'Roseanne' Spinoff: Can ABC's 'The Conners' Carry the Torch at 8 PM?

The Conners are coming back — just, you know, minus one. But can “The Conners” carry “Roseanne’s” torch without Roseanne?

Well, it had better, because the “Roseanne” spinoff sitcom, which ABC ordered 10 episodes of sight-unseen after weeks of negotiations following its decision to fire Barr, has some big shoes to fill. The Disney broadcast network has scheduled “The Conners” in its vacated “Roseanne” time slot, Tuesdays from 8 p.m.-8:30 p.m. That spot kicks off the entire evening’s lineup, and ABC saw huge Nielsen numbers — a 5.3 rating/23 share among adults 18-49 and 18.652 million total viewers, on average — there this past season.

Those figures, which include a week’s worth of delayed viewing, are hard to come by in the modern television ecosystem, and will be difficult to replicate. But Samba TV CEO Ashwin Navin believes Dan (John Goodman), Jackie (Laurie Metcalf), Darlene (Sarah Gilbert), Becky (Lecy Goranson) and D.J. (Michael Fishman) may be up to the task.

Also Read: ‘The Conners’: ABC Orders ‘Roseanne’ Spinoff Straight-to-Series for This Fall

“There aren’t many scripted shows that cater to this audience,” Navin told TheWrap, referring to Trump supporters. That’s a group who wants to relate to its TV characters — much like its politicians, clearly.

But with Roseanne Conner — the Trump-supporter and Republican of the bunch — out of the picture (and the credits), will the loyal “Roseanne” audience revolt? Not if the “Conners” writers are smart businesspeople, Navin said.

“As long as they don’t dramatically shift the narrative [from ‘Roseanne’],” the “opportunity is there to preserve the numbers” — and perhaps even to grow them, he explained.

Also Read: Tom Arnold Teases Anti-Trump Alliance With Michael Cohen: ‘The Dude Has All the Tapes’

So how will ABC handle its post-Roseanne version of the show? Below is ABC’s official description for “The Conners.”

After a sudden turn of events, the Conners are forced to face the daily struggles of life in Lanford in a way they never have before. This iconic family – Dan (Goodman), Jackie (Metcalf), Darlene (Gilbert), Becky (Goranson) and D.J. (Fishman) – grapples with parenthood, dating, an unexpected pregnancy, financial pressures, aging and in-laws in working-class America. Through it all, the fights, the coupon cutting, the hand-me-downs, the breakdowns – with love, humor and perseverance, the family prevails.

That “sudden turn of events” almost surely refers to Roseanne Conner’s (Roseanne Barr) sudden exit.

Tom Werner will executive produce “The Conners,” along with Gilbert, Bruce Helford, Dave Caplan, Bruce Rasmussen and Tony Hernandez. Helford, Caplan and Rasmussen are also writers on the spinoff. The series is from Tom Werner and Werner Entertainment.

Also Read: ‘The Conners’: People Have Mixed Feelings About ‘Roseanne’ Spinoff

At least one ad buyer believes that “The Conners” could surpass “Roseanne.” “Some of the characters they’re keeping are more fun than Roseanne,” Barry Lowenthal, president of ad agency The Media Kitchen, told TheWrap. “That actually might wind up being a much better show.” He added that for ABC, bringing the show back without Barr could go a long way towards placating fans who were upset by ABC’s employment of her to begin with.

“It’s kind of a nice statement for ABC to say: ‘We believe in the cast and crew. We believe what the show stands for without someone like Roseanne,’” he continued. “Bringing it back without her is almost a political statement within itself.”

But Navin argues ABC shouldn’t all-of-a-sudden let the show swing towards the other side of the political aisle. After all, there isn’t much on TV that skews Republican beyond crime shows, sports, and Fox News, per Samba’s research. “There was something working about this show,” Navin continued, emphasizing that it would be a bad idea to alienate conservatives in a “reactionary” attempt to continue distancing the remaining group from Barr.

Also Read: ‘The Conners’: People Have Mixed Feelings About ‘Roseanne’ Spinoff

Navin thinks the rush job for this fall is a good idea — “the sooner the better,” as he put it. Otherwise, some other platform is going to try to fill that vacuum. (And they probably still are, he said.)

The situation is reminiscent of the one NBC faced in 1987, when Valerie Harper left after the first two seasons of her eponymous sitcom, “Valerie,” over a salary dispute. As ABC just did, NBC continued the show without its title character, renaming it twice: First “Valerie’s Family” and then “The Hogan Family.”

ABC could take a page out of CBS’ playbook in handling the promotion for “The Conners.” In 2011, CBS fired Charlie Sheen off its very successful sitcom, “Two and a Half Men,” and replaced him with Ashton Kutcher. The whole saga intrigued viewers who tuned in to find out just how CBS would write out Sheen’s sudden departure.

CBS was able to convert the intrigue — even incorporating that into its marketing — into record ratings. The Sept. 19, 2011 premiere, which opened on a funeral for Sheen’s character, scored a gigantic 28.7 million viewers and a colossal 10.7 rating in the advertiser-preferred demo — and that was just the “live” numbers.

Also Read: Tom Arnold Teases Anti-Trump Alliance With Michael Cohen: ‘The Dude Has All the Tapes’

But that didn’t last very long.

By the end of the season, the show drew fewer than 12 million “live” viewers for its season finale, according to Nielsen data. The following three seasons all averaged fewer viewers than when Charlie Sheen was still on the show — though it went through even more changes during those seasons, as Angus T. Jones left the show, only returning for the series finale.

But getting viewers into the store is hard enough, and Lowenthal argues that intrigue over Barr’s ouster already puts “The Conners” ahead of a lot of other new shows that premiere this fall. “Attracting an audience is a really difficult thing these days. Any show that has buzz from the get go is probably a good place to start.”

14 Famous Last-Ditch Efforts to Save (Almost) Canceled TV Series (Photos)

  • Be it poor ratings, a huge cast member exit, or a showrunner shakeup, series can suffer many a crisis that puts them on the rocks with their network. But several shows have managed to back away from the cliff, thanks to some successful hail mary passes. Heck, some have even been resuscitated after cancellation. Check out the gallery below to see programs that were on the brink of cancellation (or already canned) for one reason or another, and the last-ditch efforts that were made to save them.

    Netflix


  • “Roseanne”

    The 2018 revival of Roseanne Barr’s hit ’90s sitcom brought John Goodman’s Dan Conner back from the dead and became an insta-hit — until a racist tweet by its star got it canceled just after the season finale. Then ABC greenlit a spinoff series called “The Conners” — without Roseanne either on or off camera

    ABC


  • “Star Trek”

    A story so nice we’ll tell it twice: What became one of the most influential shows of all time was a low-rated cult hit when it originally aired on NBC in the late ’60s. It was almost canclled after its second season, but an intense letter writing campaign by the show’s dedicated fans convinced NBC to give it a third season — after which it was canceled for good.

    The show went into syndication in the 1970s where it became a truly monster hit. The show was revived as a film series in 1979, which in turn spawned a sequel television series, “Star Trek: The Next Generation” in 1987.

    NBC


  • “Valerie”

    Simply put, one of the most infamous cast shake-ups in sitcom history. Star Valerie Harper, for whom the show was created and named in 1986, was fired after the second season, and her character killed off, over a fight with NBC and the show’s producers over pay. (This would lead to a bitter lawsuit Harper eventually won.) Instead of canceling the hit show, NBC cast Sandy Duncan as a new live-in aunt, retitled the show “Valerie’s Family” — and then changed it to “The Hogan Family” from season 4 on.

    NBC


  • “Baywatch”

    The original run on NBC from 1989-90 suffered from poor ratings and a studio shutdown, but David Hasselhoff and the creators helped get the show into syndication — where it ran for a decade as a worldwide hit.

    NBC


  • “Roswell”

    The WB let “Roswell” live after fans sent in bottles of Tabasco sauce (the characters’ favorite condiment) to beg the network not to cancel.

    20th Century Fox Television


  • “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”

    The WB didn’t put a stake through “Buffy”s heart, but the network wasn’t willing to shell out the cash that UPN was for the series — so it jumped networks.

    The WB


  • “Chuck”

    Fans rescued the NBC show by getting advertiser Subway involved with a “Save Chuck” campaign that actually worked.

    NBC


  • “Arrested Development”

    Fans thought the Bluth Family was gone for good when Fox canceled the show in 2006, however, Netflix picked it up for a fourth season in 2013 and it’s still going.

    Netflix


  • “Friday Night Lights”

    A deal NBC struck to have DirecTV produce the show kept the Panthers playing for several seasons.

    NBC


  • “Community”

    The cult show spent its life on NBC perpetually on the bubble until the network finally cancelled it after season 5. Yahoo Screen picked up the series soon after; Fans got their “six seasons,” now they just need the “and a movie” part.

    NBC


  • “Jericho”

    Fans took a main character shouting “nuts” to heart and sent CBS studio executives tons of the snack. Lucky for them, they reviewed the ratings and renewed it.

    CBS


  • “Once Upon a Time”

    Almost every key regular decided to leave after the ABC fantasy show’s sixth season in 2017. It looked like all might be lost, but producers opted for a soft reboot that kept it going.

    ABC


  • “The Leftovers”

    Die-hard fans showed up at HBO’s headquarters in NYC dressed as the show’s Guilty Remnant faction, which was good enough for the network for one more round.

    HBO


  • “Nashville”

    ABC denied the country musician-centric show a fifth season, so CMT stepped up and brought it to a new home where it was truly appreciated.

    ABC



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“Roseanne,” redubbed “The Conners,” is the latest show to barely escape the executioner’s block

Be it poor ratings, a huge cast member exit, or a showrunner shakeup, series can suffer many a crisis that puts them on the rocks with their network. But several shows have managed to back away from the cliff, thanks to some successful hail mary passes. Heck, some have even been resuscitated after cancellation. Check out the gallery below to see programs that were on the brink of cancellation (or already canned) for one reason or another, and the last-ditch efforts that were made to save them.

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