Tag Archives: TCA

No, Walter and Jesse Won’t Be in ‘Better Call Saul.’ But Anyone Else Could Turn Up

better call saul tca

Ever since Breaking Bad went off the air, AMC has been desperately searching for the next Breaking Bad. Now the network hopes it has found it…with their new Breaking Bad prequel, Better Call Saul, which paneled today at winter press tour.

As I wrote at Adweek, Vince Gilligan, the creator of both Breaking Bad and its spinoff, says the sky’s the limit when it comes to Breaking Bad characters popping up on Better Call Saul — well, everyone except Walter White (Bryan Cranston) and Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul).

“Walt and Jesse don’t show up in Season 1. But everything else is on the table,” co-creator Peter Gould told reporters at today’s press event. “We want this thing to stand on its own.” (Also, as the AMC panel pointed out, Jesse Pinkman would have been in middle school during Better Call Saul’s first season.)

Before introducing the Better Call Saul panel, AMC president Charlie Collier talked about the “dramatic change” facing in the network, and why AMC is now operating in “a Live + 365 environment” (do advertisers know?).

No, Walter and Jesse Won’t Be in ‘Better Call Saul.’ But Anyone Else Could Turn Up

‘Mad Men’ Creator Hopes Finale Will Delight Fans, But Not ‘Give Them Everything They Want’

Mad Men finale

AMC is calling the upcoming Mad Men finale “The End of an Era,” and that’s not hyperbole. Today at winter press tour, creator Matt Weiner and Mad Men’s original six cast members assembled to reflect on Mad Men’s legacy, and its “surprise” conclusion.

As I wrote at Adweek, Weiner admitted he didn’t want to craft a finale that would spark fan outrage, like the How I Met Your Mother conclusion did:

“I’m trying to delight them and confound them, and not frustrate and irritate them. I don’t want them to walk away angry,” Weiner said of Mad Men viewers. But at the same time, “I don’t want to pander to them. … Sometimes, people have to be protected from what they want to see happen. You can’t just give them everything they want.”

There’s much more from the cast on how they reacted to the finale, and Weiner talks about protecting the Mad Men brand in the years to come.

‘Mad Men’ Creator Hopes Finale Will Delight Fans, But Not ‘Give Them Everything They Want’

Discovery’s New President Promises to Ditch Silly Stunts Like ‘Eaten Alive’

discovery snake

Discovery Channel president Rich Ross had only been on the job 72 hours when he appeared at TCA winter press tour this week, but he already had plenty of ideas about how to stem the network’s eroding ratings. As I wrote at Adweek,

The key, he said, will to be “authentic.”

“It’s really important that we look into this incredible brand and all the programming that we make and make sure that’s what we stand for,” he told journalists at the Television Critics Association winter press tour. “And it’s a filter in which we’re looking at everything we have on the air and everything we’re talking about moving forward.”

That means no more silly stunts like December’s Eaten Alive special. As Ross promised, “I don’t believe you’ll be seeing a person eaten by a snake during my time.”

Discovery’s New President Promises to Ditch Silly Stunts Like ‘Eaten Alive’

Can Dead People Resurrect A&E’s Ratings?

the returned

Things unraveled quickly for A&E in 2014, which is looking to The Returned, about dead people who suddenly reappear in a small town, to resurrect its ratings this year. The show is based on the French series, and the pilot is almost a shot-for-shot reaction of it. But executive producer Carlton Cuse swears that will change, as I wrote at Adweek:

“While we start in a similar place, the show is fairly distinctively different by the end of the season,” said Cuse. “We felt like there was a way to take the show and over time, make it something that was very distinctly our own.” Cuse added that while “there’s a small, fervent audience that watched the French show,” an even larger American audience did not.

Of course, that’s the same thing producers said last summer about Gracepoint, Fox’s adaptation of the British drama Broadchurch, which flopped last fall.

Can Dead People Resurrect A&E’s Ratings?

Discovery is Fast-Tracking an Answer to ‘Serial’

ID serial

After last fall’s runaway success of Serial, the race was on to see what company would be first to launch its own version of the true-crime podcast. It looks like the winner will be Investigation Discovery, which announced plans for its own true-crime podcast today at the TCA’s winter press tour.

Henry Schleiff, ID’s Group President, didn’t share too many details about the podcast onstage, but he gave me some scoop afterwards about the project, which he’s fast-tracking for this spring even though he hasn’t yet settled on a subject, or host.

As Schleiff told me, the podcast idea was completely prompted by Serial:

“I think we were all surprised by the amount of press and attention—and indeed some of the viewership, or ‘soundship’—that the podcast got,” explained Schleiff, who credits a lesson he learned from the late Don Hewitt, who created 60 Minutes. “He used to say about 60 Minutes, ‘If you can turn off the video and just listen to the voices, you’ve still got a great story.’ You put that learning and you put the experience of podcasts together and we said, great, we tell stories really well, why don’t we do our own version, and we’ll do a multi-arc podcast.”

Schleiff also shared some possible hosting ideas: could Susan Lucci be the new Sarah Koenig?

Discovery Is Fast-Tracking an Answer to NPR’s Serial

Neil deGrasse Tyson Is About to Get Yet Another Job Title: Late-Night TV Host

neil degrasse tyson

Adweek broke off part of my TCA winter press tour Day 1 roundup into a separate story, focusing on National Geographic Channel’s decision to tap Neil deGrasse Tyson for its first late-night show, Star Talk. As I wrote,

Based on Tyson’s popular podcast and radio show, Star Talk “will bridge the intersection between pop culture and science as it brings together celebrities, comedians and scientists to discuss the latest developments in our vast universe,” said Courteney Monroe, CEO of National Geographic Channels.

Tyson will host the series from the site of his day job: the American Museum of Natural History’s Hayden Planetarium in New York.

Neil deGrasse Tyson Is About to Get Yet Another Job Title: Late-Night TV Host

NBC Ditched Tina Fey’s New Sitcom—and She Couldn’t Be Happier

tina fey

The first day of TCA winter press tour is in the books, and I rounded up the highlights from Netflix, ESPN and National Geographic Channel for this Adweek story.

Among the highlights: Tina Fey talked about why her new NBC sitcom, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, ended up on Netflix instead:

Given the grim fate of this season’s new broadcast sitcoms (RIP, Manhattan Love Story, Selfie, A to Z and Bad Judge), Fey couldn’t be happier about her show’s unlikely new home. “All of the networks have had a little trouble launching their comedies this season,” said Fey. “I think more people will find us like this.” For ambitious comedies like Community (which migrated to Yahoo Screen after NBC canceled it last May) or Kimmy Schmidt, “it just makes more sense than broadcast.”

The sad truth: Even NBCUniversal realized that its own network wasn’t the ideal place to nurture Fey’s new sitcom. “The show is made by NBC; it’s in NBC’s best interests for the show to have its best home,” said Fey. “And rather than trying to stick it on NBC between a multicam and a drama, they agreed that this would be the right place for it.”

There’s also lots of detail on Netflix’s grand ambitions to be “something for everyone” and ESPN adding short films to SportsCenter.

NBC Ditched Tina Fey’s New Sitcom—and She Couldn’t Be Happier

TV Apps Were Supposed to Keep People Subscribed to Cable, But They’re Creating Confusion Instead

Tv everywhere

The first day of TCA winter press tour is in the books, and I have my first — of many —Adweek TCA stories. I looked at TV Everywhere: the industry-wide initiative between the networks and cable providers to give subscribers streaming access to their content, and hopefully keep them from cutting the cord.

While usage is increasing, industry execs remain frustrated by Nielsen’s inability to measure those TVE audiences. As I wrote at Adweek,

Mark Garner, svp distribution, A+E Networks, noted that the measurement abilities “lag behind the technology” to such a degree that they have become “harmful to this business.” As a result, “you’re looking at numbers that don’t really tell the whole story” because they don’t account for TVE viewing, said Erik Flannigan, evp multiplatform strategy and development, Viacom Entertainment Group.

There’s also some interesting insight as to why the phenomenon of people sharing authentication passwords is not as widespread as had been feared.

TV Apps Were Supposed to Keep People Subscribed to Cable, But They’re Creating Confusion Instead

What is TCA Press Tour?

TCA logo

In a few hours (weather permitting) I will be flying out to Pasadena, Calif. for the start of the Television Critics Association winter press tour. As this is the first TCA tour since I launched the site, it seemed as good a time as any to explain what press tour is, and why I — and almost everyone else who writes about TV —  will be talking (and tweeting, using the #TCA15 hashtag) about it nonstop for the next two weeks.

Twice a year, hundreds of TV critics and writers from all over the U.S. and Canada assemble at an L.A. hotel (the Beverly Hilton in summer; the Langham Huntington in winter) for press tour. Each day, a new network presents a variety of panels featuring talent and producers from their new (and sometimes returning) programs, as well as panel with their top executive. There is also a “scrum” after each panel — where smaller groups of reporters gather around certain panel members to ask additional questions — as well as one-on-one opportunities throughout the day and at receptions held during most evenings.

Between the news that breaks during the panels (and at least one panel per press tour goes completely off the rails — Girls, 2 Broke Girls and Stalker are recent examples of this) and the interviews I land outside of the panels, each TCA press tour yields dozens of stories for me, both during the event itself and in stories I bank for the weeks and months to come. If you look at the “popular tags” cloud in the column on your right, the TCA tag is by far the biggest one.

I first attended press tour, and became a TCA member, back when I was TV Editor at People. Now, I cover TCA for a variety of outlets — material I gathered from TCA summer tour ran in Quartz, The Atlantic, The Daily Beast, Adweek and Today.com — but for winter tour, I’ll be writing about it primarily for Adweek. (As always, I’ll post all my stories here as well.)

And with that, I’m TCA-bound. Have more any questions? Check out Alan Sepinwall’s far more comprehensive TCA rundown here.

Cable Networks Will Save Themselves by Focusing on What They Do Best

cable networks will save themselves

Just nine months ago, USA President Chris McCumber was talking to me about his network’s push into comedy, and preaching patience. Looks like his patience has worn thin, because USA announced that it is retreating from comedy and refocusing on drama, while AMC has pulled the plug on almost its entire reality slate as it, too, opts to concentrate on what it does best. As I explained at Quartz,

Those surprising moves were in part explained by a Wall Street Journal report that the US top 40 most widely distributed cable channels in 2010—USA and AMC included—have lost an average of 3.2 million subscribers, or more than 3% of their distribution, during the last four years, as consumers have starting “shaving the cord” by opting for smaller, cheaper bundles of channels.

Intent on not being shaved out of existence, networks are refocusing on keeping their core audiences happy, rather than trying and attract new viewers. “In an environment of exploding content options for viewers,” AMC said in explaining its decision, “we have decided to make scripted programming our priority.”

Both networks damaged their core business by taking their eye off the ball, and their sudden retrenching should also be a red flag for E! and Bravo, which are both branching into scripted series for the first time.

Cable networks will save themselves by focusing on what they do best