SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Why do most of the Sf shows on mainstream Tv not last?

If you want to appeal to viewers right across the board, you need to make 'drama' the centra..."
That's a really good point.
And BSG was great for drama.


If I recall correctly, Futurama was moderately successful while it was airing on Fox for 4 seasons, even though Fox executives didn't really support the show. It is now doing well on Comedy Central.

If a SF story is just about technology with no foreground "drama" (or whatever), it would be so boring that only the author would watch it (or read it).
"Science fiction" is drama/humor/etc. told within an environment other than our current time and/or place, where science is still pretty much the same (albeit more advanced?) with an occasional wink towards FTL flight.
In other words, it's a (hopefully) entertaining yarn that's not fantasy, not history, and not contemporary.
Did I miss something?

I agree, though consider it soap opera. I..."
Nice to find someone else who isn't in love with BSG :)
Okay, yes, technically, I have to admit BSG has all the sci-fi elements, I just found it so overly filled with ridiculously contrived drama and zero redeeming qualities that the sci-fi sort of got lost (my opinion, not necessarily right or wrong, just my opinion). Gave it a fair shot, watched two and a half seasons and then just couldn't take it anymore.


Melodrama. Melodrama everywhere...

Melodrama. Melodrama everywhere..."
:)

As a side note. I think myself and my boyfriend are two of the only people to really love Terra Nova and be sad that it was cancelled. :(

As a side note. I think myself and my boyfriend are two of the only people to really love Ter..."
My hubby and I liked Terra Nova as well. It's sucked when they cancelled it. Stupid Fox. Grrr.

I also gave the new "V," a shot. (And it's yet another science fiction show at least partially set on a space ship since "Firefly." And it also had Morena Bacarin.)
OTOH, loved the new improved BSG and "Babylon 5" and "Firefly." I never watched "Terra Nova." "Futurama" usually makes me laugh while waiting for Jon Stewart to come on, but I don't seek it out.


Did anyone watch V through the end? Because NOBODY told me that it just... ends. On a total cliffhanger. So... head's up... if you're watching it... zero closure.

I'll have to check it out.

JJ Abram's Revolution will pick up millions of advertising in the trade shows in NY and if a show can't pull in money (compared to their operating budget), the networks will dump it in a NY minute. During pilot season they make all sorts of first episodes that get killed before they even air.
The BBC and cable don't operate the same way, so you often see a different criteria on cable than on the Networks. Sci Fi has grown more commercial over time and so its criteria has changed.
Networks are like a horse race and every week the executives read the trades like Variety and Hollywood Reporter to see the numbers.
This is why V got killed and Battlestar Galactica lasted a ton of seasons. Any channel reliant on commercials is going to kill shows that don't draw in the advertisers. And when Sci Fi started out, they seemed more experimental, less profit driven.
Sci Fi/ Fantasy shows last as long as money and prestige flow in.

The same goes or sci-fi and fantasy shows. Those that get cancelled usually do because they stink (like The Event) or they cost too much for the amount of profit they pull in (like Terra Nova or Sarah Conner). Sci-fi shows tend to require a lot of special effects so they cost more to produce and, thus, they need more people watching.
There are of course a few exceptions. Sometimes good shows get cancelled too soon (like Firefly) and sometimes bad or unpopular shows get renewed (like Dollhouse, which was a lot better in the second season).
That said, there many sci-if and fantasy shows that have lasted many seasons (some great, some not so much): Buffy, Angel, Lost, Next Gen, X-Files, Supernatural, Smallville, Babylon5, BSG, Eureka, etc.

The issue of story arc is another problem. Does the story pusher know where it's going?


This is an inaccurate definition. Science Fiction is not limited by milieu. It can literally be in any setting or time. The reality is that Science Fiction on television is cheaper to make by setting in modern day.
Person of Interest is as Science Fictional as anything else out there, as are any of the CSI shows. The stuff they have and do in those shows are completely, utterly impossible with modern technology. That's Science Fiction.
Saying SF has to be "spaceships and ray guns" is as limiting as saying Fantasy has to be "elves and magic rings."

I disliked Terra Nova immensely. All of that talent squandered on such terrible, terrible writing.
Once I got into Primeval, I liked it quite a lot. One of the things that I especially liked about it was that it had the cojones to go with the premise it had set up and follow it to the logical conclusion. Permanently killing main characters, altering the timeline... very few shows have that kind moxie. Usually they're cable shows like The Walking Dead.

Count me as +1 in that data. I really enjoyed SG1 and despised BSG. I mean, the "spacesuits" in one episode of BSG looked like they came from Sears. How is it possible that regular workaday suit-and-tie outfits you can see in any city end up on the other side of the galaxy? Combine that with the achingly awful story and I was out.

I'd rate Fringe as the best science fiction currently on television, and I'm sorry this is its last season. I like Revolution, and Person of Interest and even Last Resort are almost science fiction, too. V and Terra Nova last year were just ok (and V, in my opinion, didn't measure up to the original mini-series in the 1980s). Alcratraz deserved to be cancelled.

I get Trike's point that "Person of Interest" is science fictional.







It is rather the exception that proves the rule. It did fall out of favor for quite some time, though, when sci-fi wasn't as popular.
Of course, it does have the one genius idea at its core that no other show has: the lead character can be changed. I can't think of any other series which has that feature, which allows for both longevity and reinterpretation.
That really is a brilliant idea.


I don't know why Network doesn't last as long as cable. I think the networks are in it for a quicker turnover and scifi requires a longer buildup. We need time to build characters and worlds and that takes more than 10 or 13 episodes sometimes even with good writing. I don't see Defiance mentioned on any recent posts, I loved Farscape which is by the same creators and so far I'm impressed.

I thought Journeyman and The Cape would do really well, but the network suits pulled them too quickly.
Speaking of The Cape, isn't the guy who played him now Monroe on Revolution?

And since he travels in time and space, it really doesn't matter if he spends more time in the 1960s or 2010s. It can update technology and adjust to modern time without losing the spirit of it.

Agree completely about Journeyman - which, in its final episodes, really went into some fine, sophisticated time travel loops and paradoxes.

And yes, the guy from The Cape is now Monroe on Revolution. He was on ER for one of the last seasons as well. David Lyons.
Paul wrote: "Cliff wrote: "I thought Journeyman and The Cape would do really well, but the network suits pulled them too quickly..."
Agree completely about Journeyman - which, in its final episodes, really wen..."

I never got around to watching "Journeyman" or "The Cape," but I quite enjoyed the two or three episodes of "No Ordinary Family" I saw.

Chiklis on The Shield was so searingly incandescent, I can't watch him in anything else.

Just circling back to this. I of course agree about POI, but what's science fictional about CSI? (I have a pretty good but not infallible knowledge of forensic detection, which I acquired over the years when researching my Phil D'Amato science fiction / mystery stories.)

I can sum it up in one word: "Enhance."



Also, I tend to think that a slight exaggeration of what can be done in reality is not really science fiction - which I would reserve for time travel, ftl travel, teleportation, robots with intelligence, aliens from other planets, and those kinds of major departures from what we know. But that's just me :) - or maybe we should distinguish between slight science fiction vs. science fiction.

Books mentioned in this topic
Flashforward (other topics)World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War (other topics)
If you want to appeal to viewers right across the board, you need to make 'drama' the central genre of your TV show.
Either that or comedy. Really funny comedy.