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Why Blue Bloods was canceled


Grayfox54

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Posted

I've been a fan of Blue Bloods since the very beginning. Great show! Like many I was surprised that it got canceled this year after 14 very successful seasons. As it turns out, I wasn't the only one. The cast and crew were taken by surprise as well. They all wanted the show to continue and many tried hard to keep it going. So why did CBS cancel one of their most popular shows? Well, it seems that CBS decided that a show that promoted family values and supported police no longer fits in with their current "woke" thinking. So it had to go.聽 Screw SeeBS!聽馃が

https://www.outkick.com/culture/blue-bloods-aired-its-final-show-last-night-fans-emotional

https://www.outkick.com/culture/tom-selleck-rips-cbs-cancelling-blue-bloods-series

  • Angry 1
Posted

Tom Selleck tried hard to get it to another network (even a cable network) but CBS owns it and wouldn't sell it. Not only did they pitch one of their best rated shows in the bin, they intentionally buried it.

Posted

When a major network kills one of its most successful shows due to politics, it shows just how committed they are to the liberal agenda. Scary, ain't it?聽馃が

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

My wife likes this show. It is her favorite. She watches all the episodes and some of the old reruns on another network. It will be missed in our house.聽

Shame on CBS

Edited by pop pop
Posted

I'm guessing budget cuts came into play.聽 Networks are burning cash, and the talent density on Blue Bloods couldn't be cheap.聽 I'm also wondering if all the older, conservative tilt of the audience limited advertising revenue to offset the costs of the show.聽 Great ratings only matter if you can tell companies the people they want to buy their products are watching.

  • Like 1
Posted
51 minutes ago, btq96r said:

I'm guessing budget cuts came into play.聽 Networks are burning cash, and the talent density on Blue Bloods couldn't be cheap.聽 I'm also wondering if all the older, conservative tilt of the audience limited advertising revenue to offset the costs of the show.聽 Great ratings only matter if you can tell companies the people they want to buy their products are watching.

I'm sure that there is a good parcel of truth in the above post-- $$$ Talks and keeps the lights on...

Posted
2 hours ago, btq96r said:

I'm guessing budget cuts came into play.聽 Networks are burning cash, and the talent density on Blue Bloods couldn't be cheap.聽 I'm also wondering if all the older, conservative tilt of the audience limited advertising revenue to offset the costs of the show.聽 Great ratings only matter if you can tell companies the people they want to buy their products are watching.

Blur Bloods was constant money maker for 14 years and was the #11 rated show, behind several big sports programs, at the time it was killed.聽

If you read the articles, the entire cast and crew offered to take a 25% pay cut. Offer refused.

Selleck tried to buy the show and take it to another network. CBS wouldn't sell. CBS made up their minds that the show had to completely die and nothing was gonna change that.聽

Posted
10 hours ago, Grayfox54 said:

Blur Bloods was constant money maker for 14 years and was the #11 rated show, behind several big sports programs, at the time it was killed.聽

If you read the articles, the entire cast and crew offered to take a 25% pay cut. Offer refused.

Selleck tried to buy the show and take it to another network. CBS wouldn't sell. CBS made up their minds that the show had to completely die and nothing was gonna change that.聽

Ratings don't always equal money.聽 Like I said, if you can't sell the advertising to high payers, then you're not generating money.

The article didn't talk about how much that 25% pay cut came out to, did it?聽 For someone has experienced as Tom Selleck, and Donnie Wahlberg, I can see being up there on a per episode basis, even after a 25% cut.

And if I'm CBS, I'm not selling the show either.聽 The residuals from having Blue Bloods in syndication and/or on streaming platforms is a way for them to keep revenue coming in without having to actually pay to produce more.聽 14 years is a crazy large catalog of episodes people will probably be willing to watch for a long time to come.聽 At this point, CBS may have just wanted to make money on their 14 years of investment without putting any more into it due to diminishing returns.

Posted
4 hours ago, btq96r said:

Ratings don't always equal money.聽 Like I said, if you can't sell the advertising to high payers, then you're not generating money.

The article didn't talk about how much that 25% pay cut came out to, did it?聽 For someone has experienced as Tom Selleck, and Donnie Wahlberg, I can see being up there on a per episode basis, even after a 25% cut.

And if I'm CBS, I'm not selling the show either.聽 The residuals from having Blue Bloods in syndication and/or on streaming platforms is a way for them to keep revenue coming in without having to actually pay to produce more.聽 14 years is a crazy large catalog of episodes people will probably be willing to watch for a long time to come.聽 At this point, CBS may have just wanted to make money on their 14 years of investment without putting any more into it due to diminishing returns.

How does ratings not equal money?聽 Ratings are what gets advertisers to buy time to advertise their product.聽 Ratings equals people watching their commercials.聽 Now, the demographics of those ratings will surely play into it, but unless you are trying to sell Bud Light to a Blue Blood crowd, you will get as much return on your investment there than an equally rated show.聽聽

Posted

Number 1 show in a crappy time slot is not worth nearly as much as the Number 2 or 3 show in a premium time slot. Also live TV ratings are not worth nearly as much as they once were in this day and age of streaming. I have not had cable or watched live TV in over a decade now.聽I have not watched a TV commercial in years either. The only person I know that does watch live TV is my 86 year old Father-in-Law. He has no desire to adapt to streaming.聽

I don't watch new release stuff in general. If all seasons or at least multiple seasons are available streaming I will give a show a try to see if it grabs my attention. I typically watch all episodes and seasons of one show at a time. Once it is done I find the next one to start on. If there are a lot of episodes or season it may take me many months to finish a series since I only watch TV a few times a week. 聽

All that said, I have not watched this show but 14 years is a good long run. In my experience anything past 5 or 6 seasons has probably gone to crap anyway.

Most major "prime time" network shows follow the same arc. They get a great pitch and pilot picked up by a network. Some big name actors are onboard and the top tier writers are fully engaged. The dialog is sharp and the story is well written. Like most creative folks, writers are addicts, they are chasing the hit, the next exciting or challenging project. After 3 or 4 seasons the story starts getting stale. The writers are not getting that same dopamine hit and they move on to the next project or creative outlet. They are not content cranking out the same work, for the same story, and the same characters for years on end. So junior writers and, quite frankly, lower talent writers step in to carry the series forward. They start more or less phoning it in or worse, forcing the story down strange paths not congruent with the original story. I prefer shows with a pre defined story arc. If the writers know what the end is when they start it is probably a more well constructed show. Not to say that all the dialog and every episode is written but if the outline is clear they can know if it is going to take 2, 5, or 10 seasons to tell the story. If the writers are figuring out what the plot of the next season is at the end of the last one it is probably time to hang it up and move on.

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