Farscape Frelling Cancelled 445
Mukaikubo writes "The Sci-Fi Channel has decided to cancel their second largest show, Farscape. Because networks respond better to phone calls and snail-mail letters than a mass e-mail campaign and there is contact info on a fan-run Message Board. Time is of the essence, as the Network wants to tear down props at the end of next week. Help save one of the best science fiction shows on TV today!" Other articles can be found here and the chat log is online too.
There will always be... (Score:2)
Re:There will always be... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:There will always be... (Score:3, Informative)
Not only that, but I believe ADV releases their DVDs without any kind of encryption or macrovision protection. In all, they seem to make good products and release good shows. (In addition to a whole load of anime, they also released the Reboot season three DVDs.)
Re:There will always be... (Score:2, Interesting)
Perhaps not, but they do put out their series at prohibitively high prices. $25 for 2 episodes? The series may be good, but $275 per season is a bit much for me...
Stargate SG-1, on the other hand, sells for only $70 per season. True, it's an MPAA company, but at least they're not going to bankrupt me if I want to buy their shows.
--The Rizz
FastFood and FastTV (Score:5, Informative)
The analogy I can find, is to Fast Food: Low-quality stuff for the masses (but it's practical and I'm enjoying it sometimes). Guaranteed profit. The stuff I consider high-quality, is a matter of taste. So the market is limited and profits not guaranteed. If you would run a restaurant for a living, what would you offer?
Sad, though.
It comes as no surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
Farscape is, of course, a space show, so I saw this coming. It was surprising that it stayed on the schedule this season, but not surprising that its stay of execution was only temporary.
And now, for a small question from me... What is the point of a science fiction channel without science fiction?
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:4, Interesting)
If they aren't going to do space shows, does that mean SG1 is doomed? How about the rest of the Dune movies?
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:3, Funny)
I certainly don't get Farscape. It's not Sci-Fi anymore than Friends is a soap or Charlie's Angels was "crime drama". They're all comedy.
Just like Andromeda.
SG-1 is pretty damn funny too.
Colonel Jack O'Neil: Hey, Carter, thought you might like to watch a movie, so we got Star Wars. Teal'c here has seen it like, what, eight...
Teal'c: Nine.
O'Neil:
Capt. Samantha Carter: [long pause] thinking [to O'Neil] You mean...you've never seen Star Wars?
O'Neil: Well, you know me and Sci-Fi.
Maybe it's all comedy...
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:3, Funny)
To those who are wondering why,
NWhat we call 'SF' ain't 'sci-fi',
It's just, there's a fine line,
Between Robert Heinlein,
And 'Son of the two-headed fly'.
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:2, Interesting)
Therefore, they insist that "good" science fiction is a completely different genre from "bad" science fiction.
I can debunk this silly notion with 2 words: Starship Troopers. Anybody who has both read the book and seen the movie based on it knows exactly what I mean.
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:2)
Hello, I'm imitating John Edwards and I am happy to tell you that all of your loved ones are "Fine" they are always "Fine" yep... fine fine fine fine. (Coughs) Oh wait, I meant to say it as the French do - "Fin'e".
Oh by the way, along with my utterly useless answers I will just ooze smarmy fake compassion then laugh all the way to the bank.
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:2)
Depends what "space show" covers, not much space travel in Dune and not that much, most of the time in SG1.
Re:Don't worry about stargate :) (Score:2)
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:2)
The term SciFi started out as simply a contraction of those words, but long ago it evolved to have a meaning of its own, distinct from its origin - that's what language does, it evolves. Nowadays, SciFi typically covers anything that is "light" and of a fantastical nature, covering many stories that might otherwise be called fantasy or historical fiction as well as light science fiction.
As for the other guy saying that Starship Troopers is some kind of proof that SciFi and Science Fiction are one and the same - BFD. Of course there are borderline stories, just like there are borderline stories across the genres of mystery and historical fiction or fantasy and satire, etc, etc. The movie certainly was light in places, but it was also a savage commentary on fascism, even moreso than the book.
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:2)
Maybe John Edwards knows?
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:2)
They even ran "Red Scorpion" on the channel, about a Soviet officer who's dumped in the desert to die after fighting his commanding officer in order to save a village... He's saved by a tribe and returns to BSU (blow shit up)... So HOW THE HELL does this relate to science fiction?
Since I can pretty much download any show I want from Usenet these days via cable modem, I'm *almost* ready to cancel my cable teevee service, no point in letting AT&T double dip charge me anyway...
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:2)
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:3)
It is an interesting question... Why is it that anything that portrays space as a useful place to be that is anything other than hideously uneconomical to get to gets axed almost immediately? As is, for that matter, anything that shows the least bit of imagination or originality...
Are people just not interested in anything beyond the "lands we know" anymore?
Re:It comes as no surprise (Score:2)
Assuming that "Sci-Fi" was intended to mean only addressing science fiction. The most obvious example being "Sightings", a "documentry" series about the paranormal.
Must be a study somewhere... (Score:2)
Non-fan perspective (Score:2)
Unfortunately I'd have to put Farscape in that column. I caught an episode or two and just didn't find it all that interesting. I'd guess that someone, somewhere decided that a show that lacks whatever elements make scifi popular to those people who don't count themselves as part of the sci fi fanbase.
I think that like any genre the true fans always have a greater level of appreciation for things that will never register with most people. Some things (Star Wars, Alien, Close Encounters, Blade Runner, etc) have an attraction that makes them attractive outside the genre's base. I don't think that Farscape was one of them.
And this is true of lots of genres of books, movies, music, or any other creative endeavor. It drives the fans batty, of course, because inevitably they are insulted when something they thought was a good representation of the genre gets cut because it just isn't popular with non fans.
What surprises me is that as many scifi fans as there are that they haven't started doing their own low-budget scifi films direct to video. The Born Again types have been doing this for a while now, making movies based on Revelations. Its pretty big in the Christian community but doesn't even register on Hollywood's radar.
The Real intention of scifi (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Real intention of scifi (Score:2)
I don't buy it. I think it's just SciFi doesn't want to spend so much on what is only now a moderate performer.
Re:The Real intention of scifi (Score:2)
Re:The Real intention of scifi (Score:2)
Correction, cast and crew -nt- (Score:2)
Nice theory, but this action is consistent .... (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah it's dumb. You have to spend money to make money. But it's the way business works these days. Investors see everything in terms of the quarterly bottom line. This was true even when the economy was booming and is doubly true now. The company I work for has been profitable for 8 quarters straight, has a huge amount of cash, and no long-term debt. And yet we have to jump through hoops to justify even tiny expenditures -- even ones that would obviously save us money in the long term.
The cash issue explains a lot of stuff at SciFi that had me puzzled. Their unwillingness to show Farscape episodes that supposedly had already been paid for. Their sudden disappearance of other shows because of "poor ratings". (Ratings that are poorer than the "Tales From the Crypt" reruns they used as filler?) I'm afraid the bottom line is this: SciFi's strategy of becomming a first-run entertainment provider is dead, and it's back to reruns of other networks' shows.
Re:Nice theory, but this action is consistent .... (Score:2)
Re:The Real intention of scifi (Score:3, Funny)
Petitions, letters, and phone calls. (Score:2, Informative)
As Ben put it, "They're taking a chainsaw to Moya next week" meaning that the sets are scheduled to be destroyed within a matter of days.
Yeah, maybe letters and phone calls will make them spend the money to rebuild the sets, but I probably wouldn't hold my breath. They would have folded the sets if there was a chance the show was going to be picked up again (as they did with "Crusade"'s sets [even though they never did pick up this series]). I think it's best we wish Brian Henson et al the best of luck on their new endeavors instead of spending our energy on such a longshot. The best we could hope for is for a final episode or movie, but I doubt this as well
Ok, i'm not a massive farscape fan (Score:3)
There is no good sci-fi on at the moment. I see Enterprise and its just more "wild west cowboys in space" crap.
Re:Ok, i'm not a massive farscape fan (Score:3, Informative)
The idea is that certain words didn't get picked up right by the "translator microbes" so Crichton hears the "native" word, rather than the translation. Or something like that. It was just a way to give flavor.
Re:Ok, i'm not a massive farscape fan (Score:2)
Re:Ok, i'm not a massive farscape fan (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ok, i'm not a massive farscape fan (Score:2)
Someone throw him a frickin' bone here!
(All I want is some frickin' sharks with frickin' laser beams on their heads!)
I smell HBO, cc them with your letters (Score:3, Insightful)
There is always hope. HBO has a rather good record of picking up shows of meritable creative content that do not get network/cable support from the cronies that run them. Maybe you could redirect or cc your support mail there.
Re:I smell HBO, cc them with your letters (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I smell HBO, cc them with your letters (Score:3, Funny)
Blue boobies.
'Nuff said.
Shit! (from a UK viewer) (Score:2, Insightful)
Urrghh... what a way to wake up on a Saturday. Farscape is one of the few shows that I make time to watch.
I'm not usually surprised when a series is cancelled - either it obviously bites, or no-one is watching. Neither seems to be true of Farscape. In fact, I'm so mystified by this, I've spent my Saturday morning writing a letter to the Sci Fi channel in the U.S... I know, I know, I've been extremely polite (just expressing my sincere shock) and I realise that they will probably just bin it along with the thousands of other "fan" letters, but I had to do it.
I've never done that for a TV show before. So maybe that will mean something to the less cynical slashdot readers.
Fax them! (Score:5, Informative)
Free Online Fax [tpc.int]
Sci-Fi's fax number is +1-212-413-6531.
Re:Fax them! (Score:2)
Sit back, let fax for about 7 and a half hours.
Of course, it's long distance, but... as brody once said, "small price to pay for the smiting of one's enemies".
~Will
Re:Fax them! (Score:2)
~Will
normally (Score:2, Flamebait)
Reminds me of The Pretender and NoWhere Man (Score:3, Insightful)
What is with this TV season's cancelling crap??? (Score:5, Informative)
Look at what the networks have killed in the past 6 months (of note):
Dark Angel (FOX: news to me, but axed in May, had ok ratings!)
Futurama (FOX: weak ratings)
A couple days ago:
Witchblade (TNT: had strong ratings!)
Farscape (Sci-Fi: good ratings?)
(I'm sure I'm missing a biggie in all this. X-Files, Ally McBeal, Family Guy, etc. don't count...)
I'd understand the cancellations if the ratings were weak, and new programming was so much more promising but:
Derivative spinoffs: CSI:Miami, Law & Order:
Cop shows, cop shows, cops shows
doc shows, doc shows, doc shows
Another boring lawyer show from David E. Kelley
New soon-2-be-DOA show from the other lucky producer...
And the rest being f**king lame-assed "reality" shows I don't watch. How the f**k do loser shows like Big Brother2, Amazing Race2, and The Mole2 manage to get timeslots??? Yeah, they're cheap to produce, but they get sh*tty ratings.
I just don't get it. There a quite a few new shows coming out this fall, and most of them have LOSER stamped on them. Why kick out a promising show to stick in a sure loser?
The only thing new that looks like it has promise is Firefly. But I would have killed something other than Dark Angel... (Birds Of Prey looks promising too.)
Is it that our demographic (and thus, entertainment preferences) is too old and not desirable anymore? Do good shows cost too much? Do networks make more money on sh*t reality shows?
Am I missing a possible trend? (Economic recession putting content companies out of business? 9/11 makes people want mindless, "wholesome", patriotic, hero themed shows?)
Its a conspiracy, I tell you! And the handwriting is on the wall. Get ready to say goodbye to Buffy, Stargate SG1 (a Sci-Fi channel property), Angel, Smallville, Enterprise(?), South Park, Son of the Beach,
I can't say its all bad. I watch way too much TV. I'd like to feel confident that there will be something watchable in a couple of years, but it doesn't look good (for me, for us?)...
Re:What is with this TV season's cancelling crap?? (Score:2, Informative)
Unfortunately, it's also their most expensive show to create, but what the hell else do they have? They killed b5:lotr (And no, not THAT lotr), they killed lexx, Stargate's coming to a conclusion after this season.... They're going to have dead zone and johnathon edwards when at the end of this year.
JMS said scifi wants to get away from "those space shows", when they killed the b5 spinoff. I haven't figure out who's irrational bias this is, they're the scifi channel for christ sake, ut if I ever identify the person responsible, rest assured that I will provide contact info.
Re:What is with this TV season's cancelling crap?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Real science fiction fans deride the use of Sci-Fi as a moniker, I guess it is becoming obvious why. Soap operas in space are not science fiction, 900 number reject asshole "psychics" that scam old people are not science fiction.
Science fiction is about expanding the way we thing about the present, by showing us probable or possible futures, based on the science and technology we currently have. It only barely encompasses the "supernatural", only insofar as the "supernatural" is just science we do not yet understand, which, by definition isn't really supernatural.
Re:What is with this TV season's cancelling crap?? (Score:2)
The want the sci-fi channel to get away from those space shows.
Ah.
I can see it from a managers point of view though. Make a sci-fi show that requires almost no special effects, and it will be a lot more profitable that one with a lot of expensive special effects.
I bet "Crossing over" bring them a bundle of cash.
Sh*tty Ratings vs Demographics (Score:2)
Then again, NBC Executives have twice cancelled ratings-wise successes that followed Friends (Inside Schwartz was ranked in the top 15 at year's end, believe it, or not), because they pulled in only a 30 share rather than carry the 60 share of the Ross/Rachel crew.
SFC's tactics seems to make it unprofitable for another network to hop in and save the show, or else toss in money to rebuilt the sets. Slash and burn, anyone?
Re:What is with this TV season's cancelling crap?? (Score:2)
Re:What is with this TV season's cancelling crap?? (Score:2)
One thing that the TV execs would rather fight than admit is that trying to chop the world up into geographical bits won't work any more. As soon as something is broadcast anywhere in the world it is likely to be available for download from some source or other.
Re:Reality Programming.... (Score:2)
If I understand the idea behind television series correctly, The producers of the programming make a bit of money off of the original run (more if the ratings are really good and the show really brings in the advertising) which is all well and good. But don't they end up making more money *long term* if their shows end up in syndication after the series has been around for a few (3 or 4?) seasons.
You are correct. That is why Network TV production companies are producing them, not independent production companies. Network TV does not care that there is no "resale" value to reality TV. And reality TV does not carry over debt into future seasons like a regularly produced program. The payoff is instant good ratings AND they are sort of counting on the FORMAT of the reality show to continue, even though the contestants don't. And when the ratings tank, chuck the format. Finally, "reality" TV takes maybe 1/10 of the cost of a regular drama/comedy. Thus those programs produce more money for the network. Who cares if they are getting less audience and lower advertiser dollars, if its more profitable than a drama/comedy?
What concerns me is the network deliberately choosing shows that do not get great market share, but generate desirable net profit. That means more crappy shows, less people watching TV, but networks keeping them because they make more money than a drama/comedy.
Re:Reality Programming.... (Score:2)
100% fault of incompetent marketing (Score:2, Informative)
Fucking idiots can't change their marketing when they have that oddest of things, a show with a story.
Yes it's an expensive show. But if you can't make money on the best show on cable, with high ratings then fire your incompetent marketing department, don't cancel the show!!!
Anyway that's what I think we should say in all of our tinkle-bell letters (clap those hands).
Licence the damn back episodes and you can sell the series, idiots!
Rocky J. Squirrel
Huh? (Score:2)
Huh? I'm hoping this is due to a
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Re:For those that enjoy it... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:For those that enjoy it... (Score:2)
As for special effects, I'd prefer a fly-by of Moya over Enterprise.
Hopefully Farscape engrossed the right minds, so someone in high places will scoop it up.
"Humans are suuuuppeerriioooooor!!!" - John Chricton
Re: (Score:2)
Re:For those that enjoy it... (Score:3, Insightful)
I could never get in to Enterprise.
I found the storyline, while appealing to my like for "history" (even if it is fictional), doesn't really seem to go anywhere. And the characters fail to interest me.
Sure. Decent production. And they seem to do a somewhat admirable job of trying to balance between a "future" defined by our real-life past views of technology during the 60s and the current sense of ethetics that lead to the look of the "modern" Star Trek.
I don't find that a big selling point. Of course, I also enjoyed shows that really required a sequential following (like B5 or Twin Peaks). Having said that - I don't feel that Farscape suffers so much from this. And even if it does... that this is really a such bad thing. Unless, of course, you're a studio manager more concerned with filling in time slots than what your programming actually is.
Farscape and Enterprise are entirely different shows and, honestly, I feel that its rather unfair to try and compare them. The only likeness between the two is that they both have a space sci-fi (sci-fantasy to the purist) background.
And I must admit, it took me a bit to get interested in Farscape. But after watching a handfull of episodes (a couple of different times), I got hooked. Mainly because Farscape is very different. Its chaotic. Its full of very odd concepts and designs - from hardware, to aliens (and I've come to appreciate the occasional anamatronic alien puppet instead of another makeup-and-prostetic alien). And there is a certain degree of desperation that pops up occasionally that I find refreshing (as an example, running out of food and facing starvation pops up from time to time).
Will Farscape be everyone's cup of tea? Hardly.
Re:For those that enjoy it... (Score:2)
What I couldn't stand was the encounters they had with 'weird things'. I mean things that were weird for the sake of being weird. They lost me at the planet populated by lawyers.
Gotta agree about Enterprise. What I like most about that show is the dialog. It's so much different than the other Trek shows. I think a lot of people don't pick up on that and that's why they hate it.
I miss Quantum Leap over all of it. Scifi can be good, but you have to have good characters in it to make it work. QL decidedly proved that.
Re:For those that enjoy it... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:For those that enjoy it... (Score:2)
*POOR* Production values? They beat Star Trek hands down. Have you actually watched any episodes of Farscape or Enterprise and compared them side by side?
Enterprise is stale, boring, and MORE LIKE A SOAP OPERA THAN FARSCAPE.
Simon
Re:For those that enjoy it... (Score:2)
To be fair, I think people need to realize thaet comparisons between these shows is unfair, they have different "attitudes" and this affects the way the show looks on screen, as well it should.
Farscape, is a show that sets a better mood than I've ever seen Enterprise do. Ignore the flashy sets and glizy backgrounds of Enterprise; low-lighting and innovative camera tricks do more to set-up a scene than all the CGI and expensive sets in the world. I also have to say that as long as the story is strong and the production work good enough to add to rather than detract from the story, then I'm happy.
Too many times, the scenes on Enterprise fail because I think Berman and crew did an absolute dismal job on setting the period of the show. This show is supposed to take place before kirk yet, at-a-glance I have problems placing it anywhere before any of the TOS Movies: this is a problem. If you are trying to set up a movie in the 1920s, having a 2001 Corvette show up in the frame is going to be a bit jarring. This happens to me whenever I see the NX01 on screen, which get in the way of me enjoying the show. There are other issues in the show where I have a problem with Berman and company being a bit revisionist as well...for one thing, most of the crew on board the Enterprise act like they have been in the Federation for years yet the UFP doesn't exist yet, another thing that gets in my way of enjoying the show, and I'm hoping this is something that gets addressed in future eps.
So for me, I just find Farscape a better fit for it's setting. A hint, folks: life is a soap-opera. Sometimes it's nice to see your characters be true to themselves and not act in ways you expect of your typical protagonist. Farscape excels here, while Enterprise still feels like a fish out of water.
Despite this, I hope it gets the standard 7 year run. If Voyager did, then Enterprise damned well should. With Farscape gone, the amount of even passably decent shows on TV is dwindling at a precarious rate.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The reason they were canceled is obvious... (Score:4, Interesting)
As for why it was canceled? Face it people. Scifi and USA Networks isnt Paramount with its huge cash reserves. It takes money. While Paramount can keep up with the costs, SCiFi cant. All those CGI effects, costumes, salaries, Puppets, etc..all cost money.
I hate it. I wish they didnt cancel it. But SciFi can actually make MORE money rerunning POPULAR scifi shows and have fans watch then make a new series or new season.
Think about it. They get money for the commercials and stuff for simply reruning a show that was already made or has already paid for it self.So instead of spending money on it, they can start making money. I think they simply figured 88 epsiodes are enough backlog to show reruns and have the fans keep coming back out of nastalgia.
sad sad. Witchblade is canceled too!! Cause its TNT. Sad. Cause a cable TV isnt as big as Paramount or not enough money..original and great shows get cancled.
Witchblade,
First wave,
etc..
now..Frascape.
Caitlin Kiernan has contact and action lists... (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.caitlin-r-kiernan.com/journal.h
Mailbox Full (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Mailbox Full (Score:2)
Re:Mailbox Full (Score:2)
She sure seems appropriate, since it seems they've taken the ax to the better programming after her arrival. Granted, Vivendi Universal has had it's financial problems with Messier having been at the helm (since dumped) but cost cutting of original programming, if that's what's going on, makes no sense. Why take one's higher rated programs off. Does it lower some costs? Sure. But it also makes Sci-Fi into just another run-of-the-mill cable channel with reruns. It certainly lowers the value... something I'd think they wouldn't want to do since I'm guessing a lot of the subsidiaries (possibly the whole USA net group and Universal group) may be back on the block. Maybe they could save costs by eliminating her position. I think USA would be better back in the hands of Diller and Universal back in the hands of the Bronfman's. I'm guessing they could both get them back at a lot less than they sold them to Vivendi for in the first place. (After all, they've taken a beating on Vivendi stock, that's for sure!)
Time for the Slashdot Channel (Score:3, Interesting)
yeah, it wouldn't have much original programming, but i imagine it would be the best mix of reruns and syndicated shows available. and with this crowd, a lot of sci-fi and classic thinking-person's shows (ooh! a channel that would show "The Prisoner" would get my vote)
maybe with enough karma-minded contributing viewers, it would have enough clout and advertisers to afford to get some original shows produced...
*shrug*
it's an idea. not my best...
Re:Time for the Slashdot Channel (Score:4, Funny)
I dunno, I've seen that Goatse pic enough times already.
Re:Time for the Slashdot Channel (Score:2, Funny)
SciFi == timid management (Score:2, Interesting)
Frill. They are the SciFi channel! Space shows are they're bread and butter!
The problem with television is that relatively new emerging networks (Fox is another example) is their history:
Hmmm... Lots of traditional businesses follow a similar path now that I think of it...
Solution?
I Predicted This! (Score:3, Offtopic)
My theory for the past 10 years has been that there is an inevitable tendency for any given TV network or channel to become exactly like all the others. New, focused channels may pop up, or old ones may refocus, but those are momentary spikes, and the general direction will remain unchanged.
Remember when MTV actually had music? Or when VH1 did? Now they both mostly have crappy reality shows and cheesy documentaries.
Remember when TNN was The Nashville Network? Even if you weren't a country fan, you had to respect the attention they gave to their target demographic, with "Dukes of Hazzard" and "Dallas" marathons, NASCAR, outdoor shows, and the Grand Ol' Opry. The first bad sign was when they started showing Star Trek. Nashville? Huh? Now they're the "National Network," and last time I checked there were no fishing shows or overalls in sight.
CNN used to be all news; now it's mostly talk shows that are vaguely news-related. Fox and WB used to be hip and edgy, and now they could give CBS a strong challenge for the snooze market most nights. Heck, even the Weather Channel has shows now!
And soon we'll all pine for the days when Sci-Fi actually had science fiction. I'll go out on a limb and predict that they'll soon change their name to "SF," then shortly thereafter start pretending that it stands for something completely different, like -- I don't know -- "Serious Favorites: The Best Shows Everybody Likes!"
When we were told we'd have 500 channels of programming, nobody ever bothered to mention that they'd all be showing reruns of Law & Order and Friends.
Re:I Predicted This! (Score:2)
Re:I Predicted This! (Score:2)
Re:I Predicted This! (Score:3, Insightful)
A Clue... (Score:2, Interesting)
They gave no clue that they were cancelling Farscape, but it was clear that the relationship with Farscape was different then many of their other shows. Basically a number of their shows are produced by either themselves or by a sister company under Vivendi Universal, but Farscape is not.
Thus they have very few rights to Farscape, basically first broadcast rights. They may have decided that they needed more rights or control to the properties that they do broadcast then what Farscape was offering. Think about it, with the Dune miniseries, they own it completely. They get money from every DVD, every overseas sale, etc.
This adds up, and may be what makes them believe they'll make more money producing their own or their sister companies shows then continuing to promote Farscape which owns all such subsidiary rights.
BTW, re: the comments about starting in January being a bad sign, the executives also said in the panel that they don't try to do new stuff in the fall like the other networks. Instead, they counter-program, and thus introduce new mini-series and events in December when most networks are doing their first reruns, and introduce new shows in January and Summer when the momentum for network shows is down.
-- Herder of Cats
Does this NOT make sense to anyone else? (Score:5, Interesting)
On top of that, SCIFI doesn't seem (from my brief research and the recollection of the credits) to have anything to do with production, they seem merely to purchase the show for "broadcast". What I understand is that Jim Henson Productions owns the show (characters, plots, elements, etc). So if JH owns the show, why would SCIFI cancelling the show cause JH and the production company to tear down sets when apparently the show runs on several other channels/stations in other countries (like BBC2 in England, FoxTel in Australia, etc).
While SCIFI has a history of cancelling good shows, and I can't completely discount this as rumor/hoax the story just doesn't make a whole lot of sense, and there is no press release or the like that I can find on a credible site.
If you do believe that the story is true and SCIFI is indeed cancelling FarScape, then I suggest that along with your letters/calls/emails/faxes to the SCIFI headquarters, that you also write/contact the programming managers at some other stations, just in case.
HBO comes to mind, they are a major force in commercial-free original series, and they currently lack a SciFi based show. In order to compete with Odyssey 5 and Jeremiah on ShowTime (don't they also show SG-1?), HBO might very well be willing to pick up FarScape along with the installed viewer base. A letter writing campaign to them might better scure the future of FarScape in the event of cancellation by SciFi Network and cesssation of production by Henson, et al.
Re:Does this NOT make sense to anyone else? (Score:2)
Re:Does this NOT make sense to anyone else? (Score:2)
Just got back from the wrap party (Score:5, Informative)
Tonight I was checking Fark.com literally as I was about to go out the door and saw that we'd been cancelled... my jaw just *dropped*. I couldn't believe it, the show was literally our lives for the last three years...
The mood at the party was pretty good, a lot of sadness - I mean sci-fi broke the news the DAY before the wrap party, everyone was still reeling. We'd all known that season 5 was an on-paper "lock" but we knew there was a chance it might not happen. But overall people were in a cool state of mind, nothing like this had ever been done in Sydney before and it's been a hell of a ride. Everyone involved with the show is so happy to have been a part of it, for me it was my first job in the industry after quitting the IT world, and even when it got tough I'm so grateful to have gotten the opportunity, and I've made a lot of good friends to boot.
Brain Henson explained that it had almost made it to at least 13 eps for season 5 but in the end he just couldn't sell it. Man, I'm numb (of course that could be the after effects of the party) It turned out to be a damn good party though, the gag reel had been hastily re-cut to include some nice moments in light of the news, but it went down well - Anthony Simcoe as D'Argo and Wayne Pygram as Scorpious bring the house down every year with their totally in-character bloopers, this year was no expection. I know the show was not to everyone's taste, hell sometimes I didn't go to the screenings myself, but it's a great offbeat show, and if you liked it enough; as Ben Browder, David Kemper and Richard Manning explained in the chat, send (polite!) letters to sci-fi, or call, and let them know.
Ok drunken ramble mod /off going to go watch the sun come up :-)
Re:Just got back from the wrap party (Score:2)
Is there any way for the fans to see these?
Re:Just got back from the wrap party (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Just got back from the wrap party (Score:2)
Here are the rumors (Score:2)
Re:Second largest show? (Score:5, Insightful)
I am also with the people who have commented that season 4 wasn't worth the time I spent watching it.
That's just my opinion, yours is yours.
-Rusty
Re:Second largest show? (Score:2, Funny)
Cost-cutting (Score:2, Funny)
TV shows with stories (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem is that Farscape had an involved story (unlike other TV shows). That's what made it good. But you needed to see all the episodes to make any sense of what was happening.
Combine that with expensive, high quality production and the most incompetent marketing department in history and you have a huge money hole.
They needed world wide distribution to make their money back, but their God damn incompetent marketing dept. couldn't understand that you have to treat a program like this differently than Bonanza.
They wouldn't let outside networks get season 1 & season 2 episodes without which the series made no sense!
100% incompetent marking.
100%
Re:My idea of a SciFi channel. (Score:2)
Re:The fourth season (Score:3, Interesting)
But Season 4 has just blown, hitting what I think was its low point with "John Quixote."
But I'm easy. If they would throw me a bone with something as good as "The Flax" or "Crackers Don't Matter," I'd be right back in front of my tee vee.
(God, I'm a geek. Quoting all these episode titles, I sound like Comic Book guy. Time to go soak up some real life.)
Re:Where is the proof? (Score:2)
Re:I'm only mildly surprised (Score:2)
I like farscape, I've found that the farscape fans generally suck.
Re:Was Filmed in Australia but too exe now. (Score:2)
Re:Speaking of Sci-fi...Enterprise is back on Sept (Score:2)