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In reply to the discussion: Cosmos is not a Ratings Disaster [View all]Gothmog
(178,132 posts)23. Here is a very good article on why Fox is showing Cosmos
Fox the channel as compared to Fox News is trying to broaden its viewer base and Cosmos fits into this strategy. http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2014/03/09/why-foxs-cosmos-is-a-smart-risk.aspx
The TV industry is changing -- what once was a big success may now no longer be as viable. As a result companies will do anything to boost their ratings and in turn their financial bottom lines. Fox (NASDAQ: FOXA ) has embraced this concept like no other and tonight its first of many 2014 investments into "event programming" begins with Cosmos: A Space Time Odyssey. ...
Cosmos is the first of a number of big-name "event" series slated to air on Fox in 2014, along with the return of 24, the American adaptation of Broadchurch (called Gracepoint) and M. Night Shyamalan's Wayward Pines. Yet while those are all fictional series, this one is very real and looks at our world's fabric and DNA. It's not your usual program and not one you'd expect to air in primetime, but it's one that has a very realistic chance of success.
Re-launch vs. reboot
The original Cosmos went off the air 34 years ago and this iteration will look to essentially pick up where it left off. This is not a reboot, but like TNT did with Dallas, this is a continuation with new aspects. Noted astronomer Carl Sagan, who created the original, will again open the series with his trademark introduction. Beyond that the torch is passed to famed astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. Sagan passed away in 1996, but his widow Ann Druyan is picking up the mantel. Druyan has written new installments of the series that look at new scientific advancements and questions that this generation has about the world around them and then Tyson will visually guide audiences through some of those answers.
Fox also has a secret weapon in charismatic entertainer Seth MacFarlane, who is one of the series' executive producers. Few people have brought the network more viewers (and attention) in the past few years than MacFarlane, whose Family Guy has a long and twisty history with Fox. Eventually executives began to embrace the popular performer and Cosmos came from that relationship. MacFarlane has a lifelong interest in science and was a huge proponent of bringing this series back to TV. Between him, Tyson, and Druyan, this will clearly not be the same Cosmos audiences first saw decades ago.
Industry impact
The twist will be reinventing the series while holding tight to its core principles. If successful that will bring a whole new demographic to Fox and its broadcast partner in the series, National Geographic. These are all massive names in their fields and that adds to the show's credibility.....
For Fox, this isn't just a smart risk because it's an example of outside the box thinking mixed with a strong pedigree of producers. Cosmos represents an opportunity to gauge what it is audiences are looking for in today's TV landscape. This is a big reason why 10 networks have agreed to give up time on their very profitable Sunday primetime lineups.
The show gives Fox and its partners a chance to gather intel that can be used for other upcoming projects while at the same time putting out a product that could be both entertaining and interesting at the same time. If this works, more networks could start simulcasting their big-event programming. It's a new way of scheduling and one that could alert audiences that something big is happening that they need to check out live. While the new +7 ratings numbers are slowly gaining credibility, advertisers covet live viewership even more (it's harder to skip over commercials that way) and projects like Cosmos could be a major draw.
On the surface, this may seem like just another ordinary series launch, but it's one that needs to be watched because the ramifications will affect how networks develop and program future slates (as well as what advertisers will want to buy on those slates) for many years to come.
My youngest reminds me that Fox the channel (in contrast to Fox News) has some fairly liberal shows on including the Simpsons. Cosmos is a great show and will help this channel in the future.
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Drudge is the Internet's foremost expert on the HTML coding practices of 1995. eom
tarheelsunc
Mar 2014
#3
Why do they worry about ratings for a show they don't watch and can't understand? nt
kelliekat44
Mar 2014
#6
Probably a correlation to people liking the show, and also having modern tech like a DVR.
AtheistCrusader
Mar 2014
#9
Well I hope the wingnuts keep whining about Cosmos. That will only help its ratings! nt
SunSeeker
Mar 2014
#11
If you need any more evidence of how far the American conservative movement has fallen...
Skinner
Mar 2014
#22
All that stuff about Newton, and Halley... I consider myself fairly well informed, and i didnt know
Warren DeMontague
Mar 2014
#29