--
Mary Loomer Oliver (aka Erilar)
You can't reason with someone whose first line of argument is
that reason doesn't count. --Isaac Asimov
Erilar's Cave Annex: http://www.chibardun.net/~erilarlo�
I don't see anything in the listings to indicate that the commercial
networks are blowing off their primetime schedules for any Jackson-
related programming. Have you heard otherwise?
In addition, Tuesdays are the night for NOVA (reruns) and Nova
scienceNOW (new episodes). And, of course, "True Blood" on HBO.
I'm also seeing a bunch of new programs on the cable networks,
such as the premiere of "Warehouse 13" on PsyPhi.
Patty
--
aem sends...
> No TV next Tuesday for non-Jacko worshippers.
What do you mean?
Brian
--
Day 153 of the "no grouchy usenet posts" project
[extraneous quotage clipped]
>Patty Winter wrote:
>>
>> I don't see anything in the listings to indicate that the commercial
>> networks are blowing off their primetime schedules for any Jackson-
>> related programming. Have you heard otherwise?
>>
>Local news here did say all 3 networks would cover it, about like a
>state funeral.
The memorial service is in the late morning (California time). Have
you heard anything about the networks repeating it in the evening?
So far, as I noted, the listings (and their websites) show normal
programming on Tuesday night.
Patty
Let's see - even if network Primetime gets nuked, I'll record at least
"Make It or Break It" and "Raising the Bar" on Monday, and "Warehouse
13" will still premiere on Tuesday on Psly-Phy. (And I work late on
Tuesday, anyway.)
So, I should be covered... :)
> erilar wrote:
>
> > No TV next Tuesday for non-Jacko worshippers.
>
> What do you mean?
>
Well, I like to listen to news shows when I'm working on something in
the house during the day, and there won't be any.
> In article <7bc3gjF...@mid.individual.net>,
> "Default User" <defaul...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>> erilar wrote:
>>
>>> No TV next Tuesday for non-Jacko worshippers.
>>
>> What do you mean?
>>
>
> Well, I like to listen to news shows when I'm working on something in
> the house during the day, and there won't be any.
>
One local radio station has announced it will carry the "event". I
suspect others will too.
From there, I can certainly imagine the station rerunning it in the
evening "as a special favor to you listeners", if for no other reason
than they've been reairing older shows to fill in during holidays lately.
That may not be the case for TV, but I suspect it may. "It's not
fair to the people who can't watch during the day". At the very least,
there will be recaps during all the news and entertainment news shows in
the evening.
Michael
Is there anything on network TV during the summer? 99% of the stuff in
my DVR is on cable.
--
Barry Margolin, bar...@alum.mit.edu
Arlington, MA
*** PLEASE don't copy me on replies, I'll read them in the group ***
For the summer, the broadcast networks mostly have reality and gameshows.
However, the networks do/did have some firstrun scripted programming on:
ABC: Better Off Ted, Samantha Who?, Surviving Suburbia, The Goode Family,
The Unusuals, Pushing Daisies, Eli Stone, Dirty Sexy Money
CBS: Harper's Island
CW: Valentine
NBC: The Listener, Kings, The Philanthropist, Merlin
FOX: Mental
The major broadcast nets will air the service live, no primetime
reruns.
Everett W.
> In article <7bc3gjF...@mid.individual.net>,
> "Default User" <defaul...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > erilar wrote:
> >
> > > No TV next Tuesday for non-Jacko worshippers.
> >
> > What do you mean?
> >
>
> Well, I like to listen to news shows when I'm working on something in
> the house during the day, and there won't be any.
I think I'd have to say that such a condition doesn't quite equate to
"no TV next Tuesday".
Brian
--
Day 154 of the "no grouchy usenet posts" project
There's a new episode of "Deadliest Catch" for me on Tuesday.
Try C-Span. In theory, they wouldn't be doing MJ coverage.
I heard somewhere recently (I think it was on TV) that nobody watches
C-Span, so they can do whatever they like.
Michael
Yeah, hyperbole much?
Patty
> "Barry Margolin" <bar...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
> > Is there anything on network TV during the summer?
>
> For the summer, the broadcast networks mostly have reality and gameshows.
> However, the networks do/did have some firstrun scripted programming on:
>
> ABC: Better Off Ted, Samantha Who?, Surviving Suburbia, The Goode Family,
> The Unusuals, Pushing Daisies, Eli Stone, Dirty Sexy Money
Does DSM have unaired episodes left?
> CBS: Harper's Island
> CW: Valentine
> NBC: The Listener, Kings, The Philanthropist, Merlin
> FOX: Mental
Notice that about 75% of this airs Fri-Sun. They're not putting
burn-off shows during the week, presumably because they can get bigger
audiences for the reality crap.
Yeah - of these only "The Listener" airs on Thurs. (and it's getting
*killed*), and Mental (and Better of Ted?) airs on Wednesday.
> They're not putting
> burn-off shows during the week, presumably because they can get bigger
> audiences for the reality crap.
In CBS's case, at least, they actually get bigger ratings for scripted
series reruns.
Not sure, but I think there are 3 episodes. Marked my calendar for July
18th!
bj
4 more firstrun episodes to air starting July 18th.
>> CBS: Harper's Island
>> CW: Valentine
>> NBC: The Listener, Kings, The Philanthropist, Merlin
>> FOX: Mental
>
> Notice that about 75% of this airs Fri-Sun. They're not putting
> burn-off shows during the week, presumably because they can get bigger
> audiences for the reality crap.
Yep. TV viewers prefer reality crap and reruns to original scripted
programming...especially if the scripted programming is known to be burnoff.
For whatever reason, many/most TV fans are scared to be caught watching
something that has been cancelled.
> On Jul 6, 4:57�pm, Barry Margolin <bar...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
> > In article <h2so27$2p...@news.motzarella.org>,
> > �"Obveeus" <Obve...@aol.com> wrote:
> > > "Barry Margolin" <bar...@alum.mit.edu> wrote:
> > > > Is there anything on network TV during the summer?
> >
> > > For the summer, the broadcast networks mostly have reality and gameshows.
> > > However, the networks do/did have some firstrun scripted programming on:
> >
> > > ABC: �Better Off Ted, Samantha Who?, Surviving Suburbia, The Goode Family,
> > > The Unusuals, Pushing Daisies, Eli Stone, Dirty Sexy Money
> > > CBS: �Harper's Island
> > > CW: �Valentine
> > > NBC: �The Listener, Kings, The Philanthropist, Merlin
> > > FOX: �Mental
> >
> > Notice that about 75% of this airs Fri-Sun. �
>
> Yeah - of these only "The Listener" airs on Thurs. (and it's getting
> *killed*), and Mental (and Better of Ted?) airs on Wednesday.
Mental moved to Friday.
> > They're not putting
> > burn-off shows during the week, presumably because they can get bigger
> > audiences for the reality crap.
>
> In CBS's case, at least, they actually get bigger ratings for scripted
> series reruns.
I've always liked that CBS reruns their Sunday night dramas in the
summer, because during the regular season they get pushed around by
Sunday afternoon football.
No wonder I missed last week's episode!!
I believe someone suggested that we'd only have the Staples extravaganza
today. The Today Show BEGAN with Jacko at 7 AM and so did CNN.
Fortunately I discovered a branch was messing up my outdoor radio
antenna extension and now Minnesota Public Radio is coming in
beautifully, which had been a daytime problem despite the fact that it's
FM, so I listened to Morning Edition, which not only HAD news, but had
NO commercials. I do love PBS!
> erilar wrote:
>
> > In article <7bc3gjF...@mid.individual.net>,
> > "Default User" <defaul...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >
> > > erilar wrote:
> > >
> > > > No TV next Tuesday for non-Jacko worshippers.
> > >
> > > What do you mean?
> > >
> >
> > Well, I like to listen to news shows when I'm working on something in
> > the house during the day, and there won't be any.
>
> I think I'd have to say that such a condition doesn't quite equate to
> "no TV next Tuesday".
I should have added "morning". However, there's nothing in the
evening I care to watch either. There are, I hear, a few shows out
there I might like at inconvenient times, but none I've sampled enough
to bother to tape except Masterpiece Mysteries.
I love PBS, too, but they have nothing to do with Morning Edition
or any other program on Minnesota Public Radio. (Unless MPR runs
the audio feed of PBS's "NewsHour," which some public radio stations
do.) Your adulation in this case would be properly directed at NPR,
APM, and other providers of public radio programming. APM, by the
way, is an outgrowth of MPR that produces "A Prairie Home Companion"
and many other popular radio shows.
Patty
> In article <h2t8l1$gcr$1...@news.eternal-september.org>,
> "Obveeus" <Obv...@aol.com> wrote:
>
>> "erilar" <dra...@chibardun.net.invalid> wrote:
>>> Well, I like to listen to news shows when I'm working on something in
>>> the house during the day, and there won't be any.
>>
>>
>> Try C-Span. In theory, they wouldn't be doing MJ coverage.
>
> I believe someone suggested that we'd only have the Staples extravaganza
> today. The Today Show BEGAN with Jacko at 7 AM and so did CNN.
> Fortunately I discovered a branch was messing up my outdoor radio
> antenna extension and now Minnesota Public Radio is coming in
> beautifully, which had been a daytime problem despite the fact that it's
> FM, so I listened to Morning Edition, which not only HAD news, but had
> NO commercials. I do love PBS!
>
Apparently ABC will have two hours tonight about the event. Barbara
Walters will interview the family at 9pm, then at 10pm something else.
I hear Robert Macnamara died yesterday. The only place I noticed that (I
don't tend to watch the tv news that much) was on the page for "Fresh
Air", where they said they'd rerun a 1995 interview with him, and then
some related older piece.
Michael
> I love PBS, too, but they have nothing to do with Morning Edition
> or any other program on Minnesota Public Radio. (Unless MPR runs
> the audio feed of PBS's "NewsHour," which some public radio stations
> do.) Your adulation in this case would be properly directed at NPR,
> APM, and other providers of public radio programming. APM, by the
> way, is an outgrowth of MPR that produces "A Prairie Home Companion"
> and many other popular radio shows.
You're right; I meant NPR, but I also like many public TV shows.
I'm wondering whether some movie network might rerun "The Fog of
War" soon, but so far I'm not finding it in a search of the upcoming
TV listings.
Patty
I've never seen it. I'd be interested.