My 17-year-old son, a senior in high school, is way too busy these days to watch much television. But occasionally he takes a break from his busy schedule (and online video-game playing) to
watch something with his parents.
My wife and I DVR about three-quarters of all the prime-time series we watch together. When we sit down to watch them, we tell our son to
let him know.
Two new series are his favorites: FOX’s “Pitch” and CBS’s “Bull” (along with FX’s “Atlanta,” which my wife and I have
not yet seen).
“Pitch” is one of the best new shows of the season. Unfortunately, it’s on the verge of cancellation primarily because most of its potential target
audience has never even heard of it. While ostensibly about baseball, it’s not really a sports show, and should not be marketed as such. It’s a great family drama that should appeal to a
broad audience — probably the same viewers that turned NBC’s “This is Us” into a hit.
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As I’ve written on several previous occasions, not being able to
promote a show to the largest chunk of available (and prime) prospects — namely, those watching compatible programming on other broadcast networks — remains an impediment to any network's
airing a successful new show that doesn’t fit in with the rest of that network’s lineup.
A similar situation has hurt CW’s “Frequency,” which deserves a
much larger audience than it has drawn. Don’t you think that if CBS’ new medical drama, “Pure Genius,” was promoted on ABC’s “Grey’s Anatomy” and
NBC’s “Chicago Med,” it too might have gotten a bigger audience?
At a time when DVR and subscription video-on-demand services have both hit the 50% penetration level, and
multimedia devices are now in 30% of TV homes, the idea that the broadcast networks still see each other as their main (if not only) competition is the height of ridiculousness. Accepting ads from
cable networks, streaming services like Netflix, and premium cable networks like HBO and Showtime — but not from other broadcast networks — makes no sense.
It’s about time
the networks realize that when a new broadcast series, such as “Empire” or “This is Us,” becomes a hit, it benefits all broadcast networks. It reminds advertisers that except
for the occasional mega-hit on cable like “The Walking Dead,” nothing can rival broadcast networks in developing high-rated, high-reach programming.
CBS’ “Bull”
is a different story. It’s the highest-rated new show among households and total viewers, and is in the top 20 among adults 18-49. It fits in well with the rest of CBS’ heavily
procedural drama programming. But because CBS skews older, so does “Bull.”
I asked my son if he had seen any promos anywhere for “Bull,” and he had
not. The only reason he was aware of the show is because I get all the pilots from the broadcast networks before the season so I can write my new series analysis. I suspect if a show like
“Bull” was promoted to a younger audience, it would be performing even better.
The same can be said of a show like “Criminal Minds” (originals on CBS, repeats on
ION). It has a diverse cast that should appeal to older and younger viewers, men and women. Every episode focuses on serial killers and often grisly crimes. Why doesn’t it get the
younger viewers who love shows about serial killers, like “Dexter,” “Hannibal,” “The Following,” etc.? Because it’s on CBS and ION, both of which have
an older audience, and it’s not promoted to younger viewers, and not promoted as a show about serial killers.
The bottom line is that new series promotions work. And despite the
fact that we live in a digital world, promoting a new show on linear television is still by far the best way to get viewer sampling. But those promos need to be on the right shows, directed to
the right audience.