nomadcowatbk said:
bpatrick said:
quadraphonic said:
Pab Sungenis said:
Now, if an American network were courageous, they would consider handing 9 PM-11 PM on Saturday back to their affiliates, and program family friendly fare from 5-6 PM and 7-8 PM instead. The right shows in those time slots will attract viewers before most people head out for the evening, or convince those who are staying at home to perhaps stay tuned for the prime offerings.
I have thought that same thing a few times.
In 1992 ABC tried to duplicate its success with "TGIF" on Friday nights with a block called "I Love Saturday Night." It consisted of an animated show called "Capitol Critters," "Who's The Boss?," "Growing Pains," and "Perfect Strangers." "Boss" and "Pains" were about to get canceled, and ABC had decided that "Perfect Strangers" no longer appealed to the 10-18-year-old crowd that was the backbone of "TGIF." "I Love Saturday Night" was gone in five weeks, although ABC did go on to try a couple more sitcoms, one with Julie Andrews and one with Billy Connolly which became part of "TGIF" for a short time. The only Saturday show that worked for ABC at the time was definitely not family-friendly: "The Commish." And nobody has tried a family-friendly block on Saturday since (except the occasional Disney movie on ABC). Makes me wonder if family programming can ever work on Saturdays.
NBC was still getting good ratings on that in 1992
NBC did have two shows in the top 30 on Saturday nights at the time: "Empty Nest" (tied for 22nd with "The Fresh Prince of Bel Air") and "The Golden Girls" (tied for 30th with "In The Heat of the Night"). But "The Golden Girls" moved to CBS that fall, renamed "The Golden Palace," and the highest-rated show on Saturday nights in the 1992-93 season was "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman" on CBS (23rd). Since then, only "Walker, Texas Ranger" has cracked the top 30 (to my knowledge), although "Cops" has a sizable audience of 18-34-year-old males. And neither of the latter two shows are what I would call family-friendly.
Until recent years the rule of thumb has been to program kid-friendly shows on Friday nights (besides the "TGIF" block, ABC had "Ozzie And Harriet" when David and Rick were young, "The Brady Bunch," and "The Partridge Family"), shows appealing to older viewers on Saturday (Lawrence Welk hung in for 16 years on ABC as proof of that). I know, there have been exceptions; "Dallas" didn't hit the top of the ratings until it moved to Friday, but the networks over the years have not actively courted the older crowd on Fridays or the younger crowd on Saturdays, knowing that the latter is "date night." And I think the movie studios know that, since they like to program previews of films opening on Friday on Thursday night.