http://blog.macleans.ca/2008/12/01/because-people-got-lost-in-lost/

Because people got lost in ‘Lost’

Serialized shows are being phased out in favour of old-fashioned
stand-alone episodes


Things change so quickly. It was just a little over a year ago that
critics and audiences were wild about shows like 24 and Heroes, where the
stories were serialized over a full season, and episodes had no clear
beginning, middle or end. Tim Kring, the creator of Heroes, gave an
interview in which he exulted in the success of the show’s complicated
format and praised the network for “embracing the very type of
storytelling that was off limits less than two years ago.” Now it’s in
danger of being off limits again, as new shows feel the pressure to switch
back to traditional self-contained stories. When Terminator: The Sarah
Connor Chronicles premiered earlier this year, it featured a long,
elaborate story arc about the title character trying to uncover a
conspiracy. This season, each episode focuses on a stand-alone adventure
for the characters. Series creator Josh Friedman told the Television
Critics Association that the show’s producers are going where the ratings
are: “In the middle of the season when the ratings dipped, we were doing
some heavily serialized mythology episodes. This year, we’re trying to
tell slightly less ambitious stories.” Serialization is last year’s thing;
today, a show needs a story that gets wrapped up every week.

You can tell that serialization is in trouble if you look at the ratings.
Serialized shows like Grey’s Anatomy and Heroes are down, Prison Break is
on the verge of cancellation, and the only shows that are doing better are
the ones that tell self-contained stories, like comedies and mysteries
(such as CBS’s new hit procedural The Mentalist). Even the producers who
helped create the serial fad in the first place are being encouraged to
tone down their penchant for never-ending stories. With Lost, producer
J.J. Abrams went further with serialization than anyone had gone before,
creating plots that lasted not just for a season but an entire series; he
expected the audience not only to know what happened last week, but to
accept that nothing would be resolved in the current week. But while
Fringe, Abrams’s new show, has an overarching mystery like Lost, every
episode has a self-contained story about a “monster of the week.” Joss
Whedon’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel were shows that became famous
for featuring more complicated story arcs and fewer stand-alone adventures
with every season. In 2009 he’ll return to TV with Dollhouse, but he wrote
on his fan site whedonesque.com that the network asked him to “make the
episodes more stand-alone, stop talking about relationships and cut to the
chase.”

The biggest problem networks have with serialized shows is that they’re
closed shops: if you didn’t start watching at the beginning of the season,
it’s difficult to understand what’s going on. Abrams explained to USA
Today that Fringe is a reaction to complaints about his other shows: “So
many people would say to me, ‘I was watching Lost or Alias, but I missed a
couple of episodes and I couldn’t keep up and get back into it.’ ” And
unlike daytime soaps, these shows don’t even have hotlines to bring you up
to speed.

Rob Thomas, creator of Veronica Mars - a show famous for its labyrinthine
season-long mysteries - told Denis McGrath of heywriterboy.blogspot.com
that network market research had demonstrated that “the average viewer of
any show will watch one out of four episodes,” making it difficult for
serials, where you have to watch every episode to know what’s going on.
He’s learned his lesson: on his new show, a remake of his ’90s cult flop
Cupid, every episode has the title character bringing together a different
couple. Shows like these can still have subplots that run throughout the
season; Cupid has a continuing storyline about the sexual tension between
the main characters. But because every episode tells a complete story, new
viewers aren’t lost; no matter when you find House, you’ll know that it’s
about a misanthropic doctor who solves medical mysteries, and a mystery
will be solved by the time the hour is up.

And yet by appealing more to casual viewers who don’t want to watch every
episode, networks may risk losing some of the viewers who actually want to
get hooked on a show. The shows that make the strongest impact are often
the ones that build stories week by week. Shows as different as 24, The
Sopranos and Buffy became cultural touchstones in part because they kept
audiences arguing about where the story arcs would go. Networks may find
that you can’t create that level of involvement if viewers can afford to
miss three out of four episodes.

Reply via email to