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`Friday Night Lights' Returns With New Hope

JAKE COYLE   01/16/09 11:28 AM ET   AP

Friday Night Lights

NEW YORK — "Friday Night Lights" is one of those shows, one hears, that you gotta see. Really, you just don't know what you're missing.

Like "Arrested Development," "30 Rock" and "The Wire" were, "Friday Night Lights" has been thoroughly stamped with that label of "critically adored, low-rated."

When executive producer and head writer Jason Katims tells people what he does for a living, people usually say: "Oh yeah. I hear that's a great show."

"I get that response all the time," he says. "There are people that have heard it's a great show but don't watch."

But there is hope for "Friday Night Lights" and other excellent but low-rated programs. Shows with passionate, niche audiences are proving to be more valuable than they once were.

The third season of "Friday Night Lights" premieres Friday on NBC after the network struck an unusual partnership with DirecTV that has kept the show alive. The satellite service aired the full season ahead of the broadcast premiere for its 17 million subscribers.

"If this model works for our show, then it could work for other shows," said Katims. "That would be a great thing to be a part of."

"Friday Night Lights" is originally based on the 1990 book by H.G. Bissinger and focuses on a high school football team in Dillon, Texas. It's not your typical hour-long drama, though.

There are no sets; it's shot throughout a real Texas town with three cameras always rolling. Actors and cameramen typically aren't under strict orders, giving the show a realistic feel.

"Friday Night Lights" is ultimately about community _ a community that lives through football, centered on the nucleus of the team coach (Kyle Chandler) and his wife (Connie Britton). The fluid approach allows the show to follow its many characters into their homes, into their lives.

It was first a 2004 movie, directed by Peter Berg, who then adapted it for the tube. It was first scheduled not on its namesake day, but Wednesday _ and opposite "American Idol." For its second season, it was switched to Friday night, but ratings only improved to 6.2 million viewers after 5.9 million the previous season.

After the writers strike abruptly ended the second season, the fate of "FNL" hung in the balance. Fans mobilized and mailed plastic footballs to NBC co-chairman Ben Silverman.

Silverman, though, was already a fan. When he attended last year's Sundance Film Festival, he met with his friend Eric Shanks, executive vice president for entertainment at DirecTV, and floated the idea of partnering on "Friday Night Lights," which NBC also produces.

"It just felt like a jewel and that it was a show that really had so many people passionate about it," said Silverman. "I only get yelled at, but we love these great shows."

Neither side will discuss how much DirecTV paid for the first rights to the third season, but Silverman calls it a "real, meaningful partnership" that has given the network "a larger tolerance" for low ratings from the show.

The first half of this experiment over, Shanks says DirecTV is very pleased. DirecTV has other exclusive agreements with several sports leagues, and had been thinking about exclusive entertainment programming, too. They contemplated saving "Arrested Development" when Fox canceled it in 2006.

"For us, it has blown away our expectations as far as how it's performed from a ratings perspective," said Shanks. For the premiere episode, the show ranked seventh for DirecTV customers among all basic cable. (It was second among 18-49 year-old women.)

Shanks said the company has not yet researched how "Friday Night Lights" has affected subscriber numbers.

Silverman hopes "Friday Night Lights" on NBC will capitalize on the buzz from the DirecTV deal and the usual critical acclaim. (A critic for The New York Times has written: "I love `Friday Night Lights.'")

Skeptics wonder if the show's core audience has already seen season three, either on DirecTV or illegally online through BitTorrent.

"Our expectation is the show should not be in any way hurt from this experiment in terms of absolute ratings," said Silverman. "But we'll have to see. I don't know yet."

Whether "Friday Night Lights" survives to a fourth season or not, it's clear shows like it have more opportunities now.

DirecTV is also now offering all eight episodes of "Wonderland," the acclaimed ABC series that was canceled in 2000 after just two episodes. The satellite service could become a veritable Noah's Ark for endangered, cultish programs.

"It's kind of cool," said Shanks. "Now that people know we're open for business and know this one of the strategies we're going after, you can imagine the calls we're getting from producers and studios from all kinds of shows."

As network ratings are dwindling, television _ and entertainment altogether _ is becoming more of a niche business. And an ardent TV following can translate to revenue from DVDs, Web traffic and international sales.

"The DirecTV deal wouldn't have happened two to three or five years ago," said Katims, who knows something about canceled shows, having written for the short-lived ABC series "My So Called Life."

"It's happened because the landscape of network television is changing," he adds. "The numbers are decreasing and people have to pay attention to shows that have niche audiences."

Jason Kilar, chief executive officer of Hulu.com, the NBC Universal, News Corp. joint-effort, recently wondered in an interview if "Arrested Development" _ the site's third most popular show _ would have been canceled by Fox in 2006 if its popularity had been that evident three years ago.

"The fact that our audience is touching this content in a lot of places, it requires us to just be more entrepreneurial in how we can finance that content," said Silverman. "There are so many different partners that we have as a broadcaster and content company that can help offset our risk."

Though the plight of good, low-rated shows is unlikely to ease drastically, they might be more valuable commodities in an increasingly disperse TV landscape.

That would cheer even Grandma Saracen, the elderly grandmother of Panthers quarterback Matt Saracen on "Friday Night Lights." In an episode in the third season, she wonders why her beloved "Cagney & Lacey" isn't on anymore.

"It was a good show," she says. "I don't know why they quit the good shows and put these other shows on."

It's too late for "Cagney & Lacey," but it might not be for "Friday Night Lights."

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NEW YORK — "Friday Night Lights" is one of those shows, one hears, that you gotta see. Really, you just don't know what you're missing. Like "Arrested Development," "30 Rock" and "The Wire" wer...
NEW YORK — "Friday Night Lights" is one of those shows, one hears, that you gotta see. Really, you just don't know what you're missing. Like "Arrested Development," "30 Rock" and "The Wire" wer...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
levibatgirl
trolls lie
09:53 AM on 01/17/2009
I tried watching it the other night because of all the talk that its a great show.

Within seconds after tuning in they were talking about football and I switched to something else.
I knew it was all about small town obsession with football but there is only one thing more boring than football to me and that's people talking about football.

Oh well I gave it as much as I could stand.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:31 PM on 01/16/2009
Coming from a small town where *way* too many people lived & died by high school football, I have loved this show from the first minute I saw it (and I was late to the party) ... the teen drama scenes are far more endurable than most shows aimed at that audience, and the acting is great.

The football scenes are pretty darned authentic for television.
12:49 PM on 01/16/2009
I tried watching the show cause I like Kyle but the hand held jiggley camera shots turned me off.
If I was twenty I could deal with it but I just don't like that constant motion camera action. Must be my age showing.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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12:00 PM on 01/16/2009
FNL is a weak attempt by NBC to rip off of the great movie on the same name. It should have been cancelled. Of course, the same is true of NBC.
10:54 AM on 01/16/2009
love the show
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mediamarv
1-2-3 Is this thing working?
10:18 AM on 01/16/2009
He sort of has Bloggo's hair, don't you think??

Hope that style is not growing in popularity (pun intended).
10:04 AM on 01/16/2009
Such a fantastic show. More people should watch it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
233Sandy
10:02 AM on 01/16/2009
I live in small town USA, and I can assign FNL characters to characters right here in my own community. Don't change a thing.....I'm glad it's back on the air......
09:42 AM on 01/16/2009
this show blows I don't understand why so many people are obsessed with the popular kids from high school that they need to watch all of these teen dramas that are poorly written just generally show how much tv executives suck at picking shows
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LisaO8
You're gonna need a bigger boat.
09:26 AM on 01/16/2009
This is one of the best shows on t.v. We watched on Directv and now are thrilled it's back on NBC - the cast is amazing!
obamasandiego
Blame the strategery.
02:56 AM on 01/16/2009
I love this show. The teen angst works!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ChiGuy
Just an earthbound misfit, I
12:41 AM on 01/16/2009
An excellent show deserving of a larger audience.
I was not a fan of Kyle Chandler on Early Edition, but on this show, he's fantastic.
The same can be said of his co-star Connie Britton.
10:59 PM on 01/15/2009
I'm no sports fan and I think it's a great show. Strong acting from everyone.

It's a very full and rich slice of an American town that just happens to be dominated by football.

People will be surprised if they every pick up the DVD's.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mayoyo
I am the cutest busy body you'll never meet...
09:59 PM on 01/15/2009
I am so excited...I...Love...this...show.OMG.
07:05 PM on 01/15/2009
Friday Night Lights is one of the best written, well acted and intelligent television dramas ever.