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The Remaining Episodes of “Selfie” Will Be on Hulu

November 25, 2014
Uncategorized
abc, hulu, selfie

(via The Hollywood Reporter)

If you’re a fan of the short lived Selfie with Karen Gillan and John Cho, you’ll be able to get some closure by watching the rest of the first and only season on Hulu.

If you read everything we post here at The Comedy Bureau, this move should come as no surprise to you, especially given our thoughts that we posted yesterday on comedy at broadcast networks being assuredly diminished week by week.

It would almost seem as if the Internet has been made into the “land of misfit toys” for comedy programming that networks like NBC and ABC don’t want.

What Has Happened to Comedy on Broadcast Networks? (Hint: Lots of Canceling)

November 25, 2014
Uncategorized
a to z, abc, arrested development, big bang theory, black-ish, cbs, comedy central, community, cristela, fox, franklin and bash, fx, fxx, john stamos, key & peele, last comic standing, last man on earth, louie, manhattan love story, mindy project, nbc, new girl, portlandia, selfie, sullivan and son, the-simpsons, transparent, two and a half men, unbreakable kimmy schmidt, veep

It would be a little premature to say that there’s writing on the wall, but comedy definitely seems like it is playing second fiddle (or almost no fiddle at all) to hour long dramas at NBC, ABC, CBS, and Fox. Comedy is currently flourishing on cable and online and, perhaps, that is where episodic comedy, wholly, is headed. 

This TV season alone, freshman comedies Selfie, A to Z, Manhattan Love Story, and Bad Judge have been canceled along with relative new comers The Millers.

Community, Arrested Development, and now The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, which had a series order from NBC but didn’t even make it to air, have moved from TV networks to online streaming services.

Just yesterday, it was announced ABC also scrapped a sitcom they had already ordered to series, Members Only starring John Stamos.

Bloggers and John Mulaney alike keep talking about whether Mulaney will last on Fox. On top of all of that, there are rumors that NBC has halted production on Last Comic Standing after it already had brought it back from the dead.

We’re not saying broadcast networks have drawn a hard line on in the sand (yet) prohibiting comedy from their airwaves. Cristela, black-ish, and Brooklyn Nine-Nine have found success just starting out and the networks have a few comedy mainstays like Modern Family, The Big Bang Theory, and Two and Half Men. New Girl and The Mindy Project have also seemed to fared well in their tenure at Fox. Also, cable networks TBS and TNT have recently canceled Sullivan & Son and Franklin & Bash, respectively.

Still, this last couple of years have seen an unprecedented shift of the comedy genre as an aggregate on TV from going live on air to every household with a TV on a weeknight to niche cable networks and various online entities ranging anywhere from Netflix to YouTube to Amazon. Key & Peele, Louie, Portlandia, Veep, Transparent, and Children’s Hospital are all just a few perfect examples of this new paradigm.

The future for comedy on TV and the behemoths of television does have yet to be decided. The highly anticipated Last Man on Earth from Chris Miller and Phil Lord starring Will Forte is premiering next year. Networks, like CBS, are starting to get on board with their own streaming service. 

What is clear in the current TV landscape, above all, is that the Internet isn’t going away and, because of that, viewers can watch whatever they want whenever they want to watch it. Thus, people will watch their favorite Key & Peele sketch as many as times as they can stand, binge watch The Simpsons via The Simpsons World app/site, consume as much media that exists online of their favorite comedians (i.e. web series, podcasts, stand-up clips, etc.), and do so at any time of any day in any place versus Thursdays at 8 at home,

In such an environment, it’s much harder than it used to be to launch a broad franchise sitcom that lasts 10 seasons and lives on in syndication, which has been the network TV model for comedy for decades. So, for now, as NBC chairman Bob Greenblatt poignantly remarked during Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt’s move to Netflix, “…we have a very drama-heavy midseason schedule.”

ABC Cancels “Selfie” and New Network Comedies Seem Like They Really Can’t Catch a Break

November 7, 2014
Uncategorized
abc, cancelled, selfie

(via The Hollywood Reporter)

Must like their film studio counterparts, TV networks are looking for tentpole franchises in their series, hopefully having something that will make it past six seasons and eventually go on to syndication. Series such as Seinfeld, Friends, and The Office running for so long have given credence to this dynamic when it comes to sitcoms.

However, with the explosion of niche comedy and comedy in general via the Internet, the idea of the long-running half hour sitcom seems much harder to start these days. Already in this latest TV season, Manhattan Love Story, A to Z, and Bad Judge have been cancelled.

ABC has added to that list with their axing of Selfie. 

There weren’t that many freshman comedies to begin with at the big broadcast networks this fall, leaving us to wonder how marginalized scripted comedy currently is at NBC, ABC, CBS, Fox and how much more it will go that way.

Carl Reiner One Ups the Selfie By Making the Selfishie

July 23, 2014
Uncategorized
carl reiner, conan, conan o'brien, selfie, selfishie, team coco

Even at 92, Carl Reiner is keeping up the ever changing tides of the Internet. When appearing on Conan last night, he took the first ever “selfishie” with Conan O’Brien and we wouldn’t be surprised at all if it caught on.

Watch and see what it exactly is here.

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