Brian Damage
04-07-2009, 12:17 AM
You've starred in directed sitcoms. Sitcoms have been a big part of your career. Why do you think the genre is fading away? What sitcoms do you watch?
You know, the sitcom is coming back actually a little bit. Most of the networks have ordered a bunch more sitcoms. To be 100 percent honest with you, I think that "Must See TV" which NBC ran for years, killed the sitcom. It killed it because they continued to put out the same shows over and over again to a group of people that don't watch network television. White yuppie America doesn't watch network television. They watch HBO. They watch Showtime. They watch FX. They watch the History Channel. They watch National Geographic. They're not watching regular network television. But they continue to make shows for those people and the numbers continue to drop. They continue to push to a certain group in America that was themselves, but they don't watch television, themselves. It killed the genre. The genre will come back if they start to make sitcoms for the people that are actually watching network television. There's a reason shows like The Jeffersons can run for 14 years, or shows like The Cosby Showor Roseanne or any of those other long running shows that were made for regular middle America people. You have to sell it to those people. To be honest with you I don't like any of the sitcoms that are out there right now. I don't watch any of them because they are not directed towards people like myself. There's nothing to watch.
http://laist.com/2009/04/06/seven_questions_with_alfonso_ribeir.php
You know, the sitcom is coming back actually a little bit. Most of the networks have ordered a bunch more sitcoms. To be 100 percent honest with you, I think that "Must See TV" which NBC ran for years, killed the sitcom. It killed it because they continued to put out the same shows over and over again to a group of people that don't watch network television. White yuppie America doesn't watch network television. They watch HBO. They watch Showtime. They watch FX. They watch the History Channel. They watch National Geographic. They're not watching regular network television. But they continue to make shows for those people and the numbers continue to drop. They continue to push to a certain group in America that was themselves, but they don't watch television, themselves. It killed the genre. The genre will come back if they start to make sitcoms for the people that are actually watching network television. There's a reason shows like The Jeffersons can run for 14 years, or shows like The Cosby Showor Roseanne or any of those other long running shows that were made for regular middle America people. You have to sell it to those people. To be honest with you I don't like any of the sitcoms that are out there right now. I don't watch any of them because they are not directed towards people like myself. There's nothing to watch.
http://laist.com/2009/04/06/seven_questions_with_alfonso_ribeir.php