E
editthis
Guest
Just texted my nine year old niece, she had no clue. She's watching her pre-teen shows on Nick and Disney. No peanuts.
bpatrick said:"Nashville" dropped from 9 million viewers its first week to 6.8
million its second; that much of a drop is not good.
justpassingthough said:I'm 31 and I never watched the Peanuts cartoons regularly, but I know of them for a general pop culture standpoint. Also I grew up in Southern California and they had their characters licensed to Knotts Berry Farm, who had Camp Snoopy, but thats the extent of my knowledge of the Peanuts.
bpatrick said:But yesterday I saw a scheduling move by the same network that left me
reeling, because the show is practically all kid-appeal. ABC is showing "It's
The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown" Wednesday at 8/7. Now just how many
kids does ABC think will be home at that time instead of out trick-or-treating,
especially in the Central and Mountain time zones? Why not tonight or tomorrow
night? If ABC is staring at fourth place (and it has produced what are possibly the
two biggest disappointments among the season's new shows: "Nashville" and "666
Park Avenue"), it's a few moves like this that will put them there.
bpatrick said:Up to now I've always thought the dumbest piece of scheduling in the
history of television was ABC's placing of the live-action sitcom "Harrigan
And Son" between two animated shows, "Matty's Funday Funnies" and
"The Flintstones," on Friday nights in the 1960-61 season; "Harrigan," about
father-and-son lawyers, had absolutely no kid appeal (and yes, I know and
remember that ABC was aiming "The Flintstones" at adults in those days but
that didn't keep the kids away, even before Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm).
MCarney said:As for Charlie Brown, I didn't see any promos either. I'm not surprised it's not being pushed - as others have said it's available on DVD and most kids don't have the foggiest notion who Charlie Brown or any of the other Peanuts characters are outside of the Met Life commercials. I know my nieces and nephew could not care less about it.
crainbebo said:It's so sad that this quality family entertainment is being taken out for Spongebob, iCarly and Disney's Shake it Up on end. I just cannot believe these kids don't even know about Charlie Brown, and they are close to their double-digits ages. Surely by now the parents should've mentioned at least Charlie and Snoopy to their kids right? Oh no, we need to talk about the latest iCarly or "Here Comes Honey Reality Crap" episode...
PTBoardOp94 said:Keep in mind: kids in their "double-digit ages" have never seen anything new featuring Charlie Brown and Snoopy. Charles Schulz died 12 years ago. Anyone who really remembers seeing new "Peanuts" strips would be eligible to vote next week.