TVWEEK Sayeth:

March 29, 2009 8:27 PM
CBS Shopping for ‘Light’ Replacement as Network Weighs Fate of 
Long-Running Soap
By Josef Adalian

CBS may soon decide to pull the plug on “Guiding Light,” the 
longest-running daytime drama in television history.

While no final decision has been made, the network’s deal for the 
Procter & Gamble-produced drama—the least watched of the eight daytime 
serials currently on the air—ends in September. But if CBS does drop 
“Guiding Light,” it likely would lock in a decision within the next 
month, people familiar with the matter said. That would give writers a 
chance to tie up storylines.

CBS also would need to finalize new programming for the daytime hour 
that “Guiding Light” would be vacating.

In the most significant indication that the network is seriously 
pondering life without “Guiding Light,” CBS has been talking to outside 
studios about potential replacement programming for the show, sources said.

Possibilities under discussion include both game shows and talk shows. 
CBS could easily cut its programming costs for the hour in half by 
switching away from a scripted drama.
Representatives for CBS and P&G declined comment.

In addition to contracting with an outside studio for programming to 
replace “Light,” CBS daytime chief Barbara Bloom has been developing 
possible in-house candidates for the soap opera’s slot.

CBS executives are taking their time deciding the fate of “Light,” which 
has survived more than 70 years on radio and television. P&G also 
produces the CBS soap “As the World Turns.”

Nonetheless, a decision by CBS to end “Light’s” run on the network 
wouldn’t be a surprise.

The serial has been the subject of cancellation rumors for the better 
part of a decade. Those rumors became particularly intense within the 
past 18 months, but P&G threw something of a Hail Mary pass last year 
when it implemented a radical reworking of “Light’s” production model.

On Feb. 29, 2008, the show ditched its traditional storytelling style in 
favor of a lower-cost model that also was intended to give the show a 
more realistic, less staged feel. Around the same time, CBS renewed 
“Light” for the current season, retaining an option for an additional 
season.

Ratings for the show haven’t improved since the switch. “Light” is 
averaging a 0.9 rating among women 18-49 and a 1.6 household rating, 
according to Nielsen. Season-to-date, it’s averaging 2.17 million 
viewers and a 0.9 rating in women 18-49; season-to-season, it’s down 18% 
in viewers and down 25% in the demographic.

It’s possible P&G or CBS could attempt to keep the show alive in some 
form on the Internet, though doing so likely would require another 
radical reinvention of its production model.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"World News Now Discussion List" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/wnndl?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to