NEWS - C'è poco da ridere! La prossima stagione sarà all'insegna del drama (meno sit-com per tutti)
Articolo di Brian Lowry per "Variety"
Desperate times call for desperate scheduling. And in the case of
network comedy, that means breaking with longstanding traditions in
seeking to invigorate a signature TV genre that is struggling mightily
to find its place in the DVR age. The upcoming 2014-15 season was unveiled during last week’s network
upfront presentations, coming on the heels of a year where much
pre-season buzz surrounded a glut of high-profile comedies and big names
— Michael J. Fox! Robin Williams! — gracing TV with their presence.
Many critics glommed onto new shows with “Comedy’s back” abandon,
enthusing over half-hours like “Enlisted,” “The Crazy Ones,” “Brooklyn
Nine-Nine” and “About a Boy.”
While the last two will be back, the pile-up of canceled comedies
resembled the carnage in a summer blockbuster. NBC finally got around to
pulling the plug on “Community,” and announced a closing run of “Parks and Recreation,” shows whose media footprint always far surpassed their Nielsen resumes.
The real jaw-dropping takeaway from the aggregated lineups, however,
is how decades of tradition were discarded, largely because the
challenge in launching new comedies has become so formidable.
Toward that end, NBC will shift a drama, “The Blacklist,” to anchor
its Thursday lineup at midseason, and kick off the fall with reality
competition “The Biggest Loser” in the 8 p.m. hour — the first time the
Peacock will be comedy-free to open the night in more than three
decades. (NBC did move “The Apprentice” into its 9 p.m. slot during Jeff
Zucker’s tenure, generally seen as a Hail Mary pass after years of
squandered sitcom development.)
Fox, meanwhile, will break up its longtime Animation Domination
block, pairing “The Simpsons” and “Family Guy” on Sunday with two
live-action sitcoms, “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” and the new “Mulaney,”
respectively.
CBS felt compelled to shrink its comedy footprint by an hour, and
thanks to its acquisition of Thursday-night football, will get through a
chunk of the fall airing only two sitcoms.
During his network’s upfront, ABC entertainment chief Paul Lee
described passion as a must-have ingredient for program survival in the
modern age, saying of successful shows, “It’s about what you love — what
you seek out.”
Sitcoms have still managed to form love connections. But with a few
ostentatious exceptions — CBS’ “The Big Bang Theory” and to a lesser
degree ABC’s “Modern Family” — those bonds have been with smaller
audiences, to whom such shows can speak in a more particular way. Other
than those Emmy-nominated network hits, the roster of cable award
contenders, like “Girls,” “Veep” and “Louie,” draw crowds that would get
them canceled between the first and second commercial breaks by any
broadcaster.
Echoing Lee, Fox counterpart Kevin Reilly discussed the need for new
shows to make noise in order to get noticed. But comedies generally
struggle to conjure the kind of noise-making concepts that dramas or
reality shows can, which is why new sitcoms have traditionally relied on
an existing hit to help lead people into the tent. “Strong lead-ins
still matter,” CBS entertainment president Nina Tassler says.
In success, of course, there’s still nothing quite so lucrative as a
wildly popular comedy — and even in this day and age, “Big Bang” is a
supernova of profits for Warner Bros. Television.
Amid the din of channels crying for attention, however, the sound
emanating from such hits, along with the experience of widely shared
laughter, looks to be slowly but steadily fading. And if that trend
can’t be reversed, sitcoms as a genre could really be the biggest loser.
mercoledì 28 maggio 2014
Etichette:
Brian Lowry,
Brooklyn Nine-Nine,
Community,
Enlisted,
Girls,
L'EDICOLA DI LOU,
Louie,
Modern Family,
NEWS,
Parks and Recreation,
The Big Bang Theory,
The Blacklist,
The Crazy Ones,
Veep
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1 commento:
non mi ricordo una sitcom riuscita e che faccia veramente ridere da anni (forse l'ultima è TBBT)
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