Reality shows get new Life in rerun Marathons
Posted on Thu, 19 Jun 2008 02:01:42 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By James Hibberd
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - If reality TV is junk food, then the
full-season daytime reality marathon has become the equivalent to a daylong,
couch-bound Del Taco binge.
Networks are increasingly airing entire seasons of reality programming in large,
seemingly indigestible chunks. Morning-to-dusk stretches of "The Bachelor" on
VH1, "Top Chef" on Bravo, "Rock of Love" on MTV.
The marathons have solved what was once considered one of the major drawbacks of
the reality genre. Unscripted shows, went the mantra, have no repeat value.
What's the point of watching "America's Next Top Model" after you already know
who wins?
Turns out, encores do work, as long as fans don't have to wait for the next
episode.
"You can start watching TV at 8 in the morning and follow Season 2 for 'Project
Runway' all the way," says Andy Cohen, Bravo's senior vp programming and
production. "It's exciting to watch the progression of creativity and excellence
in a competition setting and makes for an amazing arc to follow in one
afternoon."
During a marathon, a producer often gives permission for the network to cut off
a show's credits, so a story rolls from one episode to the next.
"Marathoning is a great way to hook people," said Mark Cronin, executive
producer of VH1's "I Love New York," "Flavor of Love" and others. "I've had
people say to me, 'I got into your show in a marathon.' They start watching and
they've seen three episodes before they know what happened."
Reality marathons typically air during daytime rather than primetime, on
weekdays or weekends. The ratings are often on par with regular programming,
which is nonetheless a victory of sorts given that reality shows were once
considered next to useless after a season concluded.
"As the reality craze has worn on, it's developed its fan base -- like disco,
people either love it or hate it," TV historian Tim Brooks said. "Reality
repeats are not a weekly habit kind of programming, but if you make it a Sunday
or Saturday afternoon, you can at least sustain the audience they would likely
get there anyway."
For programmers, the most effective use of a marathon is not to boost ratings
but create excitement for the premiere of a show's new season.
"It's promotional in a sense because it drives viewers to a premiere," Cohen
said. "You catch up on a whole season and you're so invested and hopped by time
the premiere airs, it winds up being a full and satisfying viewing experience."
Interestingly, the biggest reality shows including "American Idol" and
"Survivor" are not among the heavy cable marathon titles. The format favors
soapy shows such as "Bachelor" and "Rock of Love."
"The original burst of reality shows were focused on a contest and a winner and
I think shows have shifted more to the process," Brooks said. "The majority of
the viewers are female, so that's a home run for a sales department."
Serialized dramas are getting in on the act. Fox plans to repeat the first
season of "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" beginning August 10. The
nine hours will air as a four-day marathon.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
© Copyright 2008 Reuters.
Posted on Thu, 19 Jun 2008 02:01:42 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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