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    Sunday, April 28, 2024

    TV interruptus: Viewers wonder where their shows have gone

    So many TV shows went missing this winter, viewers were ready to call out bloodhounds.

    After airing just four episodes, "V" disappeared from ABC and didn't return until this week. The Fox hit "Glee" went on an extended semester break that will stretch until April 13. ABC's "FlashForward" and Fox's "Fringe" both left mysteries hanging during lengthy hiatuses.

    An unusual number of shows took long breaks this season, leaving some fans puzzled and worried. But breaks of three or four months no longer mean a series has been canceled. They are just more evidence of the broadcast networks' continuing search for new ways to program the TV season.

    We can blame ourselves for making the change necessary. After happily watching reruns since the dawn of television, viewers stopped being so eager to see the same episode twice. In the 1990s, an explosion of original programming on cable gave us plenty of fresh choices, while recording devices kept us from missing our favorite programs the first time around.

    The networks tried slipping repeats into the broadcast season, but with more and more shows featuring serialized elements, random reruns proved confusing to audiences. So did scheduling frequent weeks off, as ABC tried disastrously in the first season of "Lost."

    Meanwhile, cable networks were getting lots of attention airing short seasons of original series and making fans wait months for new episodes. On HBO, "The Sopranos" ended its first season on April 4, 1999, and didn't return until the next Jan. 16. The audience came back, too.

    Broadcasters began talking about year-round scheduling and looking at cable (or British) ways of doing business. Fox led the way, trying and succeeding with one strategy when it delayed the Season 4 premiere of "24" to January 2005, allowing the day to unfold without interruption. With baseball in the fall, Fox tried a different strategy with "Prison Break," starting the serialized show in late summer 2005 and then picking it up again after several months.

    NBC has since experimented with airing "Heroes" in so-called chapters, each making up part of a season. And "Chuck," renewed last May, was held back to January so its episodes could run in sequence, a la "Lost."

    But this year's hiatuses, while they might be seen as a test for how network TV might look in the future, actually were more happenstance than strategy.

    The "Glee" break was scheduled, in part, because creator Ryan Murphy was committed to directing a movie ("Eat, Pray, Love," starring Julia Roberts). Fox also got a chance to whip up interest in the musical-dramedy, releasing the first half of the season on DVD and announcing a concert tour for the cast.

    ABC had always intended to run "V" in chapters, ABC Entertainment President Steve McPherson explained.

    "We did not intend for the first chapter to be so short," he said. "There were production issues that took over, unfortunately." (In other words, the show was going wrong, and producers and writers sat down to regroup.)

    As a result, the network decided on "a kind of limited chapter" of four episodes to run in the fall, with a consecutive run after the aliens-on-Earth drama's return.

    "FlashForward" was already on the air when ABC noticed that "repeats really weren't working," McPherson said. Considering that the Olympics were set to air on NBC in February, the network decided to hold "FlashForward" back to March and promote it alongside "V" as an event.

    "It wasn't something that we intended, but we dealt with the circumstances, I think, in the most productive way we could," he said.

    Executive producer David S. Goyer defended the "FlashForward" hiatus as the only thing that made sense, telling TV critics visiting the set in January that all involved had decided that airing the remaining episodes consecutively was the best course. However, Goyer has since left the show, and "FlashForward," whose viewership had declined (down more than 40 percent from its premiere) even before the hiatus, returned last week to unimpressive ratings.

    "FlashForward" could be a test case for whether a new show can survive the hiatus strategy. If the series, which ABC had hoped might be a long-running replacement for "Lost," ultimately fails, ABC might be more inclined in the future to run shows like "Castle," a nonserialized, character-driven drama that McPherson calls "our highest-performing repeat show."

    Then, no hiatus would be necessary.

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