Thursday, July 10, 2008

"Springer" going back to basics

NBC Universal's The Jerry Springer Show is dispensing with the circus freak-like sideshow and now just featuring the freak-like show.

The rabid talk show enters its eighteenth season this fall with a return to a format which features only a single story and more emphasis on the conflicts of the guests, which defined the program in the height of its popularity in the late 1990's. Gone are the midgets, the puppets, and the drunk reverend (I'm not making this up...)

Taping of the program resumes on August 11 at the NBC Tower.

Thought: (or should I say final thought...) It seems Jerry Springer has become a parody of itself over the last few years, becoming more and more sitcom-like with these weird characters. With a slight ratings decline this past season, it's no surprise the producers are returning to what worked best (or worst). But one could wonder if this soon can be the final call for Springer, as ratings are stagnant and the program's controversial content isn't bringing in any real revenue from advertising. A report a few months ago also stated that Tribune (which carries this show and Maury in most of its markets) may be stepping away from such fare as a result.

Much like other programs with controversial material in the past, like The Morton Downey Jr. Show (which was syndicated by MCA TV - the predecessor to Springer's current syndicator NBC Universal), the shows are stacked with direct response ads - 1-900-date commercials, "Women Gone Wild" videos, motor chairs, "K-tel" like-special offers, etc. Not exactly prime-time, blue-chip type of advertising. A Don Ohlmeyer- syndicated show hosted by Mike Conners dealing with notorious crimes was canceled in 1989 after a few months because of a lack of relevant advertising.

CBS' Swingtown is also suffering from this kind of fate. Recently, a direct-response ad ran during the show featuring a song-collection set.

Ironically, Springer escaped the wrath of the Parents Television Council and American Family Association after the Janet Jackson Super Bowl debacle in 2004, though both organizations have targeted Springer before then.

Interestingly enough, Springer's dysfunctional show has been eclipsed by the real-life political dysfunction you can see every day and night on the cable news networks... And quite honestly, that's more offensive.

3 comments:

Mario500 said...

"The Jerry Springer Show" has not aired in my area (Mobile, Alabama) since the 2003-2004 television season after Pensacola, Florida's notorious ABC affiliate WEAR-TV replaced it with other syndicated shows at 9:00 AM beginning with "Living It Up with Ali and Jack" and now "The Rachael Ray Show". The show continues to air on co-owned station WFGX-TV in Fort Walton Beach, Florida, but it's distance keeps it separate from Mobile. From what I read about the station and it's programming, it's not worth having, even for "Smackdown" when it moves to MyNetworkTV this fall.

WEAR-TV has also stopped airing "The Maury Povich Show" in favor of an hour-long newscast at 4:00 PM. The show also continues to air on WFGX-TV.

Southwest Alabama has basically been shut out of both shows.

T Dog said...

Hey, I'm familiar with Mobile-Pensacola - my dad is from there and still has relatives in the area... Given the conservative nature of the market, I'm not surprised.

The last time I visited there (in 1991), WALA was still with NBC and WPMI was with Fox and they swapped affiliations a few years later. I still have my copy of TV Guide I bought there. Do you know if WALA is still No. 1? Or did WKRG take over?

I'm not surprised about WEAR - According to the TV Guide I have, they once pre-empted ABC's World News Tonight on Sundays for the syndicated "21 Jump Street".

Mario500 said...

WEAR-TV has been pre-empting the weekend editions of "ABC's World News (Tonight)" for years. They currently prefer the weekend editions of "The Insider" and "Inside Edition" over the network newscast. Interestingly, we only get this edition of "Inside Edition" in Mobile while WFGX-TV airs it on weekdays.

They have also been airing "Nightline" at about 11:00 PM for over 20 years and sometimes 11:30 PM due to a local high school football program. About four years after "Nightline's" debut, according to a 1984 TV Guide posted online, WEAR-TV aired it at 11:00 PM. They recently began airing "ABC's World News This Morning" again shortly before it became "America This Morning".

In overall ratings WALA-TV is still number one and since last year has overtaken WKRG-TV in local newscasts.