
It is an unwritten rule of network development — if a new show from a genre not currently on TV becomes a hit in the fall, a lot of pilots in that milieu get ordered the following season as networks try to replicate the success.
Case in point this year — NBC‘s Revolution. J.J. Abrams/Eric Kripke’s post-apocalyptic series emerged as the biggest hit of the fall, and now the networks are betting heavily on other dramas set in the future. Today alone, three futuristic hourlong pilots received a green light, including one from Abrams, an untitled project at Fox with Fringe showrunner J.H. Wyman set in the near future when all LAPD officers are partnered with highly evolved human-like androids. The other two were at the CW — The Hundred, which has a post-apocalyptic setting similar to Revolution, and Oxygen. The Hundred takes place 97 years after a nuclear war has destroyed civilization when a spaceship with the human survivors sends 100 juvenile delinquents back to Earth to investigate the possibility of re-colonizing the planet. Oxygen is in the vein of District 9 ans is about a human society where a group of alien visitors are kept in prison. The CW has been the most aggressive in pursuing futuristic dramas. In addition to The Hundred and Oxygen, the network has ordered a second pilot for the Hunger Games-esque The Selection, which is set 300 years into the future. After building its brand mainly on contemporary teen soaps, the CW has fully embraced genre and high-concept dramas this season. Out of its six pilots only one, Taylor Hackford’s naval base-set Company Town, reflects present America. In addition to the three futuristic dramas, the network also has backdoor pilot The Originals, a spinoff from hit vampire drama The Vampire Diaries, and Reign, about 16th century Mary Queen of Scots.
ABC, which has been consistent in its efforts to get a sci-fi/genre hit on the air post-Lost, has two more hopefuls, Marvel’s comic book-inspired S.H.I.E.L.D., from Joss Whedon, and the zombie-themed The Returned. Other high-concept/genre broadcast drama pilots in contention include Fox’s Sleepy Hollow, from Alex Kurtzman and Bob Orci; and Delirium, set in a world where love is eradicated; Abrams’ other pilot, NBC’s Believe with Alfonso Cuaron, about a girl with special power battling evil elements; NBC’s Bloodline, about a young woman from an ancient line of mercenaries, brigands and killers; and the Carlton Cuse-produced comic book adaptation The Sixth Gun; as well as CBS’ summer series Under The Dome, based on Stephen King’s book.
For a full list of broadcast network pilots and for all Deadline pilot season stories, go to our Pilot Panic page.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


Where is THE EXTINCTION PRINCIPLE? Totally X-files/Fringe/Quantum Leap…
All those pilots sound so boring, zzzzzzzzzzzzzz
“an untitled project at Fox with Fringe showrunner J.H. Wyman set in the near future when all LAPD officers are partnered with highly evolved human-like androids.”
Is the show called “Mac and C.H.E.E.S.E.”?
“Is the show called Mac and C.H.E.E.S.E.?”
I was wondering when someone would make that reference to Friends.
Hahaha. Good reference. I had completely forgotten about that!
Please do the sixth gun right NBC! It is an amazing, high concept comic, and it would be awesome to have a successful western on the air.
I couldn’t agree more with you. The Sixth Gun has the potential to be a hit and it has the potential to bring in 10 million+ viewers per episode. But NBC has to let the writers and producers have creative control and reign over the show. No micromanaging at all. If they do that, the show will be a hit.
If the pick it up to series, I say they revamp Wednesday or Thursday and out this on at 10.
They let Tim Kring have a lot of control on Heroes. And we all know how that ended. It isn’t about network micro-managing vs creative control, it’s about getting the right people in place to start with.
I hope they all get picked up to series, and do you want to know why? Because I am so sick and tired of cop procedurals, law procedurals and medical procedurals.
Seriously. I can’t stand law procedurals and medical procedurals. Why so many show about doctors?
Well put. The worst part about all the procedurals is it is always the same twist (“top notch doctor/lawyer/detective who can’t manager their personal life”). These genre shows are appealing simply because they’re something a little different. Variety is the spice of life.
But it’s those shows that pay for these more cult offerings. Without their high ratings bringing in the advertising money, the networks wouldn’t be able to take risks.
The problem is that audiences don’t turn out for the genre shows. And if people don’t watch, no matter how good your show is, on a broadcast network that relies on advertising money, you’re going to get cut.
I say all this as a massive fan of shows like Fringe, Firefly, Dollhouse etc… and it annoys me too that more people don’t watch, but that’s not the fault of the cop/lawyer/medical shows.
Does everyone remember how successful all the Lost copycats were and all the MadMen clones were?
Will they never learn that it’s not the GENRE it’s the execution?
Or that what people respond to is something fresh and new? And that the reason nothing took hold this year is it was all cookie cutter?
You could write this story every development season, just MadLib the names of the hits and genres.. That’s why cable is trouncing the networks creatively. They’re actually creative.
Sometimes the point of developing similar series is to steal some of the competing network’s audience in that genre. Every executive knows that the chance of any show becoming a hit is so slim, you might as well develop certain shows to directly compete with other nets, to steal some of their audience – if only because your show ifeels a little newer than there’s. There’s already an audience for REVOLUTION so why not take a shot at attracting away some of that fan base that might have waned for something else like it, but different enough to feel newsworthy.
Exactly. Just because Starbucks already exists, does that mean all the other coffee chains shouldn’t have bothered? Of course not – Starbucks proved theirs a viable customer base there, the others are capitalising on it. It’s the same on TV. It’s not like if you watch one show of a particular brand, you won’t watch any other shows like it.
Terra Nova was set in the future. FOX should bring that back.
Something tells me that Revolution will lose a huge chunk of its audience when it returns. What the hell is NBC thinking for keeping it off the air for so long? No wonder they’re constantly in last place. Piss poor decisions.
TV episodes don’t grow on trees. NBC wants to air the second half of the season without interruption and they can’t start it yet because not enough episodes have been produced.
And Go On and The New Normal are doing so well airing without The Voice as their lead in aren’t they?
It doesn’t seem to hurt cable when they do it.
lame as hell. NBS was #1 last year. get ur facts right
Sam, I’ll tell you what’s lame, your post.
What the hell is NBS? At least get your spelling right before you go bitching about other people’s mistakes.
NBC was only #1 last year due to it’s reality program. CBS is still #1 in scripted shows.
So is CW’s Amazon officially dead?
Maybe that”s not considered sci fi for this article. Wonder Woman is more mythical/fantasy.
I agree with jay. That big hiatus for Revolution will do wonders for its’ numbers-in a negative way. Many fans won’t be back for that show. Granted,genre fans are quite loyal,but,this particular hiatus is absolutely ridiculous in terms of its’length. If the numbers tumble upon its’ return(not just the first episode back,but,a gradual drop in subsequent episodes) Nbc will have noone to blame but themselves.
“Granted,genre fans are quite loyal,”
No they’re not. They are the most ficklest of all viewers. Every damn season these genre myth-arch shows start out alright but by Thanksgiving or Christmas most of the viewership has gone. The few that are left just bitch and moan about how “lame” the show is.
And the dirty little secret is Revolution uses The Voice as a rating’s crutch, just like Castle did with DWTS. NBC doesn’t want to take a chance of bringing it back without its lead-in crutch, hence the long hiatus.
All of these sound pretty interesting. Can’t wait for next season.
New Abrams/Wyman FOX cop show must be like Abrams/Nolan POI – with procedural structure and less arcs. POI is best scripted and acted drama on broadcast TV. If they can move some of the writers and Greg Plageman to help Wyman the same way they do with Nolan will be perfect. Only change can be younger cast and hot female lead for better 18-34 demo – its FOX, not CBS.
Please stop posting this same post OVER and OVER again, Petar. It’s making my eyeballs itch and my brain cry. And the blatant BS of POI being the best scripted show on TV makes me what to punch a cute baby.
SHEESH.
Peter’s right. What’s your problem Beese?
And will the networks team all of these Revolution-inspired shows with Voice-inspired ratings monsters to boost their numbers? Take away The Voice or put some legit competition besides the bland Hawaii 5-0 or the diminishing Castle and Revolution will be hard pressed to match it’s lowest numbers from this first half season.
I’m not embarrassed to admit that I’m looking forward to CW’s spinoff “The Originals”. Joseph Morgan and Daniel Gilles are fabulous on TVD (they’ve actually eclipsed the main trio in my eyes) and deserve more screen time. Glad to see they’re getting it.
What about a Babylon Fields reboot??
The future huh? How about one or two pilots set IN SPACE? I’m get bored with the post-apocalyptic and superhero shows.
The regular networks are doing the long break thing as a test to compare the results to what cable is doing. Like how Game of Thrones or True Blood airs 10-13 episodes in a year, takes a year break and comes back to do another 10-12 years. All the networks are kind of playing with the formula to see how it works for them. This is why you are seeing more and more shows with fall and winter breaks and then returning weeks or months later. And they are trying to have year around programming (like cable does) compared to how in the summer it used to be nothing but repeats and reality shows. They are seeing how successful cables formula is & they are trying to replicate those same results. Which I have to say I don’t mind so much, it means more shows to possibly become interested in. And also if you are a fan of the show, I don’t care how long they are in hiatus for, when it comes back on and will be watching. Viva la Revolution and Grimm (which returns in March as well)!
Cable series are gripping enough to motivate the audience to watch for its return. The bland fodder that broadcast produces isn’t in that league, A few shows like Grimm and Fringe manage to lock in a loyal following, but it’s a small loyal following that can only thrive on Fridays where broadcast has more or less given up.
I wanted to like Revolution, but I just hate the main character. She’s such a whiny girl. I was hoping for more of a Katniss tough girl and instead I got a crybaby who screws up over and over again. I stopped watching after 5 episodes.
So should I stop writing about zombies?
Only if I stop writing fairy tale pilots.
I so agree. TV serials are inundated with police and medical shows. The big 3 or now 5 have to wake up to the fact that they are losing viewers to cable network series.
What’s happening with Will Gluck’s drama at NBC? It sounded interesting.