Getting No Action
Last week's announcement that Xena: Warrior Princess will hang up
its sword this summer cuts two ways: Fans will not only lose
their favorite femme fatale, but the syndicated action-hour
business may also be bowing out. Local TV stations don't need
many weeknight alternatives like Xena anymore, thanks to the
expansion of The WB and UPN. As a result, actioners have been
relegated to weekends, where they face smaller audiences and
frequent sports preemptions. ''Xena is as good today as it was
when it first came on,'' says Steve Rosenberg of Studios USA,
which produces the series and Jack of All Trades, another
recently axed syndie series. ''But the viewers just aren't there.''
Actually, some are. Studios USA has been bombarded with letters from angry fans, demanding that it find Xena a cable home. But with over 130 episodes in the can ready for syndication, Studios USA doesn't have much incentive to keep producing the costly $1 million-plus-per-episode drama. So the saga of the ancient female warrior could indeed be history.
Overhaul of Fame
The curse of the retooled show continues: Fox's spooky drama
Freakylinks underwent an overhaul complete with new producers and
writers, but it's still perilously close to cancellation with a
woeful 2.8/8 average 18-49 rating. That doesn't bode well for the
heavily reworked The Michael Richards Show and John Goodman's
continuously revamped Normal, Ohio, which has been surrounded by
rumors that Goodman is unhappy and that creators Bonnie and Terry
Turner wanted to push the debut back to midseason.
Since reworked shows always sport the stench of failure, why are
there still so many of them? ''It goes to the change that's taken
place over the years,'' says veteran sitcom scribe Nat Bernstein,
who, along with writing partner Mitchel Katlin, walked off
Cursed, NBC's new Steven Weber sitcom, after network execs
started using the ''R'' word (the retooled series now centers on a
man who is unlucky rather than one who's definitely had a curse
placed on him). ''You're now collaborating with the networks and
sometimes two studios that feel they should have more active
participation in the creative process.''
Still, there's at least one retooling success story: Touched by an Angel was created by John Masius but quickly commandeered by
Martha Williamson after the pilot came across as too dark and
far-fetched. Now it's just far-fetched.
And So On...
The WB needs serious help to launch a successful
comedy, so could it be ElectraWoman and DynaGirl to the rescue?
The net's expected to team with Sid and Marty Krofft
Pictures the dynamic duo responsible for such vintage kids fare
as H.R. Pufnstuf and The Bugaloos to remake the campy '70s
series that starred Deidre Hall (Days of Our Lives) as a
journalist by day, caped crusader by night.


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