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Saving Grace Canceled

Final Season to Air in the Summer of 2010

Sep 1, 2009 Kimberly Shumway

This will be the Holly Hunter show's final season, despite that TNT offered to renew it.

Saving Grace will finish out its final season next summer. The Hollywood Reporter (August 13, 2009) reports that Fox Television Studios, which produces the show, declined a fourth season for "financial reasons." Instead the show will be given an extra three episodes, for a nine-episode run next summer.

Typically, canceled shows fail due to poor ratings – there are too few people watching to justify keeping it on the air. That's not the case here, a move that The Los Angeles Times (August 14, 2009) calls "very unusual."

Saving Grace is not particularly flashy. It basically looks like every other cop show on television. Though it uses visual effects, they're hardly pervasive. A fourth season would stand to bring in revenue for the studio, both from the network (which pays a fee for the show) and from other sources, such as the Saving Grace DVD sales and foreign revenue. If the studio declined a full fourth season for financial reasons, it must not be making enough money on the show to justify producing it. Indeed, Variety reports that a rep for FTVS stated, "the economics of the series mandated stronger international and ancillary revenue than the show was able to generate" (August 14, 2009). That's in addition to rising costs as shows age.

There's a troubling trend in television to populate shows with award-winning actors – Glenn Close in Damages, Timothy Hutton in Leverage, and Holly Hunter in Saving Grace – as if it will guarantee a good show. On the surface it makes sense. TV executives can justify spending tens of millions of dollars to produce a show because such actors have a demonstrated history of success. But that justification fundamentally misunderstands the nature of television.

Economics of Movies vs. Economics of Television

In movies it's believed that big stars can 'open' a movie, meaning that people will go see the movie on its opening weekend by virtue of the star alone. It's the Will Smith-Fourth of July phenomenon. Given the business model of movies – studios get the highest percentage of ticket sales on opening weekend – it's understandable that such stars would be key to the decision-making process. The demonstrated history of box office performance justifies it.

The same is not true of television. Television makes stars. E.R. catapulted George Clooney to stardom. He's now one of the most decorated actors in film. More recently, Grey's Anatomy made Katherine Heigl a household name. Now she stars in romantic comedies and her life populates the tabloids.

Star-studded TV

Television can launch such stars, but stars can't keep a show on the air. A movie is a one-time commitment. Audiences watch once and they're done. Television requires audiences to come back week after week, over a span of many years on a successful show. That's practically a relationship.

It doesn't matter how talented the actors, people stop watching if a show isn't good. If star-power was the only requirement, Shark with James Woods would have been successful. So would Cane with Jimmy Smits and Hector Elizondo. But those shows, among others, didn't work. The TV industry doesn't operate like the film industry.

Final Season Comes Early

Enticing award-winning stars to do television is an expensive proposition; shows have to pay for their star power. If the studio can't make enough money on the show, even with solid ratings, is that due to the cost of getting such a star? If so, that's hardly beneficial for viewers or the network, especially if the network considered the show profitable enough to continue airing.

Saving Grace will end its run earlier than it could have, a shame both for fans who watch the show and employees who work on it. The one silver lining is this announcement gives the showrunner time to wrap up the series properly. But perhaps this experience will cause the network and studio to consider shows for sustainability rather than simple marketability. If not, as The Los Angeles Times says, this "might become more common in today's challenging marketplace."

Read more: 'Saving Grace' will wrap next summer and Shortsighted or smart? TNT's 'Saving Grace' has plug pulled by producers.

Update 12/28/09: In a Variety story about the success of scripted series on cable, the Saving Grace cancellation was noted as the "biggest surprise of the year for TNT" ("New, scripted series boost cable ratings," 28 December 2009). The article went on to note, "The 'Saving Grace' situation reflects the tricky balance the biz faces as more and more outlets produce originals."

Update 2/2/10: The Futon Critic is reporting that Saving Grace will return earlier than expected on Monday, 29 March @ 9pm when viewers will get back-to-back new episodes from 9 to 11pm ("Exclusive: 'Saving Grace' Returns to TNT on March 29," 2 February 2010). The next week it will assume its regular 10pm timeslot, though that will be interrupted by the NBA playoffs as of 19 April. There are 9 new episodes left to air in its final season.

The copyright of the article Saving Grace Canceled in Film/TV Industry is owned by Kimberly Shumway. Permission to republish Saving Grace Canceled in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
TNT Cancels 'Saving Grace', TNT TNT Cancels 'Saving Grace'
Holly Hunter Stars in TNT's 'Saving Grace', 20th Century Fox  Home Entertainment Holly Hunter Stars in TNT's 'Saving Grace'
 
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Comments

Dec 8, 2009 5:51 PM
Guest :
"Saving Grace is not particularly flashy. It basically looks like every other cop show on television." Have you watched the show? Apparently not.
Dec 24, 2009 8:04 PM
Guest :
Well I love Saving Grace and love Holly Hunter as Grace...original show and can't wait to see how it will end. Too bad it is going away like so many others. It's always about the money!
Jan 10, 2010 12:14 PM
Guest :
Well, that stinks. Saving Grace being cancelled really makes me mad. It seems that everytime I find a show that is really different (Book of Daniel NBC i think) it gets cancelled. How irritating that 'reality shows' rule in todays market. I don't ever watch those.
mary - santa rosa ca
Jan 11, 2010 5:11 PM
Guest :
Wow, this definitely is not right. Financial reasons... yeah, sure. They use that as an excuse. The one main reason is typically because NONE of these people understands the quality and work put into this. All are misunderstood, not only that, are they looking the other way of this TV show, they are also not understanding the topic... Crazy, Any other cop show uh huh, okay, if that is what they are judging it by; any other cop show, then i just think it's stupid, this show along with any show, that gets viewers should stay on air, some could be caused by financial reasons, but i think personally that TNT is trying to cover up something that their viewers do not know. It's called popularity; any response that is bad to their show, maybe said by a critic, will make them think everyone else says the same. Well, guess it really isn't about us, the one's who watch it, maybe it's well known, just for popularity. But what do i know, I'm just a viewer, not a critic.
Jan 18, 2010 9:02 PM
Guest :
I LOVEE Saving Grace it is a really great show it is sad that it is canceled :-(
Jan 26, 2010 6:41 AM
Guest :
This sucks!! Everytime I find a great show, it gets canceled. (Dirty, Sexy, Money-My Own Worst Enemy-Monk ( I am soo going to miss Mr. Monk). It just make me want to cry!
Jan 27, 2010 12:03 PM
Guest :
Sorry to see it go--great acting, heartfelt situations, lots of love. Had hopes for Grace with that special angel of her own. Wouldn't we all like to have one of those.
Feb 2, 2010 1:59 AM
Guest :
I wholeheartedly agree with Mary...Saving Grace is SOOOOOOOO better than the reality crap that makes it on the air these days. WHY?!?!?!?!?! Not necessarily geared to the studios because they churn out what people watch...so I ask viewers everywhere...WHY?!?!?!?!?!?!
Feb 3, 2010 5:05 PM
Guest :
I am SO sad! Since the 1st episode, this has been my favorite program. So much better than anything else on TV. Love the entire cast. They better at least let Grace & Ham end up together!
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