NBC going supernatural this fall
Struggling network adds spinoff ‘Heroes: Origins’ to schedule
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(MSNBC is a joint venture between NBC and Microsoft.)
The struggling network will also try to stretch “Heroes” by spinning off a related six-episode “Heroes: Origins” series that lets the audience choose a new cast member.
Fourth-place NBC was the first of the broadcast networks to unveil a new fall schedule to advertisers this week. After showing signs of life last fall, NBC recorded its least-watched week in prime time in at least 20 years last month — then went even lower the following week.
Having little to brag about, NBC’s annual sales presentation was an hour shorter than usual. And comic Jerry Seinfeld, brought onstage to discuss a series of comic shorts he’s doing for NBC this fall to plug his new movie, provided a reminder that the good old days are gone when he recalled standing on the Radio City Music Hall stage a decade ago.
“There was no YouTube,” he said. “It was Us Tube. America watched what NBC put on the air or lived in fear of the consequences.”
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With only four new dramas set to bow in the fall, and a drama and comedy each scheduled for midseason, it’s a conservative schedule for a network badly in need of hits.
“Loading up on (new) product is not necessarily a recipe for success,” said Kevin Reilly, NBC entertainment president. “Particularly in this day and age, with a fragmented audience, you simply can’t market them.”
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“We like the high-concept hooks,” Reilly said. “But this was by no means an effort to replicate what we have on ‘Heroes.”’
NBC kept intact its Thursday night lineup of comedies and “ER.” Although shows like “30 Rock” and “The Office” are critical favorites, they aren’t popular, leaving the network faltering on a night it once dominated.
Reilly said the shows have upscale appeal and are popular with advertisers.
“We’re up against ‘
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The six-episode “Heroes: Origins” series is a novel way for a network to address one of its chief unpleasant lessons this season: viewers are impatient when their favorite serials disappear into reruns for a huge chunk of the year. Each episode will introduce a potential new character, and the most popular chosen by fans will join the “Heroes” cast full time.
Brooke Shields headlines “Lipstick Jungle,” an hour-long series about three high-powered women friends, with a script from “Sex and the City” author Candace Bushnell. It will bow next January.
NBC’s other new series, “Life,” is a drama about a detective given a second chance after spending years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit.
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Illustrating the difficulties in introducing new comedies, NBC said it will have only one new sitcom next season — and it didn’t even earn a spot on the fall schedule. “The IT Crowd” is about a group of people who work in technical services at a large corporation.
The successful game “
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