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NBC - The story of a downfall

Sep 21, 2011

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10 years ago, NBC programs ranked among the most watched on television. In 2001/2002, the peacock had launched successful new series such as Law & Order : Criminal Intent, Crossing Jordan and Scrubs, not knowing that in the following 4 years, they would produce only 5 successful new shows while countless failed, prefiguring the crisis they're into since 2007, a crisis they don't seem to be able to get out of.

In 2002/2003, American Dreams was the only new show that worked, all the other were cancelled : sitcoms In-Laws (15 episodes), AUSA (12 episodes, 4 unaired) and Hidden Hills (18 episodes, 5 unaired), and dramas Kingpin (6 episodes) and Minister Sterling (10 episodes). Both Boomtown and Good Morning Miami were renewed for a second season scheduled for 2003/2004 but halfway through it, they were both cancelled, they ended in December 2003.

During the 2003/2004 season, Las Vegas was the only successful new series, the others were axed : dramas Miss Match (18 episodes, 7 unaired) and The Lyon's Den (13 episodes, 7 unaired), and sitcoms The Tracy Morgan Show (20 episodes), Whoopi (22 episodes), Coupling US (11 episodes, 7 unaired) and Happy Family (22 episodes). I think an era ended in May 2004 on NBC, comedy-wise : the end of both Friends and Frasier combined with these 4 failures left NBC with only Scrubs and Will & Grace as returning shows for their comedy lineup next season.

In 2004/2005, it was pretty much like in 2003/2004 since 6 new shows were cancelled, just like during the previous season (but in 2004/2005, 4 dramas + 2 sitcoms were cancelled whereas it was 2 dramas + 4 sitcoms in 2003/2004) : dramas such as Medical Investigation (20 episodes), Hawaii (7 episodes), LAX (13 episodes) and L&O : Trial by Jury (13 episodes) were quickly put down while animated sitcom Father of the Pride (15 episodes) and mid-season replacement Committed (13 episodes) were canned as well. So, was it another catastrophic season regarding new series ? Not really. NBC aired a mystical/sci-fi miniseries Revelations, which was quite successful during its 6-week run, and more importantly the peacock launched Medium in January 2005, and it became a popular show for many seasons. And NBC did renew two not-so-popular new sitcoms, Joey and The Office US. While one was eventually going to crash in the fall of 2005, the other spreaded its wings, showed its true potential in a full second season and in the end became the new cornerstone of the NBC comedy lineup, which needed guidance after the end of Frasier and Friends.

2005/2006 was another awful season on NBC. Only one new show managed to get a second season (and eventually a third and a fourth) and that's My Name is Earl. Otherwise, heads rolled, whether it's for sitcoms such as Teachers US (6 episodes) and Four Kings (13 episodes, 6 unaired) or for medical drama Inconceivable (12 episodes, 10 unaired), action drama Heist (7 episodes, 2 unaired), military drama E-Ring (22 episodes, 8 unaired), legal drama Conviction (13 episodes), sci-fi drama Surface (15 episodes) or edgy/controversial drama The Book of Daniel (12 episodes, 4 unaired).

American Dreams (3 seasons, 61 episodes), Las Vegas (5 seasons, 106 episodes), Earl (4 seasons, 96 episodes), Medium (5 seasons, 95 episodes on NBC) and The Office (7 seasons, 139 episodes), those few successes are not enough when the look at all the losses over the years : Providence (5 seasons, 96 episodes) in 2002, Just Shoot Me (7 seasons, 148 episodes) in 2003, Ed (4 seasons, 83 episodes), Friends (10 seasons, 236 episodes) and Frasier (11 seasons, 264 episodes) in 2004, American Dreams (3 seasons, 61 episodes) and Third Watch (6 seasons, 132 episodes) in 2005, The West Wing (7 seasons, 156 episodes) and Will & Grace (8 seasons, 194 episodes) in 2006.

And this is not enough when you know 33 new series have aired from September 2002 to May 2007 : 25 were cancelled after a single season (most of the time with plenty of unaired episodes), 3 shows were cancelled during their second season (Boomtown, Good Morning Miami and Joey) and only 5 have had more than 2 seasons (American Dreams (3 seasons), Earl (4), Las Vegas (5), Medium (5 on NBC, 2 on CBS) & The Office) and 1 of them is still on the air (season 8 of The Office premieres next Thursday).

And at that point, it's too late. The lack of appealing returning shows, the rise of new ways to watch television, the end of former hits such as L&O : Criminal Intent (USA Network picked it up) and Crossing Jordan : it all contributed to bury NBC's reign on network TV. In the fall of 2006, critically beloved new shows such as Heroes, Friday Night Lights, 30 Rock and Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip couldn't change anything about it (sitcoms 20 Good Years and Andy Barker PI, and dramas Kidnapped, The Black Donnellys and Raines couldn't either, all cancelled after a few episodes during that season). Sure, except Studio 60, all three returned for a second season, but were they ratings hits ? Nope, not at all (except Heroes in its first two seasons). But that was good enough for NBC from now on, they lived if only for the fact that they were praised by the critics.

In 2006/2007, the three most watched series on NBC were Heroes season 1 (14.3 million viewers), L&O SVU season 8 (11.9 million) and ER season 13 (11.5 million). 4 years earlier, in 2002/2003, the three most watched series on NBC were Friends season 9 (21.2 million viewers), ER season 9 (20 million viewers) and Law & Order season 13 (16.9 million viewers).

Furthermore, in 2006/2007, only 3 scripted NBC series were above 10 million viewers (Heroes, SVU and ER) while in 2002/2003, every single scripted series was above 10 million viewers on NBC — except the Tuesday sitcoms minus Frasier and Hidden Hills (the final season of Just Shoot Me + returning series Watching Ellie + new series In-Laws and AUSA were around 7-8 million viewers and were all cancelled). Today, The Office is the only NBC comedy that can sometimes expect reaching 7-8 million viewers.

The following dramas premiered on Mondays on NBC since September 2006 and were cancelled after a single season :

- Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip (22 episodes) in 2007.
- The Black Donnellys (6 episodes aired) in 2007.
- Journeyman (13 episodes) in 2007.
- My Own Worst Enemy (9 episodes) in 2008.
- Trauma (18 episodes) in 2010.
- Chase (18 episodes) in 2011.
- The Cape (10 episodes) in 2011.
- The Event (22 episodes) in 2011.

The Playboy Club might be the 9th Monday drama cancelled after a few episodes over the past 5 seasons !

As for the new dramas having aired during the rest of the week (mostly on Wednesdays), over the past 5 years, NBC also cancelled Kidnapped, Raines, Bionic Woman, Fear Itself, Quarterlife, Knight Rider, Crusoe, Southland (picked up by TNT), Kings, The Philanthropist, Mercy, Persons Unknown, Outlaw, Undercovers and LOLA. All of them only had a handful of episodes.

How many new dramas have been successful recently for multiple years on Mondays on NBC ?

Only 2 : Chuck and Heroes — by successful I mean they were not cancelled after 1 season, because we all know how few people watched the last 2 seasons of Heroes and all 4 seasons of Chuck, but somehow they kept coming back (and Chuck is coming back for the last time this fall, but on Fridays).

Between all the new dramas NBC launched since September 2006, how many have had more than 1 season ?

No more than 7 : Lipstick Jungle (2 seasons, 20 episodes - thank you Writers' Strike for the season 2 renewal), Life (2 seasons, 31 episodes), Parenthood (3 seasons, 51 episodes - still in production), Harry's Law (season 2 premieres tomorrow), Friday Night Lights (5 seasons, 76 episodes - thank you DirecTV), and the aforementioned Heroes (4 seasons, 78 episodes) and Chuck (5 seasons, 91 episodes).

Bottom line : between September 2006 and May 2011, NBC launched 30 dramas : 23 were cancelled after a single season, 3 had two seasons (Lipstick Jungle, Life, and Harry's Law which is still in production) and only 4 have had more than two seasons (FNL, Parenthood, Heroes and Chuck). And none of them is exactly a hit. Southland also has 3 seasons (and the fourth is premiering in January) but unlike for FNL, here NBC has nothing to do with it. That's equivalent to the figures of September 2002 to May 2007 : 75.80-76.70% of shows cancelled in their first (and only) season, 9-10% dying in their second year and 13.50-15.15% having more than 2 seasons.

Meanwhile, throughout these years of chaos, the peacock lost all its major dramas :

- L&O : Criminal Intent (6 seasons - picked up by USA Network) and Crossing Jordan (6 seasons) in 2007.
- Las Vegas (5 seasons) in 2008.
- Medium (5 seasons - picked up by CBS) and ER (15 seasons) in 2009.
- Law & Order (20 seasons) and Heroes (4 seasons) in 2010.
- Friday Night Lights (5 seasons) in 2011.
- Chuck (5 seasons) in 2012.

Sure, they still have Law & Order : SVU, which will be entering its 13th season tomorrow (it will have a tough time against CSI and without Chris Meloni), but if it weren't for this procedural, in March 2012, the oldest drama on NBC would be Parenthood (on the air since March 2010) since the 91st and final episode of Chuck will air in February.

But Parenthood is likely to have a shortened, 16-episode season, ending in February as well, and the show is far from being a hit absolutely sure to come back for a fourth season, so when the 2011/2012 season is over the oldest drama on NBC besides SVU might be Harry's Law after all (launched in January 2011).

That's how bad things are on NBC, they almost have to start from scratch every year, regarding dramas. Fortunately, their (outstanding) Thursday comedy lineup is alright : Community, Parks and Recreation, The Office and 30 Rock. All these 4 terrific sitcoms return this season, and with 30 Rock next January, it will be the same lineup for 3 years now, and stability s a good thing. NBC executives have proven they have faith in their struggling comedies (pretty much all of them except The Office). Sure, they're struggling in the live ratings but they're TiVO'ed a lot and they get huge praise by the critics, and that's what might save them (aside from fairly decent ratings on the 18-49 demo compared to most NBC dramas) — NBC almost has to work like a cable channel now.

Judging from last night's ratings, The Playboy Club doesn't look like it will be a major NBC player for the next few years, so Grimm, Awake, Prime Suspect and Smash are their only hope (The Firm being a 22-episode miniseries). Now the question is : do you think NBC can be saved ?

37 comments:

  1. Putting it like this, wow. I'm more of a CBS fan, considering most of my favourite shows all air on their network. It was hard to believe how downhill things have gotten for NBC. I do hope their recent new lineups will boost their ratings a bit. I am looking forward to Awake.

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  2. I only watch Chuck on NBC did give The Playboy Club a shot and liked but  its on at the same time as Castle so I didn't watch live.  And i hate watching shows that don't make to even 1 season let alone 2.  I was a fan of The Black Donnellys, Trauma, Chase, and The Cape really hope the playboy club can do better then its predecessors.

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  3. Just hope Parenthood has better luck. It's a fantastic show.

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  4. Literally I have only watched one show on NBC over the last..two seasons and that was Chuck.  I'm not really sure what to kibitz here.  I know that on the list of past cancellations (and non hits) were some, imho, really good dramas.  (I have NEVER been able to figure out what anyone finds funny about Scrubs.  Tried three times.  Not even a smile.) 

    However, this season there are quite a number of shows I'm interested in checking out.  
    - I watched The Playboy Club fully expecting to hate it and I really enjoyed it.   I hope they move it off of Monday before cancelling it.  the premiere ratings weren't the best.

    - I'm looking forward to Prime Suspect (though NBC is notorious for not 'getting' their British imports.  Couples  was just frightful which was surprising considering they used the British pilot script.  There was one case of mis-casting (due to not getting the British character) and the tone being off.  Sorry...wondered off point.  My point is...I am hoping Prime Suspect is good, but I won't be shocked if it's not.

    - Grimm looks interesting. But, it's a genre show and I'm just not banking on NBC being able to deal with the realities of genre ratings.  (they're traditionally pretty low.)

    - Awake looks fantastic, but it also looks like a show you have to pay attention to, at least during the setup.  Really smart intellectually challenging shows haven't typically pulled in major numbers.  (That was my impression with what happened to Boomtown.  Really intricate conceit in the pilot and that was the first thing they got rid of as the ratings dropped.

    None of their sitcoms intrigued me tho.  

    I still love the start of the network television season.  Lots  of new stories to check out.   Hopefully, there will be more pleasant surprises.

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  5. While so many of those series were cancelled early into their first season, some of them were actually as good as other series that survived on other channels for multiple seasons. The Black Donnelys, Kidnapped, Surfaced, Boomtown, Good Morning Miami, Journeyman,  and Chase all could have last a few years if given the chance I think. 

    Sure they were not and would never have been "hits", but a solid placeholder on your schedule can be a boon too. IT means you don;t have to virtually "start over" like you mentioned. It is far easier to concentrate on a few new dramas, (giving each the time it needs in development), than it is to develop 6 or more  dramas each year.

    I guess that's the problem though....  when you need a hit or two, can you settle for a placeholder or two?  I personally feel like NBC has been too quick to cancel solid mediocre series that could have had a loyal viewership for a few years and let them concentrate more on developing fewer, but better series each year.

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  6. I just can't shake my hatred toward NBC ever since Heroes.

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  7. I used to watch more NBC than any other channel. (At one point it was just CW for SMV and SPN, and then NBC for Heroes, and the comedies on occasion...) I would always try out the new NBC shows because they appealed to me (Journeyman, My Own Worst Enemy, SURFACE !!) and so I've been personally paying attention to it over the last 2-4 years and it's utterly depressing to see how things repeatedly fare on NBC... The only glimmer of hope I saw this past season was The Voice's ratings (THEY NEED THAT SHOW! lol The 5.0s to the 4.0s saved their ass!) and Harry's Law, which is pretty much their most-watched drama now. (Low in the 18-49s but it gets between 7-12 million viewers)... I think that Smash being paired up with The Voice is a really good idea. I think an older more Broadway less teenage high school tv show like Smash could be a hit and be an actual good show... (Maybe I just love Anjelica Huston and I want it to be a success for her?) and Prime Suspect COULD grab onto a respectable amount of people...but I don't know. I'm hoping for the best because I want to see a reversal of the last few years. ABC is having problems with all its flagships going down in the ratings in the last couple years, but nothing like this... CBS somehow is immune to the low ratings problem, and Fox has American Idol and X Factor to prop it WAY up above the others. 

    I know Playboy Club is done for. It STARTED with a 1.7 and that's just unbelievable. Unless somehow word of mouth gets out that it's a great show (Not likely) and the ratings go up to 2.0-2.3 next week (extremely unlikely) this show will be dropped as quickly as it can be to be replaced by another show.

    As for Awake, I don't see it doing well in the ratings. I see that as a show that should've been on a cable channel. I hope to God I'm wrong and it gets 10 million and a 2.3 which is just enough to be a good success on this channel. 

    I think Grimm is going to have serious issues with the timeslot it has, and will probably premiere like the Playboy Club did.

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  8. what a great analysis :)

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  9. I don't watch anything on NBC any more.  I watch Hawaii Five - O on CBS, Leverage on TNT, Supernatural and Vampire Diaries on the CW.  That is about it.   I will probably watch The Hart of Dixie.  I don't take the time to watch.  I write, I go to school online and am in the middle of my Junior year, and I work a 40 hour week in another town.  There are other things I'd rather be doing.  I have a lot of books to read, plus my school reading assignments papers and presentations to do.  Four or five shows is more than I can handle.

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  10. The only NBC shows I watch are the Voice and possibly Sing Off.  I love genre and would like to watch Grimm, but good Lord, why did they put it across from  2 of the best genre shows on the air Fringe and Supernatural?  I'm committed to both and my DVR only can handle 2 shows at a time, so I probably will never sample Grimm.  I think scheduling monkeys made a big mistake with Grimm.

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  11. NBC IS HEADING FOR THE END, I RARELY WATCH IT...

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  12. The drama's situation does sound really dire, you rise an exellent point about their lack of long running dramas and the fact that neither Parenthood nor Harry's Law are big hits for a second in charge.

    But their comedy lineup is solid and as long as they have succecful linchpins they have the posibility to try new series with safety.

    But the drama lineup, really, really worrysome. They need a safe procedural with enough flavor to separate it from SVU, ala Bones or BoP. Because SVU is not going to last long either.

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  13. Only NBC can garner Best Comedy, Best Actress and Best Actor emmy nods in shows that average somewhere in the 5 million viewer range.  Anything happens to Parks and Rec, 30 Rock, The Office or Community and I swear on my big toe I will never watch that network again.

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  14. Facinating article and sad to see the decline of a network that used to provide some quality entertianment. I currently still watch a number of NBC shows: Chuck, the Thursday comedy block, and I did catch a few episodes of the Sing Off/Voice in the past (the off schedule was good for that) but not sure if putting the SIng Off where it is currently was the best idea but assuming it's less of a hit for NBC to take being a reality based program costwise. I am interested a bit in Grimm, but the problematic timeslot of scheduling it against 2 of my similar genre faves means that it will sampled in replay online for me. I watched the Playboy Club, and I liked it but I am a Castle live, H50 dvr first viewer at that timeslot. I am looking forward to Prime Suspect, Smash and Awake, although I imagine that Smash probably has the better chance of the 3 to be the breakout smash that NBC is hoping for. I truly hope that the fortunes of NBC (and all the networks for that matter) that either by finding some other realistic means/measures of success from the Neilsens, that good quality scripted shows remain on to entertain and challenge us. It would be a very sad day if the majority of network programming be reserved for nothing but reality/reality competition shows..

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  15. they shouldnt have cancelled  Law & Order without a big finale, at least.

    CSI isnt what it was either, without Grissom it isnt the same! 
    I love SVU, becuase I really like Mariska Hargitay, Ice T and all the others. That Meloni decided not to sign a new contract was a poor decision - he'll never get a job like this again.

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  16. When you tried Scrubs, did you start from the beginning?

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  17. Awesome article Bunky. As someone from the UK who has only been following US TV for the past 4-5 years I was a great history lesson.

    Thanks for writing

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  18. You are so right. The Office and (back in the day) Seinfeld didn't have good ratings at first but turned out to be big hits... NBC could have given some shows more time in order to see how they could develop.

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  19. I really don't watch too many shows on the main channels.  I seem to be always watching  CW, TNT, FOX or other cable channels.  Thank goodness we now have cable channels otherwise I would be reading constantly.  I wouldn't need a television set.  

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  20. Wow, I knew most of this info but it is still freaking amazing and sad to see it all in one post.

    Yup, NBC was my #1 network and unfortunately has completely fallen apart.  I know many people from NBC just through my friends, contacts and some insiders from my Heroes blogging days and it was always negative.

    I hate to see any shows canceled, but they keep putting out crap.  Like you said The Playboy Club was supposed to be one of their next big hits, but I think any one who saw the first sneaks knew it was headed for disaster.

    BTW, I can't remember now but there was that one sci-fi alien invasion show that had a 13 episode S1 which was reduced to a 4 episode season (mini series) called Day One that had some serious buzz and eventually never made it on air....I still wonder how that would've been.

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  21. I was excited for Day One! 
    From their Heroes replacement show... to 13 episodes... to a 4-episode mini-series... to a 2-hour pilot/ movie that never aired. %^%@^&@#Xnader Berkley, Catherine Dent and someone else I'm forgetting...Oh, Carly Pope and Julie Gonzalo! (I used the Google)

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  22. I am really rooting for SMASH to be a big hit for NBC. Really looking forward to that show and I think that them pairing it with The Voice was a very smart idea. If NBC wants SMASH to perform well, they'd be smart to air lots of commercials for it during the Superbowl the Sunday before the premiere. 

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  23. NBC is in deep doodoo. It's a shame that Awake is on NBC because it looks terrific. Than again, it also looks relatively short-term and it might be able to survive on a network with lower expectations. 

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  24. "In 2006/2007, the three most watched series on NBC were Heroes season 1 (14.3 million viewers), L&O SVU season 8 (11.9 million) and ER season 13 (11.5 million). 4 years earlier, in 2002/2003, the three most watched series on NBC were Friends season 9 (21.2 million viewers), ER season 9 (20 million viewers) and Law & Order season 13 (16.9 million viewers)."
    This is an unfair comparison. TV ratings on all the networks are constantl going down, so of course the older ratings are going to look better.
    Explained in more detail here http://tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com/2011/06/03/we-of-the-gunsmoke-rule-mourn-the-passing-of-james-arness/94636/

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  25. With Meloni no longer on SVU, I don't think it will hurt ratings. Adding in newer characters does help to bring in newer fans, which boost up the ratings.

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  26. Great article, helped me through some boring school lessons today :P

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  27. NBC has only itself to blame. Hit shows such as Crossing Jordan and Las Vegas suffered when moved back and forth across the schedule. IIRC, shows such as L&O Trial By Jury and Conviction were canceled with higher ratings than most of what NBC shows have produced in recent years. Harry's Law is in a very difficult spot as well.

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  28. I think they should have renewed The Event for another season and saw how it goes, it's not like the new shows are doing any better.

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  29. Wow. I had no idea. What a fascinating read. I do hope that NBC get more success in the future, since several shows from there have made my all-time favourites list.

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  30. I'm still disappointed Studio 60 got cancelled. Good thing the new Sorkin show is on HBO. :)

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  31. Actually what NBC should do is raid their cable cousins and rebroadcast them!

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  32. Before reading this I knew NBC had lots of misses, but I never knew it was THIS bad. Here's to hoping they find their footing this fall and in the spring.

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  33. NBC has had a long history of canceling programs that they thought had a mediocre or low viewer ship, but in truth it really had a huge cult following that didn't translate into Nielsen numbers. Remember Quantum Leap (fans are still wondering if Sam would ever return home), Star Trek, True Blue?

    Chuck is really the ONLY show that I watch on NBC.

    Nielsen ratings are okay, but in this day of the VCRs, DVDs and Tivos, where people record a show because another one they want to watch is on, it's hard to get an accurate number on viewership. I honestly think we need a new supplemental rating system needs to be put into place that gauges true fan enthusiasm for a series.

    If something like that were to be implemented, then shows like Chuck would be around for a lot longer than it is currently.

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  34. NBC is my least favorite major network. Chuck is the the only "great" show on that channel... :( 
    Hope for "Awake" but... 

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  35. what about now?
    PH is doing fine for a 3rd season drama at 10.00, and really good for NBC. So it's pretty sure that will be the oldest drama besides SVU.
    HL is totally a failure, Grimm a success for his timeslot!
    The only hope that the network has is Smash! 
    Awake is not scheduled O.o

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