TV Analysts: It's Been A Bad Summer

CSI Files

Captain
For most Americans, the biggest concerns over the past few months may have been to keep their BBQ hot and their beer cool. But as it now turns out, television network bosses may have instead spent this summer worrying where their viewers went.

According to an article by <font color=yellow>Josef Adalian</font> in trade paper Variety, this summer so far broadcast networks have lost of 10\% of their audience compared to last year. This stands in sharp contrast to the past regular season, during which hits such as Desperate Housewives and Lost seemed to bring about a renaissance for broadcast television, and is also surprising considering the early success of shows such as Dancing With The Stars and Hell's Kitchen. However, besides these two shows there have been precious few new reality shows that were not complete flop -- as one network insider told Variety, "there was too much reality, and most of it sucked."

Viewers have also not shown a great deal of interest in drama this summer. Fox's CSI-like The Inside barely registered on the ratings radar, and a similar fate befell ABC's Empire, co-directed by CSI: Miami's <font color=yellow>Greg Yaitanes</font>. Repeats of established shows fared better, but not as well as last year. For instance, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit held on to only 48\% of its audience from the regular season, compared to 66\% last summer. For CSI, only 42\% of the regular season audience tuned in this summer, down from 48\% last year.

But even though Variety characterised both Law & Order and CSI as "showing signs of age," not all is lost. All three CSI shows this summer still performed far better than most other network shows, and usually ended up at the top of the ratings charts. As for the rest of the networks' ratings woes, they could simply be the result of an underwhelming schedule this year, rather than a real trend away from broadcast television. According to Variety's network insider, much of this year's summer programming "felt like burnoff. It seemed like it was just sitting around rather than made for summer."

And who knows, maybe viewers really did prefer their BBQs to seeing Gil Grissom solve a case to which they already know the outcome. That's fine in a summer like last year, which was one of the coolest on record, but not quite as attractive in a summer that's consisted of heat wave after heat wave in many regions. What qualifies as a good summer for most people, simply may not be for television networks.

For the original Variety report, please follow this link (registration required).<center></center>
 
Don't call CSI a 'warhorse', it's only been five seasons for that show.

Law and Order is 14 years old

and besides, warhorses are the best kind of horses..
 
Maybe it just means that more people are starting to actually see sunlight instead of the screen of their TV all the time? Shouldn't that be a gooood thing? o_O

And CSI is not old. L&O is old. ER is old. CSI is not old. >_< How can it be old if it got 35 million viewers during "Grave Danger"!?
 
Maybe it just means that more people are starting to actually see sunlight instead of the screen of their TV all the time? Shouldn't that be a gooood thing? o_O

And CSI is not old. L&O is old. ER is old. CSI is not old. >_< How can it be old if it got 35 million viewers during "Grave Danger"!?

Heck the Superbowl didn't even get that many viewers and it's wAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY older than CSI.

But then again, this is the media...same media that considers anyone over 30 geriatric..

Hate the media..burn in hell critics
 
OK, I'll buy that... except SAD usually works on people in the winter, when they're not getting enough sunlight.

:lol:
 
I know it's usually like that, but I've been reading about people who seem to have the opposite problem. Maybe it's a different disorder..weird..

CSI is not aging..and I'm going to write to the Variety people and say that..
 
Here's my response from the writer of the Variety article

Thanks for your email. I appreciate you taking the time to send it.

You make a very good point about my use of the phrase "warhorse." While
5
seasons IS a long time for any TV show (most die after one season), I
think
you may be right that it would be better to reserve the word for shows
like
"Law & Order" or "The Simpsons".

Duly noted!

Thanks again,

Joe Adalian

p.s. I got quite a few emails about this particular story-- more than
usual.
Was it linked from another site other than Variety.com?
 
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