The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 23°
Humidity: 85%
Wednesday, 02/10/10
Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here
Home »    Arts/Entertainment »   TV/Radio » 

Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookTwitterDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published August 14, 2004
ABC special on failed TV pilots is an hour's worth of snarky fun

The one-hour ABC special The Best TV Shows That Never Were, at 8 p.m. Monday, could also be called Busted Pilot Theater 3000. A snarky narrator introduces, describes, and makes fun of failed TV pilots.

What's a pilot? Best TV Shows That Never Were uses a clip from the movie Pulp Fiction in which Samuel L. Jackson explains to John Travolta that a pilot is the first episode of a proposed TV series.

Every year, each TV network films about 30 pilots, but fewer than 10 usually make it to the air. The others are consigned to a TV graveyard, never to be seen again.

In recent years, a small cottage industry has emerged as producers dig up these broken pilots. Pop cable network Trio has aired some of them under its Brilliant But Canceled umbrella. But back in 1990, TV producer Lee Goldberg (Diagnosis: Murder) first delved into this pop culture cesspool with his book Unsold Television Pilots. It was the basis for an early '90s CBS special. Now he and writing partner William Rabkin, with whom he co-executive produces Lifetime's Missing, have unearthed clips from more failed pilots for The Best TV Shows That Never Were.

Best is actually a misnomer. Most of the pilots showcased are awful but in a so-bad-it's-funny way. Goldberg's and Rabkin's script for the special, which they completed a couple of years ago and have been waiting for ABC to air, is quite funny.

On the John Denver-as-FBI-agent pilot Higher Ground: "When he sees crime, he gets Rocky Mountain mad. … He also likes to break into song when he isn't breaking arms."

On the cop/family/lifeguard/car racing show Daytona Beach, from the producers of Baywatch: "They just couldn't capture lightning in a bikini twice."

My favorite failure in the special: K9000. It's about a cop who gets an implant that allows him to hear his canine partner's thoughts. Better yet: The dog somehow functions as a cell phone.

"Unlike any other industry, television [failures] are laid out for the world to see," Goldberg said of his illuminating, fast-paced, entertaining special. "It's a great reflection of what's going on in the culture at the time."

Selling ABC on the special was an easy pitch that can be summarized like this: You think what's on TV now is bad? See what didn't get on. "I think there's a perverse pleasure in looking at what did not get on the air," Goldberg said.

Getting the rights to use clips from these episodes proved to be a greater challenge. Most of the shows featured did air at some point, often as a late-night movie if it was a two-hour pilot. If a pilot has not aired, it becomes a lot more expensive to get rights to a clip from it, Goldberg said.

And then the actors featured have to sign off on use of their voice or image.

"There was a pilot called Claws that was Baby Talk from the point of view of cats, all done by famous people, including Dennis Miller," Goldberg said. "None of them would allow us to clear their voices. Dennis Miller talks a good game, but he didn't want the world to know he was the voice of a talking cat for a sitcom on CBS. We have a thousand George Clooney busted pilots he wouldn't let us use. But Tom Selleck said, 'Use any one you want.'"

Goldberg uses a clip from the wacky sci-fi sitcom LAX 2194 in Best TV Shows, but only clips without a pre-Friends Matthew Perry, who would not allow footage of himself to be used.

If this look at TV failure succeeds in the ratings, Goldberg said it would be easy enough to whip up another edition.

"There were close to 3,000 pilots in my original book in 1990, and there have been 100 flop pilots a season since then."

Let the exhumations begin!

Th e Block News Alliance consists of The Blade and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Rob Owen is the TV editor for the Post-Gazette.


Permanent Link

Culture
Updated: 9:46 am
TO THE NINES: SNOW DAY EDITION >>
TV/Radio
Updated: 7:48 am
Co-host of Good Morning America’ talks about his new job duties >>
Movies
Updated: 9:04 am
Director to speak in Hillsdale >>
Food
Updated: 8:34 am
Valentine food celebrations >>
Culture
Updated: 8:54 am
Introducing the new Sports Illustrated cover model, Brooklyn Decker
THIN SLICES >>
Food
Updated: 9:25 am
Toast the Olympics with a real Canadian beer >>
More peach/entertainment stories





click here!

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
Kelly Heidbreder
Updated: 7:37 am
Keep Jack Frost from harming plants, trees >>

Kathie Smith
Updated: 8:39 am
Chocolate is more than a candy bar >>

Barbara Hendel
Updated: 11:32 am
Neighbors gather for football, food, fun >>

More columnist stories

MOVIE SHOWTIME LISTINGS!
Showtimes, Descriptions, Trailers

TV LISTINGS!
Times, Channels, Descriptions


FIND RECIPES
Find great recipe ideas


Restaurant Guide

Search by cuisine


BROWSE CALENDAR
February - 2010
« January March »
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
31
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
1
2
3
4
5
6
MOST READ STORIES
1.  Snowmobiler killed in Lake Township
2.  Lucas, Wood Cos. under Level 2 emergency; Owens cancels classes
3.  Westfield Franklin Park leases space to 4 stores
4.  Children's Wonderland equipment is up for sale
5.  Teen in assault to be tried as an adult
6.  Retired Sylvania officer who stole on job gets early release
7.  Bell stands by raises in face of unions' ire
8.  Ottawa County driver asks lifetime ban after fatality be ended
9.  North Toledo carryout, clerk charged with food-stamp fraud
10.  To Blade readers who missed their paper Wednesday
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  Toledo strip club puts cover charge into quake relief
2.  Tennis champ accused of phone harassment
3.  Officer says 33 dogs seized from suspected puppy mill
4.  Knights' Cromwell steps down
5.  Mental health agency looks to pare $3.5M from services
6.  Homelessness board votes for outside audit; advocate Ken Leslie safe for now
7.  'Stagecoach Mary' broke barriers of race, gender
8.  Sylvania lawyer charged in thefts from 2 clients
9.  Mental health board hears appeals from officials
10.  MAC basketball struggles with fall from elite


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2010 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®