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Freakshow
Moderator
Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,039
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"NCIS: New Orleans" to End after 7th Season
CBS Renews 18 Series
by Peter White, Nellie Andreeva May 6, 2020 CBS has renewed 18 more series for 2020-21 including the majority of its drama lineup and a trio of comedies. "NCIS: New Orleans" returns for season 7. https://deadline.com/2020/05/cbs-renewals-1202927097/ |
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Last edited by JamesG; 02-18-2021 at 05:57 PM. |
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#2 |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,403
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CCH Pounder: NCIS: New Orleans will tackle the early days of the coronavirus pandemic
Pounder says the CBS drama's take “is remarkably reflective of how New Orleans was in terrible shape, until our mayor (LaToya Cantrell), with the help of her governor (John Bel Edwards), really put her foot down and was very, very strict. And then the numbers went down.” |
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#3 |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,403
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NCIS: New Orleans will end with its current Season 7
The current seventh season will be the last for the second NCIS spinoff, with the series finale scheduled for May 16. The news comes one day after news that NCIS: New Orleans showrunners Christopher Silber and Jan Nash are developing NCIS: Hawaii. “It has been our sincere pleasure and honor to work on this show and with this incredible cast and crew for over 150 episodes,” Silber and Nash said in a statement. “As disappointed as we are to see NOLA end, we couldn’t be prouder of the work we’ve done and are grateful to the spectacular and resilient Crescent City that embraced us for seven wonderful years.” |
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#4 | |
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Member
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Join Date: Jun 30, 2004
Posts: 1,782
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#5 |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,403
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NCIS: New Orleans was the only police procedural to tackle its flaws in wake of George Floyd's death
George Floyd's death one year ago today was the spark for a summer of reckoning with racism, police brutality and the way television prioritizes the police of view. "The summer of 2020 posed a problem for some creators of TV cop shows," says Kathryn VanArendonk. "After decades of coasting along as a reliable, profitable source of network-TV narrative grist, there came a wave of calls for cop shows to be pulled from the air — or, at the very least, to become less racist, less militaristic, less rooted in police perspectives. But how, without dismantling the basic idea of what a cop show is? One year later, it’s clear that most shows barely tried to answer that question. The original NCIS and NCIS: Los Angeles paid service to COVID-19 and largely ignored Black Lives Matter; Law & Order: SVU included small, toothless police-accountability plots. Which is what made this season of NCIS: New Orleans so surprising. In small but meaningful ways, the series, which aired its final episode on Sunday (after being canceled unexpectedly in February), offered a model of how to retrofit an old-school police procedural into something more reform-minded. It did not reinvent the wheel, but it tweaked it. For most of its run, NOLA’s protagonist, with the fantastic TV name Dwayne Pride (Scott Bakula), has been a familiar, plays-outside-the-rules kind of cop, often making unilateral decisions about when to ignore the law in favor of what he sees as justice. In its seventh season, NOLA began to incorporate stories more explicitly skeptical of Pride’s tactics and wove them together with broader observations about the challenge of life in New Orleans for anyone without his cultural advantages. One NCIS investigator is frustrated when he realizes how few social services are available to a young mother experiencing homelessness. Loretta Wade, the show’s medical examiner played by CCH Pounder, finds herself burned-out, caught between the exhaustion of COVID and that of worrying about the safety of her Black son. Pride himself goes from self-certain white knight to a man questioning his privilege. The show’s new direction has been obvious enough that a vocal portion of its viewership grew frustrated. Facebook and Twitter commenters registered complaints about the show’s 'woke'-ness. But the ratings — 5 million viewers an episode — were decent, and for every tweet complaining about the show’s new 'anti-police and anti-white' agenda, there were others praising the show. (Why the show was canceled is unclear — the network said simply that it had 'hit the end of (its) cycle.”)" |
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#6 |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,403
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NCIS's Crossover Mentality Highlights the Franchise's Biggest Mistake
NCIS' three-way crossover may have been a success, but it also highlighted how canceling NCIS: New Orleans was a mistake for the CBS franchise. |
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#7 | |
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Member
Forum 3000 Club Member
Join Date: Apr 14, 2007
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__________________
"When the run of a network TV show has ended, some go out with a bang, some with a whimper, but all are...Future Endeavored." "Stay Safe"? More like "Stay Sad". ![]() #2020Hurts |
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