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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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https://www.primetimer.com/item/Pop-...-a-Time-olSZ4M
The canceled Netflix comedy's first season on cable premieres on Tuesday. Pop TV rescued One Day at a Time for its "untapped potential" after Netflix's cancelation The beloved sitcom makes its debut on Pop TV tonight one year after Netflix's cancelation sparked fan and critic outrage. In response to the cancelation, Sony Pictures Television president Jeff Frost vowed to keep One Day at at a Time alive. “I wasn’t going to rest until we found a new home for the show,” he said. “It’s not just an entertainment show. It transcends that.” Meanwhile, Pop TV was looking for a high-profile show to replace Schitt's Creek, which at the time was about the announce its sixth and final season. Netflix repeatedly stated that One Day a Time was canceled because its viewership was too low. But David Nevins, the chief creative officer of CBS and chief executive of Showtime Networks, who oversees Pop TV, saw opportunity in the Netflix comedy. "I think Netflix clearly has a model where they feel they’re getting value out of (shows) in the first couple of seasons and they don’t have that much incentive to go the long haul,” he said. That may be the right decision in many cases, he added, but “the programmer in me thought it had untapped potential.” But as a cable network, Pop TV had to offer less money to buy the rights to One Day at a Time. "It really took Sony coming down as far as they could — and where it still made sense for them — and it took us going up as high as we’ve ever gone,” said Pop TV president Brad Schwartz, without divulging numbers. Schwartz believes One Day a Time's viewership could approach Season 4 of Schitt's Creek: roughly 3.3 million viewers. Gloria Calderón Kellett and Mike Royce, who created the revival, say the Pop TV version will stay true to the show’s roots of socially conscious comedy. "Keep doing what you’re doing," Schwartz said he wrote in his first email to the showrunners. "We’re making this show because we love it." ALSO:
One Day at a Time premieres to 607,000 viewers in its cable debut, but the vast majority watched on TV Land Even though Pop TV picked up the canceled Netflix comedy for Season 4, last night's premiere was simulcast on TV Land and Logo. Of the 607,000 total viewers, 457,000 watched on TV Land while 124,000 viewed the show on Pop TV. Compared to how previous Pop TV shows performed in the same timeslot, One Day at a Time was up in a few key demos. One Day at a Time's return is a reminder that we’re all just trying to live our best sitcom lives amid coronavirus quarantine "One day at a time — right? It’s how we’re all existing at the moment, in covid-19 isolation, apart and yet so strangely together," says Hank Stuever. "And, it occurred to me while enjoying some new episodes from the fourth season of the revived and recently rescued One Day at a Time (premiering Tuesday on Pop TV), that we’re all just trying to live our best sitcom lives: Confined mainly to the living room and the adjoining kitchen (sitcom sets practically invented the open floor plan), with some occasional scenes in bedrooms or hallways, venturing to other locations only when it’s essential to the plot, and keeping our conflicts and resolutions to the half-hour mark. That’s the dream, anyhow; results within your own zany situation comedy may begin to resemble a darker and extremely dry comedy. Still, if anything in recent culture taught the American family — in whatever form it takes — about consistent closeness and good-natured togetherness, it’s the sitcom. The format is as old as television itself (descended directly from radio and theater), so ingrained in our consciousness that we recognize it in any language: A group of people, sorted into tribal archetypes, share in an event or a minor crisis. Something new is always happening, to the extent that everything must always stay the same. The day begins, a problem stirs the household and creates chaos; people argue and snap at one another; then they share in mutual consolation and express their solidarity and love. The day ends. It’s called an episode...We are talking here about the pure sitcom, and its persistence — the kind that is filmed in front of a studio audience on a soundstage, using multiple cameras, rehearsed and finessed all week until taping, when every line, every pratfall is executed with amusing and admirable precision. The audience is goosed into laughing harder than they usually might. If you’ve ever tried to imagine your own life as a sitcom, you had to supply that laugh track in your head, as all mediocre sitcoms must." ALSO:
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Last edited by TMC; 03-25-2020 at 10:32 PM. |
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