After a rough couple of years for its cable networks, Viacom is trying to finally right the ship in 2016.
Ratings for Viacom's TV networks—including MTV, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon, Spike and VH1—have been falling, declining an estimated 13 percent during the third quarter of 2015 alone.
But at the Television Critics Association's winter press tour in
Pasadena, Calif., the company laid out its plan to bounce back this year
by renewing its most popular shows and unveiling new series it hopes
will draw an audience.
Comedy Central, which lost its sketch-comedy series Key and Peele last
year, secured the future of its other two big shows by announcing the
renewals of Inside Amy Schumer (Season 4 debuts in April; Season 5 will
air next year) and Broad City (which was picked up for fourth and fifth
seasons, ahead of Season 3's debut later this spring).
The network is also airing Time Traveling Bong—a miniseries from Broad
City's Ilana Glazer about (you guessed it) a magic, time-traveling
bong—which premieres April 20. Comedy Central also is planning on a big
celebration this year for South Park's 20th season, which will air this
fall. It also has a new sex-themed show, Not Safe with Nikki Glaser,
premiering Feb. 9.
Kent Alterman, Comedy Central's president of original programming, said
The Daily Show has also found its footing under new host Trevor Noah.
Thanks to the millennial host,
the show has retaken the late-night lead among adults ages 18 to 24 as
well as among men ages 18 to 34 and ages 18 to 24. Forty percent of The
Daily Show's audience is now watching it on digital platforms, with 2.6
million views a week.
MTV, which is still looking for a Jersey Shore-size hit, is hoping to
score big with The Shannara Chronicles, which debuted last night and is
based on the best-selling fantasy series of books by Terry Brooks. "We
wanted to broaden in scope and demographic," said Mina Lefevre, evp and
head of scripted development for MTV, who hopes the show will attract an
older, more male audience alongside MTV's core viewers.
The Shannara Chronicles "will set a new level for fantasy on television," said star John Rhys-Davies.
In more traditional MTV fare, the network is airing Greatest Party
Story Ever, which premieres Jan. 14 and retells epic party stories using
animation. The network renewed the show for a second season even before
the first one premiered, which "could be a first for MTV," said Lauren
Dolgen, head of reality programming and evp of series development.
TV Land has completed its rebranding,
ditching its nostalgic multicamera sitcoms—its last remaining one, The
Soul Man, will air its fifth and final season this year—for edgier
single-camera comedies like Younger (which was renewed today for Season
3), The Jim Gaffigan Show, Impastor and new comedy Teachers (which
premieres Jan. 13).
Keith Cox, evp of development and original programming for TV Land,
said the rebranding has lowered the network's prime-time median age by
seven years, and a new TV Land app, featuring access to full episodes,
debuts tomorrow.
The network hopes to continue its momentum by ordering a pilot for
Nobodies, a new comedy from Melissa McCarthy and husband Ben Falcone,
about a Hollywood group of friends who are tested after some of them
become successful. McCarthy and Falcone will direct the pilot, and
McCarthy will guest star on the show if it's picked up as a series.
Stephen Hill, president of programming at BET, said the network is now a
top 15 network in the 18-to-49 demo. After announcing a Season 4
renewal for Being Mary Jane, BET focused on two new series: Zoe Ever
After, which stars Brandy Norwood and debuted last night (It's Moesha
all grown up," said Hill, referencing her first TV role), and Chasing
Destiny, a reality-competition show about the creation of a new girl
group that host and executive producer Kelly Rowland insisted "is not a
reality competition show."
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