April 24, 2024

‘The Bible,’ a Hit on Cable, Will Have Its Sequel on NBC

In an indication of the shifting center of power in television, a broadcast network, NBC, has stepped up to buy the sequel to a hit cable mini-series, “The Bible,” which appeared on the History Channel.

The follow-up series, “A.D.: Beyond the Bible,” will trace the early history of Christianity and again be supervised by the producer Mark Burnett, in partnership with his wife, the actress Roma Downey, NBC announced on Monday.

“The Bible” was the top-rated new series of the year on cable. Its premiere, in March, reached 13 million viewers and its finale attracted 11.7 million, both enormous totals for cable television — or broadcast television, for that matter. In addition, the DVD version of the 10-hour series, which went on sale three months ago, has topped one million in sales, the biggest result for a TV series in five years, NBC said in its announcement of the acquisition.

No financial terms were announced, but History Channel was also seeking to secure the new series, according to one executive familiar with the negotiations. That executive did not want to be identified discussing a private negotiation, but added that NBC is believed to have bid significantly more than History.

NBC’s studio, Universal Television, will now become one of the production partners for the sequel, along with Hearst Productions, which has an overall production deal with Mr. Burnett.

The new series will center on the work of the apostles and early Christians in trying to survive Roman oppression in the years after the crucifixion.

Mr. Burnett has been television’s most successful creator and producer of reality television shows, with current hits on three networks, “Survivor” on CBS, “Shark Tank” on ABC and the top-rated entry, “The Voice” on NBC.

“The Voice” has been critical to NBC in the last three years, and Bob Greenblatt, the chairman of NBC Entertainment, said in a statement that he had spoken to Mr. Burnett the day after the premiere of “The Bible” to express interest in a sequel.

“I followed the development process of ‘The Bible’ closely with Mark and knew that the story was far from over after Christ’s crucifixion,” Mr. Greeenblatt said in his statement. “In fact, what happened in the aftermath — which is essentially the beginning of Christianity — is utterly fascinating.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/02/business/media/the-bible-a-hit-on-cable-will-have-its-sequel-on-nbc.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Reality TV, Shaking Off Recession, Takes Entrepreneurial Turn

Two networks are betting on shows based on entrepreneurs competing for seed money for their business ideas. NBC’s “America’s Next Great Restaurant” features aspiring restaurateurs trying to impress a panel of judges to win financing for a new chain. And ABC has reintroduced “Shark Tank,” in which entrepreneurs try to get backing from a panel of venture capitalists who bet with their own money — in exchange for a piece of the action.

“We think this area is a gold mine — where business hits reality television,” said Paul Telegdy, the executive in charge of reality programming for NBC. “Wealth creation and the concept of capitalism are things that are inherently top-of-mind in America.”

Three years ago, as the economy crashed, reality television producers rushed out shows about pawnshops and scavenging like AE’s “Pawn Stars” and “Storage Wars” — a reflection of the desperate mood across the country. Are viewers now ready for a more optimistic view?

So far the results are not worthy of a buy order. “Shark Tank” showed improvement over its first year’s ratings in its return last week, but still attracted less than a hit-level audience at 6.1 million viewers. NBC’s restaurant show, which has averaged only about 4.3 million viewers, is being buffeted by other reality competition on Sunday (especially “The Amazing Race” on CBS and another, more heart-tugging money-oriented show on ABC, “Secret Millionaire”), but it showed an unexpected sign of life when NBC ran a repeat on Tuesday night.

Mark Burnett, the most successful reality producer in television, with “Survivor” and another business show, “The Apprentice,” on his résumé, jumped at the chance to produce “Shark Tank” both because he was familiar with the show from British television (where it was called “Dragon’s Den”) and because of his personal entrepreneurial experience.

“I emigrated here from England and started out selling T-shirts on the beach,” Mr. Burnett said. “I can really identify with these entrepreneurs.” He said he had also produced a pilot for VH1 about “business turnarounds.”

Last year, “Shark Tank” was a marginal success on Sunday night. This year, it is playing regularly on Friday nights and has added some celebrity juice to its panel of venture capitalists, in the form of the comedian Jeff Foxworthy and the prominent businessman — and sports franchise owner — Mark Cuban.

Mr. Cuban certainly believes in the concept of putting up his own money for entrepreneurial ideas. He said in a telephone interview, “I get amped up about a lot of things, as people know, but this was exciting.” One of the aspiring entrepreneurs managed to get the bidding up to $4 million, a sum that Mr. Burnett said was probably “the biggest amount ever available in a nonfiction TV show.”

“Dragon’s Den” began in Japan, and the format is owned by Sony. Steve Mosko, the president of Sony Pictures Television, said the format for “Dragon’s Den” had been sold in 38 countries, and had become a hit in many. (The most recent editions are in Poland and Saudi Arabia.) Mr. Burnett changed the title thinking that, in the United States, dragons would not conjure the image of tough venture capitalists as well as sharks would. “Blood in the water and all that,” Mr. Burnett said.

Mr. Mosko said it should be “the perfect format” for American audiences, given the whole “American dream thing.” From a business point of view it has another advantage, as one former reality-show producer noted: it’s cheap to make.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=a0cadfa26628e32aa5c0916ac5815dee