Topic: "Give it a season."

I've seen this a couple times recently, and it's always bugged me, so I'd like to get some other opinions. People will tell me to watch a show, I'll check out the pilot and say "eh, not my thing," or...you know, "that was pretty bad, no thanks." And the inevitable response is "give it a season."

How about this: no. I'll give you a pilot. If you can't make me think "ah, I will watch this season to see how it unfolds" in the first whole episode, I've done my part, and that's that. It's really not hard to get me onboard with something, I don't feel like my standards are unreasonably high. You have 22, 42, or 60 minutes to tell me who the protagonist is, what they want, what the stakes are, and what's standing in their way. If you do, and those things all make sense, I'm probably interested to find out what happens. If you don't, I'm probably not.

The next thing people will say is "well, most pilots suck, it takes them a while to find their stride." Two things. One, I understand that on paper, but it doesn't make me enjoy the pilot any more, so how is the burden on me to watch them fuck around with my bra before sticking it in me? (Or. Something.)  Two, all of the shows that I would call my favorites I have loved since the first time I saw my first episode. The West Wing, Doctor Who, Firefly, Studio 60, Weeds, Californication, even shit like Scrubs, The Office, and docu-reality stuff like Mythbusters and Top Gear. Saw one, went "I see what you're doing here, let's fuckin' go."

Naturally every show is different, but find me a throughline that hits all of those shows and then tell me that this rule just can't apply to everything.

Anyway. This has been on my mind a lot lately, and I wanted to get it off my chest. I'll watch anything, but I won't just keep watching it because you say it eventually gets good. It's not that I don't believe you, it's that I don't have to wait to like a lot of things, and why should I?

Has there ever been a story told so complicated that they couldn't get me engaged in the first hour of their attempt to engage me? Fucking Lord of the Rings begins with telling me what's up, and then I get to spend time with some lovely, funloving characters I can identify with before challenging them with this impossible quest. That's Lord of the fucking Rings, by all accounts a sprawling, intricate story. And boom, I'm in for the ride. Way to start, guys. I don't even like period/fantasy dramas, and I'm in. If your show is less complicated than Lord of the Rings, you have no excuse. If it's as complicated as Lord of the Rings, you have no excuse. If it's more complicated than Lord of the Rings, figure out something a moron like me can latch onto immediately so you don't buck me off the ship as it leaves port.

Just don't blame me for not becoming engaged. That's not my problem, it's theirs.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: "Give it a season."

Yeah! And why can't we have dessert at the beginning of the meal? And why can't every comedian just start his jokes at the punchline? I've got things to do!

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Re: "Give it a season."

I'm not saying I like to have dessert first, very clearly. I'm saying I like the appetizer to be appetizing.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: "Give it a season."

None of the shows I have loved got me with the first episode.  The American Office took until the second season to hook me, same with Buffy.  Firefly I watched two episodes, and didn't watch a frame of it until 3 YEARS later when I decided to give it another chance.  I'm in the middle of a similar thing with The Wire.  I watched the first two episodes when they premiered...and that's it.  Now that i have an HBO Go account I intend to give it another run. 

My point is is that we are rarely in the right place or time for something.  Sometimes, the problem is actually with us.  Sometimes the problem is with the "us," of this very second.  I loved Oz when it was first on.  Easily my favorite show...of 1999.  Now I watch it knowing that if I were discovering it for the first time, I'd find it a bit schlocky.  Yes, the Teague of today prefers Carnivale to Game of Thrones.  Fine.  But Teague is nowhere near a permanent state, so don't take your reaction today for your reaction always.

Eddie Doty

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Re: "Give it a season."

Personally, if I find a show to be interesting in its premise, I'm willing to give it a season to figure itself out. Season 2 is put up or shut up time, for me.

I think it's not very much different from the Terminator/Terminator 2 thing. Terminator 2 is awesome, but to get there and have it make much sense you need to see Terminator 1, which isn't that great but it'll be worth it. In a TV season, there may be awesome stuff coming later but it requires the laying of groundwork. "Give it a season" means, I think, give it the groundwork as a time investment, and ideally it'll pay off later. And also, of course, the show needs to proceed to get more interesting even within the season or it's not a good sign.

A lot of shows never make it past the pilot. If a show makes it to the stage that it was picked up for a full run AND multiple people are telling me that it's a worthwhile time investment, then that doesn't guarantee anything obviously but I feel like it's only fair to give it a shot even if the pilot is only meh.

And yeah, I can't think of any show I loved right out of the gate with the pilot.

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Re: "Give it a season."

Eddie: I agree with you, and those are good points, but to be clear - this isn't about Game of Thrones, or Carnivale, or anything that specific. This is a more general thing, referring to the broad trend of "keep at it, you'll like it."

I have been trying to like beer for years, and I have made zero headway. I might like it when I'm thirty, I might love it when I'm thirty, but drinking more now isn't helping.

Mike: I agree, but I need more than a premise, usually, I need someone to like or at least want to know more about, usually a few someones. Like, right off the bat. I'll give a show eight years of intricacy if in the beginning I see why I'm watching it.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: "Give it a season."

I think the difference is you define "in the beginning" as just the pilot, whereas most people would give a show at least a few episodes to make its case. But if it doesn't interest you at all then there's not much to be done.

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Re: "Give it a season."

That does seem to be the difference, but that makes me wonder...why would they? Why should I not expect a show to announce it's intentions in the pilot? And what exactly should be in the pilot if not something to make you just have to watch the next episode?

Obviously it's subjective as all shit, but.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: "Give it a season."

The key word there is "intentions."  The best shows I have loved exceeded their intentions.  I started watching Buffy because I was ok with the premise of a chick fighting vampires with Karate.  But it wasn't until the course of several seasons that you really got the most of the ever changing relationships, show dynamics, and set pieces that all sprout from their evolving intentions over time that I REALLY enjoyed it.  Sometimes it doesn't work, like with Dollhouse.  Sometimes the inverse is true, like with Lost.  Thus is the nature with any kind of serialized story telling.  Everyone's threshld is different, as are the preferences we possess that allow us to tolerate some of more and less of others.  But honestly, I'm glad that I've had friends who have told me to shut up, take my medicine, and stick with a thing because it does indeed pay off sometimes.

Last edited by Eddie (2011-08-11 18:22:47)

Eddie Doty

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Re: "Give it a season."

Fair 'nuff.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: "Give it a season."

I think the problem here, frankly, is one of hype and expectations. If you're watching a show casually then you're likely to give it an episode or two to see where it's going. If you're watching a show because you've heard how great it is and you feel left out of the conversation, then when it's not immediately great it's easy to dismiss it.

But the people who are saying it's great are the ones who went in with no real expectations, gave it a few episodes and watched it unfold. You're going in with expectations that were built by viewer reactions to the run of the show/season. They aren't expectations the pilot was meant to meet.

When people tell you that a show is good, they mean the show, long term, is good, not necessarily the pilot. So to see the good stuff they're talking about, you'll have to go further.

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Re: "Give it a season."

I think that's probably right in the case of Game of Thrones, for me - plus medieval fantasy isn't something I'm inclined to dig anyway - but that also doesn't always happen. From the Earth to the Moon and The West Wing were inflated by my friends to impossible standards, and they both paid off that way for me.

Eh. Whatevs. Everyone's statute of limitations on not-giving-a-shit-yet are different, and differ from case to case.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: "Give it a season."

I'm kind of on the fence. I've had the same feeling as Teague—especially with 24 and Lost. But I gave in on Fringe and recently just finished the first season—15 hours later it's getting good.

But I also think that movies are often hampered by the fact that they're trying to cover an awful lot of ground in two hours—making you understand and like all the characters, follow the action, and so on. It's not at all easy. With TV shows, I think we should all WANT them to take their time revealing the characters and unraveling the mysteries. It keeps the shows from being Gilligan's Island: here are seven people from all social strata stranded on an island; enjoy a hundred identical episodes.

Still a TV show needs to really PULL you in with the first two or three episodes. That's its JOB. Set up the characters—leave some mysterious for now, but intriguing. Set up some conflict that isn't going to get resolved immediately.

Warning: I'm probably rewriting this post as you read it.

Zarban's House of Commentaries

Re: "Give it a season."

Another problem with high expectations is when they're the WRONG high expectations. For example with GAME OF THRONES, if what you'd been told was that it was an amazing epic fantasy, then when you watch the first episode you're likely to be bored and confused and waiting for someone to show up and explain what the damn quest is already, because that's what epic fantasy is.

If instead you were told that the show is THE WEST WING -- a show about power struggles and political intrigue -- but set in in a fantasy world, it's better contextualized and easier to go along with.

Obviously that's a GOT-specific example, but I've had many occasions where I didn't initially like something because I was coming at it from the wrong context (which casual viewers not watching because of hype don't have to contend with, since they aren't imposing any context at first).

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Re: "Give it a season."

I'm old enough to be completely with Teague on this. Episode One of any show is the sales pitch to the audience for the rest of it, and needs to be built accordingly.

As with any sales pitch, it needs to grab my attention, then deliver the whole pitch before it loses my attention. That pitch needs to amount to "stick with us, it'll be worth it."

I'm not remotely interested in listening to any show warming up or finding its voice over the course of some indeterminate number of episodes; life's too frigging short, and the writers and producers should have done that already before throwing the monkeys in front of the cameras.

Several of the shows mentioned above have the advantage of having been left on the air long enough to find a voice that we can now talk about, but that's with hindsight. Plenty of other shows remain uninvolving, and I don't think it's my job to pay out a load of attention rope to a show just in case it finally grabs hold of it.

Now, this doesn't always work out: FlashForward's pilot had a bunch of momentum, and then stalled for most of the rest of the season before blowing up the gear box in a panic at the end; Heroes had a stonking beginning, and only really turned to mush in season three.

I've repeatedly heard the claim that it can take a show three seasons to get really good, and the 'evidence' for this is Star Trek: the Next Generation, which does, indeed, have a truly horrible pilot.  (So horrible, that my girlfriend and I literally gave up on it partway through, and didn't see the rest of it until years later, after catching a few season three episodes re-engaged us with the show.) However, I think this claim is as spurious as the claim that it takes Microsoft three goes to make any product good (based on Windows 3.0 being the first non-terrible version).

ST:TNG might have convinced Rick Berman that he deserved three seasons of our attention to get his acts together with DS9 and Voyager and Enterprise, all of which underwent significant changes during their respective seasons three, but that was just a cheap excuse for not being ready at the start, and he was less able to get away with each time as we had more alternatives to just sticking with it.

If you're producing a new show, you need to grab my attention and win it with Episode One, don't just expect that I'll donate literally days of my life to you on the off-chance that you might get your act together once you've learned how to write what you want to say.

Re: "Give it a season."

fcw wrote:

Several of the shows mentioned above have the advantage of having been left on the air long enough to find a voice that we can now talk about, but that's with hindsight. Plenty of other shows remain uninvolving, and I don't think it's my job to pay out a load of attention rope to a show just in case it finally grabs hold of it.

But we're not talking about an unknown quantity that might get better but no one knows if or when. We're talking about shows that have already had their runs and people who watched them are saying, from firsthand knowledge, that the early time investment has a worthwhile payoff, but you have to watch more than just the first episode to get there.

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Re: "Give it a season."

But.

fcw wrote:

If you're producing a new show, you need to grab my attention and win it with Episode One, don't just expect that I'll donate literally days of my life to you on the off-chance that you might get your act together once you've learned how to write what you want to say.

So, that.  big_smile

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: "Give it a season."

That makes sense if you catch a show's first episode on TV, know nothing about it, and aren't interested. That's not the same as when you have people who have continued watching who are vouching that it improves. Then you're not watching on the "off-chance" of anything -- you've got eyewitnesses confirming that it's worthwhile.

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Re: "Give it a season."

Would you at least say it'd be ideal if all showrunners thought they only had one chance to hook an audience, and focused on making the pilot do just that?

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: "Give it a season."

At the end of the day, that's just how TV shows work. You can have faith in a show (or the people that recommended it to you) that it will improve, or you can throw it away and move on to the next thing. But you won't know until you try.

Last edited by Doctor Submarine (2011-08-11 20:56:11)

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: "Give it a season."

Yeah, if a movie sucks, then oh well, no franchise. TV shows automatically get a couple of more shots. This has especially been true since Star Trek—after taking off in syndication, the network ended up kicking itself for not giving it more of a chance in the first place... and you can never go back.

So, keep in mind, Teague, that you're on the same side as Fox. They canceled Firefly, Futurama, Family Guy, and whatever else because they didn't seem to be getting traction. Then, whoops, a lot of people liked 'em. They were SO popular, that they actually got second chances, but it's not the same. (Well, Family Guy is the same, for whatever that's worth....)

Even so, after Twin Peaks, I've long had a policy of waiting out TV shows—especially since I got a DVR—until I was satisfied that they weren't going to suck or wander off into crazyland. (I'm lookin' at you, Lost.)

I guess what I'm saying is: William Shatner is the greatest man alive.

/stuck in Charlotte airport in a frickin' white squall

Warning: I'm probably rewriting this post as you read it.

Zarban's House of Commentaries

Re: "Give it a season."

The thing is, if a show has managed to go an entire season and there are people whose judgment you trust evangelizing for it, clearly the pilot did manage to hook an audience at some level, even if only just enough that they were willing to see where they were going with this.

If you want to know what's so great about it and the answer -- from people who gave it a shot and watched the whole thing -- is "stuff that happens after the pilot," then that's the answer. If you actually want to find out if you agree with them or not, you'll have to go past the pilot. If you're just not interested enough to do so, then don't; worst case scenario you're missing out on something you'd actually enjoy, it's not the end of the world. The people pitching it to you, obviously having already seen it, haven't lost anything, except maybe the ability to share and discuss it with you. No one's gonna end up with cancer over it.

But, realize that you forfeit your ability to honestly say you "don't understand" what people think is so great about it, because they will have already told you. You simply chose not to investigate.

Zarban wrote:

Yeah, if a movie sucks, then oh well, no franchise.

Oh, for those days.

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Re: "Give it a season."

http://www.eximagen.es/graphic/images/2010/July/14/4BC3_4C3D213E.jpg

Give it a pilot, Teague.

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Re: "Give it a season."

In business, there's the concept that activities have an opportunity cost; by doing plan A, you don't just spend time and money on that, you also implicitly and irrevocably lose the opportunity to try plans B to Z instead, because time is not recoverable, and the world moves on.

I look at unengaging shows (or books, or anything requiring serious time commitment on my part) in the same way; if I spend 50 hours sitting through seasons one and two of Everybody Loves Shark Jumping until I get to what my friends think are the good bits, those are 50 hours I didn't spend, and can no longer spend, watching The Curiolanus Chronicles instead. (Which, according to my neighbour's decorator, definitely gets good once the Plugbots turn up.)

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Re: "Give it a season."

Oh, and by the way:

Dorkman wrote:

And yeah, I can't think of any show I loved right out of the gate with the pilot.

Mad Men
Doctor Who (new series, not the original, which I picked up during Doc #2)
Sports Night
Heroes (although it makes this case in reverse)
Space: 1999 (I was, like, twelve)
Futurama
Lost (I was, like, forty-two)
Hill Street Blues
Curb Your Enthusiasm
Life on Earth

...at least.