
The Fall TV season will soon be upon us (and not a moment too soon!) but one of my favorites from last season won't be on the schedule. I know when NBC announced that they would air not one but
TWO shows set behind the scenes of a sketch comedy show ala
SNL, many people had bets on which one would get canceled. Would
30 Rock, the
Tina Fey half hour version starring
Alec Baldwin make the cut or
Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, the
Aaron Sorkin hour version featuring the star-studded ensemble cast be the winner? As it turns out, despite having ratings than were less than stellar,
30 Rock lives on for another season and
Studio 60 died a quiet death. Although mourned by a few fans (hence the cancellation), the ratings for
Studio 60 were actually better than those for
30 Rock. Go figure...
The ostensible reason for the lack of ratings was that, although
Studio 60 was classic
Sorkin--smart, topical, well-written, well cast, well acted--it just wasn't funny. Certainly not as funny as
Alec Baldwin's self-important Jack Donaghy or
Tracy Morgan's diva-esque Tracy Jordan. And certainly not as funny as one might expect for a series about a sketch comedy show. And herein lies the rub--it wasn't
SUPPOSED to be funny.
Studio 60 was an ensemble drama. It was
The West Wing set in the world of television rather than politics. Sure, maybe the comedy sketches could have been funnier. Maybe the show could have exposed the back-biting, power tripping and insanity of the behind the scenes look at a Hollywood production.
But
Studio 60, like
The West Wing, was based on the presumption that those who work in the industry--like those who make a career in politics--are noble, decent, honest and idealistic souls. Having lived in D.C., I found the integrity of
Sorkin's White House a bit hard to swallow. I mean I
WISH politicians had the social conscience of
Toby Ziegler or
Josh Lyman, but we all know better, don't we?
Studio 60 was
Sorkin's arena for bringing up a variety of topical issues--the Iraq war, the religious right, censorship. And if people had seen the show for what it was--a drama exploring a variety of social topics set in the world of television--it might have succeeded.
Unfortunately, it didn't. But it's not the first time a show that I've loved has been given the shaft. Here's a few more shows that went to an early grave despite being of much higher caliber than
The Bachelor or
According to Jim:
1.
Sports Night - another
Sorkin gem set behind the scenes of an ESPN-like sports show. Starring
Peter Krause before
Six Feet Under and
Felicity Huffman before
Desperate Housewives,
Sports Night featured classic
Sorkin witty dialogue and great character interaction. And
Joshua Malina! Sigh...
2.
My So Called Life -
Claire Danes starred as Angela Chase in this realistic look at teen life which also featured a young
Jared Leto and
Bess Armstrong as Angela's mother. Canceled after only 19 episodes, that last show still haunts me. Brian (played by
Devon Gummersall) has coached--ala Cyrano--Jordan Catelano (
Leto) into winning back the heart of Angela. Even though he himself has a long-standing crush on her. At the end of the show, Angela realizes it was Brian's heartfelt words and not Jordan's and then...
I'll never know what might have happened. Aaarrggghh!
3.
Cupid - starring and produced by
Jeremy Piven and co-starring
Paula Marshall, this show was about a man who claimed to be the Roman god of love and insisting he was tasked by Zeus to unite 100 couples so that he can return to Mount Olympus. Is he Cupid or is he crazy? We will never find out because ABC juggled the show's scheduling so much they killed any chance of it finding an audience. Those who did find the show still sorely miss it...
4.
Action! I was at a party the other night and someone brought up this short-lived satirical comedy starring
Jay Mohr as producer Peter Dragon and featuring the wonderful
Ileana Douglas. I'm a sucker for inside Hollywood fare and this was a bitter, cynical and unflinching look at the business.
5.
Profit - before
Adrian Pasdar was one of the
Heroes, he was a psychopathic corporate climber in this show about ambition, greed and murder. Dark, edgy and totally repellent--in the best possible way! The most recent of the
Ocean's flicks stole a bit from this show--in one episode, Jim Profit puts a tack inside his shoe and steps on it in order to skew and thus pass a polygraph exam. A similar scene in
Ocean's 13 has Livingston Dell (
Eddie Jemison) pulling the exact same trick.
6.
Buffalo Bill -
Dabney Coleman,
Joanna Cassidy and
Geena Davis before she was--well,
Geena Davis, starred in this sitcom about the outrageously obnoxious host of a local TV talk show. Acerbic, witty and a hell of a lot of fun! What is it about me and liking all these shows featuring men who are @$$holes? Think maybe I have something to work out in therapy? Hmmmm...
Are there any short-lived shows that you sorely miss?