ABC Kills 'Life On Mars'

Low ratings are the culprit, but ABC to give fans closure

By MICHAEL HINMAN Mar-2-2009
Source: TV Week

David Bowie will have to find another show to haunt.

"Life On Mars," which had a pretty solid start for ABC, is finishing on a low note as the network has made it clear it won't order any additional episodes past the initial 17.

The early decision will allow producers to give the fans who have stuck around to see Sam Tyler -- a 2008 cop traversing in 1973 -- find closure.

"We felt it was the right thing to do for the producers and the fans and creatively," said Steve McPherson, ABC Entertainment group president, to Television Week.

"Life On Mars" -- a remake of the short-form British serial starring John Simm in the main role -- premiered Oct. 9 to strong ratings with Jason O'Mara in the Sam Tyler role, earning a 7.7/13. It was up against another series premiere that night, "Eleventh Hour" on CBS, and actually beat it by 5 percent, and clobbered "ER" on NBC in the timeslot.

However, it was a different story by the second week. "Eleventh Hour's" audience climbed nearly 8 percent while "Life On Mars" plummeted 27 percent, and never was able to recover.

Things got worse for the show when it moved to Wednesdays after "Lost," a move which many thought was a strong one putting two shows with similar styles of audience together. But in the end, the move was toxic to "Life On Mars," dropping another 40 percent, and losing more than 38 percent of its "Lost" audience lead-in.

The nice part about the cancellation, if there is such a thing, is that "Life On Mars" will end up with one episode more than its British counterpart, TV Week says. That show lasted 16 episodes. However, the difference was that its run was planned to be that short, where producers had hoped for the American version to last several years.

Although "Life On Mars" was a victim of low ratings, McPherson had nothing but praise for the critics darling.

"I look at it creatively, and I couldn't be prouder," he said.

"Life On Mars" airs Wednesdays at 10 p.m. ET on ABC. Its final episodes are expected to air in April.

About the Author: Michael Hinman is the founder and site coordinator for Airlock Alpha and the entire BlipNetwork. He owns Quantum Global Media Inc., the parent corporation of the BlipNetwork. He's a print journalist by day, and lives in Tampa, Fla.
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