Friday night death slot
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The term Friday night death slot refers to the idea that television shows broadcast on Friday nights in the United States face a greater than average chance of being cancelled.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] The term possibly began as a reflection of certain shows' dominance of Friday night in the 1980s, but today it reflects the belief that Americans are rarely at home to watch TV on Fridays.[11][12]
On the other hand, placement in the slot can occasionally yield improved ratings for a struggling show: If such a show suffers low ratings earlier in the broadcast week because it must compete against more attractive programming, a move to Friday evening may improve its ratings because the other shows competing for viewers in the new time slot are weaker or less well known.
Therefore, the Friday night death slot offers networks an opportunity to test the long-term prospects of a traditionally strong show going through a period of struggle: If it regains viewers when placed against the weaker competition featured on Friday evenings, network executives may attribute its ratings drop in its previous time slot to competition with the specific shows aired by other networks at the same time. Therefore, they may restore it to its previous time slot once its quality recovers and/or competing shows hit a slump. (For example, NBC moved season 17 of Law & Order from 10:00 PM EST Wednesday to 10:00 PM EST Friday but returned the series to its Wednesday slot for season 18 and has subsequently renewed it for a nineteenth season.[13][14] ) If, however, the show is unable to regain viewers even against weaker competition, the odds are greater that its decline has resulted from a substantive and permanent shift in audience tastes, such that the show is unlikely to recover popularity and executives have greater incentive to cancel it.
Whether networks exploit this fact by purposefully moving programs to Friday nights to justify their cancellation is the subject of much continuing debate and cynicism among fans of programs scheduled at these times.[15]
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[edit] FOX and Fridays
In recent years, this has especially been true with FOX. The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. (1993-1994), M.A.N.T.I.S. (1994-1995), Strange Luck (1995-1996), VR.5 (1995), Brimstone (1998-1999), Greed (1999-2000), Dark Angel (2000-2002), The Lone Gunmen (2001), Fastlane (2002-2003), Firefly (2002-2003),[7]John Doe (2002-2003), Wanda at Large (2003), Playing It Straight (2004), Wonderfalls (2004)[16][7], Boston Public (2000-2004), Jonny Zero (2005), Killer Instinct (2005), Malcolm in The Middle (2000-2006), The Bernie Mac Show (2001-2006), Justice (2006), Standoff (2006-2007), Vanished (2006)[17], The Wedding Bells (2007)[18], Nashville (2007), Canterbury's Law (2008), and The Return of Jezebel James (2008) are all examples of FOX shows that started on Friday nights and lasted only a few episodes, or moved to Friday nights, lost the battle for television ratings, and were eventually cancelled. However, at least one Fox show that premiered on Friday Nights, The X-Files, became a success, especially after moving to Sunday nights in the fall of 1996. Incidentally, The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr, which premiered in 1993 in the Friday night slot along with the X-Files, was quickly canceled. The X-Files ran 6 years in its Sunday timeslot.
Fox has justified some of these cancellations by a small fan base. However, some of these shows become even more popular due to their short lived run as well as potential as a great long running series had it not been place in the slot. Fastlane re-runs were shown on MTV, Court TV, and G4, and Firefly's storyline and characters have since been made into a major motion picture entitled Serenity.
[edit] TGIF on ABC
In the late 1980s, ABC thrived with its success on Friday nights by creating a family night of television with sitcoms such as Full House, Sabrina, The Teenage Witch, Family Matters, Step by Step, Hangin' with Mr. Cooper, Boy Meets World, Perfect Strangers, and Dinosaurs, which were among shows within the TGIF lineup that thrived for several years. In the early 1990s, the TGIF lineup began to feel stale to viewers and in 1991 the network tried to freshen up the night by moving Full House to Tuesday nights. Further changes occurred in 1996, when Hangin' with Mr. Cooper was renewed as a midseason replacement slated to return in spring 1997. The series would be brought back in the summer of 1997 to air on Saturday to run the 15 episodes that were produced. Family Matters and Step by Step were both canceled by ABC in the spring of 1997, but were quickly picked up by CBS for a final season. By the late 1990s the majority of the shows that were on the original TGIF lineup were canceled. In 2001, ABC attempted to fill the slot with the reality show The Mole, but it was pulled after only three weeks. In the early-mid 2000s, ABC attempted to launch another block of family shows. However, this attempt was unsuccessful and these shows were canceled in 2004.
[edit] I love Saturday Night on ABC dumping ground
Originally, ABC's "I love Saturday Night" concept was developed to capitalize on the popularity of TGIF and heavy promotion of the lineup was done during TGIF and other popular nights on the network. Unfortunately, the concept never caught on. This started in 1992 with the moving of longtime series Perfect Strangers and Growing Pains to the night to make way for newer shows on TGIF. Midseason replacement Capitol Critters was also moved to the night. All shows, including MacGyver were cancelled in spring 1992. Perfect Strangers was brought back for six episodes in summer 1993 to resolve all loose ends on the show. Other shows moved to Saturdays and were quickly cancelled included Where I Live, George, and Thea.
[edit] CBS and Fridays
CBS, in an effort to revive Friday night television in the 1990s, first attempted to compete with ABC launching a comedy night in the fall of 1992 with The Golden Palace (a spinoff/continuation of NBC's The Golden Girls, along with Monday-night Top-10 hits Major Dad and Designing Women, along with a new sitcom from Bob Newhart, Bob. This initial effort failed, and only Bob was renewed for the 1993-1994 season.[19]
In the Fall of 1997, CBS tried to capitalize off the cancellations of Friday night programs on rival ABC. They gave shows such as Step by Step and Family Matters a second life and created the CBS Block Party to take away ABC's viewers. In September 1997, the CBS Block Party kicked off with Family Matters and Step by Step in their original timeslots and The Gregory Hines Show and Meego were added to the mix. However, CBS failed to adequately promote the programs, resulting in their cancellation after one season. Some argue that viewers of the shows had grown older and moved on to other viewing options which caused the ratings decrease. CBS did not try to use the concept again, sticking to dramas from that point on.
The phenomenon is now seen in regard to other original programming on CBS as well. Joan of Arcadia, which had a successful freshman year in the 2003-2004 season - and was even renewed unusually early - in January 2004 for the following fall season - was cancelled after its second year. The popular CBS show CSI: Crime Scene Investigation was originally aired on Friday nights before being moved to Thursday nights months after its fall 2000 series premiere; it has remained on Thursday nights ever since. Another popular series that aired on Friday nights at the beginning of the 1996-97 season was Everybody Loves Raymond. After its debut, the show received low ratings; however, the network kept the show and moved it from Fridays to Monday nights, midway throughout the season, to boost ratings, and Raymond performed well over 9 seasons.[6] Homicide is another example of a CBS program that struggled on Fridays but did well after being moved to another night.[8] CBS has also found success in its Friday night lineup with The Ghost Whisperer, Moonlight, The Price Is Right $1,000,000 Spectacular, and Numb3rs.[20][21]
[edit] The case of Star Trek and NBC
A famous example of a television series brought to a premature death by being moved to Friday nights was the original Star Trek series, which aired on NBC. Producer Gene Roddenberry lost a fight with Laugh-In producer George Schlatter over the 8:30 p.m. Monday-night time slot. Roddenberry said he had been promised the slot when the show was renewed, after fans deluged NBC with mail in protest (a long-held Hollywood tradition holds that one single letter also represents the opinions of 20 other people that didn't have the time to write).
That would have meant Laugh-In would have had to start a half-hour later, and Schlatter did not see why his show, a ratings smash, had to yield that time to the poorly-rated Star Trek, and made no secret of his displeasure. Roddenberry, who never forgave the network for this, made good on a threat to withdraw from personally producing the show, which when combined with the departure of others involved behind the scenes hastened its decline and ensured that there would be no fourth season, and while Schlatter won the battle, it was at his own expense, as it caused Laugh-In cast member Judy Carne to resign in sympathy.
This was only a year before NBC began using demographic breakdowns to decide which shows to air. NBC discovered that even in the 10 p.m. Friday slot, the show nevertheless attracted an audience segment advertisers would have found highly desirable, as it consisted mainly of married couples with lots of disposable income.
In an echo of what happened with the original Star Trek, the prequel series Star Trek: Enterprise was rescheduled from Wednesday to Friday nights on UPN for its fourth season (2004–2005), a move which preceded its cancellation in February 2005.
[edit] Programs that buck the phenomenon
However, many popular shows, such as Sanford and Son (NBC, 1972-1977), The Partridge Family (ABC, 1970-1974), Monk (USA, 2002-present), Miami Vice (NBC, 1984-1990), Dallas (CBS, 1978-1991), Falcon Crest (CBS, 1981-1990), The Incredible Hulk (CBS, 1978-1982), The Dukes of Hazzard (CBS, 1979-1985), Providence (NBC, 1999-2002), Ghost Whisperer (CBS, 2005-present), Nash Bridges (CBS, 1996-2001), Picket Fences (CBS, 1992-1996), The X-Files (FOX, 1993-2002), Reba (The WB/The CW, 2001-2007), Sabrina, the Teenage Witch (ABC/The WB, 1996-2003) Grounded for Life (FOX/The WB, 2001-2005), Law and Order: Special Victims Unit (NBC, 1999-present), and The Price Is Right $1,000,000 Spectacular (CBS, 2003-present) have been launched on Friday nights and become successful. Often this will result in in the "promotion" of the series for Friday sweeps; for instance, FOX later moved The X-Files to Sunday nights, and NBC relocated Law and Order: Special Victims Unit to Tuesdays. Reba also moved from Fridays to Sunday nights when it moved to The CW for what would turn out to be its final season. It could be argued, however, that Grounded for Life was a victim, as FOX cancelled it before it went on to achieve success on The WB. The Price Is Right $1,000,000 Spectacular has moved around between Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, and it has had its greatest ratings success in the Friday 8 p.m. time slot.
Similarly, Battlestar Galactica flourished at 10 p.m. on Fridays on the Sci-Fi Channel from January 2005 to January 2007, in which time it became one of Sci-Fi's highest-rated programs. For several years, Sci-Fi Channel in fact placed its three highest rated shows on Friday night, airing Galactica alongside Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis in a three-hour Sci-Fi Friday block. This is no longer the case as of the 2006/07 season, however; as of January 21, 2007, Galactica was moved to Sunday nights. It was moved back to Fridays for its last season. Although the name of the block and shows aired on it have changed, the block itself has been (for the most part) very good for many of the Sci-Fi Channel's original shows.
UPN/The CW's WWE Friday Night SmackDown!, originally named SmackDown!, was first broadcast on UPN on Thursdays in competition to WCW Thunder. UPN moved the show to Friday nights in the United States on September 9, 2005, because of low ratings in its original Thursday-night slot, and the show has retained its Friday night timeslot since moving to The CW. Upon its move to the "death slot", UPN/CW Friday nights have seen a substantial increase in ratings over UPN's movies and most of the WB's sitcoms. SmackDown! had also initially garnered even better ratings in the death slot than the ratings on its former Thursday-night airings (after the merging of WCW with WWE). Ironically, The CW chose to cancel Smackdown which will begin airing on MyNetworkTV in Fall of 2008. [22]
[edit] References
- ^ Katherine Phillips. "Witty sitcoms scheduled in Friday night death slot," Richmond Times-Dispatch, March 28, 1986, page 46: "ABC is sending two of this season's brightest new sitcoms to certain death at the hands of J.R. Ewing and his Dallas clan."
- ^ John Voorhees. "ABC reshuffles schedule for ratings but deals only two new shows," The Seattle Times, December 13, 1985, page C5: "Also being dropped is Our Family Honor, the ABC series that has had the distinction of being the lowest-rated Nielsen show almost every week since its debut. It is in the Friday night death slot of 10 p.m., against Miami Vice and Falcon Crest.'
- ^ Knight-Ridder News Service. 'Family Honor' ditched for 'Spenser', Lexington Herald-Leader (KY), October 19, 1985, page C6: "Spenser: For Hire, the above-par detective series starring Robert Urich, is being moved out of the Friday-night death slot opposite Miami Vice and Falcon Crest. ... To make room for "Spenser," ABC is taking "Our Family Honor" off the air [Tuesdays], at least for a while and perhaps permanently.
- ^ Bridges, C.A. New on DVD: Whatever show you didn't watch last year. The Daytona Beach News-Journal: November 3, 2006
- ^ Melanie McFarland. "Spring can be the cruelest season for our favorite shows," Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA), March 16, 2007, page D1: "Prison Break has yet to be renewed, but it's safer than Standoff, which is getting a last chance to justify its existence by turning around the Friday night death slot. (Not gonna happen.)"
- ^ a b Gail Pennington. "Critic's picks," St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO), May 16, 2005, page C6: "Paired with [Dave's World] in a Friday night death slot, ' Raymond' struggled but survived, moving in March 1997 to Mondays, where it took up permanent residence."
- ^ a b c Emily Nussbaum. "Same Night, Same Channel, Same Giant Bummer" (interview with Tim Minear on the demise of Angel, Firefly, and Wonderfalls, The New York Times, April 18, 2004, page 25, column 1.
- ^ a b Eric Deggans. "NBC announces fall lineup," St. Petersburg Times, May 13, 2003, page 2B: Still, other than a few quibbles (including moving Peabody Award-winning Boomtown to the Friday night death slot that once hobbled Homicide), NBC unveiled a promising fall lineup.
- ^ Tom Long. "UPN's 'Under One Roof' is no home sweet home," The Detroit News (MI), March 22, 2002, page 1C.
- ^ Kinney Littlefield. Broadcast blues: Television: Bad movies, bad sitcoms and bad news summed up the tube in '93. So what else is new?" The Orange County Register, December 26, 1993, page F40: "Against the Grain" NBC. A fine family drama of small-town Texas life. Excellent reviews, terrible ratings in its Friday night death slot."
- ^ The Austin Chronicle: News: Election 2006
- ^ Goodman, Tim. "Saturday night is dead, yes, but Friday, too?", San Francisco Chronicle, 2007-10-10, pp. E1. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ [1]
- ^ http://www.ohio.com/entertainment/17252944.html?page=all&c=y
- ^ Johnson, Christian. Threshold Moved from Friday Death Slot, CBS Offers Episodes on Streaming Video. Cinerati: November 11, 2005
- ^ Minear, Tim (2004-03-16). An Open Letter from Tim Minear. TimMinear.net. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ Ryan, Maureen. 'Smith' is gone, 'Heroes' gets a full season: TV news you can use. Chicago Tribune: October 6, 2006.
- ^ Wedding Bells in Jump The Shark
- ^ Brooks, Tim and Marsh, Earle, "The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable Shows 1946-present," 7th edition
- ^ CBS Casts a Spell Over Friday Night. Zap2It: November 3, 2007
- ^ Friday Night 'Numb3rs' Favor CBS. Zap2It: November 10, 2007
- ^ http://www.zap2it.com/tv/news/zap-wwesmackdownmynetworktv,0,7469333.story

