Darth Fanboy wrote:RedImperator wrote:As ShroomMan said (and you conveniently ignored), the episodes were aired in the Friday night death slot,
Which, if the show was as good as diehard Firefly fans say it was, should not have mattered. I don't believe that Fox would pick up a show with the secret hope that it would tank so that they wouldn't be able to make money off of it.
It's not a work of supreme genius or anything, but even good work has to be presented well for people to notice it and appreciate it. Put something in a crappy time slot, run the episodes out of order, and jerk viewers around by rescheduling it half the time to make room for something else in that slot, and its quality doesn't matter very much.
All this is
especially important in the first season, when the show is still trying to build up a viewership base. For the show to catch on, you need large numbers of people who have never seen it before to watch several episodes in a row and decide that they like it.
constantly preempted for baseball,
The Simpsons has been one of the shows most preempted by baseball ever since Fox started airing the World Series (not just the new episodes, but the reruns that seem to be common among affiliates across the countr), it doesn't seem to have affected them much. Same with Family guy in more recent years.
Yes, but by now they are well known enough to survive that. If
the Simpsons is rescheduled, it doesn't matter; people still know it's funny* and will watch it again in two weeks when it's on at the normal time again. Or even go out of their way to watch the rescheduled episode. A show just starting out doesn't have that advantage.
*Even if it isn't as funny as it used to be, whatever, it's still
accepted as funny and not without reason.
The out of order airings I will admit are bad mismanagement, but to say that the network actively worked to get the show to fail is laughable to me.
I don't claim sabotage, but I do think the network fucked up so thoroughly with the presentation that it amounts to depraved indifference to its success. They had something that quite possibly
could have done fairly well in that time slot, if they had cared enough to make it work, but they didn't care, so they effectively destroyed it by making a series of decisions that harmed the show.
So while they didn't actively work to make it fail, they didn't actively work to make it succeed, either, even on the bare minimum "give the show some freedom from being actively screwed with for minor reasons" level.
Also, I point out once again that despite high expectations, Serenity underperformed greatly as well despite all of the browncoat predictions I heard about it being poised to be one of the most incredibly high grossing films of the year.
Underperformed by what standard, exactly?