The futon critic is projecting that TV's Hit Drive will premiere at 8pm on April 2nd as the lead in to 24. I don't have a clue where they get their info, but I don't recall ever hearing complaints about their accuracy.
It's the perfect spot IMHO.
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls, The Inside and Drive), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
The futon critic is projecting that TV's Hit Drive will premiere at 8pm on April 2nd as the lead in to 24. I don't have a clue where they get their info, but I don't recall ever hearing complaints about their accuracy.
It's the perfect spot IMHO.
I agree. That's also part of my logic. I also think Drive has a lot going for it in terms of publicity - it looks great, and there's plenty of action stuff to lace trailers with. And mystery. It would be possible to set up some really great viral marketing websites for Drive about The Race and such, very similar to what ABC does with Lost. See also: Heroes. I have toyed with this idea myself, but I don't want to step on the networks toes -- I'm really hoping they think of that. Toy with the online audience -- recent years has shown online word of mouth does work when engaged properly.
That said, I thought The Inside was going to do better than it did, because I figure crime procedurals often fair well. I was wrong.
My logic is that the show seems to have more elements of a mainstream hit and fewer off-putting quirky differences.
I thought that was the idea on The Inside?
fewer off-putting quirky differences.
I thought that was the idea on The Inside?
I'm not sure quirky is the right word for Locke, but offputting to your standard procedural crowd? I can buy it.
The futon critic is projecting that TV's Hit Drive will premiere at 8pm on April 2nd as the lead in to 24. I don't have a clue where they get their info, but I don't recall ever hearing complaints about their accuracy.
My first thought was, "Hey, that's against Prison Break !" Then I remembered that PB was on Fox, which means: perfect!!
offputting to your standard procedural crowd? I can buy it.
This. It was so deliberately different, whereas Drive is deliberately awesome.
I know a few people outside of fandom circles who have seen The Inside in real life on ITV4, and they said The Inside was too dark for them.
ETA: Although that said, there's so many popular crime shows where the victims are raped every single week, I'm not sure the theory holds up.
there's so many popular crime shows where the victims are raped every single week, I'm not sure the theory holds up
L&O SVU or CSI victims rarely evoke an emotional response from me--I've lost touch with whether or not they're supposed to. Despite the weekly murder and rape, I couldn't call them dark. Gross sometimes, but not dark.
My first thought was, "Hey, that's against Prison Break !" Then I remembered that PB was on Fox, which means: perfect!!
Yeah, PB's season finale is March 19th, and 24 is supposed to be two hours on March 26th. Then the timeslot is open for TV's Hit Drive on April 2nd.
It would be possible to set up some really great viral marketing websites for Drive about The Race and such, very similar to what ABC does with Lost. See also: Heroes. I have toyed with this idea myself, but I don't want to step on the networks toes --Yeah, because FOX stomps back. I remember (the studio, not the network) going after Buffy fan-run spoiler sites. It was either during season 6 or 7. It was ridiculous.
I know a few people outside of fandom circles who have seen The Inside in real life on ITV4, and they said The Inside was too dark for them.
It got much too dark for me. Not for Scott, though. He was disappointed he didn't get to see Tim kill him -- still claims he's not dead until it airs on network TV. I thought The Inside was well done, but I just didn't want to be thinking about the stories. t /baby
What is it that makes a crime show "too dark"? The music, the lighting, the emphasis on the psyche of the criminal? The psyche of the investigators?
Of course, I loved Millennium. The Inside seemed to fall somewhere between that and Profiler to me.