Apparently, not only is the 10:00 hour on life support, but the
networks are about to get out of the Friday night programming
business, as they got out of the Saturday night business a few years
ago.

http://marquee.blogs.cnn.com/2009/11/13/what-happened-to-friday-night-tv/

Earlier this decade, the four major TV networks pretty much gave up on
Saturday nights.  Outside of the Fox crime block and "48 Hours
Mystery" on CBS, the only new network programming you see on Saturday
nights is live coverage of sporting events.

Now it appears the networks are about to do the same to Friday nights
as well.  CBS announced that it is cutting the episode count of Friday
night staple "Numb3rs" from 22 to 16 this season - a likely sign that
the show will be done after six seasons.  Fox has canceled cult fave
"Dollhouse," which aired on Friday nights.  NBC opted not to air the
second season of "Southland," which was scheduled to air on Fridays.
And ABC may or may not move "Ugly Betty" to another night after
several poor showings on Fridays.

Pretty soon, the Friday night network TV landscape will be made up of
cheaply-produced news magazine shows, low-budget "reality" fare,
"re-purposing" (fancy term for reruns) of current network fare and
first-run scripted shows on their last legs.  Sounds a lot like
Saturday night, right?

Looking at the numbers, it's easy to understand why the networks
appear to be pulling away from Friday nights.

Last week, the top Friday night show on the major networks was the
20-year-old "Law and Order" with 8.4 million viewers.  That's almost
four million below last week's 20th overall ranked show, "CSI: NY" on
CBS.  And in the 18-49 target demo that advertisers crave, no network
could reach a 2.0 average.  Compare that to this past Tuesday, where
three of the four major networks reached at least a 3.0 average in the
demos.

Can Friday night network TV be saved?  Anything is possible, but it is
up to the networks to put competitive programming in these slots.
Give the viewers something they want to watch, and they will come in
droves.  Disney Channel, for instance, has had a great deal of success
premiering its big movie events on Friday nights - the 2007 premiere
of "High School Musical 2" was watched by 17.2 million viewers.
Perhaps the networks should look at their cable counterparts for some
guidance.

There was a time in the U.S. where Friday night was required network
TV viewing.  CBS in the 1980s featured "Dallas" and "The Dukes of
Hazzard," while NBC ruled the night with "Miami Vice" for a time.  ABC
could always be counted on with successful family fare like "Full
House" and "Mr. Belvedere," while "The X-Files" made Fox the network
to watch on Friday nights not too long ago.

Do you think Friday night network television can be saved?  And if so,
what will the networks need to do?

Posted by: CNN.com writer James Dinan
Filed under: television

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