Roy Mustang (post: 1354306) wrote:
The only thing that I'm worried about is, they are going to only show four eps in Nov and then it will not pick up until March of 2010.
mechana2015 wrote:Three words.
LOST final season.
Just about any show ABC has would end up getting bumped for that.
Roy Mustang (post: 1354345) wrote:Nope, that is not the reason. They are going to resume in March 2010 after the 2010 Winter Olympics to complete its 13-episode season. The production on the remaining nine episodes will resume in January 2010 as well.
Which I wondering is Lost going to head to head with the Olympics?
Col. Roy Mustang
ShiroiHikari wrote:I don't know, 9 million viewers seems like a lot to me, but then again I don't know anything about television ratings.
ShiroiHikari wrote:Also do those ratings count the number of times it's been viewed on Hulu?
The channel or the audience?rocklobster (post: 1356927) wrote:That's why I hate ABC. If it's not comedy, they're never interested.
rocklobster (post: 1357060) wrote:the channel. And they keep Lost on because it has good ratings, Roy.
rocklobster wrote:the channel. And they keep Lost on because it has good ratings, Roy.
―]That's capitalism[/I]. You don't stock products that don't sell, quality is irrelevant. You stock up on popular items and slowly filter out low sellers, and occasionally take a risk with dangerous new opportunities, like V. Science fiction is always a pretty niche audience for mainstream television. You're chewing out ABC when you should be thankful that they even took a shot at all.rocklobster (post: 1357060) wrote:the channel.
Fish and Chips (post: 1357093) wrote:Of course they kept Lost because it has good ratings.
. . .
Science fiction is always a pretty niche audience for mainstream television.
Yeah, I don't think that's a fair comparison. V wears its science fiction ambitions right out on its sleeve, whereas Lost eased you into it. I've still only watched the first three episodes of Lost, but that alone proves my point]And I think it's kind of faulty to say that sci-fi is a niche audience for mainstream television. Star Trek, anyone? Granted, the times have changed and more people tend to lean towards comedies or dramas, but I think a large audience will enjoy a well-written show.[/QUOTE]No, science fiction is still niche. Star Trek is a notable exception, as is, for that matter, Star Wars, which actually opened up the genre to people.Radical Dreamer (post: 1357169) wrote:Actually, this is where I think most people are seeing things differently. Lost IS science fiction--about as science fiction as they come, really. However, it gets good ratings because it's a well-written show with characters the audience cares about and questions the audience trusts will be answered.
Radical Dreamer wrote:Lost IS science fiction--about as science fiction as they come, really.
I haven't watched V for myself just yet, but perhaps the audience is falling away because it's not written in a manner that draws a good audience. I'm just guessing, though.
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