Posted on 27 October 2009 by Bill Gorman

Under the terms being negotiated, TNT will buy the seven episodes that ran last spring as well as the six new episodes that Warner Bros. and John Wells Productions made for NBC. The show is not going back into production because TNT will decide whether to order additional episodes of “Southland” after it sees how the drama performs. The show isn’t expected to make its cable debut until after the new year, and the new episodes might not run until late February or early March.
via Los Angeles Times.
That’s pretty much what I expected the deal to be. TNT salvages the episodes already produced and waits to see the ratings until ordering more. I wouldn’t bet on that happening, but the deal means the chance is no longer absolutely zero.
Posted on 27 October 2009 by Robert Seidman

Sunday’s Dexter averaged 1.7 million viewers or about as many as Mad Men’s 1.723 million. The difference? AMC is available in roughly 95 million homes, while Showtime is only in around 21 million (based on Nielsen estimates from September).
The 1.7 million represents a series high for Dexter which this year has John Lithgow in the cast.
Update: Here is the press release from Showtime noting that it was the most-viewed single telecast since 2004. But they also mix and match and don’t even list the 1.7 million, instead using “over 2 million” which must include ~300,000 for the encore.
Read the full story
Posted on 26 October 2009 by Robert Seidman

The debut of USA’s light and fun crime series, White Collar averaged 5.4 million Friday night at 10pm. Comparisons to other USA shows that debuted in the summer or not on Friday nights don’t make much sense to me, but the shows numbers were double that of The Starter Wife in the same slot a year ago.
I haven’t seen the numbers out to three decimal places yet, but will no later than tomorrow. Those planning on entering the White Collar guess the ratings contest for this coming Friday’s episode might want to wait for all three digits before posting your guesses (though dozens of people have already guessed even before they saw the 5.4 million). Update: it appears for the 71 minute premiere it averaged exactly 5.400 million. Earlier in the night Monk averaged 5.419 million…
Posted on 23 October 2009 by Robert Seidman
Last year ventriloquist Jeff Dunham’s Christmas special set ratings records for Comedy Central. Last night he did it again with the debut of The Jeff Dunham Show which averaged 5.3 million viewers and the most-watched series premiere in Comedy Central’s history.
The show also posted records for a Comedy Central series premiere in adults 18-49 (a 2.6 rating rating, but I’m checking to see whether that’s just a coverage rating, if so, it could drop down to ~2.2 when compared with the overall TV audience).
Another 2.6 million average audience watched the encore of the show to bring the night’s total to 7.9 million.
Posted on 23 October 2009 by Robert Seidman

HBO today announced it has renewed its Emmy-winning drama In Treatment for a third season. Gabriel Byrne will return in the role of Paul Weston.
There was some question over the return because the Israeli show it was based on (and whose scripts were modified) only ran for two seasons. And it is a pretty big production run with 35 episodes in the second season and even more in the first. Doubt was cast over whether HBO would want to incur the expense of writing new scripts. More speculation ensued when Warrent Leight who was the showrunner in the second season departed for other pastures. The show was nominated for three Emmys under Leight’s watch, but Leight had declared the work grueling.
Casting on the other roles expected to begin shortly, and production is expected to begin in early 2010 with the series airing on HBO later in the year.
Anya Epstein, (”Tell Me You Love Me”) and Danny Futterman (”Capote”) will take over as executive producers/co-showrunners.
I still haven’t seen the first season but watched all of the second and really enjoyed it, so I’m glad they’re giving it another season.
Posted on 22 October 2009 by Bill Gorman

It was a surprise to Robert and I when a press release we posted last season about Bravo’s Real Housewives of Atlanta got so much traffic, and we became well acquainted with the fact that NeNe [Leakes] was “da’ bomb”.
Read the full story
Posted on 21 October 2009 by Robert Seidman
Last summer Bill wrote about how many cable networks were abandoning their roots to grab more audience. Now comes word that The Weather Channel will be airing feature films. That’s right, The Weather Channel will be airing movies.
Ok, sure, they will be movies with some kind of weather tie in, so it’s perhaps not as drastic as some of the moves by other networks. But still, movies. On The Weather Channel. From the press release:
ATLANTA (October 20, 2009) – For the first time in its 27-year history, The Weather Channel® (TWC) will add movies to its programming schedule with “The Weather Channel Presents…” This new movie series launches Friday, October 30, with the TWC premiere of The Perfect Storm, starring George Clooney, which coincides with the anniversary of the ferocious “perfect storm” of 1991, on which the movie was based.
Read the full story
Posted on 20 October 2009 by Robert Seidman

Don’t get me wrong, anything can happen, but not before this summer as TNT has announced its plans to run the final 3 episodes of the current season of The Closer beginning December 7.
Reports are that if TNT picks Southland up, it would make one 13 episode season out of the 7 episodes from last season and the six unaired episodes from this season. I can definitely see that happening. But it seems unlikely to happen before summer. If a decision on whether to produce additional episodes has to wait that long, I don’t see it ever happening as those involved on the show will have moved on to other gigs.