Ten Ways NBC Can Save Itself
By Mike Schuster Oct 15, 2009 8:00 am
Armchair advice on behalf of all couch potatoes.
When the announcement came in last December, the peacock started looking like a buzzard.
Seated firmly in fourth place, NBC (GE) pulled a move that had analysts scratching their heads and viewers rolling their eyes. A foolish, albeit bold, move that smacked of cost-effectiveness at the expense of taste and good reason. An attempt to save face by cracking an egg over it.
Jay Leno. Five nights a week. 10 p.m. EST.
Admittedly, NBC Universal Chief Jeff Zucker didn't want to lose Leno to a competing network when his contract was up the following May, but under the circumstances, the alternative came at a greater cost. While NBC insiders claim it's still too early to call the deal a disaster, many other analysts are willing to admit the obvious.
Not only has Leno's new show failed to bring in the numbers that scripted shows garnered last season -- none of Leno's third week episodes surpassed 60th in the Nielsen’s -- it's impacted the numbers of surrounding programming. James Poniewozik at Time.com referenced the 10% to 30% drop local news has suffered since Leno's prime time premiere -- increasing the possibility of affiliates airing their news in Leno's place. Bill Carter of The New York Times mentions the ratings dip that Leno's brethren Conan O'Brien and Jimmy Fallon have earned from having a weaker lead-in. Even Law and Order: SVU has taken a hit since being pushed from the 10 p.m. slot.
With no new breakout hits this fall and five fewer hours of scripted entertainment per week, NBC is almost guaranteed to trail ABC (DIS), CBS (CBS), and Fox (NWS) for the remainder of the season -- a certainty that doesn't seem to bother Zucker.
Back in March of this year, Zucker had the audacity to admit, "I don't think we'll ever be able to say, 'NBC is number one in prime time,' " during a presentation to the McGraw Hill Media Summit. He added, "What does number one in prime time mean anymore?"
Apparently nothing to Zucker: His network has gone from number one to number four under his leadership.
This mixture of bad luck and gross mismanagement has General Electric looking to unload its property -- likely onto Comcast (CMCSA). Talks have progressed and an announcement of a changeover could come at any moment.
Whether or not a deal takes place, NBC is in desperate need of a new direction. Despite Zucker's comments, the network can drag itself out of the doldrums and emerge as the place of fantastic programming that it once was. It might take some pretty big steps, but in the end, it could usher in a new era of television -- one that even its competitors would want to emulate.
Seated firmly in fourth place, NBC (GE) pulled a move that had analysts scratching their heads and viewers rolling their eyes. A foolish, albeit bold, move that smacked of cost-effectiveness at the expense of taste and good reason. An attempt to save face by cracking an egg over it.
Jay Leno. Five nights a week. 10 p.m. EST.
Admittedly, NBC Universal Chief Jeff Zucker didn't want to lose Leno to a competing network when his contract was up the following May, but under the circumstances, the alternative came at a greater cost. While NBC insiders claim it's still too early to call the deal a disaster, many other analysts are willing to admit the obvious.
Not only has Leno's new show failed to bring in the numbers that scripted shows garnered last season -- none of Leno's third week episodes surpassed 60th in the Nielsen’s -- it's impacted the numbers of surrounding programming. James Poniewozik at Time.com referenced the 10% to 30% drop local news has suffered since Leno's prime time premiere -- increasing the possibility of affiliates airing their news in Leno's place. Bill Carter of The New York Times mentions the ratings dip that Leno's brethren Conan O'Brien and Jimmy Fallon have earned from having a weaker lead-in. Even Law and Order: SVU has taken a hit since being pushed from the 10 p.m. slot.
With no new breakout hits this fall and five fewer hours of scripted entertainment per week, NBC is almost guaranteed to trail ABC (DIS), CBS (CBS), and Fox (NWS) for the remainder of the season -- a certainty that doesn't seem to bother Zucker.
Back in March of this year, Zucker had the audacity to admit, "I don't think we'll ever be able to say, 'NBC is number one in prime time,' " during a presentation to the McGraw Hill Media Summit. He added, "What does number one in prime time mean anymore?"
Apparently nothing to Zucker: His network has gone from number one to number four under his leadership. This mixture of bad luck and gross mismanagement has General Electric looking to unload its property -- likely onto Comcast (CMCSA). Talks have progressed and an announcement of a changeover could come at any moment.
Whether or not a deal takes place, NBC is in desperate need of a new direction. Despite Zucker's comments, the network can drag itself out of the doldrums and emerge as the place of fantastic programming that it once was. It might take some pretty big steps, but in the end, it could usher in a new era of television -- one that even its competitors would want to emulate.
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2009-10-15 10:54:11
here's an idea
Cop shows - better yet, detective shows - have always had some draw. And why ? Because they are by nature interactive - the game is to solve the case before the plot lines settle on the scripted solution. It engages the mind.
Try to engage the mind, NBC. Build your scripts as if they were video game plotlines, with puzzles to solve every episode.
Of course you need an advertisable, attractive premise; and a writing team that can write. Add in that mind-engagement factor, and you've got a multi-year franchise on your hands.
And remember: "Biggest Loser" is not a foregone conclusion.
--
ps: that CBS kicks everybody else's tails with scripted drama may have something to do with their skew towards (dare I say it) old-school patriotic sentiment. Politics. The legendary "silent majority".
---
pps: I have an idea for a new cable news channel. Anybody want to hear the pitch ? Principals only.
Try to engage the mind, NBC. Build your scripts as if they were video game plotlines, with puzzles to solve every episode.
Of course you need an advertisable, attractive premise; and a writing team that can write. Add in that mind-engagement factor, and you've got a multi-year franchise on your hands.
And remember: "Biggest Loser" is not a foregone conclusion.
--
ps: that CBS kicks everybody else's tails with scripted drama may have something to do with their skew towards (dare I say it) old-school patriotic sentiment. Politics. The legendary "silent majority".
---
pps: I have an idea for a new cable news channel. Anybody want to hear the pitch ? Principals only.
2009-10-15 11:15:37
How about
it they show more commercials of grown men crying over how wonderful the GE engines are. Absolutely ridiculous. Or perhaps throwing a wrench around the country to fix something they built. OSHA would never allow throwing of a wrench. DUH
Fire whomever is making their commercials.
If the Biggest loser is your best show...how about that for foreshadowing. The Jay Leno show is good. But remember supply and demand. Too much of anything, kills the demand.
Buy CBS's show: The Unit, those idiots at CBS cancelled it. Scour the cable channels for shows with traction, and buy them of steal/borrow/emulate their formats.
Fire whomever is making their commercials.
If the Biggest loser is your best show...how about that for foreshadowing. The Jay Leno show is good. But remember supply and demand. Too much of anything, kills the demand.
Buy CBS's show: The Unit, those idiots at CBS cancelled it. Scour the cable channels for shows with traction, and buy them of steal/borrow/emulate their formats.
2009-10-15 12:53:04
Law & Order at 10:00pm. Drop 11:00 news altogether, but play 30 minute version at 6:00, while eliminating all biased reporting which will leave more time in 30 minutes for more facts without editorial. Leno at 11:00, Conan at 12:00.
FIRE ZUCKER.
FIRE ZUCKER.
2009-10-16 03:05:40
NBC
NBC proved over the summer what's wrong with the network mentality by acquiring, then dumping "Merlin" with no real promotion, no publicity, no marketing effort. And yet the show won a very loyal audience, but almost certainly NBC won't pick it up for next year. Hopefully sister cabler SyFy will do so, proving once again that the networks don't know how to act in this era of the fractured audience. Minyanville has it right -- instead of being all things to all people, be THE thing for a few people. You'll win loyalty and you'll have a targeted, defined audience to sell to advertisers. Boy, NBC has blown it big time.
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