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#91 | |
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Join Date: Sep 11, 2000
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Well, I think initially it was "Star Trek: Voyager", which at the time was a significant hit. After that their biggest hits, although far from watercooler shows were "Moesha", "Girlfriends" and "The Parkers". |
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"and to the fans. I was only supposed to be on every other Tuesday. But, thanks to you, I'm here, and I promise! I will try my best never to let you down. I am going back into that studio on Monday, and I'm going to play Erica Kane for all she's worth!"-- Susan Lucci, May 1999 Daytime Emmy Speech. |
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#92 |
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The CW Network killed UPN and WB in September 2006!!!
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Max Passa |
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#93 | |
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Last edited by TMC; 05-13-2020 at 05:02 AM. |
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#94 |
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I think a big problem with the CW is that they stopped even trying to do comedy. They totally abandoned the genre in favor of nothing but dramas, sci-fi and superheroes.
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#95 | |
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The urban do talk about hell, but doesn't have any problems on creative differences in order to solve on time and that's why most of the urban got renewed beyond their first season and then replace all WB younger generations when the merge approached. |
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#96 | |
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#97 | |
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#98 | ||
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#99 |
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The elephant in the room, screen clutter, killed both of them. I remember tuning into UPN and not only getting their logo constantly on the screen, but the word "PRIME" right under it, as if I also needed to be constantly told that it was prime time. (Did UPN even HAVE anything on outside of prime time hours?) The last time I saw a WB show, it had "ALL NEW" next to the logo. I suppose waiting for a rerun would have let me watch it with less crap on the screen. Now of course CW stands for Can't Watch.
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#100 |
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I'm quite sure that I posted this two part video that details the history of UPN:
Since I started this thread, I have come across discussions about the rise and fall of UPN elsewhere. One issue that was made of note is that UPN was never really able to get a significant enough market or reputation to become bigger that what they were. In other words, they could never really shake off a reputation of being a low rent network for lesser, sometimes trashy or stereotypical shows. The Secret Diary of Desmond Pfeffier, Homeboys in Outer Space, The Mullets, Shasta McNasty, and reality shows like Chains of Love are perfect examples of this. This was despite the fact that they managed to get a respectable amount of African-American centered sitcoms and had some interesting shows that other networks wouldn't try. By the time that actual critical darlings like Veronica Mars started showing up on UPN, it was too little and too late. Imagine if UPN had shows right from the start that were able to give them the needed attention and momentum to the point where profitable shows eventually took root on it? Fox quite obviously had that with Married...with Children and The Simpsons during its early years. Even though they may have been perceived as being a tad bit "trashy" when compared to what the "Big Three" networks had to offer at the time, those two shows none the less, had a "boldness" (shows like MWC redefined the TV sitcom and grabbed a lot of attention) about them that allowed them to get over the hump so to speak. Of course, what also probably helped in Fox's case was that they had Rupert Murdoch's money and well-established media presence that was behind it since day one. Murdoch simply put, wanted it to compete with the "Big 3" networks and was willing to pay for it. On the contrary, were Paramount or Warner Bros were nearly as committed as Fox? Maybe they tried way too hard to be everything to too many different people. They unlike Fox, played it safe and produced nothing innovative to define themselves. With UPN, what they really had going for themselves in terms of "breakout" (at least from a pop culture/mainstream sense) or "must see" event shows were Star Trek: Voyager and SmackDown. Voyager was of course, connected to a legacy franchise that launched the network and SmackDown was the only program that did consistently good numbers (even though it was really a niche audience for the network). And I'm not entirely sure that even Star Trek (either Voyager or Enterprise) could truly or seriously elevate UPN in the end. |
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Last edited by TMC; 01-09-2023 at 12:13 AM. |
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#101 | |
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#102 |
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Recalling the rise and fall of black shows on UPN
"By the time 1998 rolled around, black TV shows with black leads telling black stories were no longer as plentiful as they had been earlier in the decade," says Kelley L. Carter. "The Cosby Show aired its last original episode in April 1992. A Different World reached that mark in July 1993 and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air stopped in May 1996. The heyday of black appointment television had faded away. NBC tried to maintain the glory with In The House, starring LL Cool J, who, like Will Smith before him, was banking on an established musical fan base to carry over into his newfound acting career. But after two seasons, the series was canceled in 1996. UPN, which was launched in 1995, was happy to try and pick up both the show and the mantle." UPN tried to copy successful black and multiracial shows on other networks like Living Single, In Living Color, New York Undercover and Martin. "We nicknamed it, ‘You Pick a Negro Network.’ That was the nickname," recalls Debbie Allen, who co-starred with LL Cool J on In the House. "They told us that they were just doing all kinds of black shows. I guess they were trying to follow Fox’s shoes. Fox had become a big TV network, starting black programming, and they were doing the same thing, but they were putting on some really pretty bad shows. And I remember one of my actors from A Different World got cast in the show. She said, ‘Ma, don’t you watch it, don’t you dare watch it! I’m telling you now, don’t you watch it!’" But the period of black programming on UPN didn't last long as the network sought to appeal to white viewers. "If you offer a night, or if you offer a couple of nights of shows filled with black stars who don’t get much play in mainstream Hollywood and were stars of their own shows, then black people will show up and watch. You then have an automatic audience that you can build on,” says NPR TV critic Eric Deggans. “Unfortunately, the way that cycle used to work is that these networks would get their early audience with these shows and then slowly start to focus their broadcast networks away from black viewers. Because they wanted the greater [advertising dollars] that came from shows that appealed to white viewers." By 2006, UPN was shut down and merged with The WB to form The CW, which focused on appealing to young white female viewers. |
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#103 |
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Marge: There are only 49 stars on that flag. Abe: I'll be deep in the cold, cold ground before I recognize Missouri! |
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#104 |
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#105 | |
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