Buffy and Angel returning to the WB...well for one night The WB is going to run the pilots for Buffy, Angel and a few other shows on Sept. 17. They are also going to have interviews with people from WB shows, though I don't know if anyone from Buffy or Angel will be in any of them.
You can read the whole article below.
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117946199?categoryid=14&cs=1
*WB revisits glory days*
*Net plans to go out with a bang*
By MICHAEL SCHNEIDER, JOSEF ADALIAN
The Frog is planning one last hurrah before it croaks.
The WB will sign off the air forever on Sunday, Sept.
17, by rebroadcasting the pilot episodes of several of
its signature skeins, including "Buffy, the Vampire
Slayer," "Felicity" and "Dawson's Creek."
Landing the rights to air the series required outgoing
WB supremo Garth Ancier and the net's remaining execs
to conduct a delicate licensing ballet with the
outside studios that own those skeins, and cablers
that now play home to the shows.
In addition to the pilots, Frog plans to fill its
final night with a bevy of classic promos and image
campaigns from the WB's 11-year history. There'll also
be a final tribute reel featuring the hundreds of
thesps who've appeared on WB skeins over the years.
Such a farewell is unprecedented: When one-time fourth
network DuMont signed off the air for the last time in
1956, it did so with little fanfare -- and with very
little coverage.
"How do you end a network?" Ancier asked rhetorically.
"This will be an homage to our shows."
The planning process began with a group of remaining
WB execs, who made a list of the net's most memorable
series.
"We kept coming back to the same significant shows,"
Ancier said. "Certainly 'Dawson's' and 'Buffy' were
no-brainers."
Because the Frog's final bow will take place on a
Sunday -- a night on which the WB airs programming
from 5-10 p.m. -- net's blowout bye-bye will be a full
five hours.
Night will kick off at 5 p.m. with the J.J. Abrams-
and Matt Reeves-created "Felicity," followed at 6 by
Joss Whedon and David Greenwalt's "Angel." The
two-hour pilot to Whedon's "Buffy, the Vampire Slayer"
will run in primetime from 7-9 p.m.
Appropriately, "Dawson's Creek" -- the Kevin
Williamson teen sudser that put the WB on the map --
will be the final show to air on the Frog, running
from 9-10 p.m.
Some shows that would seem a natural for the last
night -- such as "Smallville" and "7th Heaven" --
won't appear because they'll live on at the merged
WB-UPN, which is called the CW.
And getting rights to air the series one last time was
a sticky process. Most of the shows are airing in
off-net syndication on cable, and navigating those
license holders was a bit more complicated.
"Every cable network that runs these shows had to give
the rights to us," Ancier said. "And they all wanted
their own pound of flesh."
That meant breaking the taboo of promoting cablers on
the network's air with date-and-time promos. (Usually
broadcast networks allow only cable ads that tell
viewers to "check local listings" to find the show).
But under this unusual circumstance -- and with the WB
folding anyway -- the Frog and its departing
affiliates were willing to let it slide.
The shows' creators, producers and studios were game
for the idea. But because all of the shows come from
outside the WB's Warner Bros. parent, Ancier and
company had to find a way to make it attractive for
those outside studios to license the shows for a
night.
Solution: All the studios involved will get a free
on-air promo of the DVD collections of their
respective skeins.
Beyond that, Sony Pictures TV (which produced
"Dawson's Creek"), Touchstone/Imagine ("Felicity") and
20th Century Fox TV ("Buffy" and "Angel") waived the
usual license fee; the WB was required only to pay the
necessary residuals.
"Everyone was great about it," Ancier said. "No one
was making money off of this."
Three of the five hours to air on the WB's last night
("Buffy," "Angel") will be from 20th Century Fox TV --
ironic, as the WB and 20th had more than a few
financial run-ins.
In particular, the night reps a homecoming for
"Buffy," which moved to UPN after the studio and Frog
couldn't come to terms on a license renewal. It's the
first time the show has returned to the WB since
leaving for the rival netlet in 2001.
There had been speculation the WB would sign off at
the end of August. But the new CW net -- which is
replacing the WB in many markets --isn't set to begin
broadcasting until Monday, Sept. 18.
Across town, UPN has not yet announced how, or if, it
will mark its own demise, which takes place the
previous Friday, Sept. 15. One possibility: The netlet
may simply shut off the lights after its usual weekly
airing of "Friday Night Smackdown."
Forumer™ is Voted #1 Free Forum Hosting provider
Build your own community today with the largest message board hosting company.