Tag Archives: Television

#Netflix #Daredevil Season 1

@Daredevil @Marvel @DeborahAnnWoll @rosariodawson @vincentdonofrio ,

John Mayo, of ComicBookPage,  and Kay Kellam, of PopArtsPlace, have a spoiler filled discussion about the first season of Netflix’s Daredevil.

Uber Marvel Netflix Daredevil

With Uber using Daredevil and Jessica Jones themed cars at New York Comic-Con this weekend, Daredevil may be on people’s minds once more.

Links:
Daredevil @ IMDB.com: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3322312/
Discount Comic Book Service: http://www.DCBService.com
Comics Podcast Network: http://www.comicspodcast.com
League of Comic Book Podcasts:http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/

Email us at TheGuys@ComicBookPage.com

Join the discussion on our forum at: http://forum.comicbookpage.com

This podcast episode originated on the Comic Book Page website:http://www.ComicBookPage.com

Limitless (2011)

John Mayo, of ComicBookPage,  and Kay Kellam, of PopArtsPlace, have a spoilers filled discussion about the recent Limitless movie from 2011, in anticipation of the new CBS television show, Limitless, premiering Sept 22, 2015 and spinning out of the movie.

Links:
Limitless @ IMDB.com: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1219289/
Discount Comic Book Service: http://www.DCBService.com
Comics Podcast Network: http://www.comicspodcast.com
League of Comic Book Podcasts:http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/

Email us at TheGuys@ComicBookPage.com

Join the discussion on our forum at: http://forum.comicbookpage.com

This podcast episode originated on the Comic Book Page website:http://www.ComicBookPage.com

After we recorded this episode CBS made the first episode of the tv show Limitless available for online viewing on their website:

FallTV

FallTV

Current Nielsen Ratings

For those tuning in to the new television season, wondering whether the shows they love will survive, if shows they are mystified will stay on the air for reasons that baffle them, and simply trying to figure out what shows they will be watching for the next several months, the Nielsen Ratings are something they are, on some level, aware of.  After all, for decades, we have all been aware that the Nielsen’s are how the networks heard whether or not people were tuning in.  If the people do not come, the show can not stay on the air… commercials need to be seen so money can be made, it is part of the age old rhythm of the television and entertainment industry.

In the past few years things have been changing slightly — overnight ratings have been giving way to same day +1, same day +3, and same day +7 as networks recognized the saturation of DVRs in households, and tried to account for the number of people who were recording shows for later viewing.  The simple truth however, is if you record a show, and do not watch it within 1 week, you count, as a viewer, for less than those who watch it within that first week.

The issue of how the +1, +3, and +7 numbers are gathered is murky territory I will leave others to debate and discuss.  Undoubtedly some are unhappy with the two way communication going on between DVRs and providers and this real time contribution to statistics and ratings — but for others, the chance to be able to effectively vote for favorite shows is an empowering feeling.  Especially if they are viewers who have had a number of favorite shows cancelled out from under them.

So why write this article now?  The Hollywood Reporter published an article this past week, as did a few other industry publications, stating that Nielsen has acknowledge a software glitch that led to inaccurate numbers being reported — since MARCH of this year.  The glitch has been corrected, and for the past several days numbers have been accurate, and Nielsen is working to recalculate numbers for the period affected.

It is hoped that October 17th new numbers will be released, including revised numbers for the shows that have already premiered during the Fall 2014 television season.  It is hoped that the numbers will not alter dramatically, and thus far very few shows have been picked up for the entire season.

It is interesting to note that the show Unforgettable was cancelled after the glitch was announced, and before the revised numbers came out.  All of their summer season’s episodes would have aired during the glitch period, and thus be effected.  Then again, Unforgettable has been cancelled, and un-cancelled before, so perhaps CBS is unconcerned about a possibly premature decision on the show which had already been moved to the summer season because of lackluster viewership during the traditional television season.  (An unfortunate fact given the show had a fun sense of humor, and lots of entertaining moments.)

It will be interesting to see next week how the newly calculated numbers come out, and how the networks particularly feel about them.  With more and more viewers streaming shows through network websites, as well as Hulu, Amazon video-on-demand, cable video-on-demand options, and a variety of other ways of seeing shows after they have aired at their appointed times, traditional same-day and overnight ratings numbers have decreased in significance, and the new numbers may be forced to reflect the +7 facts as well.

Little House on the Prairie – Laura Ingalls Wilder

Whether you grew up on the books of Laura Ingalls Wilder, or the television show Michael Landon brought to fame, it seems the majority of Americans have some impression of the Little House on the Prairie series.  To this day, for many of us, when you mention the show, we immediately think of Melissa Gilbert running down the hill in the opening credits.  Not on purpose mind you, the image simply pops into our heads having seen so many episodes of the television show which ran from 1974 to 1983, and is still in reruns.

Ingalls' Homestead, near DeSmet, South Dakota

Ingalls’ Homestead, near DeSmet, South Dakota

On a recent trip I had the chance to do a little sight seeing, which included the ‘original Prairie’, as I nicknamed it, in the form of the Ingalls’ homestead outside of DeSmet, South Dakota.   Down a dirt and gravel road, off the beaten path as one might say, this trip into the past is a nice detour for anyone who grew up on the show or books.

Quote from Laura Ingalls Wilder The site is filled with a sense of history, not just of one famliy, but of our country, and the pioneers who made their way west.  Michael Landon, Melissa Gilbert, and the entire cast of Little House on the Prairie brought to life a time from days gone by and reminded folks that a simpler time was also a tough and deadly time.  The characters dealt with storms, the dangers of digging wells, and all of the everyday details of life in 1800s frontier America.

There has been conversation over the years about how much of a contribution Laura Ingalls Wilder’s daughter Rose Wilder Lane made to the writing of the books so many have fallen in love with, and after reading a letter Rose wrote to her mother, posted online by Slate.com, I can not help but think Rose (who was a talented writer of magazine articles in her own right) may well have served as a very important editor in her mother’s works.  Many of Rose Wilder Lane’s papers are in the Hoover Presidential Library and I suspect would offer fascinating reading to those interested in this aspect of the story.

Places in Ingalls Life
Walnut Grove may have been the primary location of the Little House on the Prairie television series that so many people watched and fell and love with, but the Ingalls’ family had a far more complex story than life in one little town.  Many will remember images of the family in a covered wagon trudging through snow… not surprising given ‘Ma Ingalls’ was born in Wisconsin, and Pa Ingalls’ was born in New York (as was Almonzo).

My trip to DeSmet reminded me of how much I had enjoyed my time spent on the Prairie as a child, albeit just as a visitor to the land made real thanks to the creators of a television show.  In the ’70s and ’80s Television was a great land of escapism, with a dash of hope and lessons in it.  Pa Ingalls was a role-model to so many, and it was no wonder an entire generation wanted Michael Landon for their father.

Michael Landon, Jr. is now directing movies that frequently end up on Hallmark channel… with his flair for capturing wagon trains on screen one can only imagine his memories of growing up as a real life son of Pa Ingalls’.

There is talk of a Little House on the Prairie movie being made, and having seen several made for tv movies directed by Michael Landon, Jr., I hope he has been considered for the role of director.  For some of us it will be hard to see other faces in the iconic roles of the Ingalls’ family, but I hope another generation gets a fresh look at what life was like when the west was being settled, when fields were being cleared by hard back-breaking labor, and families pulled together – along with their communities to face obstacles many find hard to imagine in the modern day.

Sun-setting over the Prairie

Sun-setting over the Prairie

For those who want to read more about Rose Wilder Lane and her mother Laura Ingalls Wilder’s continuing collaboration, William T. Anderson has written a fantastic article for South Dakota State Historical Society available here.