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Posts with tag: fringe | Return to FantasySFBlog.com Homepage

Fringe Ratings Fall Because of World Series, V is a Hit

Ratings for Fringe fell 23% last night, most likely because fans had no idea that it was back on. Many local listings showed the World Series in that time slot. FlashForward has also slipped a bit in the ratings.
While over on Fox, some viewers didn't get the message that no Game 7 meant the return of "Fringe" -- the series hit a dramatic series low. ABC won the night, with its lineup slipping about 4% across the board: "FlashForward" (8.5 million viewers, 2.6 preliminary adults 18-49 rating), "Grey's Anatomy" (13.6 million, 5.0) and "Private Practice" (9.2 million, 3.5). Both medical dramas won their hours.

*****

Returning after a two-week hiatus, Fox's drama lineup had "Bones" (8.5 million, 2.5) down 11%. At 9 p.m., "Fringe" (5 million, 1.7) hit a serious low, falling 23%. On the CW, "Vampire Diaries" (4.2 million, 2.0) admirably retained its recent gains. "Supernatural" (2.7 million, 1.2) continues to pretend like its not paired with a hit show, falling 14% this week.
ABC's V has been a surprise hit for the network, drawing in a whopping 14.3 million viewers for its debut, despite mixed reviews from critics. Can it keep up the pace? Week two will be crucial.

Posted on November 6, 2009
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J.J. Abrams Promises Fringe Fans Giant Slugs

J.J. Abrams has promised Fringe fans that giant slugs will be coming soon.
"I think that now more than ever, the show has really found its voice," Abrams said in a group interview Wednesday in Hollywood, Calif. "The episodes that are airing starting next week are the ones that for me are far and away the best episodes and what the show is. I feel like Fringe is a show about these crazy experiments, but in many ways Fringe is an experiment. I feel like we just found a way that the show works best. Those episodes are coming up next."

*****

"There's a great resolution that's coming out in a few episodes, but it takes a lot of loose ends and gives closure to those," Abrams said. "Any show that is working will tell stories, resolve them; other stories will begin, and it'll just kind of be this staggered thing. That's where we are. So I really love the episode, and he's fantastic in it. If you're watching the show, it explains who he was, why he was doing what he did, why she's been seeing him."

*****

In the near future, Abrams is excited about the "slug gigantism" episode. "Wait until you see this next episode," he said. "If you're a fan of gigantic slugs, don't miss Fringe. That really should be the billboard."
Fringe returns Tuesday, January 20th at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Fox.

Posted on January 15, 2009
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Fringe Gets Full Season Pickup

Photo from Fringe


Fox has ordered up a full season of Fringe.
Fox is feeling fine about Fringe, ordering a full season of the freshman series from creators J.J. Abrams, Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci. The network has ordered nine additional episodes of the sci-fi thriller, for a total of 22. The Bad Robot/Warner Bros. TV-produced series has averaged a 4.2/11 in adults 18-49 and 10.7 million total viewers since bowing last month, making it the top-rated new show of the season to date in the key demographic.

"We're having a blast working on this show with this great team of producers," said Fox Entertainment President Kevin Reilly. "The series has really taken off creatively, and it's exciting to see that the audience is responding. We believe this is the first full season of many years to come."
Fringe is a very weird show, which is really growing on us. We especially like Joshua Jackson and Josh Noble's portrayals. Joshua is the brilliant son who must babysit his genius, certifiably nuts scientist father, played by Josh Noble. You will remember John for his amazing performance as Denethor in Lord of the Rings. As for the lead, Anna Torv, well, she's sort of growing on us too. But she's not who we would have cast in the role. But we do love seeing Mr. Abaddon from Lost as her mysterious boss. We're committed for the season.

Posted on October 9, 2008
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Fringe Will Start Off Jumping the Shark

Fringe LogoWired has an article about Fringe, the new show from J.J. Abrams. Abrams says Fringe won't be like Lost and that it will jump the shark right from the start.
On Fringe's slam-bang setup: "When we did the pilot for Lost, we had the monster appear at the end of the first act because we wanted to say to the audience, 'We're jumping the shark now. We're not going to wait. We're doing crazy shit from the beginning.' On Fringe, we very consciously made what is in many ways a preposterous, front-end scientific story choice in order to say to the audience, 'This is what you're going to be getting on the show.' It may be more extreme in some episodes, less so in others."

On the Fringe mythology: "I'm drawn to overarching, long-term stories so there will still be a mythology through the evolution of characters and revelations about what 'the pattern' means. But we're writing the show so it is not as serialized as Lost.

"What made X-Files so great is that they'd do a number of shows that have nothing to do with the mythology. Fringe is closer to E.R. almost, where you have these ongoing relationships and story lines, and yet week to week, when the door bursts open, you're faced with the insane urgent situation of the week."

Science fact, not fiction: "Though you could say it's science fiction, the weird thing about Fringe is that a lot of the stuff is at least in the realm of possibility. It's not sci-fi -- it's just sci.
The show debuts on Fox next Tuesday, September 9th. We will be watching. You can see the Fringe website here. A few other articles about Fringe can be found here, here, here, here and here.

Here's a video with J.J. Abrams discussing Fringe



Posted on September 4, 2008
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J.J. Abrams Fringe Bought by Fox

Fox has snapped up J.J. Abrams' new series called Fringe, which sound like a very interesting project.
After a heated bidding, Fox landed the sci-fi spec by J.J. Abrams, Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci with a big series commitment. No one would comment on the terms of the deal, but sources said it includes a budget for the two-hour pilot for about $10 million -- the ballpark of Abrams' two-hour pilot for "Lost" -- as well as an episode license fee close to $2 million. The pact also includes a digital component mirroring the template of WBTV's groundbreaking recent agreement with ABC.

"Fringe," which Abrams' Bad Robot is producing with Warner Bros. TV, centers on a young female FBI agent who, forced to confront the spread of powerful and unexplained phenomena, must work with an institutionalized scientist whose life's work may be at the center of the coming storm. "Science is frightening and enlightening at the same time," Orci said. "It can give you everything, and it can destroy you." The industry circles have been buzzing all summer about the top-secret spec script that Abrams was writing with Kurtzman and Orci. It marked the first TV writing duties for Abrams in more than three years, since ABC's "Lost," as well as the return to television of Kurtzman and Orci, one of the hottest feature writing teams at the moment. Like everybody else, Fox's entertainment chairman Peter Liguori and president Kevin Reilly were tracking the project, and even by the very vague logline floating around, felt it was "bull's-eye for Fox."

WBTV sent out the script to the networks Monday night. By Tuesday morning, Liguori and Reilly had read it. "It was exactly what we hoped for," Reilly said. "There is a track record of this type of show working on Fox, and these creators have proven themselves with this type of material." Fox has been trying for years to develop a successor to its hit sci-fi drama "The X-Files."
The brilliant scientist is described as a mix of Albert Einstein and Dr. Frankenstein. The female FBI agent must work with him (which is not easy) and his son (who doesn't get along with him at all). It sounds like a cross between NUMB3RS, The X-Files and Heroes. Works for us. If it sticks to its normal way of doing business, Fox will order up a full season, air the season completely out of order then cancel it after six episodes or so. Firefly, anyone?

Posted on October 6, 2007
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