Christopher van der Lugt Christopher van der Lugt

Upfronts 2014: Where's The Funny?

A sad state of affairs for TV-based comedies.  The Upfronts for the 2014-2015 television season is quite different from last year's high-octane announcements of the return of two comedy stars Michael J. Fox and Robin Williams (The "Michael J. Fox Show" and "The Crazy Ones" respectively) among the litany of new (heavily advertised) comedy options ("Brooklyn Nine-Nine", "About a Boy", "Community", etc.).

The 2014-15 schedule has traded in new comedies (and canceled a few), to make room for dramas and (oh good) more reality television.

Network brands are shrinking their aggregate broadcast time devoted to comedy despite the overwhelming successes of Community (whose sixth season was canceled, but was brought back by popular demand for their 5th season), The Big Bang Theory, and Modern Family.  

It is important to remember that comedy is alive and well, just not on Network television.  Runaway successes of Louie, Girls, Veep and Orange is the New Black provide insight that there is high demand for these types of shows, but the highly involved, but small audience size make it less profitable for ABC, NBA, FOX and CBS.  Due to the financials, the genre has shrunk, and new, and established, content has, and will, shift to cable, premium channels or online (Hulu, Netflix or Amzon).

It is a shame that content is judged by some discounted cash flow calculation and ROI algorithm, but that is the nature of television; always has been.  

What is worrying is the fracturing nature of distribution channels for content in a world where content distributors such as Comcast and Verizon do not allow for easy consumption across all platforms.  

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Christopher van der Lugt Christopher van der Lugt

John Oliver Takes Down the FCC: Net Nutrality

Cable companies are trying to create an unequal playing field for internet speeds, but they're doing it so boringly that most news outlets aren't covering it. John Oliver explains the controversy and lets viewers know how they can voice their displeasure to the FCC. Connect with Last Week Tonight online...

Net Neutrality has always been a major topic of conversation, but John Oliver (formerly of the Daily Show on Comedy Central) and his new show "Last Week Tonight" does a fantastic job of dismantling the FCC, lobbyists and cable companies and elevating this topic to a national imperative for action.

Make sure that you write in your comments to the FCC by using this web address: GCC.gov/Comments.  Let your voice be heard.

 

HBO via YouTube

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