make some changes. 10 o’clock on a Thursday night after a block of comedies? Sure, 10 o’clock used to be considered a prime slot, but with the expanded market on basic cable now, the competition is just too fierce to gain any kind of significant audience that late in prime-time. My opinion is, it’s time to yank The Biggest Loser from it’s 8-10 slot and use that to debut new shows. The Biggest Loser, while a show I used to watch on a regular basis, has run it’s course. It’s past time to put it down and let some new shows be given a fighting chance at staying alive.
I just hope Greenblatt realizes Person of Interest is a fantastic show, with fantastic acting, and Grimm is good broadcast formula, very watchable and fun. Broadcast formula is a warm fuzzy, if done right. Grimm seems to be doing right, getting better all the time.
All I can say for Person of Interest and Grimm is that they are two of a small handful of broadcast shows that I can tolerate watching. So they’re the cream of the broadcast crop, but still sad specimens compared with cable. And that is broadcast’s dilemma, how to bridge that huge gap without losing what’s left of their dwindling audience.
I just watched “The Debt” on DVD and tried to picture Helen Mirren wearing “the hat” in her role as a Mossad agent. Nope, it wouldn’t have worked for that role either.
New Years Wish List:
30Rock and Community and Parks and Rec need a 10 year contract.
Bob Greenblatt needs a tie.
Fox and Comedy Central will buy the reruns Bob to get your money back for the Comcast Board of Directors and all that profit share.
Leno is better than Letterman and Jimmy Fallon is better than the both of them.
Add Jimmy Fallon to that 10 year contract from NBC.
having worked with Bob for years and knowing him and his taste well, his comments regarding the current first season series show what a good diplomat he is. give him and Jennifer time and judge them on what comes out of the pipeline for fall 2012. Bob I’m sure is aware just how atrocious WHITNEY is and all the other shows that people above commented on as being horrible. he can’t go around trashing his product and expect these people to come back and do business with him. SMASH reeks of pet project, it is absolutely who Bob is, but having not seen the pilot yet i think it is something that is not out there and is pretty daring for a traditional broadcast network. the only note i would give him is stopping the ads that say “introducing Katherine McPhee.” like no one in America knows who she is. Hopefully Jennifer and Tal will be able to hip up the network through their own taste because Bob’s isn’t necessarily that contemporary in terms of the “hip quotient” but he knows a good idea when he hears it and is a master developer. along with great concepts the network needs great casting. some of the choices made for this past development season were pretty obvious, tried and true and dull. Will Arnett is hilarious but not a leading man. Christina Appelgate has had too many chances. Wouldn’t UP ALL NIGHT have been funnier with Maya Rudolph as the lead? Anyway, Bob swoons over name talent so I hope his casting department has the moxie to fight for unknowns who will break out and really make a show. Brandon Tartikoff rebuilt NBC one show at a time and with a break out comedy everything fell into place. Give him a chance people. He is one of the only sane people left in town to work with.