You Know It's Gonna Get Stranger So Let's Get On With the T.V. Show

Stories

As TV networks tighten belts, look for fewer stars, fewer risks

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CBS wanted Candice Bergen to star in its potential new comedy Big D, one of several pilots being considered for next fall’s lineup. She’d play a difficult mother who makes like complicated for her son and his wife, new East Coast transplants to Dallas.

An early meeting was promising. Bergen is a bankable TV star, a five-time Emmy winner for the network’s own Murphy Brown and, more recently, a feisty fixture of ABC’s Boston Legal.

But when it came time to negotiate her salary, the two sides were worlds apart. In past years, the network and its studio supplier would have coughed up the dough to make the deal happen, and Bergen’s mere presence would increase the odds that Big D would secure a spot on CBS’ schedule.

Instead, CBS passed, the network confirmed. It instead cast Deanna Dunagan, a well-regarded but largely unknown Broadway actress, for a fraction of Bergen’s asking price.

That’s the math in the new Hollywood, where a combination of declining network ratings, sharply lower ad revenue and escalating production costs have forced cutbacks. The new austerity is being felt most keenly during the spring “development season,” when networks groom a new crop of shows they’ll consider for fall lineups.

Among the tactics:

• Reining in those star salaries — reduced by 10% to 50% from their previous paychecks — and hiring cheaper, unknown talent and fewer established big-name actors.

• Filming in relatively inexpensive locales such as Atlanta, Boston and Detroit, thanks partly to tax breaks for television productions. All of Fox’s drama pilots and many of NBC’s will be filmed in Canada, where the stronger U.S. dollar and lower labor costs save $500,000 an episode.

• Sharply reducing the layers of credited producers who collect paychecks but do little day-to-day work on series, and eliminating most penalty fees when sought-after projects don’t get made.

• Shooting many shows more cheaply by using digital video instead of 35-millimeter film, and emphasizing multicamera sitcoms with a studio audience (such as CBS’ Two and a Half Men) over film-style comedies (such as NBC’s The Office), which cost twice as much to produce.

“This is a moment in time when everyone recognizes we have to do things differently,” says Nancy Tellem, CBS Paramount Television Group chief.

She blames the situation on a “perfect storm” of last winter’s writers’ strike, the tanking economy and NBC’s decision to hand five hours of prime time to Jay Leno this fall by sharply reducing its drama slots.

Leno’s move, she says, “sent shudders through the entire community” as it increased networks’ leverage to cut costs. Even current series aren’t immune; some are being asked to cut budgets 10% next season.

Limiting ambitions

Back in the heady days of Friends, ER and Seinfeld— and even more recently with Heroes and Lost— huge sums were lavished on new dramas and comedies, in a business in which the vast majority of the new shows each year wind up failing. The prospect of a smash hit, however slim, was enough to warrant big investments by the major networks.

But increasingly, “it’s a business where the hits no longer pay for the losers,” says NBC Universal Television co-chairman Marc Graboff. “Revenues are lower, there’s fragmentation in ratings, and the costs are higher. Twenty-two hours a week of high-quality, high-cost programming is a very difficult challenge.”

That’s why it’s not happening anymore.

Cheaper reality and news shows fill slots that would otherwise go to sitcoms and dramas. Leno’s weeknight show will cost a fraction of a drama’s price tag while leaving less room on the TV schedule for another show to become a smash hit or eventually score a big payday from syndication.

Big stars such as Kelsey Grammer have taken pay cuts to keep working. And although Charlie Sheen (Two and a Half Men) and Laurence Fishburne (CSI) pull more than $350,000 an episode, second-tier players who routinely got $125,000 an episode not that long ago now are settling for about $80,000.

“What it’s forcing us to do is look at how to produce even more efficiently than we had in the past,” says CBS Paramount studio chief David Stapf. “We can’t just throw money at things.”

He adds that “the key is to do it in a way where viewers don’t notice.”

Last year, NBC raised eyebrows by scrapping pilots and picking new shows based on scripts, shaving millions in upfront production costs. But every new show it tried failed this season, and the fourth-place network is back making pilots again.

Even so, several networks are making fewer pilots, saving money but possibly reducing their chances of finding a hit from the right blend of script, cast and director — a recipe for successful shows that sometimes isn’t obvious on a paper script.

NBC scrapped plans to shoot one pilot — a period family show called Life in the ’80s— after spending more than $1 million because the show came too close to a remake of 1989 movie Parenthood that was also in the works. “Three or four years ago, we would have made both of them,” NBC Entertainment president Angela Bromstad says.

CBS and ABC are exceptions to the pared-down development trend. ABC has ordered 24 pilots, featuring TV stars such as Grammer, Friends‘ Courteney Cox, Everybody Loves Raymond‘s Patricia Heaton and Gilmore Girls‘ Lauren Graham.

Research and development “to me is the lifeblood of the business,” says ABC network and studio chief Steve McPherson. “It’s the process that has brought us all the shows that have been iconic over the years.”

But in this new climate, networks are taking fewer swings for the fences as a new conservative approach favors series about cops, lawyers and doctors over more ambitious serialized thrillers such as Lost.

“As pressure has mounted and the economy has worsened, in some cases there is a greater reluctance to take risks and chances in favor of tried-and-true franchises,” says Peter Roth, president of Warner Bros. TV, a major supplier unaffiliated with a top network.

“In some ways I understand it: It’s often a way to break through the clutter in marketing,” he says. “From the networks’ perspective, it’s thought to be a more sure-fire way to get a hit.”

Familiar themes

But hits are elusive even in good times, and that’s true now more than ever as network audiences drift to cable.

Typically, one in five pilots becomes a weekly series, and of those, perhaps one in five proves lasting.

There are still a few big bets:

• ABC is spending $7 million on Flash Forward, an ambitious series based on the sci-fi novel that it hopes is the next Lost. (Everyone blacks out for 2 minutes and 17 seconds and has a vision of the future.)

• Fox has Human Target, based on the DC Comics franchise.

• CBS has the 9/11-influenced Back, about a man missing for eight years, starring Jericho‘s Skeet Ulrich.

• And NBC has Day One, which follows the fallout of a “global catastrophe.”

More typical is the marketing-driven tendency — as in movies — to rely on tested franchises. Even though NBC’s Bionic Woman and Knight Rider bombed, remakes of previous hit shows remain a popular tactic.

ABC has Eastwick, based on the feature film version of John Updike’s The Witches of Eastwick, and V, based on NBC’s 1980s sci-fi series about reptilian aliens.

Fox, meanwhile, has a new take on Britain’s Absolutely Fabulous, about two outrageous women. NBC is mulling that do-over of Parenthood, and CW, which renewed its Beverly Hills, 90210 remake, is at work on a new version Melrose Place and a spinoff of Gossip Girl.

Fox will spin off The Cleveland Show from Family Guy. And CBS is weighing its own spinoff of NCIS.

A few proposed sitcoms have used the economic climate in their story lines.

ABC’s Canned centers on a group of friends who are fired on the same day, and another series stars Frasier‘s Grammer as a Wall Street big shot who loses his job and is “forced to reconnect” with his small-town family.

Meanwhile, Fox has Two Dollar Beer, about Detroit pals who are sons of laid-off autoworkers.

“We’re always looking at the zeitgeist and finding aspects we can reflect on TV,” McPherson says. “Comedy is a great way you can get a release. There’s less pain because you realize we’re all going through it and you can laugh at other people in the same circumstance.”

But all the big networks are seeking to reignite the family sitcom, hugely popular in the 1980s with The Cosby Show but largely absent since Everybody Loves Raymond called it quits in 2005.

Overall, there are fewer foreboding, convoluted dramas.

“Most of our pilots in general have a lighter tone. They’re a little more escapist conceptually,” says Fox entertainment chief Kevin Reilly. “The times can’t help but influence your choices.”

So can performance: The audience for NBC’s Heroes, which at $4 million an episode is one of TV’s priciest dramas, plunged 27% this season.

“We’re definitely trying to come away from dark, overserialized dramas,” Bromstad says.

Several proposed CBS series focus on aspirational “characters who have been through or are going through a period of transition in their life,” says CBS Entertainment president Nina Tassler, though it wasn’t planned that way.

Take The Good Wife‘s Julianna Margulies, who plays a lawyer returning to the work force when her disgraced politico husband, a fictional stand-in for former New York governor Eliot Spitzer, is sent to prison.

“They go through obstacles, they triumph and they succeed,” Tassler says.

That sounds like a happy ending the networks would love to script for themselves.

Fairness Doctrine or Media Control Doctrine? | An In-Depth Discussion

Disinformation, Fairness Doctrine, FOX News, Media

Fairness Doctrine or Media Control Doctrine? | An In-Depth Discussion

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David Gregory's Past Year Of Intense Prime-Time Bootlicking Lands Him 'Meet The Press' Job

Gregory, MTP, NBC
NBC Chief White House correspondent to replace the late Tim Russert
MSNBC
Sun., Dec. 7, 2008

David Gregory has been named moderator of NBC News’ “Meet the Press,” effective immediately. In addition, Betsy Fischer, the program’s longtime executive producer has extended her tenure with the top-rated broadcast. The announcements were made today by Steve Capus, President of NBC News.

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“For 61 years, this program has played a vital role in our nation’s political discourse and millions of Americans’ Sunday mornings,” said Capus. “We lost a legend this summer, and today we hand the program over to someone who has a true appreciation and respect for the ‘Meet the Press’ legacy, and a keen sense of what it needs to be in the future. David and Betsy are first-rate and I’m thrilled to have them in their roles at a key time in the program’s, and the country’s, history. I’d also like to thank Tom Brokaw, whose tremendous dedication has helped to lead ‘Meet the Press’ through this critical transition and extraordinary election season. He did so out of honor and respect for our friend Tim Russert, and we’ll always be grateful.”

“I’m honored and deeply humbled as I take on this role,” said Gregory. “I’m filled with a great sense of purpose as I join a superb team to cover Washington and the world from a treasured platform in our country. Above all, I want to make Tim proud.”

“It’s an exciting next chapter in the long history of ‘Meet the Press’ and I, along with the rest of the staff, am eagerly looking forward to this new era.” said Fischer. “Tim so often said one of the most important things for a good journalist to do is be prepared — and there is no doubt that David is prepared for this. Not only is he a huge talent, but his tremendous knowledge of Washington and his persistence for truth and accountability make him a natural fit to uphold the strong ideals of ‘Meet the Press.’”

“Meet the Press” has been the top-rated Sunday morning public affairs show for nearly 11 consecutive years. It’s the longest-running program ever on network television, premiering on NBC-TV on November 6, 1947. The show made its initial debut two years earlier – as a radio program with Martha Rountree and Lawrence Spivak as producers. Gregory is only the tenth person ever to be a permanent host of the program. He follows veteran NBC Newsman Tom Brokaw who served as interim moderator after the untimely death of Tim Russert on June 13, 2008.

In addition to his “Meet the Press” responsibilities, Gregory will be a regular contributor for “Today” and will continue to serve as a back-up anchor for the broadcast. He will also continue as a regular contributor and analyst on MSNBC, and lend his voice and reporting to all NBC News broadcasts including coverage of special events.

Gregory first joined NBC News in 1995. He served as White House Correspondent during the presidency of George W. Bush, reporting extensively on the 9-11 attacks as well as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Gregory has also covered three presidential campaigns in 2000, 2004 and 2008.

Earning a reputation for being one of the toughest questioners of President Bush and his press secretaries, Washingtonian magazine named Gregory one of Washington’s 50 best and most influential journalists, labeling him the “firebrand in the front row.”

On the campaign trail in 2004, and during his years covering the White House Gregory was among the most heavily utilized network correspondent on television, according to the Tyndall Report.

Beyond politics, he has covered nearly every major story for the network: from the O.J. Simpson trials, to the trial of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, to the impeachment of President Clinton, and the death of Pope John Paul II.

Previously, Gregory worked as an NBC News correspondent based in Los Angeles and Chicago.  He began his journalism career at the age of 18 as a summer reporter for KGUN-TV in Tucson, Arizona.  Gregory also worked for NBC’s flagship West Coast affiliate KCRA-TV in Sacramento.

A native of Los Angeles, he graduated from American University in Washington, D.C. with a bachelor’s degree in International Studies.  In 2005, Gregory was named the School of International Service’s alumnus of the year and now sits on the Dean’s advisory council.

Gregory lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife Beth Wilkinson, an attorney, and their three children.

Betsy Fischer has been with “Meet the Press” for 17 years and has served as Executive Producer of the program since July 2002. Additionally, she served as Tom Brokaw’s producer for NBC News’ coverage of the 2008 Presidential Election, including the conventions, debates, and election night. Fischer served with Tim Russert in the same capacity during NBC’s coverage of Special Events, and throughout the 2000, 2004 and 2008 elections.

She has produced interviews with U.S. Presidents, key Cabinet officials, heads of state and every 2004 and 2008 presidential candidate. Fischer also created and produced an award winning series of special “Meet the Press” debates with the candidates from key 2002, 2004, 2006 and 2008 U.S. Senate races.

Prior to being named to Executive Producer, Fischer was the Senior Producer of “Meet the Press” and the NBC News Political/Polling Unit for five years. Her career at NBC News began with an internship at “Meet the Press” while in college and she became the political researcher in 1992 for the program.  Fischer was promoted to Associate Producer in 1995, and a Producer in 1997.

She has recently been awarded the honor of “Young Global Leader of the World 2008” by The World Economic Forum which recognizes 250 global young leaders for their professional accomplishments, their commitment to society and their potential to contribute to the shaping of the future world.

A native of New Orleans, Fischer did her undergraduate and graduate work at American University in Washington, DC.  She is a Cum Laude graduate of their School of Public Affairs and earned a M.A. degree in Broadcast Journalism from the AU School of Communications.

Further information on “Meet the Press,” including full bios and photos, will be available at www.mtp.msnbc.com and http://www.nbcumv.com/.

Settlement in NY lawsuit over NBC's 'Predator'

Stories

NEW YORK (AP) NBC Universal has settled a $105 million lawsuit
brought by a woman who claimed ”Dateline NBC: To Catch A
Predator” led her brother to kill himself after camera crews and
police officers showed up at his home in a televised sex sting.

”The matter has been amicably resolved to the satisfaction of
both parties,” said a statement released by both sides.

Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

Patricia Conradt’s lawsuit had claimed her brother, an assistant
prosecutor in suburban Dallas, fatally shot himself after he was
accused of engaging in a sexually explicit online chat with an
adult posing as a 13-year-old boy.

The lawsuit claimed NBC ”steamrolled” authorities to arrest
Louis William Conradt Jr. after telling police he failed to show up
at a sting operation 35 miles away.

NBC was working with the activist group Perverted Justice on the
sting, in which people impersonating children established online
chats with men and tried to lure them to a house, where they were
met by TV cameras and police.

In February, a federal judge issued a scathing ruling in the
case, saying a jury might conclude the network ”crossed the line
from responsible journalism to irresponsible and reckless intrusion
into law enforcement.”

U.S. District Judge Denny Chin said the lawsuit contained
sufficient facts to make it plausible that the suicide was
foreseeable, that police had a duty to protect Conradt from killing
himself and that the officers and NBC acted with deliberate
indifference.

New episodes of ”To Catch A Predator” ended in December, with
the future of the series uncertain.

”Right now we are working on other investigative stories
focusing on national security and the economy,” NBC spokeswoman
Jenny Tartikoff said in an e-mail. ”If we do more, we want to make
sure we are complementing past investigations not just repeating
them.”

JOHN EDWARDS DEMANDS AIRPLANE BE STOPPED-$1000 HAIRCUT GIVEN

9/11, Scaife

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Good Stuff StoogeWatcher!
You managed to get all the Dollar Store talking points in -Soros, Homosexuality, Manliness, Fear of a woman with a viewpoint, (“Gosh -I don’t know what it is about my lizard frat-boy brain that there’s just SOMETHING that bothers me, no, more like gnaws at me, about Hillary Clinton. She’s a no-good forgiver of her murdering husband Jeff Gerth told me. John Edwards makes airplanes stop on the runway and makes the stewardesses give him $1000 haircuts

[John Tully]

BILL O'REILLY ACCUSES MSNBC OF PLOT AGAINST GEORGE BUSH

9/11, Bin Laden, MSNBC, Rove

BILL O'REILLY ACCUSES MSNBC OF PLOT AGAINST GEORGE BUSH

BILL O’REILLY ACCUSES MSNBC OF PLOT AGAINST GEORGE BUSH

BILL MAHER REAL TIME FRIDAY APRIL 27

9/11, Bin Laden, Rove

tullycast1.jpg Dennis Kucinich acts presidential, the Republican on the panel admits to not REALLY knowing how it’s going in Iraq, and Bill defends Alec Baldwin’s right to yell at his daughter. The model for “A Few Good Men”, former US Attorney David Iglesias, has a live sitdown with Bill and is promptly and rightly called a hero by Maher. It seemed like Mr. Iglesias was a little emotional and it was a very good moment. Richard Belzer was great, not interrupting with cute jokes right in the middle of great discussions like Dana Carvey did a few weeks back. The Baghdad bureau chief for NPR, Jamie Tarabay, told of how the Green Zone is a myth in that it’s more dangerous than the (red zone) and so she and her staff don’t stay there.

Republican Lisa Schiffren, the former speech-writer for Newt Gingrich among other things, tried to talking point her way out of a discussion involving Iraqi oil revenue and the money supposedly going towards reconstruction of the infrastructure…. “Well maybe things haven’t gone on line as fast…well I haven’t actually been there so I can’t speak for how things are” after the Baghdad bureau chief flatly says: “that’s just not true”

It’s sad how completely and utterly full of SHITE “these” people are.

JT
http://broadcatching.wordpress.com

NEW RULES

DENNIS KUCINICH

REAL TIME PART FOUR

REAL TIME PART THREE

REAL TIME PART TWO

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THEY’RE ALL BELOW █Post to del.icio.us and Digg it and puff tough

BILL MAHER REAL TIME PART TWO 4/27

9/11, Bin Laden

BILL MAHER REAL TIME PART TWO
tullycast1.jpgAPRIL 27th
The panel of Richard Belzer, Jamie Tarabay and Lisa Schiffren discuss the quagmire in Iraq, the definition of “lost war” the 120,000 mercenaries that make four times what the soldiers are making,Pat Tillman, the deletion by the U.S. military of “car bombs” in counting sectarian violence…

BILL MAHER'S REAL TIME FOR APRIL 27th PART FOUR

Stories

tullycast1.jpg REAL TIME WITH BILL MAHER

(Part4)
At the very end of this segment Ms. Schiffren declares: “Well, I’ve never been over to Iraq so I can’t speak for the progress of the (infrastructure)