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Television Media

Firefly Likely to be Cancelled 644

rscrawford writes "Zap2It is reporting that Firefly, one of the best science fiction shows to make it on to network television in recent years, is going on hiatus: read, getting canceled. Well, it was an interesting, well-written, provocative and intelligent show on Fox; is anyone therefore surprised that they're doing away with it? It lasted a lot longer than I thought it would. At least they're going to show the original 2-hour pilot in December. (And yet, somehow, Just Shoot Me continues...)"
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Firefly Likely to be Cancelled

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  • by slycer9 ( 264565 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:42PM (#4772526) Journal
    It makes you think to follow the plotlines, there are no 'magic' answers to every problem, the characters have real-life type problems, and the dialog was halfway intelligent. Who'd want to watch that when we've got David Spade?! Seriously though, look how successful lowbrow stuff tends to be, versus 'the other stuff'. How long did Roseanne run?
    • It just wasn't my cup of tea. I like SF shows, but this one just didn't do it for me. My reasons for not liking it shouldn't matter to you, so they won't be listed. If you liked it, more power to ya. In a perfect world, we'd all get to see the shows we like. Anyway, you guys should already know that "quality" in art is subjective. One man's treasure, etc.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by _repressor_ ( 459527 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:44PM (#4772539) Homepage
    What about this [scifi.com]?

    "The only question is whether they're given that time. And now Fox is getting a good response to the episodes we're putting out, and so they're looking to see, well, if they do give us a bit of a push, can we build some and get a base that's big enough for them to justify keeping us around."

    Rumour has it that they're trying to find a different (better?) timeslot to air the show in, not cancel it.
    • A new timeslot would be great...Thats what I was hoping for.

      I can see though why they put it in that slot...I mean, whats the probability that the average viewer is going to be doing anything on a fri. night =P
    • by Twirlip of the Mists ( 615030 ) <twirlipofthemists@yahoo.com> on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:16AM (#4772721)
      The two reports aren't actually inconsistent. Fox placed an order for two additional episodes, and committed to air the original two-hour pilot that they initially rejected, but there will be no more Firefly episodes after that until further notice. That means that Fox will either go to the producers with notes-- which the producers can either accept or decline, but declining will probably mean trying to find another outlet for the show-- or they'll let it die.

      Firefly, even with fairly poor ratings, has been a pretty profitable show for Fox so far; advertisers love the demographic, so they're going to keep buying ads as long as Fox can keep the viewership at a reasonable level. If they can just get the show off of Friday nights, and out of the Futurama trap (the "let's preempt the show four weeks out of every six and see what the ratings look like" game), this show could become a success.

      Also ironic: the least-watched episode of Firefly (I don't remember which it was) was still seen by more eyeballs than an average episode of Buffy. It's not that Firefly sucks, or that it doesn't have an audience; it's that Fox has fairly high expectations for it. Which is pretty uppity, really, coming from the network that brought you "Who Wants to Marry the Pope" and "When Police Chases Attack."
    • What I can't believe is that they are airing the utter shit otherwise known as Andromeda (aka Hercules in Space) in the timeslot I usually GREATLY enjoy watching Firefly in. It saddens me that many scifi fans can't seem to expand their assumptions beyond the normal crap pretending to be scifi. The biggest complaint I hear? "It has sixshooters, how dumb"... the show is very well written, unfortunately the TV viewing public is apparently too clueless to get it. I don't know why that surprises me.

      Oh well, like I always say:

      TV is the enemy

  • Just Maybe ... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Snoopy77 ( 229731 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:48PM (#4772563) Homepage
    the show was not as good as you thought it was. How many times have we seen recently stories lamenting the demise of (insert sci-fi show) and how the networks just don't understand how good it was.

    Okay, maybe to a small minority (uber-geeks) it was great but you won't even get the whole /. crowd to agree it was good let alone the general public. It's time the /. crowd faced the facts ... the average joe would sooner watch Just Shoot Me than some weird sci-fi show.

    Yes, you are a minority and as such big business is not going to care too much about you when they axe the show you love and keep another show you detest but is loved by the masses.
    • sorry buddy, but this is the only show that both my girlfriend and I
      watched together. She thought the guys were cute and enjoyed the drama,
      and I liked the way it made me talk in a western accent for days
      afterwards.

      I really thought this show could become as big as any other. Too bad Fox
      routinely makes bad choices on good shows.
    • Re:Just Maybe ... (Score:2, Insightful)

      by nukey56 ( 455639 )
      The demographics will save it from the dumpster. Look at OSDN. Then look at Firefly. Same demographic. Geeks with purchasing power, many of which buy high-quality goods. Notice that there are less car commercials and more circuit city-esque ads up, as well as less shampoo commercials, for that matter. Geeks, whether or not they are collective themselves, form a highly profitable segment of the population, which investors know they cannot simply ignore.
    • Re:Just Maybe ... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Twirlip of the Mists ( 615030 ) <twirlipofthemists@yahoo.com> on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:26AM (#4772758)
      [Just maybe] the show was not as good as you thought it was.

      I think you have it backwards. You're equating good with popular. Sometimes the two go hand-in-hand; "The West Wing" is usually both good and popular. But often they're opposed to one another.

      Consider Buffy. By any reasonable measurement, Buffy is not a popular show. But it's widely lauded, and generally considered to be very good. (This season, especially, has had more than its fair share of tight writing and "goddamn!" moments.) Or Sorkin's last show, "Sports Night." These are not examples of wildly popular shows. But they're generally-- not universally, but generally-- considered to be very good shows.

      The difference is venue. Buffy has lasted umpty-bump seasons (six or seven, I think) because it lives on a third-tier network that can afford to take what it can get. Sports Night lasted two seasons on ABC out of pure charity; the ratings weren't good enough to justify it, but ABC gave it a shot anyway. Ultimately the show tanked because the numbers just weren't good enough for a top-tier national net.

      Firefly is on Fox: a shit network that thinks it's a big network. If Firefly were on any other second- or third-tier net, it would be a small-scale hit with a loyal niche audience in a valuable advertiser demo, and would probably last for five years or longer.

      In a perfect world, Mutant Enemy should take the whole thing in-house, produce episodes in DVD-resolution MPEG-4 format, and offer 'em for sale over the net for two bucks apiece. Never happen, though, because there's so fucking much piracy in the world, particularly so among Firefly's target audience, that the company would make about six dollars per episode and would go down faster than a two-bit whore.

      I'll take that ideal DRM system any time, fellas.
    • but without Sean Connery. I had trouble finding a character I could identify with, much less care about, and found it confusing - they have hyperdrives, but need people-power for 1800s technology for things like railroads, food, and mining. Much of the rest was cliché - in fact it seemed like a collection of them.

      Another thing was too many characters, all with some complex secret past that wouldn't be fully revealed until a 4th season. No one was on screen long enough to make enough points to be 3-d.

      I still have the episodes on my PVR, and may scan through them yet. Some of the later episodes seemed to begin to explain things.

      Many people seem to want to watch anything labled "sci-fi" that isn't really good, or has no science. And part of the problem is too much is PC so I doubt any real issue will be tackled which was the redeeming feature. Simply writing a plot that occurs in the future, or in a fantasy or spirtual meta-world doesn't redeem the plot, or the characters.

      And especially if there is bad science. Farscape at least had one character admit it (we can't have been shrunk since the oxygen molecules wouldn't shrink so we wouldn't be able to breathe). It is one thing to ask me to suspend disbelief. It is another thing to push absurdity or contradiction.

      SciFi is interesting because of the wonder of exploring new worlds.

      But I find many cartoons (and I don't mean Animé which almost always achieves a high level) better than something like FireFly, at least as it started.

      Firefly was followed by "John Doe" which was more interesting and had the scifi elements including a main character that knew everything about everything except himself and this created tension from the first episode. It replaced Dark Angel which also had a similar tension (though the last episode of the first season and the transition pegged my absurdity meter).

      Maybe it will pick up, or maybe it will be cancelled. But I don't think it will be the death of SciFi. They will need to wait for something more innovative and something that does take chances.
      • Re:Too Outland-ish (Score:5, Insightful)

        by hoggoth ( 414195 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @01:21AM (#4772969) Journal
        > ... the problem is too much is PC ...

        Too much PC?!

        You mean politically correct like kicking a bound bad-guy through your engines because you didn't like his attitude?

        Or do you mean politically correct like having a prostitute lauded as the most socially acceptable member of the crew?

        Or perhaps you meant politically correct like having the captain toss his first mate out the airlock for mutiny? (yeah-yeah I know he changed his mind before he died...)

        Or you must mean politically correct like having the "naive" female engineer's first meeting with the captain with her dress around her ankles as she screws the previous engineer?

        Yeah, you're right. This show is too timid to do anything that wouldn't be deemed "PC".

        You must be watching a different Firefly than I am. I am watching a show with the most 'real-life' characters I've seen on any TV show.

    • Re:Just Maybe ... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:51AM (#4772864) Homepage Journal
      the show was not as good as you thought it was [...] It's time the /. crowd faced the facts ... the average joe would sooner watch Just Shoot Me than some weird sci-fi show.


      Then why the hell did they buy it in the first place?

      Seriously, this is the thing that bothers people: They [insert evil MPAA member corporation's name] don't like the show, they don't give the show a good time slot, they don't promote it much, and they cancel it before its first season ends...why? Why bother? Why go through all this? Why not say "we're not interested" and let another network produce it?

      Are they teasing geeks for fun? Are they frustrating people outta some weird deal with satan?

      You're gonna say ratings huh? Then the question becomes: Are they really stupid enough to expect every single time slot to get excellent ratings?
      Lessee...when has Firefly been on? It played on a friday night at 8...but the first they showed wasn't the first in the story, so it was confusing because they didn't explain anything (the bit at the end when the big bad guy dies was neat though...and the bit where someone said "did he just go crazy and fall asleep?" had me laughing my ass off). The second time it played was a saturday morning at around 12:20 am. Yeah, so late a friday night that it was the following morning. The third week it was on at 8 again (lots of people expected it later and missed it). Then the week after it was on at 12:05 am. Then back at 8 for a couple of weeks, and then it didn't play at all (I had Happy Gilmour on Fox and on another channel that plays it it was replaced by cheap old Andromeda). And this week it isn't on either...

      Oh yeah, the bad ratings are really caused by the fact that its weird and to geeky, not because its nearly impossible to watch the damn thing huh?

  • Good riddance (Score:2, Insightful)

    by brunes69 ( 86786 )

    If this is an "excellent" sc-fi show nowadays, then I fear the entire genre has gone to hell and back. This show was pure crap. It was probably the most boring show on TV, next to Dr. Phil or some other BS. I had the displeasure of watching it twice, decide dot put it on my blacklist after that. Who likes this stuff? It didn't even seem like sci-fi at all, more like a soap-opera in a giant tin can. Oh sorry, its in "a boat". My mistake. (Somehow, calling the ship a "boat" is supposed to make it hip and cool or soemthing)

    • Can't agree with you more!

      Boring is it.

      I like other series like Andromeda mind you, they have some plot I like to it. Dare I say Babylon 5 (best one of all!)
    • Re:Good riddance (Score:3, Informative)

      If this is an "excellent" sc-fi show nowadays, then I fear the entire genre has gone to hell and back. This show was pure crap.

      Frankly... what the hell is your problem? You've posted N messages here saying that you think the show is crap. Fine, we heard you the first time. Now go away. You don't like it fine, but a lot of other people love it and want to see it continue.

      It didn't even seem like sci-fi at all, more like a soap-opera in a giant tin can.

      Ah, I see. You're one of those people who equate "sci-fi" with technobabble, special effects and machines that go "beep". Fine, go watch Star Trek. Personally I like shows that put a bit more emphasis on character development and, you know, the story.

    • Re:Good riddance (Score:4, Interesting)

      by lactose99 ( 71132 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @11:36AM (#4775060)
      Whatever. I've yet to find a sci-fi show on television with the depth of characters that Firefly has. Stargate SG1 is a lame rehash and completely wasteful extension of what was once a lame 2-hour movie. Farscape was alright, kinda, until they started using the same empty plots for every freakin episode. Don't even get me started with Babylon 5 or any of the Star Trek repeat-o-crap series that keep coming out. Its like Roddenberry won't die!

      Firefly really impressed me, and this is coming from someone who totally despises Buffy and other works of the producer. Every episode has been original, and the silent-pychological drama episodes are some of the best I've seen on television.
  • I even said so when it first aired.

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=40356&cid=4301 310 [slashdot.org]

    My prediction came true too. :)

    It just sucked on so many levels I don't know where to start. Oh, wait. The audience was supposed to immediatly get all the tounge and cheek humor etc etc right off the back. I mean after years of watching Buffy it shouldn't be a problem.

    Though that was exactly it! It was Buffy in space! Same style of humor, different setting. Why the hell should I waste my time watching this??? I'd rather watch re-runs of the 5th Wheel.

    I could write more about this piece of trash but instead I'll write another letter to SCIFI begging them to keep farscape. I'll be sure to mention to them that what's was firefly posing as their competition has decided to take a uh... vacation.

    www.savefarscape.com [savefarscape.com]

    Peter

    • by Twirlip of the Mists ( 615030 ) <twirlipofthemists@yahoo.com> on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:31AM (#4772779)
      The audience was supposed to immediatly get all the tounge and cheek humor etc etc right off the back. [...] I could write more about this piece of trash but instead I'll write another letter to SCIFI begging them to keep farscape.

      Anybody else catch the irony of this? At its best, Farscape was known to crack pretty wise, Peter.

      Look at the view from orbit. Farscape had strong characters, conflict, a little sexual tension, humor, and muppets. Firefly has (had, whatever) strong characters, conflict, a little sexual tension, and humor; it lacked muppets, but it more than made up for them with its strict "no sound in space" policy and absolutely kick-ass production values.

      Arguing that Firefly sucked while Farscape rocked just doesn't hold water. You're entitled to your opinion, natch, but don't try to dress it up as anything other than "I liked the Aussie show better."
  • by Alien54 ( 180860 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:52PM (#4772595) Journal
    They seem to have a mentality that says that anything that is not in the top ten, you cancel it.

    Too bad each network has a few dozen shows to run each week.

    This really gets back into the short term success syndrome that trashed Wall Street, among other things.

    • Is that so surprising? The networks don't care about putting out quality shows. Nor do they care about the shows fans. They care about selling advertising. Shows are just filler for the ads. A show could be the highest art ever created, but if no one is watching it, then advertising revenues will be low and the show will be pulled. It's not to their benefit to wait and hope a show catches on. For them it is better to replace it quickly and hope whatever fills that time slot will get more people watching ads.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:53PM (#4772597)
    I was browsing the Fox firefly boards (fox.com/firefly) today and a lot of people there know about this "hiatus" already.

    It's possible show has been cancelled but, AFAIK, the "official" word from Fox is that they are going to "heavily" promote the show in December (next new ep is Dec. 6), and see if the ratings pick up. If not, it's gone.

    Currently the show has 13 episodes filmed (I think, don't quote me) and a few more (up to 4) scripts ordered. If they were going to cancel it I think they would just come out and say it, rather then beat about the bush like they seem to be doing.

    It would be a shame, IMO, if they cancelled it. Some of the eps were not very good (including the pilot...) but others ("Out of Gas", "Our Mrs. Renyolds") were fantastic.
  • Did fox even try? (Score:5, Informative)

    by stefanlasiewski ( 63134 ) <(moc.ocnafets) (ta) (todhsals)> on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:54PM (#4772607) Homepage Journal
    Damn, I like the show. Flawed characters, dark universe, and plots that didn't always wrap up cleanly at the end of the hours. It's like the first season of Babylon 5, which ended up being the-best-scifi-show-ever (At least in my universe of non-cable TV).

    But I see that I'm in the minority.

    Fox never even tried:
    - They never showed the pilot, which probably explained some of the 'why' behind the creepy universe
    - Never seen an ad or promotion for the show outside of ./ . Honestly.
    - It's on Friday night. Most Friday night shows seem to fail. Firefly is the best show that I never watch. Why? I'm usually doing something that night, and I'm the idiot who always forgets to program his VCR, comes home at midnight and slaps his hand against his forehead.

    It never had a chance to get off the ground. But then, this is Fox: Beater of dead horses.
    • by Twirlip of the Mists ( 615030 ) <twirlipofthemists@yahoo.com> on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:35AM (#4772800)
      It's on Friday night. Most Friday night shows seem to fail.

      "Lise, when you get a little older, you'll realise that Friday is just another day between NBC's Must-See Thursday and CBS's Saturday night Crap-o-Rama."

      Once again, everything I really needed to know about life, I learned from "The Simpsons."
    • Re:Did fox even try? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by SnakeEyes ( 123104 )
      The problem with fox is multi-layered.

      First, they did not air the pilot episode, which right out of the gates, was a mistake. I have seen the pilot, entitled "Serenity" (thank you, Kazaa!) and let me tell you, it rocked. Who needs aliens when you have Reavers!!

      Second, the episodes that *have* been aired have all been out of order. I think the order they have showed them in is three, four, seven, eight, nine or something like that.
      The reason? Fox didn't "get" some of the episodes so they aired them in the order they liked.

      The terribly ironic part of this is that most people unanimously agree that the show got MUCH better as it went along. Lets face it, the first few episodes were mildly amusing at best, but the last 4 or so have kicked all sorts of ass.

      Finally, as for why the show has been placed on hiatus. Fox really liked the last episode aired ("Ariel") and the decision was made to get it out of friday night hell. It was going to be moved to the wednesday 9pm/ET timeslot. The problem? WB announced earlier this week that Angel (another Joss Whedon show) was getting that timeslot.

      Fox had no place to put it (Note: please please please make it monday at 9pm) for now so they have decided to place it on hiatus for now.

      I don't think its necessarily cancelled. It certainly would be a small tradgedy. First family guy now this.
  • The re-tooled fox schedule can be seen here [aint-it-cool-news.com].

    They leave hope that 'Firefly' may be moved to the Monday 9/8c timeslot at a later date. Hiatus doesn't always mean a show is canceled. 'Andy Richter Controls the Universe' is coming back soon after an extended break, for which I am thankful.

    -R
  • by very ( 241808 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:55PM (#4772613) Journal
    It is no surprise because it is not Malcolm in The Middle in the eye of FOX executives.

    FOX is not SCI-FI friendly.

    Remember FUTURAMA, it's been on the edge of cancellation almost every season.

    Doesn't matter iof FIREFLY is a good show, it is no TEMPTATION ISLAND!

    FOX is the greatest, FOR ME TO POOP ON!

    Only THE SIMPSONS remains.
  • I thought the 5th episode was rather good. The pilot, which you can download off Kazaa was really what they should have showed first. That really was well done compared to the first episode they showed (the train heist one).

    But really, compared to Enterprise, it was different and interesting. Some episodes are better than others, but the last few were getting good.

    It is too bad we really are locked into this Star Trek type of Sci-Fi on the main channels. You have to get SciFi to get Farscape, and most people don't get SciFi.

    Is there some petition somewhere to save the show?

  • by dfn5 ( 524972 )
    I discovered Firefly two months ago when it was a Slashdot poll [slashdot.org] and now I'm hooked. That would totally suck if it was cancelled... I reckon.
  • by bstadil ( 7110 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:57PM (#4772630) Homepage
    (And yet, somehow, Just Shoot Me continues...)

    This would have been a perfectly good answer to the story earlier about likelyhood of OpenSource going mainstream. Why would anyone want OpenSource to do just that.

  • You know, I wish Fox would can that lame John Doe show, and would promote Firefly more. Joe Doe is total trash. Nothing new in that show.
  • by silentbozo ( 542534 ) on Wednesday November 27, 2002 @11:59PM (#4772638) Journal
    Firefly is a great example of a show that runs counter to every trend on tv today. It is not dialogue driven - instead of shooting two pages of script per minute (like Friends), they're content with shooting maybe a half a page. There is no formulaic bad guy vs. good guy, with predictable special effects climax every episode. It is serial - every episode builds on previous episodes to develop the characters, instead of waiting a few seasons to give each character a defining moment.

    Basically, it's a throwback to TV of maybe 40 years ago, with a deliberately slower pacing. As a result, it's pissing off executives, all of whom grew up on MTV and who are twiching for more dialogue, more scenes, more explosions. They don't feel that they're getting their money's worth, thus, lots of pressure on Josh to either change the show, or get quashed.

    I only hope someone on one of the cable channels (SciFi, or Showtime) picks up Firefly, so I'll be able to catch the rest of the series when they syndicate it...

    Mark my words, eventually all you'll see on network TV is Jerry Springer, Judge Judy, and America's Most Dangerous Police Chases, and the crap that they like to pass off as the nightly news. I only hope that we can limit the brain-damaged execs just to network tv, and keep stuff like PBS and cable relatively uncontaminated.
    • gee it couldn't just be that the show sucks could it?

      I mean your points may very well be valid, but honestly, I don't know a single person that likes the show.
    • There is no formulaic bad guy vs. good guy, with predictable special effects climax every episode. It is serial - every episode builds on previous episodes to develop the characters, instead of waiting a few seasons to give each character a defining moment.

      Sound familliar to another genre perhaps? You don't have to go back 40 years to see this style. As I said above, Firefly is nothing more than a crappy space soap opera. That is why it is being canned. Sci-Fi fans like me don't want to watch Days of Our Lives on a "space boat". We want interesting, believable stories with a scientificlly plausable background at least (not some faster than light boat that uses a gear powered engine). The show was horrible. It is over with. Move on.

      • by blincoln ( 592401 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @02:01AM (#4773101) Homepage Journal
        (not some faster than light boat that uses a gear powered engine).

        Maybe you can clue us in as to what a real FTL drive looks like?

        Why is it so implausible that technology from 500 years in the future still has some mechanical components? Just because Rick Berman and Michael Pillar explode in a jizz-supernova every time their design department comes up with a new neon-tube-covered warp core with no moving parts doesn't make that the authoritative statement on what it would look like in real life, assuming it were possible.
  • by USC-MBA ( 629057 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:02AM (#4772655) Homepage
    Its really quite simple: it's a question of finding and developing a market. If you can do this, you're sold. If not, you're welcome to find a spot on the giant heap of failed products to toss your burnt-out husk of a show.

    A Sci-Fi televison show is one of the trickiest of products to sell because the consumer base is much too fragmented. You have your "hard sci-fi" fans, your sci-fantasy/space opera buffs, your military SF fans, your fans who always want a "Politically Correct" message, etc.

    With such multipolar market psychographics, the tendency is to try to be safe and give the show "something for everyone". Of course, the result is invariably a fragmented mess of a show, and the viewers stay away in droves: thus Firefly. Occasionally, a television show will be able to pull off the trick of satisfying most if not all of the sci-fi consumer market, Star Trek: TNG being the classic example, but such instances are far and few between.

    A simpler strategy is to go for a single segment of the target market, and hope that a cult following develops, one which may even blossom into a mass following. These types of show are usually seen in syndication or on smaller networks. Successful examples of this type of show include Buffy The Vampire Slayer (target market: Goths) and Xena, Warrior Princess (target market: Lesbians).

    In retrospect, it is obvious that Firefly was much too ambitious a show. The producers of the show took a big chance, and they failed big-time. It didn't help matters that the show was badly written - they couldn't even get the title right: how many sci-fi fans are going to get excited about watching a show called "Firefly"? - and shown in an unfriendly time slot. Television programmers developing future sci-fi shows would do well to pay better attention to the people who watch them.

  • It has to be said (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Obiwan Kenobi ( 32807 ) <(evan) (at) (misterorange.com)> on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:03AM (#4772660) Homepage
    This is not flamebait.

    I watched Firefly for a few episodes and found it very boring. The only part that was slightly interesting (the hidden crush thing) was overcome with the hokey idea of the gunslinger in space theme that, while interesting, was never taken advantage of, and therefore it lost viewers.

    I'm sure showing the pilot would've helped the show, but the first three episodes that aired (the only ones I watched), just got more and more drab. It would've been nice to actually seen the origins of these characters but, gathering what I did on those that aired, the whole thing was a misfire. Regardless of its cult-like status (whenever a show is beginning it falter and the three people who like it complain, suddenly there's a "cult"), maybe Josh Wheadon doesn't have the golden goose.

    You want to see a high-concept new show that's actually worth your hour? Check out John Doe. A slightly sci-fi, slightly X-Files, slightly CSI type show that delivers on suspense, mystery, and solid writing. While it can't be this good for long, it sure beats Firefly.

    Good riddance.
    • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @01:12AM (#4772944)
      Check out John Doe. A slightly sci-fi, slightly X-Files, slightly CSI type show that delivers on suspense, mystery, and solid writing.

      Did you watch the same John Doe I did? All it does is find horribly contrived situations in which to demonstrate his super intellect which half the time doesn't even make sense, what does leg length and shoe size have to do with a theoretical maximum sprint speed?!? Is it a popular show? Maybe I don't know the numbers, but I have never heard it refered to as a good show. Firefly is a good show, it may not be popular among a wide audience but I'vwe seen very few bad reviews. The advantage of John Doe over Firefly is John Doe has one essentially 1-1/2 dimensional main character and a couple of subcharacters with relatively plot lines so you don't have to get into it. Firefly on the other hand has a pile of major multi-dimensional characters with complex plot lines. When it comes down to it Firefly can never be wildly popular, it's just too complex, too many characters and a too involved plot. Was Babylon 5 widly popular or is Buffy? No, both have a very dedicated audience but never had huge numbers, they were just too involved for the average viewer. Name a single widly popular show with more than a few complex main characters. X-files had 2, the origional Star Trek had about 4, Seinfeld had 4. Firefly is just too complicated not to mention the episodes were out of order on top of it making even harder to get into to ever be popular but this doesn't mean it won't be good.
  • for the better (Score:2, Insightful)

    by kosipov ( 218202 )
    Shows like Firefly give bad name to scifi genre. I've seen every episode of the show except for the pilot and everyone of them was a shameless ripoff of a 50's spaghetti western show dressed up as scifi. It is difficult to translate good science fiction literature to film and even more difficult to translate it to TV series because the best scifi (IMHO) deals with a new ideas and how these ideas shape the environment and behavior of people. I consider books by Neal Stephenson or Vernor Vinge to be in this category -- they are popularly known as hard scifi. The other end of the spectrum are the books that use unusual setting like space ships or exotic planets to suspend disbelief in order to expose fundamental and unchanging elements of human behavior by putting characters into unlikely situations. Solaris which is coming out on big screen is allegedly this kind of a movie. Succeeding in this category requires a truly gifted director who can get the most out of actors and the human elements of the script.
  • by Control-Z ( 321144 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:03AM (#4772663)

    The first few episodes weren't great at all. I was about to stop watching, but somebody lent me a couple more taped episodes and they were really good. Good old Josh has struck a great combination of interesting characters, unusual situations, and funny dialog. There's just something appealing about a honorable thief and his crew of misfits.

    If it really gets cancelled I will definitely miss it, best SciFi since ST:TNG.
  • I'm not surprised.

    I got hooked on "Space Above and Beyond"... canceled
    I then got hooked on "Earth 2"... canceled

    I knew as soon as I got into Firefly that it would probably have the same ending. It seems the general population can't appreciate simple, innocent humor and are too impatient to let the characters develop. If the orginal Star Trek didn't have such a cult following I wouldn't have been surprised if TNG got canceled after the first season as well (which obviously turned out to be a great show ! :)

    Yet another sign of societies seemingly downward spiral... hopefully not I hope.

  • Red Dwarf was much more entertaining than firefly.

    The one episode I saw wasn't terrible but it wasn't great either.
    • Red dwarf is more entertaining that just about anything... Don't think it'd go down well with the unwashed american masses tho, or the new generation of "baby americans" they're breeding in the rest of the world who believe friends is the pinnacle of mankind's creation.
  • by Valar ( 167606 )
    I like just shoot me!
  • I'm thoroughly convinced the entire nielsen
    system needs scrapped. It's outdated, and
    not representative anymore. How hard would it
    be to come up with a better system? How inexpensive
    would it be to poll directv customers to see if
    they'd be cool with having their viewing habits
    monitored? Or cable customer for that matter? In
    this age of computers, how hard would it be to
    compile data if every single viewer ELECTED to participate
    in this type of monitoring? Not very hard me thinks.
    Those nielsen ratings are why morons like Barry Diller
    decides he doesn't like "space shows" and why
    they do dumb shit like show freaking Braveheart
    on SciFi now.
  • Remember they cancelled another good scifi show they could show this tripe. Dark Angel was infinitely better then Firefly IMHO.
  • One thing that Firefly got right was that whenever the camera was in the vacuum of space there was no sound. That's one thing that's always bugged me about sci-fi shows.
  • Sci-fi is an abbreviation of "science" and "fiction". Not much of that can be found in a souped-up version of a western. Myself, I am not interested in cattle, dances around fire, or various other intrigues of the sort.

    The show failed because it never had an audience. Science aspects of the show (as much as I could suffer through) are abysmal; one can find more science in "The He-Man" :-) Fiction aspects (human relationships) are hardly appealing to technologically inclined. Style of a western best caters to my grand-grand-parents. So who is left there to watch?

    For me, the show was not interesting. I watched only 1/2 of an episode; could not tolerate more. If there are good scenes elsewhere, I will never see them, because I am not willing to dig through a huge heap of junk for that. Yes, episodes are available on the Net. But they are not worth a blank CD.

    However, Lexx is interesting, and Farscape, because these are shows which build their own Universe and play by the rules of that Universe. These show's writers have imagination. I like that.

    • Sci-fi is an abbreviation of "science" and "fiction". Not much of that can be found in a souped-up version of a western. Myself, I am not interested in cattle, dances around fire, or various other intrigues of the sort.
      Well, when they get around to making Junkyard Wars in Space, I guess you'll be in heaven. No character development, no plot, just a bunch of rewired tech for the sake of rewiring tech.

      For me, one of the wonderful things about Firefly was the fact that they treated technology naturally, just something that you used and no big deal about it. Nobody goes about their daily lives discussing how to rework a dilithium matrix to increase efficiency that extra .001%.

      The fun was seeing how this Universe worked, how there could be a vastly technological core of planets vs. outer colonies reduced to using wagons and horses. Sometimes the interesting bits are the most overlooked.

      Lexx is interesting
      Okay, you bitch about the representation of technology in Firefly and then say that Lexx was interesting? WTF?!? Have you no values?
    • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @04:52AM (#4773643)


      > Sci-fi is an abbreviation of "science" and "fiction".

      Sit down, I have some news that may shock you.

      Science fiction isn't about science. It's just a setting; all the usual requirements for good storytelling still apply.

      If you want science, go to grad school in a science field. If science fiction shows peddled real science they would be somewhat less popular than Alan Alda's Scientific American Frontiers. (I say "somewhat less" because even PBS's science shows tend to be watered down with a lot of human interest fluff. Take that out and the viewership would be even lower.)

  • The melange of a futuristic society with Old West paraphernalia and situations was just too much to allow the suspension of disbelief. I watched 3 episodes and have the rest on my Tivo; I can't bring myself to watch them.
    • I've actually made an effort to not watch it. This should really tell FOX something. I love John Doe so I do watch FOX on Friday nights, but I hated Firefly so much I purposely have found something else to do during that 1 hour time slot (warcraft3).

      It's one thing to be indifferent to a show and watch it because nothing else is on, it's another to purposely avoid it. The only show I hate more is M.A.S.H., the very theme songs makes me hurl.
  • I'm dissapointed in two things, actually- first that Firefly is getting mistreated by Fox, and second that the majority of the posts on here are anti-Firefly.
    Seriously, the writing for this show is great. I like the dialogue, and I think the acting is passable even at it's weakest moments. I happen to LIKE the Buffy sense of humor- it's dark, sarcastic, and funny as all hell. The only problem with it that I notice is that they're a little inconsistant with when they use their southern drawl, but if they actually get a fair run in a decent time slot I'm sure they'll clean that up.
    They've got some pretty ingenius stuff in there that no one else has the guts to do: for example, every so often the characters will break into a little rant of Chinese. And they're the only scifi show I can remember that's actually done the no sound in space thing. It's not formulaic at all- it doesn't steal from Star Trek or Star Wars, though it's closer to Star Wars out of those two. It's the best example of genre-blending I've seen in a long time.
    Some individual responses:
    Blacklist Blacklist: Sounds like you just need to learn how to use your Tivo- Firefly's on Fox, Everybody Loves Raymond is on CBS, and Just Shoot Me's on NBC. Oh, and King of the Hill is lame.
    Leonbev, Anoynymous Coward #1, It's the first bloody season. Let them work out the kinks before you condem them based on the first episode. As for the sword fight, fencing has been a sport for hundreds of years, and I don't see it going out of style anytime soon.
    Zaren:
    What you saw wasn't the real pilot, Fox is just retarded. That big bad guy hasn't been in any of the other 9 episodes, or even mentioned. And I for one thought it was hysterical when the big buff guy got kicked into the engine. Dark humor rules.
    Snoopy77: I think a more likely explaination is that it is every bit as good as I think it is, but people watch too much Friends and trash like that to be able to appreciate it.
    Bowie J. Poag: Um... there's one black chick. Other than that, there's eight white people. You dazzel me with your intellect.
    Brunes69, you like Enterprise... I just don't know how to classify you other as than someone with no taste whatsoever. Lemme guess, you liked Voyager too? What're you, 12? These last two shows have nearly killed one of the greatest franchises of all time with lame ass writing. Enterprise couldn't even come up with an original ship design that fit into the era it's supposed to take place in- they just stole the design from the Akira Class. They have way too much technology too. I could go on for pages about why Enterprise sucks.
    Jpt.d, Andromeda was something they fished out of Gene Roddenberry's trash pile.
    Ko5mo, I don't know what show you've been watching, but there's been virtually nothing BUT character development.
    Ppetrakis: You're just bitter 'cause they canceled Farscape. The ONLY thing this show shares in common with Buffy is the humor, which, as I said before, I find very funny.
    Xagon7: John Doe is a ripoff of The Pretender. It was ok... but it didn't really grab me after the first couple of episodes like Firefly did.

    Ok, I've given my 2 cents. It's a good show, dammit!
  • I watched the first two episodes of Firefly, and just thought it was okay. It didn't put the hook in my heart like 24 did after I caught one episode. Still, I can feel the pain of those who loved the show. FOX has fucked us all at one point or another-- for example, I stubbornly refuse to remove Family Guy and Undeclared from my TiVo's Season Pass list, for sentimental reasons.

    Someone needs to start up a cable network just for all these promising and/or loved-by-a-small-but-loyal-army shows that were killed prematurely-- maybe make it a pay channel like HBO, and let the subscribers vote on the schedule. Then we discriminating viewers will have something to watch while the majority (read: morons) are enjoying "American Idol 8," "Celebrity Bukkake" and "World's Wildest Snuff Videos."

    ~Philly
  • by Cliff ( 4114 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @12:54AM (#4772873) Homepage Journal
    Step back. Breathe. Now chill out a bit.

    Being the kind of guy I am, when a likely potential presents itself, which does not depend on me thinking the worse of other human beings, I will tend to latch on to it in the hopes that such common sense thinking will prevail.

    Let's look at another likely occurance here before throwing up the age old (but experience-proven, I will grant you that) addage of the average intelligence of your network executive and *gasp* give them the benefit of the doubt here for a second.

    Firefly episodes will run thru December.

    Farscape, which also airs in that exact same "Timeslot of Doom" will begin its run of final (Yes. I know. That argument is neither here nor there. Save it for 2003. I'll be there in the trenches with you.) 11 episodes starting in January.

    Can we see a pattern here?

    So a hiatus with the provision that the show will return in a different timeslot than it's main competition in the genre this year makes a bit of...well..sense, doesn't it?

    Quite possibly Firefly will move to Monday's at 9pm, but I don't know how well that will fit, with Boston Public likely to stay in the preceeding timeslot. But as long as I don't have to compete with Farscape and Firefly on at the same time, my scheduling duties will be that much less of a hassle and if this prooves to be true, I will be grateful to the execs at Fox...

    That's assuming we all aren't right back here again within 6 months.

    Experience-worn truths are usually that way for a damned good reason.
  • by tenchiken ( 22661 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @01:40AM (#4773045)
    Per fox's PR
    http://www.fireflyfans.net/news.asp?newsid=327

    They are going to trade it. BTW, Zap2it has been ragging on firefly since day one. Take anything they say with a grain of salt.
  • Let's Not Forget... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Etriaph ( 16235 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @01:56AM (#4773087)
    ...Earth: Above and Beyond. It was one of my favourite sci-fi series, lasted one season on Fox. I think it has something to do with the viewer audience Fox gets. Judge Judy, I mean come on. I don't think the regular viewers of Fox are capable of rooting for something with intelligence, something engaging, and something original. Now E:A&B wasn't so original, very much like Starship Troopers, but next to Babylon 5 is my favourite sci-fi series.

    Fox can't really change their audience quickly, so they just drop the good stuff.

    • Sure you don't mean Space: Above and Beyond?

      That was a good show, IMHO. Reasonably intelligent plots, most of the time, with enough bangs and flashes to keep non-plot driven viewers interested. It also had the best, again IMHO, space combat sequence I've ever seen in the final dogfight in "The Angriest Angel" between McQueen and Chiggy Von Richoven; the fact that it was preceded by the "God doesn't want to speak with me right now" speech just makes it all the better.

      I do think they should have dumped the plot with West and his girlfriend (even better just dumped West out of the nearest airlock) cos that just didn't fit.

  • by Sean Clifford ( 322444 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @04:52AM (#4773642) Journal
    First, "officially" Firefly is not being cancelled:

    The current time slot occupant "Firefly" will go on hiatus. Fox Entertainment President Gail Berman stressed that "Firefly" has not been canceled. New episodes will continue to air throughout December and the network is considering a new time slot for the series.

    Electronic Media [emonline.com] (article link)

    Call me a skeptic, but I've heard this before and it will certainly make a lot of people think twice before jettisoning Firefly out of the airlock if you join the campaign to save the show.

    If you want to support what many (including me) consider to be the best show on television, join the campaign to support Firefly by voting to save it [savemyshow.com] at SaveMyShow.com, by sending a postcard asking Fox to save the show to:

    FOX BROADCASTING CO
    ATTN: SANDY GRUSHOW, CHAIRMAN, FOX ENTERTAINMENT GROUP
    10201 WEST PICO BLVD
    LOS ANGELES CA 90035

    Donate [fireflysupport.com] (via paypal) to Firefly: Immediate Assistance to support the campaign to save the show.

    Put a banner [fireflysupport.com], graphic, or link on your web site to support the show.

  • You can help! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Snaller ( 147050 ) on Thursday November 28, 2002 @11:24AM (#4774997) Journal
    Don't forget the rescue efforts.

    Many Firefly fans decided that instead of waiting to see if the show would be canceled they would start a rescue effort right away. Firefly support [fireflysupport.com] has been raising money, and on December 9th they will run a full page add in Variety supporting Firefly, they are sending copies of that issue to advertisers and to the execs at Fox. They have also used some of the money raised on producing T-shirts and bags with the Logo of the support campaign, this too will be send to Fox execs.

    One guy in American Mensa paid for an add to telling other members about this new program, another guy in Ohio bought cable adds to get other people to watch. And tons of people have been writing the advertisers thanking them for supporting the program, and generally oozing goodwil towards it.

    Its not over yet. There are two episodes and the pilot to be shown in December, and two more episodes already in the can. I you like the show, make a different spread the word, send a postcard, take a chance on something which is not the usual premasticated gruel. If you hate the show... don't do anything, no need to actively annoy other people is there?

    http://fireflysupport.com/ [fireflysupport.com]

    Think its sick to try to save a TV program? A sign of looserhood? Perhaps, but it makes more sense to fight for something you like, as opposed to spend effort on something you dislike, no?

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