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Talking up Syndie 2002

For the first time in a couple of seasons, syndicators' fall offerings create some buzz

By Staff -- Broadcasting & Cable, 8/12/2002

For the new first-run syndication season, program distributors and their station clients are focused on the two meat-and-potatoes formats of the medium: talk shows and game shows. With six new talk shows and two new game shows on the schedule, more than half the new strips for the 2002-03 season fall into one of those categories.

Behind all of syndication's efforts is that this fall marks the start of what will be an aggressive multi-year effort on the part of talk-show syndicators to come up with the next Oprah Winfrey Show, says Garnett Losak, vice president, programming for Petry Media Group. Winfrey insists that she's quitting the show after 2006, which gives the whole syndication business several tries to find someone as strong to replace her.

"There is clearly a movement afoot to find an Oprah replacement," says Losak. "You can expect that, for the next several years, everyone will be looking for that next 4 o'clock show."

To some extent, the new talk entries are trying to emulate the success of shows that have gone before them. Serious-minded The John Walsh Show and The Rob Nelson Show, for example, are likened to Phil Donahue, which ruled the first-run talk genre for much of 1970s and early 1980s.

Wayne Brady and Caroline Rhea are both entertainers, and their shows will reflect their backgrounds in blending talk with some variety elements. Dr. Phil, as King World Chairman Roger King will remind you repeatedly, is a spin-off of perhaps the most successful talk show in the history of the business, The Oprah Winfrey Show.

And James Van Praagh communes with the dead. But don't scoff. Dick Askin, president of Tribune Entertainment, which distributes Beyond With James Van Praagh, says it is sold out for the season at rates that were pretty far out there, too. He credits Van Praagh with much of that success: The host met with a lot of advertisers and agency buyers at this year's NATPE convention and essentially sold them on his schtick.

Of course, having a successful entry in the genre, Crossing Over With John Edward, didn't hurt either, Askin admits.

For TV stations, there probably hasn't been a more important show in syndication than Oprah in the past 20 years. Why? Of all the syndicated shows, the show provides the best lead-in for local newscasts. Stations that carry it will miss it dearly and are encouraging distributors to try to find a suitable replacement; stations that don't have it are hoping to find the next Oprah first.

"She's gone in May of 2006, but you have to be on the air by 2004 to generate a ratings track record if you're going to be seriously considered as a replacement," says Katz Media Group Vice President Bill Carroll.

Finding a solid 4 p.m. show is clearly the strategy for NBC's new talk hopeful, The John Walsh Show, which will debut mostly in morning time periods. "If he proves himself and becomes the hit we think he can become," says NBC Enterprises President Ed Wilson, "he's also got the opportunity to play at 3 or 4 o'clock. And that's what television stations are looking for. They need good strong local-news lead-ins. Oprah has given stations around the country a terrific advantage as being a great news lead-in."

Beyond the upcoming season, three talk projects on tap for '03 are almost sure to make it to air: Warner Bros. Ellen DeGeneres, Universal Television's Fergie and NBC/Court TV's Trial by Fire. King World is also developing at least two for '03, including a daytime show called Living It Up! With Ali & Jack, hosted by Jack Ford and Alexandra Wentworth, the new wife of ABC's George Stephanopoulos.

In the game-show arena, Pyramid, hosted by Donnie Osmond, and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, with Meredith Vieira, are old but are debuting in new versions in September.

But two other shows are sort of new as well. Weakest Link bowed in January so this will be its first full season on the air. And Family Feud is getting a complete makeover, including a new host, Richard Karn, known best perhaps as Al the tool guy from Home Improvement. In effect, Feud is being relaunched.

Carroll sees the resurgence of game-show activity in syndication as a product of the success (though brief) of Millionaire and, to a lesser degree, Weakest Link in network prime time runs. But, he notes, the fate of all the new games is "ultimately intertwined as they are running in blocks in many situations."

Petry's Losak believes the '02-'03 season is do-or-die time for the genre. Over several seasons, none of the new first-run game show contenders has emerged as a bona fide hit, she says. "They've all been lukewarm, not bad enough to cancel and a struggle to renew," she says. "I think this season will be very interesting for the game format in that, if one of them doesn't hit big, we just may see game-show development going back to remission."

King remains rather amused by the would-be competitors in the game arena. "Strong production values have kept Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy challenging and entertaining. And the plethora of challengers have all blown up."

A slight overstatement, but clearly none of them have been able to put a glove on either Wheel or Jeopardy, the top two rated first-run shows in syndication for two decades.

Meanwhile, the entire syndication business is looking forward to the new season for several reasons, not the least of which is that the viewing and advertising environment for the fourth quarter will be far more upbeat and positive than it was last year. Sept. 11 put a huge damper on an already depressed market. And syndication was hurt the worst, certainly from an ad-sales stand- point. Some estimates put the business down 30% from the previous year.

"But," says Tribune Entertainment's Askin, "now I think there's a feeling of renewed optimism that we'll see a far better TV environment, generally speaking, a more receptive environment on the part of viewers and advertisers."

Certainly, the syndication advertising business has taken a turn for the better. Gene DeWitt, president of the Syndicated Network Television Association (SNTA), estimates that this year's syndication upfront ad sales were up 18% from last year, to $2 billion.

"And there is a feeling that there very well could be some broadcast-network shortfalls," which could tighten up inventory and enable syndicators to do very well in the scatter market, DeWitt says.

According to Askin, Tribune Entertainment's ad revenue is up 25%, the result of both improved sell-out rates and higher pricing. He notes that, last year, many syndication shows sold just 50% to 60% of their inventory upfront and, this year, those levels have been boosted to 70%-plus to 80%-plus.

King says this year's upfront was "the strongest upfront we have had in years," with price increases averaging around 9% across the company's programs. And Dr. Phil, the new talk show, was one of the drivers, he says, adding that the show got the highest ad rates ever for a new show that King World has brought to market. He predicts the show will do a 3.0 to 3.5 rating, which would make it a huge hit.

Bragging is easier before the syndication season begins, but this season does seem brighter than in recent years. "None of my members are complaining," says SNTA's DeWitt, about the ad business they're writing up. Syndicators and stations hope he can still say that a few months from now.

 

Betting big

NBC is placing a bigger-than-usual bet on its latest talk entry, The John Walsh Show, which begins Sept 9.

According to NBC Enterprises President Ed Wilson, the budget for Walsh is roughly twice that of most talk shows, which typically cost between $4 million and $5 million a year to produce. Part of the reason for the higher cost is that each episode of Walsh will start off with a produced piece from NBC News Productions introducing the topic of the day, but the extra expense will also come from the unusually high number of on-location shoots planned. "We think you have to invest if you want to want to find the next break-out hit," says Wilson.

John Walsh, Wilson and executive producer Alexandra Jewett, of course, don't think Walsh will be the typical talk show.

"The question is, is America ready for intelligent talk," says Walsh, suggesting that, for his sake, they'd better be. "People want to be empowered," which is why he'll cover subjects like child safety, kids and the Internet, school violence, and victims' rights initiatives before state and federal legislatures.

Jewett says that, every week, the program will do one segment devoted to child safety, for which Walsh first came to sad prominence in the early '80s when his 6-year-old son Adam was kidnapped and killed. That got him deeply involved with fighting for passage of the Missing Children Act and, eventually, led to his crusading America's Most Wanted, a weekly staple on Fox.

Jewett said Walsh's talk show will also focus on hometown heroes. "These are things that John cares passionately about, and we intend to incorporate those passions into the show."

Walsh will frequently take his show on the road because the topics will be more closely tied to big stories in the news than other talk shows.

And he will go where other TV hosts—or journalists, for that matter—may not have access. He says he was the only TV person allowed at Ground Zero in the immediate aftermath of last year's terrorist attack at the World Trade Center. (Indeed, Jewett says the show has "some very special and powerful segments planned" for its first week concerning the anniversary of the terrorist attack.) Walsh also had unusual access after the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City.

Ad buyers say their clients have been guaranteed a 2.5 household rating for the show, fairly high in today's fragmented viewing world, where a 2 rating is considered a hit in syndication. Wilson wouldn't confirm the guarantee but says the show got a 10%-15% premium over other new talk shows in the upfront ad-sales market "just because of who [Walsh] is. People really buy into this guy."

The program is cleared in 91% of the country, at NBC owned stations and some Hearst-Argyle and Gannett stations.

The show will be produced at NBC News studios at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York. And Walsh will be extremely busy this coming season: He's also continuing to do America's Most Wanted , the only show that remains from Fox's debut as a network 16 years ago. "It's been an incredible journey," he says.—S.M.

What's happening and when

Talk

Dr. Phil (debuts Sept. 16 in 96% of the U.S.)—If any show ought to succeed in syndication, it's Dr. Phil. Relationship expert Dr. Phil McGraw has had a weekly segment on The Oprah Winfrey Show for two years, and, by all accounts, those segments have been wildly popular. But now he's being spun off into his own show, and one place stations can't put him is in direct competition with Oprah. According to King World Chairman Roger King, though, Dr. Phil isn't assuming success. "Right now, he's working 24 hours a day in Los Angeles," says King. "This is not an easy thing to do." Still King is confident that Dr. Phil will be the top-rated new show of the season.

The Caroline Rhea Show (Sept. 2, 90%)—The show replaces The Rosie O'Donnell Show, although it won't get all of Rosie's time periods. The ABC-owned stations, for example, are putting The Wayne Brady Show where Rosie was. But ABC has a vested interest in giving Caroline maximum exposure, having taken a 50% ownership stake in the show. Call it an insurance policy on Wayne. Former NBC and HBO exec Bridget Potter is executive producer.

The Wayne Brady Show (Sept. 2, 50%-plus)—It's not the first slow rollout of a talk show, and it won't be the last. For now, Buena Vista Television is selling the show for cash with no barter, although that's likely to change when the show gets past the 70% threshold. Other stations carrying it besides the ABC group include WFTS(TV) Tampa, Fla.; KNXV(TV) Phoenix; WCNC(TV) Charlotte, N.C.; WJZ-TV Baltimore; KMGH-TV Denver; WOIO-TV Cleveland; and WTHR-TV Indianapolis. The creative team behind the show includes veteran producers Robert Morton (The Late Show With David Letterman) and Bernie Brillstein (The Blues Brothers, Prime Time Glick With Martin Short).

The Rob Nelson Show (Sept. 16, 93%)—Twentieth Television President Bob Cook says Nelson "will bring the same blend of credibility and compassion to his show that made Donahue a talk-show franchise." The former Fox News Channel host (The Full Nelson) holds a law degree from Stanford and has authored two books, including 10 Common Sense Solutions to America's Biggest Problems. After what the country has been through in the past year, some observers think viewers are ready for a daily dose of serious-minded topics.

Beyond With James Van Praagh (Sept. 16, 95%)—Yes, he claims to talk to the dead. Get past it. Advertisers have, says Tribune Entertainment President Dick Askin, adding that the show is already sold out for the entire season. Van Praagh is now the second psychic talk show to enter first-run. Crossing Over With John Edwards is entering its second year in first-run syndication.

The John Walsh Show. See box, page 21.

Games

Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (Sept. 16, 95%)—Well, ABC had a humongous hit on its hands but drove it into the ground by airing it four nights a week in prime time. Executive producer Michael Davies says ABC simply ran out of ways to promote it. "We will drive the Millionaire brand with the syndicated version." he says. And that version will be different from the network version in one respect: The so-called fastest-finger round, in which a dozen potential contestants compete to get to the hot seat, will be eliminated. Instead, all contestants will be preselected in an effort to get a more diverse crowd of players; in the network version, white males have dominated. Meredith Vieira hosts.

Pyramid (Sept. 16, 95%)—Another new and improved game-show staple, and Columbia TriStar is giving it an eight-city promotional blast-off starting Sept. 8, with one person from each city winning a trip to Hollywood to play the game. Stephen Brown is executive producer; Harry Friedman, executive producer of Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy, is executive consultant.

Magazines

Celebrity Justice (Sept. 2, 91%)—It was a segment within Extra, and now Warner Bros. has created a new show to track celebs and their run-ins with the legal system. Count on this show to have the details if Robert Downey Jr. gets busted again.

Reality

Life Moments (Sept. 9, 90%)—This reality strip, hosted by Asha Blake (Later Today), will tell "stories of hope, inspiration and courage." Says Paramount Programming VP Kristin Peace, "We know that women are in intrigued by these stories, and we think we have a fresh way of telling them." Stations also have the option of using a local host. The Hallmark Channel will repurpose each episode one week after its initial airing.

Court

We, the Jury (Sept. 9, 65%)—This show is distributed by one of the few remaining independent syndicators, Teleco Productions of Los Angeles. The focus of the show is really the jury deliberation and not the personality of the judge as is the case with most of the other court shows, says Teleco President Alex Paen. Here's a unique sales tactic: In several markets, including Pittsburgh; Wheeling, W.Va.; and Johnstown, Pa., Paen is letting NBC stations test-drive the show on the weekends for free this season. If it works, he says, "maybe we can do a deal with them next season."

Weeklies

She Spies —NBC Enterprises President Ed Wilson wasn't expecting the show to get ER-size ratings in its four-week run on the network before entering first-run syndication. And, after three weeks, it hasn't. But, he says, "we accomplished what we wanted to do, and that's introduce it to an audience and create some awareness before it goes into syndication." Ad sales are solid on the show, says Wilson, no doubt helped by the shakeout of action hours last season. And who knows, there's enough babe power on the show to generate Baywatch-type interest.

John Woo's Once a Thief (Oct. 5, 90%)—This show has been seen just about everywhere but in the U.S. Fox commissioned it several years back but then never used it, and so Atlantis/Alliance sold it worldwide outside the U.S. The producer's programming consultant, Chuck Larsen, saw an opportunity and struck a deal to sell it to U.S. stations via his distribution company, October Moon. Clearing stations include WWOR-TV New York, KCAL-TV Los Angeles and WCIU-TV Chicago.

Adventure Inc. (Oct. 5, 97%)—Formerly known as The Ultimate Adventure Company, this action hour "didn't get out of the gate as quickly as we would have hoped," says Tribune Entertainment's Dick Askin. Tribune and Fireworks Entertainment are partnering on the show. Actor Michael Biehn wasn't signed to star in it until June. But now production is humming along, and the distributor is revisiting a few advertisers who wanted to see more detail about the show before making a commitment, says Askin. "All things considered, it sold pretty well. Now we're going back to fill in a few holes."

The Chris Matthews Show (Sept. 16, 93%)—The weekend news and commentary show, from the host of co-owned MSNBC's Hardball, will be produced by NBC News out of Washington. The majority of the top-10 stations carrying the show are NBC-owned, but stations from a laundry list of other groups are on board, including ones from Hearst-Argyle Television Inc., Gannett Co. Inc., A.H. Belo Corp., Cox Broadcasting, Scripps Howard Co., LIN Television Corp. and Clear Channel Communications Inc.

Livin' Large (Sept. 16, 96%)—The one-hour lifestyle magazine is produced by Heritage Networks in association with Dick Clark Productions and Basic Elements, and it is syndicated by Carsey-Werner-Mandabach. The show was packaged by United Talent Agency, which represents Heritage, as well as the show's two co-hosts, Carmen Electra and Kadeem Hardison. The program is described as a younger, hipper version of Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous and said to be more likely to profile the latest rap-group sensation than, say, Elizabeth Taylor.

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