I tell ya, it has been quite a year...the Wisconsin basketball team
number one in the nation for FOUR WHOLE DAYS...John Thompson, Patrick
Ewing and Georgetown back in the Final Four (it must be 1985 all over
again!)..."Heroes" the top rated new show of the on-going television
season.

I remember when sci-fi and fantasy were subjects non grata on
television.  Now every other pilot seems to have a supernatural theme.

~rave!

http://www.calendarlive.com/printedition/calendar/cl-et-pilots10apr10,0,4116434.story

PILOT SEASON

TV pilots play for laughs
Networks don't seem to follow a particular path except the one to your
funny bone.

By Maria Elena Fernandez
Times Staff Writer

April 10, 2007

WHAT do you get when you try to cross "Heroes" with "Ugly Betty"? A
pilot season in which all the networks, it seems, are looking for a
laugh. Even in dramas.

So long to the dark serialized sagas of the past season. The tribe of
viewers spoke, and "Kidnapped," "Smith," "The Nine" and "Vanished,"
among others, quickly disappeared, giving way to close-ended dramas
that manage to amuse as they titillate, and offbeat comedies with
characters we haven't seen before.

Of course, this is all theoretical because the shows are still in
production. Of the 112 pilots in the works, an estimated 40 will make
it on the air next season, making the race to find the next "Heroes"
or "Ugly Betty," the only two new shows that broke out this year, a
near impossibility.

NBC President of Entertainment Kevin Reilly said: "The big headline
was too much serialization, but then [NBC's] 'Heroes,' which is a
highly serialized show, ends up being the biggest hit of the season.
So you can't make those blanket statements."

Addressing advertisers last month, ABC Primetime President Steve
McPherson promised "all dramas will be funny" at his network, but he
might as well have been speaking for his competitors too. The five
networks have come up with a drama slate of quirky people, unexplored
topics and new places.

These include ABC's "Eli Stone," a lawyer (Jonny Lee Miller) who
thinks he might be a spiritual prophet; "Viva Laughlin," CBS' version
of the BBC musical drama "Viva Blackpool"; Fox's "New Amsterdam," the
story of a New York homicide detective (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) who is
417 years old; NBC's "Journeyman," about a man (Kevin McKidd) who
travels back in time to change events in people's lives while trying
to manage his own life in the past and present; and the CW's
tentatively titled "Spellbound," about a young life coach (Laura
Bittner) who happens to be a witch.

Suzanne Patmore-Gibbs, ABC's senior vice president of drama
development, said "Ugly Betty" has inspired some risk-taking. "Because
of the look [director] Richard Shepherd brought to 'Ugly Betty,' as
well as the specific tone that [creator] Silvio Horta found, that show
distinguishes itself from everything else on TV."

The "Heroes" effect also is in place, both in dramas and comedies.
Although the networks did not return to the foreboding aliens that
took over prime time two years ago, the NBC phenomenon has definitely
triggered an interest in the supernatural and in death and the afterlife.

"I think it's due to the success of 'Heroes' and 'Buffy the Vampire
Slayer'-type lore of years ago," said Shari Anne Brill, director of
programming at Carat USA, a New York-based ad firm. "The pendulum
seems to be coming back to that."

NBC is remaking "The Bionic Woman" as a coming-of-age tale, starring
Michelle Ryan. Fox is producing "The Sarah Connor Chronicles," based
on the character in the "Terminator" movie franchise, and "Them" based
on the graphic novel "Six," about agents who must retrieve
extraterrestrial terrorists who can assume human form. On CBS, the
dead are coming back to life on Long Island on "Babylon Fields," a
psychologist performs exorcisms on "Demons" and a private investigator
is also a vampire on "Twilight." ABC's "Pushing Daisies" is about a
man (Lee Pace) who can bring dead people back to life just by touching
them.

The CW has "Reaper," a drama about a 21-year-old slacker who becomes
the devil's bounty hunter, retrieving souls escaped from hell, and
"Hell on Earth," a comedy about a mean teenage girl who dies and gets
a second chance. CBS also is producing a comedy, "I'm in Hell," about
a wealthy guy (Jason Biggs) who gets sent back to Earth because hell
is full.

"The best television shows come from a new place, and you've got to
experiment with new places," said Tim Spengler, programming analyst
for Initiative Media, an ad-buying firm. "Consistently ripping off
what was new rarely wins. 'Lost' is a little bit strange. It showed
it's OK to take chances."

To that end, there's a broad range of multi-camera, single-camera and
hybrid comedies covering the gamut of genres, as the networks vie for
the elusive comedy hit. This season, CBS' "Two and a Half Men" is the
only comedy breaking the top 20 among total viewers. Among 18- to
49-year-olds, the demographic most desired by advertisers, there are
no comedies in the top 20.

Of the 54 comedies in development, 16 are set in the workplace (à la
"The Office" and "30 Rock"), and many are based on characters or ideas
that seem fresh on the surface, at least, for the small screen. Think
"Cavemen" on ABC (yes, based on the popular Geico ads); "I'm With
Stupid," about disabled people, on NBC; a heart-warming relationship
between an American child and a Pakistani exchange student on "Aliens
in America" on the CW; three siblings best described as "The Beverly
Hillbillies" meets "The Swan" on "Stumps of Hollywood" on CBS; and Lee
Majors playing himself in Fox's "Me & Lee?" the single-camera tale of
Majors' obsession with bionics since "The Six Million Dollar Man" went
off the air.

"It's almost like the more diverse the breed, the stronger the cat,"
said Fox President of Entertainment Peter Liguori. "I'm hoping we're
going to come out the other end with some very, very strong comedy
work. What should be the common thread among all of them is that the
shows are funny, the characters are strong and there's an emotional
foundation to the pieces."

Fox got ahead of the pack by picking up one comedy to be a series
before any footage was shot because the producing and acting teams
behind it were coveted by all the networks, Liguori said. "Action
News," starring Emmy winners Patricia Heaton ("Everybody Loves
Raymond") and Kelsey Grammer ("Frasier"), is co-created by
award-winning producers Steve Levitan and Christopher Lloyd.

"Kelsey and Patricia Heaton came across as totally electric when I saw
them on stage at the Fox development meeting," Brill said.

Heaton and Grammer lead a roster of TV stars who will return to the
small screen if their shows become series: Jimmy Smits, Peter Krause,
Julianna Margulies, Brooke Shields, Kirstie Alley, Alyssa Milano, Lucy
Liu, Bobby Cannavale, Dylan McDermott, Christina Applegate, Michael
Vartan, Angie Harmon, Jean Smart, Lauren Ambrose, Freddie Prinze Jr.,
and Ricki Lake.

In case it's not all smiles — there is a threat of a writer and actor
strike later in the year — the networks also are beefing up their
reality fare. The CW, which marked its only first-year successes in
that genre, with "America's Next Top Model," "Beauty and the Geek" and
the debut of "The Pussycat Dolls Present: The Search for the Next
Doll," has two unscripted pilots that appear to be unlike any other
shows on television.

"CW Now" will be hosted by four roving hosts who will be the ultimate
source of everything hot and hip for the network's 18-to-34-year-old
target audience. The show evolved from the network's successful
"content wraps," pop-oriented features created around advertiser
messages that air during commercial breaks.

"Content wraps is an example of how we approach everything
differently," said Dawn Ostroff, the CW's president of entertainment.
"We really want to turn everything upside down. And we believe that we
are the network that can try it…. It may not always work, but our
young viewers even give us credit for trying."

Brill praises the CW for understanding the interactive nature of its
audience but notes that the network needs to land a water-cooler
series, such as "Buffy" or "Dawson's Creek," to really become a player.

Although ABC is currently King of Buzz, none of its powerhouse shows
repeats well (an economic disaster), which isn't stopping it from
potentially spinning off "Grey's Anatomy" into a series revolving
around the character of Addison (Kate Walsh). But the network is
looking to fill its repeat void with comedies and close-ended dramas.

Fox also is struggling in the comedy genre and is still looking for a
way to end its September-to-December slump. CBS, the steadiest of all
networks, has developed riskier fare than normal, but, with few holes
to fill, the network will be challenged when it comes to scheduling.
NBC needs a solid companion for "Heroes" and will face the tough
decision of whether to renew the low-rated critical darling "Friday
Night Lights."

Who will have the last laugh? See you next pilot season.

maria.elena.fernandez @latimes.com


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