CBS cancels seven shows, including 'Ghost,' 'Case'

CBS is going to have some open slots for next season after all.

In a year where CBS was expected to only lose a few shows, the network has
canceled four dramas and three comedies.

[image: Season-3-ep18-ghost-whisperer-1455578-450-300]

Crime procedurals "Cold Case," "Ghost Whisperer" and "Numbers" will not be
renewed for next season. Jerry Bruckheimer's drama "Miami Medical" is
likewise canceled, as is fellow freshman "Accidentally on Purpose," which
mainly aired in the network's Monday night comedy block. Veteran Wednesday
night comedies "New Adventures of Old Christine" and "Gary Unmarried" are
also cancelled.

The network picked up "Medium" and "Rules of Engagement" for next season, as
expected.

At least two of the cancelled titles could have easily returned and, indeed,
were expected to return. Opening up nearly six hours on the CBS schedule
will signal to ad buyers that TV's most-watched network is not being
complacent and that executives have faith in the network's new shows.

*UPDATE: CBS REVEALS NEW FALL SCHEDULE WITH BIG CHANGES*

The most surprising outcome is canceling "Ghost Whisperer." The Jennifer
Love Hewitt drama consistently won its Friday night time period and was
expected to return.

Another surprise: "Old Christine," which has been a stable, if low-rated
performer on the network's Wednesday night lineup.

The Warner Bros.-produced "Christine" and ABC Studios/CBS Prods.-produced
"Ghost" both are considered to have a shot at moving to ABC, which has
expressed interest in both shows. "Ghost" would make more sense for the
network since ABC has dramatically improved its comedy offerings this season
and the average rating for "Christine" is low compared to the network's
Wednesday night comedy block. While "Ghost" would be an ideal lead-in for
ABC's new Friday night 9 p.m. drama "Body of Proof."

In the case of "Cold Case," CBS was on the fence on this seven-year-old
drama for months. On Sunday nights, "Case" ratings were admirably stable, if
fairly modest.

Since debuting midseason, "Miami" nosedived on Fridays at 10 p.m., then
showed some signs of improvement in recent weeks once it was offered a
lead-in from original episodes of "Medium." Last Friday, the momentum seemed
to stall, with the drama backsliding once again to a 1.2 rating.

"Accidentally" may wind up with the highest average rating among any
canceled show this season. As part of CBS' comedy block, the show posted a
number that would have been perfectly acceptable in most time periods. But
once CBS sample the show on less protected Wednesday nights, its ratings
fell sharply, showing the network its Monday audience was mainly built on
momentum.

As for "Numbers," the drama's cancellation has been considered a foregone
conclusion since its episode count was reduced.

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