MartinRoth
Regular
You seem to know what you are talking about,
Thanks. Sometimes it's good to know that there are people to whom that matters...
You seem to know what you are talking about,
Since there is an audience at The Sci-Fi Channel which has demonstrated an interest in watching B5-universe shows, there might be a sizable enough audience out there who'd want to see a story that was started, get finished. After all, who likes listening to only the first line of a song, reading only the first chapter of a novel, or watching only the first 15 minutes of a movie?
Amazon puts excerpts up on their site, to act as an enticement, a tease, something that will cause people to order a book. When you order the book, they don't send you just the first chapter. They send you the whole thing. People like to finish a story. Making the excerpts available helps to create demand. What Sci-Fi is doing with the Crusade reruns is like showing only the first 15 minutes of a movie, over and over and over again, with zero hope of continuation.
Gees, could it possibly be that the reason for less than great ratings numbers for Crusade is the fact that everybody knows there's no continuation or ending? Who wants to start a story when they know for a fact that there is no continuation or ending? Answer: Only the people who watched it in the first place, who just want to experience something good again, those who appreciate what's there. The rest are going to feel bitten when they get to episode 13 and there is nothing else.
You know, this argument can be applied to Space: Above and Beyond. Or Earth 2. Or Prey. Or Strange World. Or Now and Again. Or any other defunct, short-lived sci-fi show that they've picked up over the years.
The only show that they've revived is Sliders, which they owned outright, and didn't really do well until it became part of their Friday Original Series along with Farscape.
Revival is a whole nother matter, and has to do with the ratings that Crusade *always* got on SciFi, even before Rangers aired.
I'm not lazy, taichidave, but I am too lazy to compile them all into one SUPER LONG post as Recoil wants. Instead, I do a reply to each, and I think it helps break 'em up.
Stargate Sg-1: Not quite true, KoshN. Stargate was picked up by scifi with the intention of making Season Six and after Showtime decided not to pick up its option for Season Six. In other words, it simply moved to another network and continued to air on more or less the same schedule. It was one of the smarter moves Scifi has made.
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