Re: Three Rivers - news, links, discussion - part 4
Posted: Mon May 18, 2009 10:51 am
When is Alex's movie due to be released? That will certainly help with the hype.
... forever in the Moonlight
http://www.moonlightaholics.com/
CBS has renewed only Ghost Whisperer and Cold Case (late last night for the latter). None of the CSIs have been renewed and neither have NCIS, The Mentalist, Criminal Minds, Flashpoint and Numbers. Eleventh Hour, the Unit and Without a Trace are all on the bubble. My guess is they're cancelling these last three shows but keeping the rest. WOT and 11th Hour are Jerry Bruckheimer productions so CBS might be picking up Miami Trauma to make up to Jerry Bruckheimer for the loss of these two.willing freshie wrote:That's interesting, Over. Wouldn't it be something if they dropped their CSI's and put both medical dramas on instead?Overdamoon wrote:Can I ask a dumb question? Has CBS officially renewed all of their 3 CSI shows yet? I know it's been assumed that they are locks but nothing had been announced that they were formally renewed yet. There's something in these articles below to take notes. The tv.com article listed the renewal status and that the CSI's fates are yet to be determined. (with CSI:NY looks less sure than the other two.) And the THRfeed article didn't bode well for both the original CSI and CSI: NY, besides the fact that the cast for these aged shows are expensive.
http://www.tv.com/story/14810.html?page=3
http://www.thrfeed.com/2009/05/finale-r ... hells.html
In an evening full of season finales, the closers for ABC's "Grey's Anatomy" and Fox's "Hell's Kitchen" notably climbed Thursday night, while CBS' "CSI" and NBC's "The Office" fell.
...In second, CBS' penultimate "Survivor" (12 million, 3.7) was on par, but "CSI" (14.4 million, 3.4) continued its descent this week, down 6%. ..
..."Grey's" and "CSI" used to be the Greek gods of primetime dramas doing battle on this Mount Olympus of time periods. Now the smoke has cleared and "Grey's" is king. There's been stories blaming Lawrence Fishburne for the decline of "CSI," but the ratings drop is more likely due to the departure of William Petersen than the addition of the actor who replaced him. Still, some cast freshening next season might make sense. And if the "Grey's" ending is any hint, the ABC medical drama could find itself navigating a cast shakeup similar to CBS' procedural.
Meanwhile, CBS' transplanted finale for "CSI: NY" (12.8 million, 3.0) placed second in the hour with a lower-than-usual number. ...![]()
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TBUP has a release date of 22nd January next year. At least that's the date they've said so far. No doubt that could change.bluedahlia3 wrote:I'm amazed that the Ghost Whisperer keeps hanging on. I know it has its fans but it also has a loud group of people jeering at it's concept. Go figure.
And I poked into The Back Up Plan thread. The movie will take about three months to film and then who knows how long before it's released.
Are we to assume that both TR and MT will be picked up ?'NCIS' spinoff, Alex O'Loughlin's 'Three Rivers' among anticipated CBS pickups
May 18, 2009, 08:55 AM | by Tanner Stransky
Categories: Television
In a weekend filled with the broadcast networks furiously renewing shows and greenlighting new fall series, Variety is reporting that CBS, which will officially unveil its fall 2009 line-up on Wednesday in New York City, has given the OK to five new dramas: The Good Wife, starring Julianna Margulies; Three Rivers, starring Moonlight alum Alex O'Loughlin; medical drama Miami Trauma starring Jeremy Northam; an untitled drama about U.S. Attorneys; and the much-anticipated NCIS spin-off starring Chris O'Donnell and LL Cool J. On the comedy side, Accidentally on Purpose, starring Jenna Elfman, is also expected to get the go ahead when the schedule is announced.
darlingcat wrote:Speaking of Google Alerts, this one just showed up from EW
Are we to assume that both TR and MT will be picked up ?'NCIS' spinoff, Alex O'Loughlin's 'Three Rivers' among anticipated CBS pickups
May 18, 2009, 08:55 AM | by Tanner Stransky
Categories: Television
In a weekend filled with the broadcast networks furiously renewing shows and greenlighting new fall series, Variety is reporting that CBS, which will officially unveil its fall 2009 line-up on Wednesday in New York City, has given the OK to five new dramas: The Good Wife, starring Julianna Margulies; Three Rivers, starring Moonlight alum Alex O'Loughlin; medical drama Miami Trauma starring Jeremy Northam; an untitled drama about U.S. Attorneys; and the much-anticipated NCIS spin-off starring Chris O'Donnell and LL Cool J. On the comedy side, Accidentally on Purpose, starring Jenna Elfman, is also expected to get the go ahead when the schedule is announced.
On Wednesday CBS should announce both the fall schedule and the shows it is picking up. So whichever shows are not on the fall schedule will be slotted as replacements. Initial orders are usually only for 13 episodes so any show (new or old) could be replaced mid season (or even before that if the show tanks like Viva Laughlin did last year).Mags wrote:Will CBS say which are fall pick ups and which are mid season or will CBS just say these are the shows we are picking up?