Curator's Note
Whether due to a particularly breezy pace or a distinctly sunny setting, many summer series become permanently connected with the season in which they premiere. This sort of seasonal synergy can result in summer success, but it also promotes a rigidity that threatens series which extend beyond their summer roots in subsequent years.
USA Network's Royal Pains (see Slide #2) is by necessity a show about summer: its premise, a concierge doctor who caters to both rich and poor patients in the Hamptons, would be impossible in other seasons, when the rich would be away from their summer homes. It is so connected to the season, in fact, that USA has been unwilling to schedule it at any other time: the series is the only original series in USA’s lineup which is exclusively scheduled during the summer season.
Burn Notice, which USA schedules in both summer and winter, is more seasonally neutral, but its ratings (see Slide #3) suffer when airing outside of its initial summer home. Its third season averaged 6.17 million live viewers in its summer episodes, but dropped to an average of 4.63 million when it returned in the winter. With increased competition, “summer shows” like Burn Notice are devalued, the same qualities which make them so synonymous with summer becoming a liability when compared with series “worthy” of being scheduled in the traditional television season.
However, this sort of rigid hierarchy has not always been the rule within television: Beverly Hills, 90210 started its second and third seasons in July during the early 1990s, while Survivor and The O.C. began as summer programming before transitioning into the fall/winter model. Summer was a space in which to find a foothold, to capture viewers during a less competitive period and then hopefully hold onto them in the following seasons, which USA has been quite successful with.
Series which work in the summer should work in other seasons: what seems synergistic in July would simply seem escapist in January. However, network resistance to true year-round scheduling (which is lessening somewhat – see Slide #4) leads to seasonal typecasting of those shows which debut in the summer months, which sits in direct opposition to the open access created by DVRs, DVDs and On Demand or online viewing.
Comments
Sunny times all year round
Between your post and Jeremy's, there's this weird sense of trying to parse out why shows are fitting for summer and why they're not (couldn't have organized you all better if I had tried).
One thing that strikes me is that for all the crying of broadcast dying, it still remains a potent audience draw, which is cable nets air their shows in the summer or winter, when the broadcasts step back from the schedules.
So, ultimately, what makes us say this show isn't a summer show and this show is? I think something like Burn Notice would be at home on a broadcast network all season long. After all, sunny doesn't stop in Miami, right, Hawaii Five-O?
loyalty, relativity, and summer stakes
Jeremy, I think your point about the distinction between cleverness on USA and stakes on the networks is right on point and well said. However, I wonder about viewer loyalty when talking about such distinctions in light of ratings. As always, I wish there were better metrics for understanding who is watching and how. From personal experience, when the summer shows I watch air during the winter, I usually DVR them then watch them during the weekend, which in some ways maintains them as summer escapist fare. Their scheduling sometimes pits them against network shows that draw similar audiences but also works against a smoothe transition from a primetime network show that works with dire straits and angst to a breezy USA show. (I had this issue winter Thursdays trying to keep up with both the angst-o-rama Supernatural and Burn Notice.)
Which all just goes to say that the issues Miles brings up in this post require a great deal of discussion. Certainty what's been said is very fertile ground for it. Thanks for bringing these issues and this information to light, Miles!
I’m not so certain that the
I'm not so certain that the definition of the content of a summer series applies anymore, for some of the reasons Charlotte brought up. First of all, summer series as a relatively new phenomenon (in the history of television). They came to be as a way to grab more of a market share when there was a huge 3-4 month gap in television. USA knew, as a cable network beginning to produce original programming, that it could grab a stronger market share and deliver more of an audience to advertisers when there was less competition, in the summer. Most cable networks followed the same format (FX, AMC). As the cable networks produced more and more programming that had already proven popular in the summer, it started to move to fall and spring (FX did this). Summer is a TV testing ground of sorts. Does Breaking Bad, Mad Men, Rescue Me or It's Always Sunny fit your light-hearted or escapist content definitions of a "summer series"? I just don't think the content approach is useful for defining what a summer series is. USA has defined itself as seeking a particular sort of original content, and they air it in the summer, but the other cable channels don't fit.
thanks for the post
Myles,
Thanks for the post. I'm not certain I agree with you, but it definitely has me thinking about if there are content qualifiers of a summer series. Really interesting and provocative . . . thanks.
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