Wednesday, June 26, 2013

New in Comicsl: Batman and Superman Meet for the First Time in the New 52 Universe

A few choice selections from the comics due out June 26th (Note that the release dates are tentative on some of these titles):

Batman Superman #1
DC

Description: A new epic begins with the debut of this new, ongoing series! Don't miss the first fateful meeting of Batman and Superman in The New 52!

By: Greg Pak, Jae Lee




Atomic Robo Savage Sword Of Dr Dinosaur #1 (of 5)
Red 5 Comics

Description: Atomic Robo investigates cryptid sightings near the old Nazi space program, 'Science City,' buried deep in the Venezuelan wilderness. Meanwhile, a mysterious package is delivered to Tesladyne - from Hashima Island Quarantine Zone. Is it from Alan? Majestic 12? Or something else entirely? If only the title could shed some light on this mystery!

By: Brian Clevinger, Scott Wegener


Godzilla Rulers Of The Earth #1
IDW

Description: In the wake of the climactic conclusion of Godzilla #13 comes a brand new series!

Dozens of new monsters have risen from the depth and are staking out their own territory, regardless of humanity's political borders! A war of dominance beings. . . will Godzilla end up on top? First he'll have to beat a new upstart. . . Zilla!

By: Chris Mowry, Matt Frank


Ballistic #1 (of 5)
Black Mask Comics

Description: This madcap sci-fi buddy adventure about a wanna-be bank robber and his best-friend Gun, a drug-addicted, foul-mouthed, living gun, marks Darick Robertson's return to the hard sci-fi worldbuilding of his classic Transmetropolitan mixed with The Boys' ultra-violence and the lunacy of Happy.

By: Adam Egypt Mortimer, Darick Robertson


Lazarus #1
Image Comics

Description: "FAMILY," Part One

In a dystopian near-future government is a quaint concept, resources are coveted, and posession is 100% of the law. A handful of Families rule, jealously guarding what they have and exploiting the Waste who struggle to survive in their domains. Forever Carlyle defends her family's holdings through deception and force as their protector, their Lazarus. Shot dead defending the family home, Forever's day goes downhill from there. . .

By: Greg Rucka, Michael Lark


Star-Lord: Hollow Crown
Marvel

Description: As a child, Peter Quill spotted a flying saucer -- and it ruined his life forever!

Now a withdrawn, embittered adult, Quill strives to become an astronaut -- so he can return to space and take revenge!

How does a fateful encounter with the Master of the Sun change his destiny -- and transform him into the intergalactic policeman known as Star-Lord?

And can even the newly empowered Star-Lord triumph over a sadistic group of alien slavers?

Collecting material from MARVEL PREVIEW #4, MARVEL PREVIEW #11 and STAR-LORD SPECIAL EDITION.

By: Steve Englehart, Steve Gan, Ed McGuinness

More of This Week's Comics at This Link 

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Under the Dome Scores Big With Its Debut, Plus a Run Down of the Rest of the Summer Sci Fi/Fantasy Shows

Back in the saddle again and its time for a quick rundown of how the Summer sci fi / fantasy shows have been performing so far.  First, I will start out with the most recent--and biggest--news, the premiere of the Under the Dome last night based on the Stephen King book.  That series, which has been touted as a big Summer event, definitely lived up to its hype pulling a monstrous 3.2 rating and 13.1 million total viewers (those are based on the preliminaries and can change slightly when the finals come in).  That's one of the highest scores ever (or at least in the last ten plus years) for an original scripted series in the Summer months and those ratings would keep its network happy during the regular season as well.  Barring any sort of disastrous ratings slide, consider this one a lock for a second season renewal with the announcement of such probably coming in the next few weeks. 

And here's a look at the rest of the Summer shows that have debuted thus far as well as the late regular season shows:

Teen Wolf (MTV, Airs Mondays at 10 PM EST): This show came out of the gate strong for its third season, posting its highest numbers yet with a 1.0 rating in the 18-49 demo and 2.4 million total viewers.  It held onto that rating score for its second airing, but then slipped down to a 0.7 in its third week which is about where it averaged last year.  But that should be good enough to keep it going as MTV continues to tout this one as a hit series in its lineup.

In the Flesh (BBC America):  This show's three episodes ran over consecutive nights at the beginning of the month,  though it never appeared to make it into the Top 100 cable shows.  But it has been picked up for an additional five to six episode run in Britain and that will likely make its way over here at some point.

Falling Skies (TNT, Airs Sundays at 10 PM EST): The third season debut for this show delivered some of the strongest numbers it has seen in a while as it posted a 1.5 rating in the 18-49 demo and 4.2 million total viewers.  It dropped signficantly in its second week to a 1.0 rating with 2.8 million total viewers, but it had to contend with competition from the NBA finals and it's third episode improved to a 1.1 score.  Those are numbers for an original cable series, so it appears to be safe for now.

True Blood (HBO, Airs Sundays at 10 PM EST):  This series had a strong bow for its sixth season, pulling a 2.4 rating in the 18-49 demo with 4.5 million total viewers.  It slipped a bit with its second episode to a 2.2 rating, but those are still darn good numbers for a premium cable show and this series should be considered a lock for a seventh season renewal.

Continuum (Syfy, Airs Fridays at 10 PM EST):  This Canadian import has begun airing its second season in the U.S. (which ran up north in the Spring) and has posted slightly better numbers (in the 0.4 rating range) than its first season.  It relies less on the U.S. ratings, though, and has already been renewed for a third season in Canada.

Futurama (Comedy Central, Airs Wednesdays at 10 PM EST):  Comedy Central has already announced that the current season will be the last for this animated sci fi comedy.  But it debuted last week pretty well with a 0.8 rating and 1.5 million total viewers.  So don't count out the possibility that they me change their minds or that another network (or Amazon or Netflix) may try to keep this cult favorite afloat.

Hannibal (NBC, Aired Thursdays at 10 PM EST):  This hold-over from late Fall dropped notably as it wrapped up its first season in early Summer.  It didn't help that it had some pretty stiff competition from the NBA finals, but then its network had to expect its numbers to drop off in low-viewership June anyway.  It had already received a second season renewal and hopefully NBC will pair it up with Grimm on Fridays at mid-season to give it a chance at better numbers and a third season renewal.

Defiance (Syfy, Airs Mondays at 9 PM EST):  Syfy's new flagship series has definitely seen some ratings erosion in June.  Last week's episode slipped all the way to a 0.5 rating in the 18-49 demo with 1.6 million total viewers.  That's a pretty significant drop from the 1.0 score it posted with its debut back in April.  The series has already been renewed for a second season, but it will need to perform better than that 0.5 number next year if it wants to win a third season.

Warehouse 13 (Syfy, Airs Mondays at 10 PM EST):  Syfy's previous flagship series has definitely hit hard times in the ratings of late, sinking as low as a 0.3 score in the 18-49 demo a few weeks ago.  It did a little bit better the last couple of weeks, but it seems quite apparent why the cable network as tagged the show's next season as its last. 

Saturday Burn-off Shows:  ABC has begun airing two of its cancelled 2012-13 season shows on Saturdays, Zero Hour and 666 Park Ave, and as expected neither have registered much in the Nielsens.  The former series has averaged a 0.3 rating and the latter had a 0.5 score this past Saturday.  Expect them to stay in that range as they air out their episodes.  The Saturday cable ratings don't appear to get published anywhere, so I don't know how the runs of Primeval: New World and Sinbad have been fairing for Syfy so far.  Both of those shows have already been cancelled in their countries of origin (Canada and Britain respectively), so it doesn't really matter.

This column will be running on Tuesdays throughout the Summer in order to catch the numbers for the Sunday cable shows and the preliminaries for Under the Dome.  Keep an eye on the Cancellation Watch Twitter Site for quick updates on the ratings numbers, and you can see the full schedule of Summer science fiction and fantasy shows at this link.




Why Were They Cancelled? 
The Plight of Science Fiction and Fantasy Television in the Face of the Unforgiving Nielsens and Networks

Ever wondered why your favorite science fiction and/or fantasy show disappeared from the television schedule, never to deliver anymore new episodes? The reason why, most likely, is that it was cancelled because its ratings were low. And this book looks at those many cancelled sci fi/fantasy shows as well as the Neilsen ratings and television networks that dictate their fates. Available now for only $2.99 on Kindle from Amazon.com.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Cancellation Watch: 2012-13 Season Wrap-Up of Sci Fi/Fantasy Shows and the Prospects of Those that Survived

Another season is in the can with yet another round of cancellations of science fiction and fantasy shows.  But not nearly as many as you might think.  I tracked twenty six shows this past season (though several had only marginal genre elements) and of those only six received the axe.  That's only a 23% cancellation rate, much lower than what fans typically expect.  Below are my final thoughts on each of these plus some early predictions for the coming season for those that were renewed (and you can see the Fall 2013 schedule as it currently stands at this link, and for the shows getting Summer burn-off runs you can see the schedule at this link):

666 Park Ave (ABC, Cancelled) I didn't figure the prospects for this supernatural series were great, but it went down sooner than I expected.  ABC yanked it from the schedule late Fall and will air out the remaining episodes this Summer on Saturdays.

The American Horror Story (FX, Renewed for a 3rd Season) This creepy show slipped a bit in the ratings during its second season, but still did well enough for a basic cable series.  A new story arc kicks off for it in Fall and expect it to scare up another renewal.

Arrow (CW, Renewed for a 2nd Season):  I expected this revisionist Green Arrow series to be an even bigger hit than it was, but it still did quite nicely for the fifth place network.  Expect it to stick around as long as its network remains viable.

Bates Motel (A&E, Renewed for a 2nd Season): Did quite well for a basic cable series and actually managed to sustain viewer interest beyond the initial curiosity piqued by its connection to the Alfred Hitchock's infamous Psycho.  Consider this one likely to coast to another renewal.

Beauty and the Beast (CW, Renewed for a 2nd Season): I figured this reboot of the late-80's series had a better than average chance of surviving because its on the fifth place network and that's the only thing that kept if afloat.  They greenlighted a second season despite abysmal ratings but next season they throw it into a treacherous Monday night timeslot where its numbers will almost certainly drop further.  It's living on borrowed time that it won't be able to borrow much longer.

Being Human (Syfy, Renewed for a 4th Season):  Like most of Syfy's "sci fi lite" offerings (this, Haven, Warehouse 13), this one didn't pull particularly notable ratings numbers, but enough to get another renewal.  Does the end of the BBC version with its fifth season also spell the potential wrap up of the North America entry?

Continuum (Syfy, Renewed for a 2nd Season):  This one, like Lost Girl, relies more on its Canadian and international ratings for its renewal decisions.  And it looks like it is safe for now.

1 FREE Audiobook RISK-FREE from Audible

Cult (CW, Cancelled):  I believe this one had the lowest rated premiere ever for a scripted show on the broadcast networks.  And even though it aired on the fifth place network it got yanked (though it will air out its episodes this Summer on Fridays).  Quite a shame because it was a quirky, interesting show that deserved better than it got.

Defiance (Syfy, Renewed for a 2nd Season):  Prospects for this one looked good going in and it delivered Syfy's biggest hit in years--even if it has dropped off since its debut--and also its most sci fi show in a while.  This one could become the network's next flagship series.

Do No Harm (NBC, Cancelled): I didn't like this Jeckyll-and-Hyde show's timeslot, but didn't expect it to bow with the lowest rated premiere ever for a scripted series on the Big Four broadcast networks.  It was yanked after two episodes, though it will air out its episodes on Saturdays this Summer. 

The Following (FOX, Renewed for a 2nd Season): This serial killer drama looked pretty strong going into its debut (in part because of the star power of Kevin Bacon) and it actually gave its network one of their best rated scripted shows of the year.  It's numbers dropped off when it had to contend with competition from The Voice, but it still did well enough and should continue to perform strong next season.

Fringe (FOX, Final Season): Its numbers slipped even more in its final season, but it was already on its way out anyway.  This was a rare case of a sci fi show that beat the odds and dodged cancellation multiple times to go out on its own terms.

Game of Thrones (HBO, Renewed for a 4th Season):  I expected this one to hold steady, but it has improved its numbers to become another major force for cable on Sunday nights.  George R.R. Martin is targeting seven seasons for this show and it should make that goal.


Grimm (NBC, Renewed for a 3rd Season):  I expected this one to continue to do well for a Friday night show, and it definitely held strong on that night.  NBC moved it to Tuesdays to finish its second season to fill a hole in the schedule, but Fridays is where it belongs and where it will return next season.  Consider a fourth season pretty much a sure thing.

Haven (Syfy, Renewed for a 4th Season): Another "sci fi lite" coaster for for Syfy.  Defiance may have upped the game for that network though, so don't consider Haven a lock for another season.

Hannibal (NBC, Renewed for a 2nd Season): It debuted in a treacherous timeslot with a late season bow, so the odds were against it from the start.  But it had name recognition and praise from the critics so NBC renewed it despite its shaky ratings.  Now they need to move it to the Friday night post-Grimm hour next season were its prospects would improve.

Last Resort (ABC, Cancelled):  I didn't like its prospects before the season began because of its timeslot and it sunk there just as expected.  At least they gave it the chance to wrap up most of its storylines so that it had more of a mini-series feel to it.

Lost Girl (Syfy, Renewed for a 4th Season):  This one, like Continuum, relies more on its Canadian and international ratings for its renewal decisions.  And it looks like it remains safe for now.

The Neighbors (ABC, Renewed for a 2nd Season (!)):  This aliens-among-us sitcom was my one big pre-season misfire.  I thought it would disappear quickly from the schedule and I'm sure the critics would have preferred it that way.  But it managed to scrape up just enough viewers to keep it going.  And this coming Fall it finds itself in a low-expectation Friday berth that could keep it afloat all the way to a third season renewal.  Let's just hope that the quality improvements we saw in the finale continue to carry over into its sophomore season.

Nikita (CW, Renewed for a Final Season):  I believe that twenty year old repeats of Barney over on the Sprout channel rated higher than this show did in Prime Time where it only averaged a 0.4 rating in the 18-49 demo with DVR viewing factored in.  Still, the show has a strong international following and The CW decided to give it a six episode final season to wrap up all of its story arcs.

TFAW.com has the Waliking Dead

Once Upon A Time (ABC, Renewed for a Third Season):  Started out strong in Fall, but then fell noticeably during the second half of the season.   But then all network Sunday night broadcast net shows suffered (while cable entries like The Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, and The Vikings made considerable gains).  It goes into Fall on tenuous footing, but then typically a third season renewal nearly guarantees a fourth season, short of a complete ratings collapse.  If it avoids that, it should be good for another year.

Person of Interest (CBS, Renewed for a Third Season):  Ended the season as the fifth most watched show based on total viewers.  But then CBS rewarded that success by kicking it to a tough Tuesday night timeslot this coming Fall.  Should still be able to weather the change and survive there, though.

Revolution (NBC, Renewed for a Second Season):  I was on the fence on this post-apocalyptic show when the season began, and even though it started strong it fell pretty far by the end of the year.  And NBC is throwing it to a pretty competitive Wednesday 8 PM EST timeslot in Fall.  Add to that the fact that many fans have become disillusioned with the show and its prospects for the coming season don't look great.

Supernatural (CW, Renewed for a Ninth Season):  It started out in Fall somewhat shaky both ratings and quality wise.  But then it improved on both considerably by season end and delivered the best ratings it has seen in a while.  Look for it to challenge that ten season mark that Smallville achieved on The CW last year. 

Touch (FOX, Cancelled):  This one really should have been cancelled after its first season, but I guess FOX thought they had a chance of salvaging it (or had a commitment to Kiefer Sutherland of at least two seasons).  And even though the show tried to make some course corrections in its second year, FOX's scheduling assured that it had no chance to survive.

Vampire Diaries (CW, Renewed for a Fifth Season):  What was once The CW's banner series suffered notably in the ratings this year, but then so did all of that network's programs.  But it should still continue as one of The CW's top rated shows into the new season, for all that really matters.

The Walking Dead (AMC, Renewed for a Fourth Season):  I expected this one to do well in its third season, but damn!  It ended the year as the top rated scripted show on all of television!  Expect this one to stick around and I wouldn't be surprised if a few years from now will we look back on The Walking Dead as the show that broke the back of the broadcast networks.

Zero Hour (ABC, Cancelled): I expected this show to arrive DOA in its treacherous Thursday 8 PM EST timeslot, and sure enough it did.  It only aired three episode before ABC yanked it, though it will air out the rest of its run on Saturdays this Summer.   .

New on DVD and Blu-ray from Amazon.com:
Due out June 11th:


Due out June 18th:

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

New in Comics: Kick-Ass 3 Hits the Stands

A few choice selections from the comics due out June 5th (Note that the release dates are tentative on some of these titles):

Kick-Ass 3 #1 (of 8)
Marvel

Description: Kick-Ass and Hit-Girl's blockbuster return for the LAST EVER story arc of Mark Millar and John Romita Jr's mega-selling series.

Hit-Girl's in jail, leaving Kick-Ass to lead the superhero team of Justice Forever. Their first mission: Bust Hit-Girl out of the clink. But superheroes have now been outlawed, leaving Kick-Ass to dodge both cops AND criminals. For the first time since donning the costume, Kick-Ass is beginning to have his doubts. Is he now in too deep to get out?

The phenomenal follow-up to the Kick-Ass 2 movie coming this June. Issue #1 features six different covers by the industry's biggest artists, all available for order. Each cover will feature a different character, and when all six covers are linked, a special message will be revealed.

By: Mark Millar, John Romita


A1 #1 (of 6)
Source Interlink Intl

Description: The award-winning graphic anthology series returns in a new format.

Three great on-going strips:

'Weirding Willows' -- the worlds of Wonderland, Oz, Neverland, Mars, Pelucidar and Elysium clash in the little English town of Willow Weir.

'Odyssey' -- An immortal superhero out of place and time finds himself in the middle of a war for mankind between the Angels and the Demons.

'Carpe Diem' - The world's 7 greatest assassins, one for each day of the week.

By: David Elliott, Sami Basri, Roman Dirge


Daredevil Dark Nights #1 (of 8)
Marvel

Description: A gorgeous new series featuring the greatest talents in comics brings you the rest of the Man Without Fear's story

Legendary artist Lee Weeks returns to his favorite hero for 'Angels Unaware!'

A blizzard brings New York to a stand still -- and a young patient lies on death's door unless Daredevil can get to him in time!

By: Lee Weeks


Screwed #1 (of 6)
Zenescope Entertainment

Description: A young woman awakens in a hospital covered in scars as if she had been taken apart and put back together again. Her mind is as fragmented as her body, leaving her delusional and seeing monsters everywhere. Is this the work of a serial killer, or something far worse? FBI Agent Erin Scott intends to help her fi nd out, with or without the approval of her superiors in this visionary modern, mature re-imagining of the Frankenstein legend from acclaimed artist/creator Tyler Kirkham (New Guardians, Teen Titans, Amazing Spider-Man).

By: Tyler Kirkham, David Miller

More of This Week's Comics at This Link 

Monday, June 3, 2013

Cancellation Watch: Final Season Numbers for Broadcast Net Genre Shows Has Revolution Top Among Sci Fi/Fantasy Offerings

The "final" numbers for the broadcast network shows from the 2012-13 season are in.  These may be adjusted slightly at some point because a few shows are still airing new episodes (Revolution has its season finale tonight and Hannibal has a few more episodes to go), but for the most part the season has been wrapped and the networks want to know how everything played out.   And surprisingly, four shows of interest to genre fans ended the season in the the Top 30 based on the ratings in the 18-49 demographic: The Following (9), Revolution (15), Once Upon A Time (20), and Person of Interest (22).  Admittedly, the first one on that list has no sci fi elements and the last tends to play those down, but genre fans have taken a liking to both of those shows.  So that makes NBC's Revolution the top true science fiction (using that term loosely) show for the season.  And you have to go all the way back to the 1960's for the last time we've seen even three or more genre shows rank that high at season end (you can see a full survey of past seasons at this link).  Those numbers were based on total viewers, though--before the networks starting focusing on that sponsor-preferred 18-49 demographic.  And in total viewing, only two ranked in the Top 30 this year: Person of Interest (5) and The Following (22), the two least sci fi of the end of season winners.  It should be noted as well that both Revolution and Once Upon A Time rank where they are mostly on the strength of their Fall episodes.  Both shows had a considerable decline in their ratings over the second half of the season and head into this coming Fall on somewhat tenuous standing.  Expect their final rankings to decline by the end of next season and it wouldn't surprise me if one or both of those find themselves struggling to stay afloat in the coming year.

Audiobooks at audible.com.NBC's Grimm was the next highest genre entry on the list at Number 51, a pretty decent ranking for a Friday night show (though it finished the season on Tuesdays where its numbers improved slightly).  Next, at Numbers 56 and 70, were two of ABC's cancelled entries: 666 Park Ave and Last Resort.  They actually did better than renewed shows Hannibal (NBC) and The Neighbors (ABC), but then those latter two had lower expectations because of Hannibal's timeslot and the fact that The Neighbors is a sitcom and is not necessarily expected to pull the same numbers as an hour-long drama series.  After that are mostly the mid-season entries that came and went pretty quickly followed by the shows from The CW that these days seem to need no better than mid-level cable net numbers to survive.

As far as year over year change in the 18-49 demo rankings, the biggest winners were Person of Interest (23 to 22), Grimm (81 to 51), Vampire Diaries (123 to 112), and Supernatural (141 to 130).  However, that had more to do with the overall erosion in network viewing that brought down the numbers for other shows rather than rating improvements for those individual shows.  Genre entries that dropped year over year included Once Upon A Time (16 to 20, Renewed), Touch (45 to 140, Cancelled), and Nikita (150 to 176, Renewed for shortened final season).

Here is the full list of the broadcast network shows of interest to genre fans from the 2012-13 season:


Rank 18-49 Demo Net Program 18-49 rating* Rank Total Viewers 18-49 Rank Prior Season Status
9 FOX The Following 4.3 22 n/a Renewed
15 NBC Revolution 4 33 n/a Renewed
20 ABC Once Upon A Time 3.6 36 16 Renewed
22 CBS Person Of Interest 3.4 5 32 Renewed
51 NBC Grimm 2.4 60 81 Renewed
56 ABC 666 Park Ave 2.4 71 n/a Cancelled
70 ABC Last Resort 2 51 n/a Cancelled
72 NBC Hannibal 2 101 n/a Renewed
74 ABC The Neighbors 2 69 n/a Renewed
97 FOX Fringe 1.6 111 105 Final Season
104 ABC Zero Hour 1.5 63 n/a Cancelled
112 CW Vampire Diaries 1.5 146 123 Renewed
126 CW Arrow 1.2 130 n/a Renewed
130 CW Supernatural 1.1 152 141 Renewed
137 NBC Do No Harm 1 136 n/a Cancelled
140 FOX Touch 1 132 45 Cancelled
160 CW Beauty And The Beast 0.7 164 n/a Renewed
176 CW Nikita 0.4 172 150 Renewed
178 CW Cult 0.3 178 n/a Cancelled

*2012-13 Season Adults 18-49 Ratings (33 weeks of Live+7 Day and 2.5 weeks of Live+Same Day ratings)

Source: TV by the Numbers

Nielsen TV Ratings: ©2013 The Nielsen Company. All Rights Reserved.




Amazon Prime: Get Free 2-Day Shipping, Instant Access to Thousands of Kindle Books, and Free Streaming of Sci Fi TV Shows Like These: