If only one show on Saturday night on any of the networks ("Walker, Texas Ranger") has been in the top 30 in the ratings in the last 20 years, that sounds like the reason we don't see much original drama on Saturday night today.
Wright County Guy said:On this Saturday Night, (July 13th), NBC is trotting out a family-fare, made for TV, new movie "Saige Paints the Sky".
Three anomalies in one two-hour block: "Family Fare", "Made for TV Movie", and "New (on Saturday night)".
BD Sullivan said:Saturday night now is a dumping ground for any network, though filling it with sports is becoming more of a theme--ABC with college football, Fox with baseball.
Fact: Chuck Norris can make an original scripted show successful even on Saturday.PTBoardOp94 said:If only one show on Saturday night on any of the networks ("Walker, Texas Ranger") has been in the top 30 in the ratings in the last 20 years, that sounds like the reason we don't see much original drama on Saturday night today.
Wright County Guy said:On this Saturday Night, (July 13th), NBC is trotting out a family-fare, made for TV, new movie "Saige Paints the Sky".
Three anomalies in one two-hour block: "Family Fare", "Made for TV Movie", and "New (on Saturday night)".
therealjm12 said:Ever think that the viewership on Saturdays has gone down because of the crap the Nets program? I would bet viewership would go back up if Saturday night programing once again raised to the quality of All In The Family, Mary Tyler Moore, Bob Newhart & Carol Burnett. Even the Not Ready For Prime Time Players on SNL. People went out back then too. There were plenty of other options to do on Saturday night, but people stayed home to watch those shows. It wasn't like the outside world shut down.
What time, exactly, did the HUT numbers go down? Is it possible that the nets were just putting on subpar shows (even if we might think of them as hits today) and the resulting decline in HUT was mistaken as a trend of its own instead of a result of subpar shows? Perhaps the nets were giving people a reason to stay home on Saturday for so long that no one realized that when they stopped, unlike on other nights of the week, people could in fact go out and do other things, and then when the quality of Saturday programming inevitably corrected itself, this was mistaken for a societal shift because it couldn't possibly be that the networks weren't giving them a reason to watch their oh-so-quality programming.michael hagerty said:therealjm12 said:Ever think that the viewership on Saturdays has gone down because of the crap the Nets program? I would bet viewership would go back up if Saturday night programing once again raised to the quality of All In The Family, Mary Tyler Moore, Bob Newhart & Carol Burnett. Even the Not Ready For Prime Time Players on SNL. People went out back then too. There were plenty of other options to do on Saturday night, but people stayed home to watch those shows. It wasn't like the outside world shut down.
Once again, the HUT (households using television) levels went down before the quality did. The quality was in response.
Morgan Wick said:michael hagerty said:therealjm12 said:Ever think that the viewership on Saturdays has gone down because of the crap the Nets program? I would bet viewership would go back up if Saturday night programing once again raised to the quality of All In The Family, Mary Tyler Moore, Bob Newhart & Carol Burnett. Even the Not Ready For Prime Time Players on SNL. People went out back then too. There were plenty of other options to do on Saturday night, but people stayed home to watch those shows. It wasn't like the outside world shut down.
Once again, the HUT (households using television) levels went down before the quality did. The quality was in response.
What time, exactly, did the HUT numbers go down? Is it possible that the nets were just putting on subpar shows (even if we might think of them as hits today) and the resulting decline in HUT was mistaken as a trend of its own instead of a result of subpar shows? Perhaps the nets were giving people a reason to stay home on Saturday for so long that no one realized that when they stopped, unlike on other nights of the week, people could in fact go out and do other things, and then when the quality of Saturday programming inevitably corrected itself, this was mistaken for a societal shift because it couldn't possibly be that the networks weren't giving them a reason to watch their oh-so-quality programming.
Alternatively, is it possible this is connected to the increasing emphasis on the demos? I notice the most recent hit Saturday shows don't seem like they would be hits today on any night. Is it possible 18-49-year-olds always went out disproportionately on Saturday nights, and when networks started canceling any show that didn't deliver them, everyone else gave up on TV Saturday as well, which as before was mistaken as a trend in its own right rather than an effect?
Both of these are kind of flimsy, I admit, but it might be worth considering.
michael hagerty said:Morgan Wick said:michael hagerty said:therealjm12 said:Ever think that the viewership on Saturdays has gone down because of the crap the Nets program? I would bet viewership would go back up if Saturday night programing once again raised to the quality of All In The Family, Mary Tyler Moore, Bob Newhart & Carol Burnett. Even the Not Ready For Prime Time Players on SNL. People went out back then too. There were plenty of other options to do on Saturday night, but people stayed home to watch those shows. It wasn't like the outside world shut down.
Once again, the HUT (households using television) levels went down before the quality did. The quality was in response.
What time, exactly, did the HUT numbers go down? Is it possible that the nets were just putting on subpar shows (even if we might think of them as hits today) and the resulting decline in HUT was mistaken as a trend of its own instead of a result of subpar shows? Perhaps the nets were giving people a reason to stay home on Saturday for so long that no one realized that when they stopped, unlike on other nights of the week, people could in fact go out and do other things, and then when the quality of Saturday programming inevitably corrected itself, this was mistaken for a societal shift because it couldn't possibly be that the networks weren't giving them a reason to watch their oh-so-quality programming.
Alternatively, is it possible this is connected to the increasing emphasis on the demos? I notice the most recent hit Saturday shows don't seem like they would be hits today on any night. Is it possible 18-49-year-olds always went out disproportionately on Saturday nights, and when networks started canceling any show that didn't deliver them, everyone else gave up on TV Saturday as well, which as before was mistaken as a trend in its own right rather than an effect?
Both of these are kind of flimsy, I admit, but it might be worth considering.
I'll try to find those statistics, Morgan...might take a day or two.
I'm amazed at the difficulty (not just you, several people on the board) in accepting that the average 33-year old (dead center of the 18-49 demographic) of today lives a very different lifestyle than the average 33 year old of 40 years ago.
therealjm12 said:Ever think that the viewership on Saturdays has gone down because of the crap the Nets program? I would bet viewership would go back up if Saturday night programing once again raised to the quality of All In The Family, Mary Tyler Moore, Bob Newhart & Carol Burnett. Even the Not Ready For Prime Time Players on SNL. People went out back then too. There were plenty of other options to do on Saturday night, but people stayed home to watch those shows. It wasn't like the outside world shut down.