View Full Version : Magazines, News and Interviews #26
OCallyFaN80
11-28-2006, 10:09 PM
Recent News:
http://www.eonline.com/gossip/kristi...4-9d4d8a05a243
Is The O.C. Canceled? I've Got the Answer!
By Kristin Veitch
Nov 28, 2006 4:03 PM
The O.C. is canceled! The O.C. is canceled! The sky is falling!
Not. (Sorry, just had to employ a little Borat-ish non-humor there. And yes, I am well aware this is no laughing matter.)
Here’s the dealio. I, too, have been hearing the rumors in the past two days that The O.C. has been canceled. And I doggy-doo you not, just a few hours ago, I just so happened to (literally) run into executive producer McG—while reading an email from a concerned O.C. fan! How nutso is that? I was clicking away on my CrackBerry, waiting at the valet after lunch with a source, when I bumped into McG, who was headed for the Burberry store.
Naturally, I pounced for info, and McG (who is always cordial, even in such stalkery moments), told me, "No, we aren’t canceled. We hope we aren’t canceled! We are just waiting to find out if we’ll have 16 or 22 episodes this year."
Good news, no? And after such great success with my serendipitous curbside stalkage, I decided to cyberstalk executive producer Josh Schwartz just to be sure. Here’s what Schwartz tells me via email:
"I guess one of our cameramen spoke to his local hometown paper in Montana and said his last day of work was Wednesday, which then became (through the power of the Internet) the show was being shut down this week. Not true.
"The song remains the same. We were ordered for 16, and that's what we're doing. We're having a great time making the show this year, and the response to this season's episodes has been unbelievably gratifying and rewarding. I think the rest of the season will continue to deliver for our fans; we've got a lot of fun stuff in store so keep watching (or...start watching!). Thanks."
So, there you have it. The O.C. is not canceled—yet. But you should be advised that it very well could be if you don’t start watching soon. And I still contend this season truly is better than ever. So, start watching, will ya? Please? Pretty please? With Ryan and Taylor on top?
Autumn Reeser and her dog in In Touch Magazine
http://celebritydogwatcher.com/?p=1006
Thank You For Smoking gets 2 noms at Independent Spirit Awards.
http://www.eonline.com/news/article/...77&entry=index
Best Male Lead, Aaron Eckhart
Best Screenplay, Jason Reitman
To check out the past, yet recent news on anything related to The OC, check out our previous thread here (http://www.fanbolt.com/forums/showthread.php?t=35695)!
vinni2
11-29-2006, 07:21 AM
Thanks for the new thread.
Interview with Olivia Wilde. She discusses her new film "Turistas". But there's also a bit about the O.C.
http://www.mysanantonio.com/entertainment/stories/MYSA112906.1P.olivia.wilde.f65b0c.html
Q. Are you completely done with "The O.C."?
A. I'm done with "The O.C." right now. I'm actually shooting "The Black Donnellys," a new show for NBC.
Q. So you don't have any problem jumping back and forth between TV and movies?
A. When I left "The O.C." I didn't think I was going to do television again. Then I read the script to "The Black Donnellys" and it was so much better than most of the film scripts I was reading. And, of course, it was written and directed by Paul Haggis (Oscar-winning co-screenwriter of "Crash"), so I knew I couldn't pass that opportunity up.
Q. What happened to Alex (Kelly) on "The O.C."?
A. She went back to school is how we let it go. I've always thought about doing some random guest-starring role for those guys, just come back in so we could kill Alex or something. Have her get run over by a car or something so people will stop asking me whatever happened to her.
_____________
http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=51808
Stay Tuned: More Family Programming To Come, Network Execs Say
by Wayne Friedman, Wednesday, Nov 29, 2006 8:00 AM ET
LOS ANGELES -- AS MAJOR advertising executives continue to complain over the lack of adequate family programming, senior network executives believe they are making progress...
Still other executives--such as Peter Liguori, president of entertainment for the Fox Television Network--believe the young and hip Fox show, "The O.C," should be included as a 'family' program because it deals with issues that are relevant today. Liguori says his teenagers watch the show.
Still, when panel moderator Chuck Ross, publisher and editorial director of Television Week magazine, asked the audience whether they thought "The O.C." was a family show, only one audience member agreed with Liguori's view...
iwantalexback
11-30-2006, 06:33 PM
Olivia must be really mad about people asking what happened to Alex in order to say that.
d1ppy
12-01-2006, 11:20 AM
^ Lol yea I was thinking the same thing
vinni2
12-01-2006, 12:43 PM
I've posted the ratings news for "The Sleeping Beauty" episode in the spoilers thread. For anyone who'd like to bring them over.
vinni2
12-04-2006, 06:49 AM
Article on McG(OC producer) and his film "We are Marshall"
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/03/movies/03olse.html?_r=1&ref=movies&oref=slogin
Atomic County cartoon. Illustrations inside.
http://scottking.info/blog/2006/12/03/welcome-to-atomic-county-bitch/
__________________
http://www.brandrepublic.com/bulletins/media/article/607968/bt-signs-warner-emi-content-deals-launch/
BT signs Warner and EMI content deals for launch
4 Dec 2006
LONDON - BT has inked content deals with Hollywood studio Warner Bros and record label EMI for its broadband TV service, BT Vision, which launches today and expects to sign up 2m-3m customers.
The agreement with Warner Bros gives BT Vision customers access to new films such as 'Superman Returns', as well as titles in the back catalogue including the 'Harry Potter' franchise and TV shows 'The OC', 'ER' and 'Smallville'.
Under the new deal, customers can download titles to own or rent, which will be streamed instantly to their TV set via a set-top box....
____________________
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/061204/lam054.html?.v=75
Starz Lands Two Exclusive World Premieres With Award-Winning Casts
Monday December 4, 11:24 am ET
Fable 'Neverwas' Stars Aaron Eckhart, Brittany Murphy and Oscar(R) Winners and Nominees Ian McKellen, William Hurt, Nick Nolte and Jessica Lange
Heartwarming 'Our Very Own' Stars Allison Janney, Jason Ritter, Autumn Reeser and Cheryl Hines
ENGLEWOOD, Colo., Dec. 4 /PRNewswire/ -- Starz Entertainment has acquired two world premiere films both filled with award-winning casts: "Neverwas" and "Our Very Own," premiering exclusively in December on Starz and Starz Cinema respectively. Both films have never appeared in any medium, including theatrical, video, etc.
Our Very Own" was conceived by the films' director Cameron Watson, a Shelbyville, Tennessee native (where the film takes place). It is a semi-autobiographic tale set in 1978 starring Allison Janney ("The West Wing"), who was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award, Keith Carradine ("Deadwood") and Cheryl Hines ("Curb Your Enthusiasm"), along with rising stars Jason Ritter ("The Class"), Autumn Reeser ("The O.C.") and Hilarie Burton ("One Tree Hill").
In "Our Very Own," five local teens are excited about the triumphant return of another Shelbyville native, Sondra Locke, who starred with her then-partner Clint Eastwood in several films of the era, including "Any Which Way But Loose." The teenagers hope to follow the movie star out of Shelbyville, but at the same time, one member of the group is facing a personal family crisis. "Our Very Own" premieres Monday, December 11th at 6:40 p.m. on Starz Cinema.
vinni2
12-04-2006, 06:32 PM
"Mischa Barton continues her role as the face of Keds"
http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7005721831
"Cable TV's Drama Dilemna". Very brief OC mention.
http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticleHomePage&art_aid=52026
"Rock Kills Kid Cuts Single For O.C. Soundtrack At Odds On Recording"
http://top40-charts.com/news.php?nid=28972
ETA: Kristin/Eonline reporting on Adam and Rachel.
http://www.eonline.com/gossip/kristin/blog/index.jsp?uuid=dbbb3b13-dbd3-4856-8e9e-373589071a5a
0C iS L0VE x0x
12-04-2006, 07:56 PM
i saw a new ad with mischa in it. god am i seeing her everywhere! this one said i am african and she had some blue face paint. i think its for hiv and aids in africa
:)
ResaGrl158
12-04-2006, 08:20 PM
Adam and Rachel broke up?? No! I don't believe it, no, no! :(
d1ppy
12-05-2006, 04:40 PM
No they did not.
alyss123
12-05-2006, 06:08 PM
i sure hope not i might acually cry
vinni2
12-05-2006, 06:48 PM
http://people.aol.com/people/article/0,26334,1566162,00.html
Rachel Bilson & Adam Brody Split Up
TUESDAY DECEMBER 05, 2006 07:00PM EST
By Mary Margaret
Photo by: Mike Guastella / WireImage
Rachel Bilson and Adam Brody – who play a couple on The O.C. – have broken up off-screen, PEOPLE has confirmed.
“It was a typical romance and they just grew apart,” a source close to the pair tells PEOPLE, adding, “They’ve been on and off for awhile now.”
In October, the couple of three years denied breakup rumors. That month, they were spotted looking lovey-dovey strolling hand-in-hand in Toronto where Bilson was shooting the sci-fi drama Jumper. Yet that romantic scene wasn't an indication that they were still together, says the source: "Exes do hang out."
But during Brody's gig with his band Big Japan at Hollywood's Viper Room on Dec. 2, Bilson – normally a fixture at his performances – was noticeably absent, fueling rumors that their romance was over.
In April, Bilson, 25, gushed about her beau, telling Teen People that Brody, 27, is her best friend. "We always have a lot to talk about, and we tell each other everything. I feel like I have everything now – the dog, the house, the job and him. I can't ask for anything more!" (Together the couple adopted a pit-bull terrier, Penny Lane.)
Early in their relationship, the low-profile couple, who started dating during the first season of The O.C. , denied rumors that they were engaged.
__________________
d1ppy
12-05-2006, 09:41 PM
It's hard to believe they're broken up. I really can't beleive it.
AND I cant believe they're still in Toronto...I should start booking another mission to see them.
AnthonyC
12-05-2006, 10:08 PM
I wonder how that will affect the dynamic of Seth and Summer on The OC? Then again, Seth and Summer haven't had chemistry since the end of season 1.
OCallyFaN80
12-05-2006, 10:27 PM
I find it too hard to believe. I feel like it's deja vu because I felt the exact way right now then I was back then when Jennifer Aniston and Brad Pitt broke up. It's just too hard to believe. But I can't believe they broke up because "supposibly" of that reason.. Rachel and Adam was like the new, upgraded version of Jen and Brad before. But, this is too sad to even talk about. I'm upset about the news.. :(
Sar_Bear4Ryan
12-06-2006, 12:22 AM
did adam and rachel break up????
t_ina
12-06-2006, 02:47 AM
Don't forget to pick up your copy of "Music From The OC: Mix 6"
Featuring Rock Kills Kid doing a cover of "I Turn My Camera On" by Spoon.
Get it on iTunes here: http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?id=206817544&s=143441
source musicfromtheoc
t_ina
12-06-2006, 02:04 PM
the oc set ... season 4
3 short clip are up here http://getitnow.vzwshop.com/index.aspx?id=featured_shows&show=oc&bhcp=1
+1 from season 4
jillian
12-06-2006, 08:19 PM
did adam and rachel break up????
there are tabloids reporting it but as far as i've heard no confirmation from either's rep.
Sar_Bear4Ryan
12-06-2006, 10:45 PM
^ phew ok good :D
vinni2
12-07-2006, 10:04 AM
National Board of Review winners
http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2006/12/national_board_.html#more
Best Directorial Debut
Jason Reitman, Thank You For Smoking
Review of OC Mix 6
http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2006/12/oc.html#comments
firefawn
12-08-2006, 08:21 AM
Mischa in New York
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2004580002-2006570025,00.html
vinni2
12-12-2006, 08:09 AM
Article on Autumn Reeser.
http://www.nypost.com/seven/12122006/tv/new_marissa_tv_mike_battaglino.htm
NEW MARISSA
By MIKE BATTAGLINO
December 12, 2006 -- IT'S "T" time for "The O.C."
Or, to go one better, it's "T.T." time: Taylor Townsend time.
But is it too late?
The chatty valedictorian of Harbor High - played by sunny 26-year-old Autumn Reeser - has moved to the head of the class in the series' fourth season, and should be getting better marks.
A blooming romance with monosyllabic Ryan hasn't generated much watercooler talk about "The O.C.," which has become a forgotten fourth-place finisher on Thursday night against a murderers' row of "Grey's Anatomy," "CSI" and "30 Rock."
Don't blame Taylor, or Reeser, who has added much-needed sex appeal and humor to the mourning after Marissa. In an effort to win back fans - viewership is down nearly 60 percent since the 2004 season premiere - plots have turned from stalking to seduction, from somber to silly.
And Reeser, the cover girl for the December issue of lad-mag Stuff, is providing the West Coast heat. If the peek-a-boo promos for last Thursday's episode can be believed, it will make the recent photo shoot look Nor'eastern by comparison.
Reeser had one audition for what was supposed to be a four-episode run. Taylor debuted last season as a back-burner rival of Marissa (departed Mischa Barton) and Summer (fading Rachel Bilson).
Now, Taylor's an international sexual dynamo whose conquests include a Korean chef and a French ex-husband. But her ability to bed the blue-collar boy from Chino - think pre-drinking-age Sam and Diane - could save the series.
"Even though she's larger than life in a lot of ways, I think she's relatable because she tries," Reeser says of Taylor on fox.com.
She has to try harder. Rumors of cancellation are steady, and there's no word if the order for 16 episodes this season will be increased (a season typically is 22 episodes; "The O.C" aired 25 in year three).
Ratings have fallen so far, so fast (2.4 last week, far behind "Grey's" 15.4), Fox launched a "Save the O.C." Web site (www.fox.com/oc/savetheoc), which to date has generated almost 119,000 electronic signatures.
It's an effort that Taylor, Harbor's former social chair and all-around party planner, likely would lead herself.
"She doesn't let herself get beaten down by life," Reeser says on fox.com. "She just goes after it again."
We'll see if her show can do the same.
___________________________
Article on the show and the real Orange County.
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-me-uncool12dec12,0,6989606.story?coll=la-headlines-entnews&track=crosspromo
Sunset for 'The O.C.'? That depends
The show that made the county famous is on the ropes. What that means for the county's image is up for debate.
By Yvonne Villarreal and Ashley Powers
Times Staff Writer
December 12, 2006
On Saturday afternoon, Emma Murphy, a 16-year-old from Sydney, Australia, gazed at Newport Bay's choppy waters, gripping a Guess purse and a perception of Orange County gleaned solely from the small screen.
Aboard "The O.C. Experience Tour" boat, Emma spotted something that tore her attention from the surrounding yachts to the Balboa Fun Zone.
"Oh my God! That's the Ferris wheel that Ryan and Marissa had their first date on!" she yelled, referring to two main characters on the TV series "The O.C." "I have to go on, Mum."
With a mix of soap opera antics and pop culture smarts, "The O.C." has been a boon to its hometown, culminating the county's transformation from Los Angeles' ho-hum neighbor to a trend-maker perched on the endless Pacific. Its pull was so strong that a county supervisor suggested turning John Wayne Airport into "The O.C. Airport," and when characters ripped on Riverside residents as "white trash," officials in the inland city mulled their legal options.
But in the show's fourth season on Fox, its ratings have plummeted to 97th among prime-time shows, with an audience of 3.7 million, according to recent Nielsen numbers. Up against juggernauts such as "Grey's Anatomy," the show appears close to its demise, with fans posting "Save The O.C." pleas on YouTube. Like a homecoming queen stripped of her tiara, Orange County is facing a future without a series that served as a weekly hourlong infomercial for Newport Beach and has even persuaded families to cross oceans for a firsthand look.
"It makes you dream of living here, in this beautiful atmosphere," said Emma, who sported oversized sunglasses like the show's female characters and begged her mom to buy a pink sweater "like Marissa's." "It was my first look into the lifestyle over here. It's a teenage fantasy."
If Beverly Hills, Miami and other cities tied to television dramas are indicators, Orange County's newfound national brand will last well past the final episode of "The O.C." — sparking both delight and consternation. Some say getting hitched to the depiction of Newport's bronzed and Botoxed chattering class could box in county image-makers for decades. Just ask officials in Dallas (more on its Texas-sized headaches later).
Simon Hudson, an associate professor at the University of Calgary, has studied how films boost tourism in locales splashed across the screen. Television shows — sometimes recycled for decades in domestic and international syndication — appear to have a similar effect, he said.
The Ewing clan, which schemed for more than a dozen seasons on "Dallas" starting in 1978, roped in about half a million tourists a year, according to a study by Hudson and a colleague published in the Journal of Travel Research. Boston toasted the estimated $7 million a year in unpaid advertising that "Cheers" brought to Beantown.
The effect of the small-screen is so strong that Palm Springs officials are already salivating over "Hidden Palms," a show slated as a midseason replacement on the CW network (it's shot mainly in the Phoenix area).
"Films are one-offs and no guarantee — most of them fail," Hudson said. "Whereas TV series are around for a long, long time."
"Miami Vice," for example, helped turn the Florida metropolis into a playground for bling-toting hip-hop stars.
"Miami was more known as a retirement center; it was dark and shuttered," said David Whitaker, a spokesman for the Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau.
The late-1980s crime show "caressed that landscape," said Robert Thompson, a professor of television and pop culture at Syracuse University. "It gave Miami this evil but incredibly seductive look ... like an evil that you wanted to get a taste of." Miami tourism officials latched onto that, promoting images of "beautiful people in evocative settings," Whitaker said.
Similarly, some Orange County officials would like to keep tacking "the" in front of "O.C." As the show pops up on televisions in Britain, Germany and other countries, the Newport Beach Conference & Visitors Bureau has charted a 20% increase in website hits. A map directing tourists to the Balboa and Newport piers and other locations that made "O.C." guest appearances remains the bureau's most-requested item, though most scenes are filmed in Los Angeles County.
"We never really sold ourselves as 'the real O.C.,' but the concept of using the term 'O.C.' has become so ingrained that I think we will continue to use it," said Gary Sherwin, the Newport bureau's president and chief executive.
Beverly Hills still gets calls seeking directions to the Peach Pit, the fictional diner from "Beverly Hills, 90210," which ended its run six years ago. In fact, when the city's visitors bureau director, Kathy Smits, took her first tour of the Museum of Television & Radio in Beverly Hills several years ago, she stumbled upon Japanese tourists crowded around a "90210" episode.
The major distinction between Beverly Hills and the sun-bleached county to the south is that the former is perennially cast in films and TV shows, much like New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago. Orange County, said Thompson, the Syracuse University professor, is probably watching its "television renaissance" fade to black.
The county's other toeholds in public consciousness have been canned ("Arrested Development"); maligned ("Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County") or banished to DVD (the film "Orange County"). There's still the Bravo series "The Real Housewives of Orange County," but O.C.'s hipper-than-thou image can't rest on five older women in Coto de Caza.
"Orange County is going to be called 'The O.C.' for at least a generation," Thompson said. "For the fans, everything they know about Orange County they learned from 'The O.C.' "
Though that might seem tempting to tourism officials, consider how the Ewings have plagued Dallas. The nation's ninth-largest city has been stuck with the show's big-oil, big-hair image like a teenager with a despised childhood nickname.
Though it tried and failed to lure the shooting crew of the coming "Dallas" movie, the city's visitors bureau has otherwise worked to shift its small-screen reputation by wooing travel writers and meeting planners to tour downtown. Its brochures — slogan: "Live Large. Think Big" — tout an updated skyline, high-end shopping and dining, and photos that reflect Dallas' diverse population.
In part, the efforts stem from when the bureau asked folks several years ago what images the city's name conjured. Nearly a quarter-century after "Dallas" debuted, officials blanched at the top responses: 3) Tex-Mex and margaritas; 2) giant-haired women; and 1) J.R. Ewing.
jillian
12-12-2006, 01:43 PM
thanks for the autumn article.
vinni2
12-13-2006, 07:10 PM
Article on Imogen Heap.
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=541418
vinni2
12-14-2006, 09:22 AM
Golden Globe nominations are out.
Thank You for Smoking was nominated for Best Picture, Comedy or Musical.
Aaron Eckhart for Best Actor, Comedy or Musical.
http://www.ew.com/ew/report/0,6115,1569693_1_0_,00.html
vinni2
12-14-2006, 11:33 AM
New interview with Josh Schwartz (dated Dec. 14).
Possible spoilers. It's three pages long.
http://www.buddytv.com/articles/the_oc/exclusive_interview_josh_scwar-2651.aspx
Alyssalovesyou
12-16-2006, 07:23 PM
Ahhh its horrible. I still dont want to believe it.
Alyssalovesyou
12-16-2006, 07:23 PM
(That Adam and Rachel broke up)
d1ppy
12-16-2006, 08:43 PM
thanks for the josh article
t_ina
12-17-2006, 07:11 AM
Mischa Barton lends her face to the "I Am African" campaign for Keep a Child Alive.
http://i12.tinypic.com/3523txz.jpg
Each and every one of us contains DNA that can be traced back to our African ancestors.
These amazing people traveled far and wide. Now they need our help. Most Africans cannot afford the lifesaving antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) that have transformed AIDS in the West to a treatable and manageable disease. ARV’s are miracle drugs. We take them for granted here in the West but to an African family they are tragically out of reach because of cost, even by some Governments.
source http://www.mischanews.com/
firefawn
12-17-2006, 07:32 AM
Mischa Barton and Cisco Adler looked cozy at David (Pink Elephant) Cabo's recent holiday party at his SoHo loft. ..
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/480902p-404673c.html
d1ppy
12-17-2006, 09:19 AM
Mischa Barton lends her face to the "I Am African" campaign for Keep a Child Alive.
http://i12.tinypic.com/3523txz.jpg
Each and every one of us contains DNA that can be traced back to our African ancestors.
These amazing people traveled far and wide. Now they need our help. Most Africans cannot afford the lifesaving antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) that have transformed AIDS in the West to a treatable and manageable disease. ARV’s are miracle drugs. We take them for granted here in the West but to an African family they are tragically out of reach because of cost, even by some Governments.
source http://www.mischanews.com/
That is one cool photo of her.
Lyndsi
12-17-2006, 09:56 AM
i cant believe adam and rachel broke up..what the hell thats upsetting :(
vinni2
12-18-2006, 02:32 PM
Interview with Autumn Reeser
http://www.tvsquad.com/2006/12/18/autumn-reeser-the-tv-squad-interview/
vinni2
12-19-2006, 03:37 AM
Samaire Armstrong's new project
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/television/news/e3i2d2333041a2e6510641d37489824a20d
More articles on Samaire:
http://www.metro.co.uk/fame/article.html?in_article_id=29840&in_page_id=7&in_a_source=
http://www.metro.co.uk/fame/article.html?in_article_id=29841&in_page_id=7&in_a_source=
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/tm_headline=it-s-a-boy-gael-thing-&method=full&objectid=18284187&siteid=66633-name_page.html
Tate Donovan's next project:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/television/news/e3i93192526cf8de34a4a2aa544156ac921
t_ina
12-21-2006, 02:33 AM
Autumn in In Touch:
http://ryanandtaylor.com/gallery/displayimage.php?album=105&pos=0
credit Lenschn
vinni2
12-21-2006, 06:45 PM
Interview with Autumn Reeser.
Thanks Impik for the link.
http://www.eonline.com/gossip/kristin/blog/index.jsp?uuid=796a0336-9c0b-49fc-876e-0e92468424c2&page=1
E Online Watch with Kristin
O.C. Scoop: Taylor Townsend Talks!
Dec. 21, 2006 11:20 AM
They said it couldn't be done. The O.C. reborn in year four? A stupendous season minus Marissa Cooper?! Pshaw! Many scoffed at the idea, but they obviously hadn't yet learned the power of the almighty...wait for it, wait for it…Taylor Townsend. The O.C.'s latest addition is perky, prissy and meddling as all hell, and as you fellow O.C. fans know, perhaps the biggest reason we're all still watching the show this year. So, when I heard a rumor that the woman herself (also known as Autumn Reeser) was in the E! building, you best believe I stalked that little lady for some scoop!
Read on for exclusive dish on the show, how she feels about die-hard Marissa fans and why getting wet for Ryan Atwood wasn't really all that bad.
Taylor Townsend saved The O.C.!
[Laughs.] Oh, thank you, but I don't know about that! I have a great time playing her. The only time I'm not thrilled is when I have to be at work at five in the morning. That's tough, because Taylor is so energetic and focused and I'm not at six in the morning. It's a lot to pull out when it's still dark outside.
So, I suppose you're not a whole lot like Taylor in real life?
I do relate to many things about her. I'm a big organizer. I totally spend my weeknights filing photos or recipes. I don't like to get in other people's business as much as she does. And she's more neurotic and needier. But I love Taylor.
She's a little different than she was last season, though. Did you have fun doing that whole sudsy, soapy Ryan Atwood fantasy sequence a few weeks back?
[Laughs.] That was awesome. I got to shoot that on my birthday. It was a great gift for me, because I'm a dancer and I like to express myself physically. I liked being able to go off, do whatever I wanted and be somebody different. It was so much fun.
What did you think when the producers told you that Taylor and Ryan would have a thing this year?
Actually, they didn't really tell us. They sort of hinted at it [in the scripts] and then it kind of just progressed in the episodes. I thought it was a good place for the show to go. I think Taylor and Ryan actually make a really good couple together. She's a good influence on him, and I like the storyline. I think the fans like it, too.
Were you at all worried that fans would turn against you for being with Marissa's man?
Oh yeah. Absolutely. I still am half-worried that people are going to hate me [and say], "She's stealing Marissa's boyfriend!" I'm sure there are people who are pissed, but mostly it's been a good response.
Is it very different on set this season with Mischa [Barton] gone?
Yeah it is. It's always different when you lose somebody who was such an intrinsic part of what you began with.
What can you say about Taylor's future? Might we see her French husband again? Will she continue to live with Julie and Kaitlin now that Summer's back in Newport?
We will see Taylor's husband again. I can tease to that. But honestly, Taylor needs to move out [of the Cooper house] and get her life on the right path again. Everything was derailed for her when she went to France. It's like her whole life has taken this different course. There was just no planning it, so she really needs to start over, because if she's not training for a job or something, there's going to be trouble down the way. I think she should go back to school, get her own apartment and get stuff together. Stop meddling in everyone's life, Taylor, and get your own!
The next episode of The O.C. airs tonight on Fox.
LoVeThEO.C.
12-23-2006, 11:07 PM
I really hope The O.C. doesn't get cancelled..All this talk about the show maybe getting cancelled makes me sad!:(
t_ina
12-24-2006, 01:30 PM
Mischa Barton “Virgin Territory” Movie Pics
Here are some new promotional pictures for Mischa Barton’s new movie, "Virgin Territory", co-starring Hayden Christensen, which will come out in August.
spurce and pics http://www.mischanews.com/2006/12/20/mischa-barton-virgin-territory-movie-pics/#more-550
----
Here is the trailer for "Virgin Territory" as well as some behind-the-scenes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_lNf8t6s5bY&eurl=
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fdeAK1cAa5M&eurl=
IF you are going to Los Angeles most frequent asked question where can you see where they film the show.
http://www.seeing-stars.com/OC/
From the homes to Harbor High to the Pier located directions on the above website will help you.
d1ppy
12-27-2006, 08:52 AM
Awesome pics! I cant wait for the movie
jillian
12-28-2006, 03:08 PM
thanks for the autumn in touch link. such a cute pic.
vinni2
12-29-2006, 07:11 AM
People.com
Star Tracks December 28, 2006
http://www.people.com/people/gallery/0,,20005382_5,00.html
http://img2.timeinc.net/people/i/2007/startracks/070801/thursday/adam_brody.jpg
LOUNGE ACT
A solo Adam Brody scopes out the scene Tuesday night at L.A.'s Hyde Lounge. The O.C. actor next stars in the film In the Land of Women, about a guy whose life falls apart after his breakup, due out in April.
________________________
People.com
Star Tracks December 29, 2006
http://img2.timeinc.net/people/i/2007/startracks/070801/friday/rachel_bilson.jpg
http://www.people.com/people/gallery/0,,20005383,00.html
SINGLE IN THE CITY
While her ex Adam Brody ventured out to Hyde Lounge the night before, Rachel Bilson stops by another L.A. hot spot, Social Hollywood, on Wednesday.
There might be other photos and videos of the two on the other internet photo sites.
Jessica
12-29-2006, 10:54 AM
^ thanks for that
vinni2
01-02-2007, 06:46 AM
I'm not sure if these have been posted.
Olivia Wilde GQ and Self Magazine scans.
http://theocblogger.blogspot.com/2007/01/january-1st-olivia-gq-and-self-magazine.html
The Last Kiss and Oh in Ohio make comingsoon.net's list of Terrible 25 of 2006.
http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=18187
Alan Dale casting rumor.
http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=9271
There's a note on Ain't It Cool News that claims "Australian actor Alan Dale (known best for his roles on '24,' 'West Wing' and as the rich grandfather in 'The OC') is up for a role in 'THE DARK KNIGHT.' They don't know, however, which role Dale will be playing."
iwantalexback
01-02-2007, 07:05 PM
The first picture is pretty hot.
vinni2
01-02-2007, 08:55 PM
http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticleHomePage&art_aid=52986
DVRs Impact Viewership, Increase Live-Plus Ratings
by David Goetzl
Media buyers take note: Once is not enough. Just ask DVR owners. Season rankings for the most-watched shows with DVRs give rise to several conclusions: Upscale shows and programs in competitive time slots are heavily recorded, while high-profile sports events are almost always viewed live.
NBC's "The Office"--where a recent episode saw 23% of 18- to-49-year-old viewers watch with a DVR in the seven days after broadcast--is the show most heavily viewed with a DVR by this demo. Over the first three months of the season, an average 16% of these viewers watched "Office" episodes via DVRs in the week after broadcast.
The percentage represents the increase between the "live" rating and "live plus seven" rating. "Live plus seven" adds viewership via DVRs in the seven days after broadcast to the number of people that watched in real-time.
Fox's "The OC" is ranked second, with a 15% average of 18- to-49-year-old viewers watching with a DVR in the seven days after broadcast, while NBC's "Studio 60" and ABC's "Lost" are also in the top five with 14% averages.
At the bottom of the list is NBC's "Sunday Night Football," where a mere 1% average of 18- to-49-year-olds recorded it and watched it over the next week. Viewers eager to watch sports live have been augmented by ABC's "Saturday Night Football" scraping the bottom, with a 1.2% average DVR viewership.
Another wrinkle: The season's top-rated 18-to-49 show--ABC's "Desperate Housewives"--is ranked 34th in average percentage of viewers watching with DVRs (9%), suggesting that viewers hunger to watch it "live"--it's appointment television. The show also likely benefited from "Sunday Night Football" ending in the Pacific Time Zone before "Housewives" aired, weakening its head-to-head competition considerably and driving down DVR recording.
And both nights of the highly rated "Dancing with the Stars" posted very little DVR viewing (both in the 4% range) on average--suggesting that as with sports, viewers didn't want to wait for the results. (The show also airs live on the East Coast.) ABC's "Dancing" also has one of the highest median ages on television--53.1--and older viewers are not believed to be as DVR-savvy or pervasive as younger ones.
Among the possible reasons for "The Office" generating the highest DVR viewership are its upscale profile and competitive time slot against ABC's "Ugly Betty" and CBS' "Survivor," suggesting that viewers are watching one show live and recording another.
Similarly, "The OC" runs in the Thursday 9 p.m. power hour, where it competes against "Grey's Anatomy" and "CSI." "The OC" also skews younger (median age is 32.3--12th youngest on TV by one measure). Its viewers probably have a higher percentage of DVRs than the public at-large. It also is a low-rated show, where even small DVR-aided ratings increases on average lead to a significant "live plus seven" boost.
"Studio 60's" higher level of DVR consumption is probably attributable to two factors: A high percentage of upscale viewers and time-period competition from big-time hit CBS' "CSI: Miami," which has only 7% "live plus seven" average increases. "Lost" falls into the same boat--an upscale skew and a time-period battle with CBS' "Criminal Minds," which has an 8% average DVR increase.
Also, both "Studio 60" and "Lost" are serials, suggesting that viewers would record them to avoid missing an episode and falling behind on developing story lines.
Another theory as to why some shows generate heavy DVR-aided viewing is their slots in the 8 p.m. hour (7 p.m. in the Central and Mountain Time Zones). In today's increasingly busy world, some viewers have trouble sitting down for prime-time viewing that early in the evening. That point was buttressed by NBC's recent announcement that it is exploring lower-cost programming in the prime-time entry hour.
Shows ranked in the top-10 most-watched with DVRs that air in the 8 p.m. hour include "The Office," Fox's "Prison Break" (13% "live plus seven" increase), NBC's "My Name is Earl" (13%) and Fox's "Bones" (12%).
Not surprisingly, CW shows with young-skewing audiences also had high percentages of DVR viewing: "One Tree Hill," "Gilmore Girls," and "Supernatural" (all 10%). "One Tree Hill" has the youngest median age on broadcast TV by one measure: 26.4.
______________________
http://nymag.com/arts/tv/features/26009/#
January 8, 2007 issue of New York Magazine
Why Did Viewers OD on ‘The O.C.’ ?
By Emma Rosenblum
Was it only three years ago that The O.C. premiered and became an instant phenomenon? The country went mad for the sunny teen soap: It was like 90210—but funny! And self-aware! The show launched a catchphrase (“Welcome to the O.C., bitch!”), a holiday (Christmukkah), and a barrage of imitators (The Real Housewives of Orange County and MTV’s Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County). But now, The O.C. is in real danger of cancellation: In November, its fourth season debuted to its lowest ratings ever—a mere 3.38 million fans, and the numbers haven’t gotten better since.
To understand what went so wrong with the show, we should revisit what it once got so right. For starters, The O.C. had great timing; in 2003, there was a gaping hole in the market for smart teen dramas, as Dawson’s Creek had just gone off the air. The O.C. improved on Dawson’s formula of love-triangle angst set to an indie-band soundtrack, then added a smart mix of sarcasm and pop-culture knowingness that didn’t sound like adults writing for teens. (It helped that the show’s creator, Josh Schwartz, was a mere 26.) Not only was The O.C. the first teen drama that didn’t take itself too seriously, it was the first one that understood its audience had grown up watching soapy teen dramas.
There are concrete reasons for the show’s quick decline: Schwartz became distracted by other projects, and lead-character Marissa (Mischa Barton) was killed off last year. But in hindsight, these seem like symptoms, not the disease. The O.C.’s main problem—what took the show from phenomenon to failure—was that it became too cool too fast. Its hipster audience, initially seduced by the show’s self-referential wittiness, was repelled by its mainstream success. And mainstream fans, drawn in by the soap opera, were turned off by increasingly absurdist plot twists. Ironically, the super-hip O.C. failed where Aaron Spelling’s less-intelligent shows succeeded—it was too ironic to be a soap, but too soapy to be a parody. Take this season’s dismal debut: a clunky, dark hour in which hunky Ryan brooded, fought, and mourned the death of Marissa. He should have mourned instead the loss of the show’s last, best quality—an ability to make fun of itself. More recently, Ryan fell into an It’s a Wonderful Life–like coma, dreaming that his character had never arrived in the O.C. If only such a do-over were possible.
Write to the editor:
letters@nymag.com
_____________
Just my comment:
The article is dated January 8, but aside from the Chrismukkah reference, it looks like most of the information for the article was gathered around November-early December of last year. But it only saw print now.
_______________
Related article on DVR viewing:
http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003522783
Time-Shifted Viewing Figures Offer Dramatic Reality Check
DECEMBER 18, 2006 -
By Jim Edwards
NEW YORK -- Television product placement's growth has mirrored that of ad-skipping digital video recorders. Marketers responded by focusing on reality shows with their big audiences and flexible formats.
But new numbers from Nielsen Product Placement indicate that if marketers want to reach audiences watching in time-shifted mode on DVRs like TiVo, they're placing their brands in the wrong shows.
That's because people who watch on DVR favor scripted shows like Fox's The O.C. and House, NBC's The Office, Studio 60 and 30 Rock, and ABC's Lost.
Some numbers: In the third quarter of 2006, the show with most brands in it was CBS' Rock Star Supernova, with 1,609 prop-shots. But the show with the largest portion of DVR viewers in the fall season was The O.C., with 2.9 million viewers in total, 14.5% of whom are watching later on DVR.
The same thing is true for audience size. CBS' CSI got 19.1 million viewers this fall, according to Nielsen, making it the most-watched show by all viewers.
CSI is a scripted drama, so perhaps you're thinking it was popular with DVR users? Wrong. It isn't even in the Top 10 for those watching on DVRs. In fact, CSI is only the 24th most popular show among those watching on DVRs.
And it isn't in the Top 10 for placements either (unless you count the entire show as an infomercial for the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority).
The difference in viewing habits is almost certainly explained by the fact that reality shows, like sports, are only relevant at the time they're being played. After the fact, who cares who got voted off the island?
But hook a viewer into the saga of a bunch of misfits held captive on a creepy desert island and they'll make appointments—if not at the convenience of the network—to watch it later in the week.
While the numbers don't indicate that reality shows are losing their audiences, they do indicate that as viewers increasingly transition to watching shows downloaded at their convenience, reality shows—and those whose brands are integrated into them—are likely to lose out.
And it's not just a question of whether anyone is actually watching. "It's also a problem when you look at the demographics you're trying to reach," said Johan Liedgren, the head of branded entertainment at Digital Kitchen in Seattle.
Fox's "24 on DVR will reach a different viewer than the one that watched it on real-time television," he said.
There's also a looming problem for those on the production side. As Liedgren pointed out, if you watch 24 on a tiny iPod screen and a villain gets shot, you can find yourself staring at a stick figure inexplicably falling over.
"I'd like to see shows shot two ways, or some scenes shot two ways," one for each medium, he said. That would create production headaches. Aaron Lenzini, vp at the William Morris Agency in Beverly Hills, Calif., noted that "scripted TV has [already] become a battleground" because the various interests of the writers, producers, networks, directors and talent all have to be taken into account before a brand can appear. "It's not like in reality where any brand or any product will do," said Lenzini, who represents General Motors.
And there are consequences for the way products appear, also. Already brands like Cold Stone Creamery are increasing their logo sizes so they will show up on regular TV screens ( (Brandweek, 'The Tracker,' Nov. 6). How much bigger will they have to be to appear on a mobile phone interface?
__________________
vinni2
01-02-2007, 09:34 PM
http://x17online.com/celebrities/rachel_bilson/x17_xclusive_rachel_ends_relationship_ends_year_wi th_family.php#comments
X17online.com
X17 Exclusive. Rachel ends relationship, ends year with family
Our photogs spotted Rachel Bilson packing up and moving out of the place she shares with Adam Brody last week, in the final days of 2006....
(more of the article and photos in the link.)
____________________
Hollywood Reporter
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3i0c0342d71c020e73196afd48e2d4918e
NBC welcomes cops, spies, bionic woman
By Nellie Andreeva
Jan 3, 2007
The pilot pickup season began in earnest Tuesday, with NBC greenlighting three one-hour pilots, a cop show from "Law & Order" veteran Michael Chernuchin and "Rescue Me" creators Denis Leary and Peter Tolan, a spy dramedy from "The O.C." creator Josh Schwartz and a new take on "The Bionic Woman."
..."Chuck," written by Schwartz and Chris Fedak, is described as a high-concept action dramedy about spies and twentysomethings in the vein of "Grosse Pointe Blank."
Warner Bros. TV is producing the pilot with Schwartz executive producing and Fedak co-executive producing.
Schwartz, whose "O.C." is in its fourth season, has been busy this development season. In addition to "Chuck," which originally was picked by the network with a put pilot commitment, he wrote and is executive producing "The Gossip Girl," which is expected to be picked up to pilot by the CW.
More on Josh Schwartz's new project.
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117956560.html?categoryid=14&cs=1
NBC pilots 3 dramas
Net greenlights 'Pit,' 'Chuck,' 'Bionic'
By MICHAEL SCHNEIDER
Peacock execs were still in a holiday mood on Tuesday, handing out nicely wrapped drama pilot orders to Denis Leary, David Eick and Josh Schwartz.
The trio's pilots -- "Fort Pit," "Chuck" and "Bionic Woman" -- helped kick off what will likely be a flurry of greenlights at all five broadcast nets over the next few weeks.
...Meanwhile, "Chuck," an action comedy about twentysomething spies, is written by Schwartz and Chris Fedak. Warner Bros. TV is producing.
Schwartz ("The OC") will exec produce "Chuck," while Fedak is on board as a co-exec producer. Project is said to be in the vein of the quirky late '90s feature "Grosse Pointe Blank," which starred John Cusack as an assassin-for-hire with a sense of humor.
"Chuck" was originally a put pilot with penalty; Tuesday's order officially means the project will be shot.
vinni2
01-03-2007, 08:04 PM
OC TO END FEB. 22.
Official Press Release from Fox.
http://www.thefutoncritic.com/news.aspx?id=20070103fox02
THE SUN SETS ON THE O.C. WHEN THE SERIES FINALE AIRS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, ON FOX
The sun will set for the last time on THE O.C. when the series ends its four-season run Thursday, Feb. 22 (9:00-10:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX. The countdown has begun, with all-original episodes airing from Thursday, Jan. 4 through the last episode on Feb. 22.
THE O.C. stars Peter Gallagher (Sandy Cohen), Kelly Rowan (Kirsten Cohen), Benjamin McKenzie (Ryan Atwood), Adam Brody (Seth Cohen), Melinda Clarke (Julie Cooper), Rachel Bilson (Summer Roberts), Autumn Reeser (Taylor Townsend) and Willa Holland (Autumn Reeser).
Set in Orange County, California, THE O.C. premiered in August 2003. It follows a group of friends and families whose lives were changed by the arrival of an outsider Ryan Atwood to their ocean-side community of Newport Beach.
THE O.C. revived the teen drama genre while including humorous and heartfelt adult storylines. Shortly after its summer premiere, THE O.C. was a pop culture phenomenon its actors are household names and its indie music (and subsequent six soundtracks) and hip California wardrobe are sought-after in stores. The shows Newport Beach locale also has become a popular tourist attraction as fans visit the real locations featured in their favorite episodes.
"THE O.C. Season Four finale will also be the series finale. This feels like the best time to bring the show to its close, said Josh Schwartz, creator and executive producer of THE O.C. Thanks to the hard work of our cast, crew and writers, we have enjoyed our best season yet, and what better time to go out than creatively on top. It has been an amazing experience and a great run. For a certain audience, at a certain time, THE O.C. has meant something. For that we are grateful."
From Wonderland Sound and Vision and College Hill Pictures and in association with Warner Bros. Television Production, THE O.C. is executive-produced by Josh Schwartz, Bob DeLaurentis, Stephanie Savage and McG. Ian Toynton and John Stevens are co-executive producers.
___________________
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3i5d92ced0876b5ae0bb8eff856db87283
Hollywood Reporter
Sun to set on Fox's 'O.C.' in Feb.
By Kimberly Nordyke
Jan 4, 2007
Fox has pulled the plug on "The O.C."
The network said Wednesday that the series will end its four-season run next month. New episodes will air in the show's 9-10 p.m. slot every Thursday through the series finale Feb. 22.
Creator/executive producer Josh Schwartz said the show has had a "great run."
"This feels like the best time to bring the show to its close," he added. "Thanks to the hard work of our cast, crew and writers, we have enjoyed our best season yet, and what better time to go out than creatively on top."
"The O.C." got off to a promising start when it debuted in August 2003, with a strong first season and lots of buzz. But at the start of Season 2, Fox moved the show to Thursday nights, where it faced an uphill battle and never recovered. Before this season began, Fox revealed that it was cutting back on the number of episodes it was ordering.
The show, which follows a group of friends and families whose lives were changed by the arrival of an outsider (Benjamin McKenzie) to their ocean-side community of Newport Beach, recently saw some cast changes, with Mischa Barton departing at the end of last season when her character died and Autumn Reeser and Willa Holland coming on board as regulars. The other original cast members who are still on the show include Peter Gallagher, Kelly Rowan, Adam Brody, Melinda Clarke and Rachel Bilson.
During its four seasons on the air, "The O.C." also generated buzz around the indie music featured in its episodes and spawned six soundtracks.
"The O.C.," from Wonderland Sound and Vision and College Hill Pictures and in association with Warner Bros. Television, is executive produced by Schwartz, Bob DeLaurentis, Stephanie Savage and McG. Ian Toynton and John Stevens are co-executive producers.
_____________________
Kristin/Eonline
http://www.eonline.com/gossip/kristin/blog/index.jsp?uuid=33b95c15-ddf8-4403-a811-a2b5bf8767ac
Breaking: The OC Cancelled. Will it move to CW?
Somewhere, Mischa Barton is smiling.
Or, well, that's just my guess anyway. But I know one thing for sure: Those of us who've been watching The O.C. this season know the news that is about to be confirmed any nanosecond by Fox—that The O.C. indeed has been canceled—is nothing short of heartbreaking.
According to my sources, Fox will air the last episode of The O.C. Feb. 22, and then the four-season-old series will go off the air for good.
Sadly, despite The O.C.'s creative uptick this season (and the addition of Autumn Reeser, aka Taylor, who breathed new life into the show), the ratings have not been strong enough for Fox execs to justify a fifth season. Of course, the true tragedy is that the once Nielsens-robust series was plopped onto Thursday nights (first 8 p.m., then 9 p.m.), facing off against the likes of NBC's comedy lineup, CSI and Grey's Anatomy. I don't care how ripped and raw Ryan was this season (see photo, wipe drool), that was nobody's fight to win.
On the bright side, I'm told by sources at the CW network that head honcho Dawn Ostroff is "extremely interested" in picking up The O.C. for the following season. Of course, the real matter is whether the fledgling network can afford the series. (Personally, I hope so.) And of course, all the actors involved would need to stay on board, including the allegedly recently split Adam Brody and Rachel Bilson, and Josh Schwartz, who just landed a deal for a new thriller drama pilot on NBC.
Hmmm...Seems to me the cards may be stacked against us seeing The O.C. after Feb. 22, but this O.C. fan isn't giving up hope yet. How about you? Comment below.
_____________________
Ausiello/ TV Guide.
OC Creator Previews Series finale.
SPOILERY.
http://community.tvguide.com/forum.jspa?forumID=700000049
______________________
What's Alan Watching?
Alan Sepinwall Blog
http://sepinwall.blogspot.com/2007/01/end-of-oc-try-veal.html
End of the OC. Try the veal?
....Not a shock, and if I'm doing the math right, all 16 episodes will have aired by Feb. 22. Josh was always a "Seinfeld" fan, so I suppose there's some (very) small satisfaction in knowing he's going out on a high note.
UPDATE: Just heard from Josh, who wanted to add this:
Part of my quote from the press release that didn't make the cut was "There has been some speculation about a Season 5 on another network but this feels like the best time to bring the story to an end". I felt better to go out now with the run we're having then try and move the show, etc etc. and maybe not be able to deliver the same level of quality. Teen dramas have a shelf life. We've had a lot of parties on the show, and so I've learned, best not to stay too late.
The ending will be fun and bring real closure to the series.
___________________________
Zap2it.com
http://www.zap2it.com/tv/news/zap-theocfinaleannouncement,0,5282415.story
FOX Beaches 'The O.C.'
Popular soap will reach its conclusion on Feb. 22
January 3 2007
After bursting onto the scene in an inferno of hype in the summer of 2003, FOX's teen soap "The O.C." will fade quietly into the sunset this February after four eventful seasons.
FOX made the not-so-surprising announcement of the demise of "The O.C." late Wednesday (Jan. 3) afternoon. Starting this Thursday, "The O.C." will begin a stream of new episodes culminating in the series finale on Thursday, Feb. 22.
The move was hardly unexpected given that FOX only ordered 16 "O.C." episodes this season, a major dip for a series that had delivered over-sized runs of 27, 24 and 25 episodes in its first three years. In addition, FOX held "The O.C." back for a November premiere and launched it in a brutal Thursday time period opposite "Grey's Anatomy" and "CSI," two of TV's most popular shows.
The results have been easy to observe. Through its first seven Thursday airings, "The O.C." has averaged fewer than 4.06 million viewers per episode, off from last year's 5.75 million per episode. Critical raves suggesting that the show's quality was at its highest point since the first season did little to bring viewers back to the fold.
Talking to Zap2it in October, the show's creator Josh Schwartz was practical about the potential end of the show's ride.
"Obviously it's out there," Schwartz said. "Definitely when you're in this time slot and you've only been ordered for 16 episodes, you're aware that that's a possibility. Right now, we're just focused on making these 16 episode as good as we can and we'll see what happens. We'll have an answer before we're done breaking the episodes."
With that answer finally known, Schwartz seems to have shifted gears from practical to philosophical in the network statement announcing the finale.
"'The O.C.' Season Four finale will also be the series finale. This feels like the best time to bring the show to its close," Schwartz says. "Thanks to the hard work of our cast, crew and writers, we have enjoyed our best season yet, and what better time to go out than creatively on top. It has been an amazing experience and a great run. For a certain audience, at a certain time, 'The O.C.' has meant something. For that we are grateful."
There had been limited speculation about moving the series over to The CW in some modified form, but ultimately producers felt it was better to end "The O.C." on a creative high note.
In its four years, "The O.C." helped kick-start the careers of young leads Benjamin McKenzie, Adam Brody, Mischa Barton and Rachel Bilson, while introducing a whole new generation to Peter Gallagher and his eyebrows. The show won Teen Choice Awards by the barrel, was nominated for a Television Critics Association award for outstanding new show and even earned Schwartz a Writers Guild of America nod for scripting the pilot.
__________________________
Justjared.com
http://www.justjared.com/2007/01/03/the-oc-cancelled/#more-882
The O.C. Officially Cancelled!
We’ve been hearing this for many months now (perhaps longer) but word on the street is that Fox has “officially” pulled the plug on The O.C. in its fourth (and final) season. Big surprise because just yesterday, the pilot pickup season kicked off and a spy dramedy from The O.C. creator Josh Schwartz was given the green light by NBC. Josh, 30, will be delivering a high-concept action dramedy about spies (in the vein of Grosse Pointe Blank) called Chuck.
Josh will also be executive producing The Gossip Girl, which is supposedly going to be picked up by the CW. He’s going to be a busy guy, that Josh. But without The O.C. on his plate. At this point, we can only wish for great acting gigs for the cast. All of them.
Other pictures include The O.C. star Benjamin McKenzie arriving at LAX airport with friends on New Years Day.
UPDATE :: It’s official! FOX just sent out a press release. The O.C. will air its season finale on Feb. 22, so that’s 8 new episodes to go with new episodes starting tomorrow. Read the full text after the jump!
_________
Rope of Silicon:
http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/news.php?id=5004
Well, we can only wonder if it is the lack of storylines before "The O.C." heads firmly into soap opera territory, if Adam Brody and Rachel Bilson's real life romantic break up or something extra terristrial is the cause but the popular teen drama on Fox is calling it quits after four seasons.
In a press release just sent out it looks like the fourth season finale will also be the series finale when it airs Thursday, Feb. 22 (9:00-10:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX. For fans of the show it will be a nice finish as Fox will air all-original episodes from Thursday, Jan. 4 through the last episode on Feb. 22.
RopeofSilicon journo, Laremy Legel, is a huge fan of the show and had this short eulogy:
This is a real blow to the fans of the show as this season has been a comeback story. Season four has featured all the great laughs and drama that the first two seasons showed off, and it looks as though a Seth - Summer wedding might be the final bow of a short lived but culturally significant series.
One question; why again did they put it on Thursday nights where Grey's, CSI, The Office, Earl, and CSI roam?
Set in Orange County, California, "The O.C." premiered in August 2003. It follows a group of friends and families whose lives were changed by the arrival of an outsider – Ryan Atwood – to their ocean-side community of Newport Beach.
"'The O.C.' Season Four finale will also be the series finale. This feels like the best time to bring the show to its close," said Josh Schwartz, creator and executive producer of "The O.C." "Thanks to the hard work of our cast, crew and writers, we have enjoyed our best season yet, and what better time to go out than creatively on top. It has been an amazing experience and a great run. For a certain audience, at a certain time, 'The O.C.' has meant something. For that we are grateful."
Personally I have always enjoyed the show and am anxiously awaiting the fourth season DVD set, which will most likely be a late summer release.
___________
http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/entertainment_tv/2007/01/no_more_sun_and.html
Chicago Tribune
No more sun and fun in 'The O.C.'
Say goodbye to the beach, the Bait Shop and Seth Cohen’s witticisms: “The O.C.” is history.
Ratings for the Fox show have tumbled in recent seasons, especially after the teen soap moved to Thursdays, where it faced tough competition from the likes of “CSI” and, this season, “Grey’s Anatomy.” Most media observers expected the once white-hot show to end its run this year, but that ending is approaching very quickly: The show’s fourth season finale, which will serve as the series’ swan song, will air Feb. 22.
The final batch of Season 4 episodes start airing Thursday.
“For a certain audience, at a certain time, ‘The O.C.’ has meant something. For that we are grateful,” creator Josh Schwartz said in a statement.
In that spirit of gratitude, let us not spend this moment nitpicking about “The O.C’s” plots, which were often repetitive and meandering when they weren’t annoying and predictable (hello, Oliver). Let’s use this moment to remember that, in its heyday, “The O.C.” was a delightful bit of escapism.
It mocked the conventions of soap operas even as it aped them with the usual array of love triangles, paternity tests, lesbian kisses, unrequited loves and so forth. Then there was the epic Ryan-Marissa merry-go-round (by the third season, it got to the point where I could never remember whether they were apart or together, not that it seemed to matter much overall).
Still, so what? Creator Josh Schwartz and his writers knew that playing Boys II Men’s “The End of the Road” during one of Seth and Summers’ relationship crises was the perfect thing to do. The writers made Seth and Summers’ toy horses, Captain Oats and Princess Sparkle, recurring characters. They gave us the wonderful Sandy Cohen and his ultra-WASP wife, Kirsten Cohen (and holla to Alan Dale, who was perfect as the sketchy billionaire Caleb Nichol in the first couple of seasons). The show helped make indie bands such as Death Cab for Cutie and Modest Mouse household names. It made reading comic books -- sorry, graphic novels -- and watching anime and digging taciturn, musclebound guys from Chino cool.
I’ll miss Peter Gallagher and Kelly Rowan as Sandy and Kirsten (and I’ll try to forget Kirsten’s ill-conceived trip to rehab). I’ll miss Melinda Clarke, who was never less than delicious as Julie Cooper, no matter what kind of kooky plot the writers threw at her (don’t start me on Kaitlin. Just don’t). I won’t miss Marissa, because, well, they already killed her off and, unlike some of the show’s hardcore fans, I still say that’s one of the best things they ever did.
Still, it was obvious that the show needed a fork stuck in it. It was done (and clearly Fox was thinking that, since the network only ordered 16 episodes for the season).
The cast was never less than competent, but they’ve been going through the motions for some time now. Even so, the most recent Chrismukkah episode showed a little of “The O.C.’s” patented magic – Ryan brooded darkly, Seth quipped awesomely, Summer was, well, silly and adorable as only Summer can be. And there’s no way I’m going to harsh on a show that gave Chris Pratt a role as a hemp-wearing environmentalist – or any role, of any kind, really.
So, see you later, “O.C.” Thanks for all the fantastic tunes –and by the way, the latest “O.C.” CD compilation, “Mix 6: Covering Our Tracks,” is great (I can’t get Lady Sovereign’s version of “Pretty Vacant” out of my mind).
Thanks for the witty dialogue, for Seth Cohen’s ability to make nerdiness seem cool, for the tortured love affair between Ryan and Marissa, which did suck me in for the first couple of seasons.
Thanks for the quoteworthy dialogue, for the fisticuffs at parties and for the weekly opportunity to mock Marissa’s clothes.
At a time like this, it’s easy to forgive “The O.C.’s” sins. Because after Feb. 22, we won’t have it to kick around anymore.
_____________
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16459382/
Plagued by low ratings, ‘The O.C.’ gets cancelled
Final episode will air Thursday, Feb. 22
The Associated Press
Updated: 8:35 p.m. ET Jan. 3, 2007
LOS ANGELES - “The O.C.,” the once-hot teenage soap opera that saw its ratings plummet like a delinquent student’s grades, has been canceled.
The final episode of the drama will air 9 p.m. ET Thursday, Feb. 22, Fox TV and Warner Bros. Television Production Inc. said Wednesday.
The finale “will deliver real closure to the series, to the story we began telling four years ago,” series creator Josh Schwartz said in a statement. “It will be fun and emotional and I think really satisfying. It is the finale we always planned to do.”
Based in the affluent Orange County, Calif., city of Newport Beach, “The O.C.” caught fire in its first season, 2003-04, as the top-rated drama among advertiser-favored young adults and with a total audience of nearly 10 million.
The show’s story lines revolved around Ryan (Benjamin McKenzie), an outsider thrust into a heady new world of money and sex, and rich high school kids including Seth Cohen (Adam Brody) and Marissa Cooper (Mischa Barton) and their families.
“The O.C.” didn’t sustain its momentum, dropping to about 7 million weekly viewers during 2004-05 and then to fewer than 6 million last season. This year, returning in November after Fox wrapped its postseason baseball coverage, “The O.C.” has only drawn about 4 million viewers.
The third-season finale’s high drama, in which Marissa was killed in a car crash, didn’t turn the series around. This year found Ryan confronting the death of his one-time girlfriend and the man who caused it.
Fox ordered 16 episodes for the 2006-07 season and all will have aired when the series concludes in February, a network spokesman said Wednesday.
Others in the show’s cast include Peter Gallagher, Kelly Rowan, Melinda Clarke, Rachel Bilson and Autumn Reeser.
Despite its brief heyday, the show helped establish cast members including Brody, Bilson and Barton as fan and tabloid favorites.
A replacement for the series was not immediately announced by Fox.
______________
More reports. Very similar to the others.
http://www.news.com.au/perthnow/story/0,21598,21009790-5005368,00.html
http://www.tmz.com/2007/01/03/orange-crushed-fox-cancels-the-oc/
(nice picture. ouch.)
http://www.onelocalnews.com/chandlernews-dispatch/ViewArticle.aspx?id=39707&source=2
http://www.showbuzz.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/01/03/tv/main2329156.shtml
http://blogs.mercurynews.com/aei/2007/01/the_oc_departs.html
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?newsId=11297
vinni2
01-03-2007, 08:37 PM
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117956637.html?categoryid=14&cs=1
Fox bids farewell to 'The OC'
Pop culture phenom could not survive Thursdays
By MICHAEL SCHNEIDER
Farewell to "The OC," bitch.
The show that made it OK to be a Newport Beach teenager with a jones for Death Cab for Cutie's early work will call it quits next month, Fox announced Tuesday.
Net will air the series finale of "The OC" on Thursday, Feb. 22, in the show's regular 9 p.m. slot. Fox had ordered just 16 episodes of the show this season, its fourth.
Fox plans to promote the remaining episodes of "The OC" (which returns with new segs tonight) as a "countdown" to the finale.
"This feels like the best time to bring the show to its close," said "The OC" creator and exec producer Josh Schwartz. "For a certain audience, at a certain time, 'The OC' has meant something. For that we are grateful."
"The OC" premiered in August 2003 and quickly turned into a pop culture phenom, spawning six music soundtracks and pumping up the tourism industry in the real-life Orange County.
The county's "OC" nickname didn't even come into vogue until after the TV show debuted. At one point, a county official even seriously suggested renaming John Wayne Airport "the OC Airport."
"The OC" itself, however, saw its ratings steadily decline as Fox moved the show to a rough Thursday night slot at the start of season two. The show later hit some creative rough patches, further hurting its numbers, although this season it has earned some fresh critical praise.
At its height in season one, "The OC" averaged 9.8 million viewers and a 4.4 rating/11 share in the adults 18-49 demo. So far this season, the show has posted a 1.7/4 in the demo and 3.8 million viewers overall.
"The OC" launched as the tale of a Chino hoodlum (Ben McKenzie) who winds up moving into the affluent Newport Beach home of his lawyer (Peter Gallagher), stirring up the neighborhood in the process. Kelly Rowan, Adam Brody, Melinda Clarke, Rachel Bilson, Autumn Reeser and Willa Holland currently also star.
Schwartz exec produces "The OC" with McG, Stephanie Savage and Bob DeLaurentis. Warner Bros. TV produces, along with Wonderland Sound & Vision.
______________
Hollywood Reporter/ Reuters
http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=televisionNews&storyID=2007-01-04T033347Z_01_N03442524_RTRIDST_0_TELEVISION-OC-DC.XML&WTmodLoc=EntNewsTV_C1_%5BFeed%5D-1
Sun setting on "The O.C." next month
Wed Jan 3, 2007 10:33 PM ET
By Kimberly Nordyke
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Fox has pulled the plug on "The O.C," which collapsed in the ratings this season.
The network said Wednesday the teen soap will end its four-season run next month. New episodes will air in the show's ultra-competitive 9-10 p.m. slot every Thursday through the series finale February 22.
So far this season, the show is averaging about 4.1 million total viewers, less than half of what it garnered during its debut season, according to Nielsen Media Research. Last season it averaged 5.7 million.
"The O.C." got off to a promising start in August 2003, garnering plenty of buzz with its attractive cast. But at the start of Season 2, Fox moved the show to Thursday nights, where it faced an uphill battle and never recovered. Before this season began, Fox said it was cutting its order of episodes.
The show, which follows a group of friends and families whose lives were changed by the arrival of an outsider (Benjamin McKenzie) to the chic California community of Newport Beach, recently saw some cast changes. Mischa Barton's character was killed off at the end of last season, and Autumn Reeser and Willa Holland came on board as regulars.
The other original cast members still on board include Peter Gallagher, Kelly Rowan, Adam Brody, Melinda Clarke and Rachel Bilson.
During its four seasons on the air, "The O.C." also generated buzz around the indie music featured in its episodes and spawned six soundtracks.
"This feels like the best time to bring the show to its close," said creator/executive producer Josh Schwartz. "Thanks to the hard work of our cast, crew and writers, we have enjoyed our best season yet, and what better time to go out than creatively on top."
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
_______________
Associated Press
http://www.heraldnewsdaily.com/ViewArticle.aspx?id=39732&source=2
Fox‘s once-hot ‘The O.C.‘ is canceled
2007/1
By LYNN ELBER, AP Television Writer 1 hour, 10 minutes ago
LOS ANGELES - "The O.C.," the once-hot teenage soap opera that saw its ratings plummet like a delinquent student‘s grades, has been canceled. The final episode of the drama will air 9 p.m. EST Thursday, Feb. 22, Fox TV and Warner Bros. Television Production Inc. said Wednesday.
Based in the affluent Orange County, Calif., city of Newport Beach, "The O.C." caught fire in its first season, 2003-04, as the top-rated drama among advertiser-favored young adults and with a total audience of nearly 10 million.
The show‘s story lines revolved around Ryan ( Benjamin McKenzie ), an outsider thrust into a heady new world of money and sex, and rich high school kids including Seth Cohen ( Adam Brody ) and Marissa Cooper ( Mischa Barton ) and their families.
Observers have pointed to a variety of possible reasons for the slump, including inconsistent quality, the fickleness of younger viewers and a time-slot change.
Fox ordered 16 episodes for the 2006-07 season and all will have aired when the series concludes in February, a network spokesman said Wednesday.
Others in the show‘s cast include Peter Gallagher , Kelly Rowan, Melinda Clarke , Rachel Bilson and Autumn Reeser.
A replacement for the series was not immediately announced by Fox.
______________
Moviehole.net
http://www.moviehole.net/news/20070104_the_oc_gets_kod.html
_____________
EW.com popwatch blog
http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2007/01/aggggghhhhhhh_f.html#comments
http://popwatch.ew.com/photos/uncategorized/17582__taylor_l.jpg
Aggggghhhhhhh! Fox cancels 'The O.C.'!
Taylor Townsend (pictured) is here to blood-curdlingly let you know that Fox has officially canceled The O.C. Its last episode -- the 16th of Season 4 -- will air February 22.
Ah, O.C. My love, my life, my adorable but at times disobedient pet. I'm conflicted. Yes, Season 4 has been great -- the humor's back, Ryan and Taylor are doin' it, Seth and Summer are for some reason engaged. But let's face it: it had to end eventually, and we fans pretty much knew this was coming. Did we really want to see a senile Julie Cooper terrorize the other patients in her nursing home, which she had to live in because her 17th husband, Rich Oldman, whom she poisoned for real this time, left her only Riverside-rich? (Actually, yes.) I don't know -- I'm torn between devastation and a philosophical attitude of genuine appreciation that it ever existed at all. I like Josh Schwartz's comment in Fox's press release: "For a certain audience, at a certain time, The O.C. has meant something. For that we are grateful."
And so are we. Let's all wear our "Save Marissa" shirts, leather wristcuffs, and hoodies tomorrow in mourning. (I only own a hoodie, but whatever.) Let the wailing and gnashing of teeth begin...
UPDATE: This just in from the Schwartzinator himself, via e-mail: "Yeah, this season will indeed be the last. There was some speculation about a Season 5 on another network but we are having a really fun, great run and I feel like better to go out now then stay too long at the party... and after 4 seasons of the OC, I know a lot about parties..."
Drunken pool parties featuring occasional hookers? Ah, yes, I remember them well...
________________________
http://www.buddytv.com/articles/the-oc/the-oc-finished-in-february-2814.aspx
http://www.eonline.com/news/article/index.jsp?uuid=4d7aaad8-0078-4a60-83af-ef7da88758d7
________________________
More blog reports. Basically the same information, although if you have a sense of humor about this, some of the titles(and articles) are funny.
http://www.tvgasm.com/newsgasm/news/the-oc/fox-cancels-the-oc.php
http://www.aintitcool.com/node/31140
http://www.tvsquad.com/2007/01/03/its-official-the-o-c-s-series-finale-will-be-on-feb-22/
http://blogs.brilliantbutcancelled.com/newswire/2007/01/the_oc_cancelled.shtml
http://teamsugar.com/97116
http://www.defamer.com/hollywood/fox/fox-sends-the-entire-oc-crew-to-meet-coop-surfer-johnny-and-crazy-oliver-in-cancellation-heaven-225905.php
http://televisionary.blogspot.com/2007/01/fox-squeezes-oc-off-air-but-cw-said-to.html
http://seriouslyomgwtf.blogsome.com/2007/01/03/just-like-adam-brody-and-rachel-bilsonthe-oc-is-over/
More blogs:
http://blogs.usatoday.com/popcandy/2007/01/the_end_of_the_.html
http://miamiherald.typepad.com/changing_channels/2007/01/summers_last_so.html
http://blogs.ohio.com/beacon_tv/2007/01/ocya_later.html
http://thetvaddict.com/?p=1265
http://www.thestranger.com/blog/2007/01/the_oc_is_canceled.php
http://www.ibabuzz.com/unscripted/2007/01/03/the-oc-is-o-ver/
http://www.moviesonline.ca/movienews_10924.html
The Nikke Finke column is interesting, but don't agree with her assessment of Mckenzie.
http://www.deadlinehollywooddaily.com/the-oc-is-dead-burial-slated-for-feb-22/
a few more blog comments:
http://www.nypost.com/seven/01042007/tv/the_o_c__is_d_o_a__tv_michael_starr.htm
http://tapeworthy.blogspot.com/2007/01/oc-is-great-again-and-now-fox-cancels.html
http://www.niquehappy.com/blog/2007/01/03/the-oc-finally-canned/
http://rawkblog.blogspot.com/2007/01/end-of-era-oc-comes-to-close.html
http://mustytv.blogspot.com/2007/01/oc-ya-later.html
http://www.theocblogger.com/2007/the-oc-has-been-officially-cancelled/
http://popsurfing.blogspot.com/2007/01/oc-is-doa.html
http://cisforcodycat.blogspot.com/2007/01/rip-oc.html
vinni2
01-03-2007, 10:40 PM
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3i5d92ced0876b5ae0bb8eff856db87283
Schwartz busy with 2 pilots
By Nellie Andreeva and Kimberly Nordyke
Jan 4, 2007
It has been an eventful week for Josh Schwartz.
He has inked a new rich three-year overall deal with Warner Bros. Television and CW has given a pilot order to his drama "Gossip Girl," Schwartz's second pilot order in two days.
Meanwhile, his first series, "The O.C.," is set to bow out after four seasons. Fox said Wednesday that it will air new episodes of the teen soap Thursdays through the series finale on Feb. 22.
"Gossip," from Warner Bros. TV and Alloy Entertainment, is based on Alloy's popular book series about privileged teenagers attending elite private schools in New York.
Schwartz and "O.C." executive producer Stephanie Savage penned the project, which originally was picked up by CW in the summer with a put pilot commitment (HR 8/21). The two are executive producing with Alloy's Leslie Morgenstein and Bob Levy.
In addition to "Gossip," Schwartz received a pilot order from NBC on Tuesday for the action dramedy "Chuck" (HR 1/3).
As for "O.C.," Schwartz said the show has had a "great run."
"This feels like the best time to bring the show to its close," he added. "Thanks to the hard work of our cast, crew and writers, we have enjoyed our best season yet, and what better time to go out than creatively on top."
"The O.C." got off to a promising start when it debuted in August 2003, with a strong first season and lots of buzz. But at the start of Season 2, Fox moved the show to Thursday nights, where it faced an uphill battle and never recovered. Before this season began, Fox said that it was cutting back on the number of episodes it was ordering.
The show, which follows a group of friends and families whose lives were changed by the arrival of an outsider (Benjamin McKenzie) to their oceanside community of Newport Beach, Calif., recently saw some cast changes, with Mischa Barton departing at the end of last season when her character died and Autumn Reeser and Willa Holland coming on board as regulars. The other original cast members who are still on the show include Peter Gallagher, Kelly Rowan, Adam Brody, Melinda Clarke and Rachel Bilson.
During its four seasons on the air, "O.C." also generated buzz around the indie music featured in its episodes and spawned six soundtracks.
"O.C.," from Wonderland Sound and Vision, College Hill Pictures and WBTV, is executive produced by Schwartz, Bob DeLaurentis, Savage and McG.
Schwartz is repped by Endeavor, manager Mikkel Bondesen and attorney Joel McKuin.
____________________________
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117956643.html?categoryid=14&cs=1
CW gives Schwartz some good news
2nd pilot picked up for show creator
By MICHAEL SCHNEIDER
For Josh Schwartz, the TV gods giveth and taketh all in the same week: "The O.C." may be history, but the show creator has scored his second pilot pickup in as many days -- and just signed a rich overall deal with Warner Bros. TV.
The CW has greenlit "Gossip Girl," from Schwartz and fellow "O.C." alum Stephanie Savage, repping the Green net's first-ever scripted pilot order. Hourlong teen drama is based on the popular book series of the same name.
The "Gossip Girl" thumbs-up comes a day after NBC ordered "Crumbs," a drama pilot from Schwartz and Chris Fedak. That means Warner Bros. TV's three-year, seven-figure pact with Schwartz is already paying off for the studio.
Pact keeps Schwartz at Warner Bros., where he created "The O.C." as one of the industry's youngest showrunners. Warner Bros. TV prexy Peter Roth has long considered Schwartz a homegrown success story.
"I've had a wonderful experience working with Peter Roth and his love of storytelling," said Schwartz.
"Gossip Girl" is about the world of New York teens and their parents, as told through the eyes of an anonymous blogger. The book series' 10 editions have sold more than 2 million copies and an 11th is in the works.
Warner Bros. TV pacted with "Gossip Girl" publisher Alloy Entertainment to adapt the books for TV; Schwartz was then brought in and re-teamed with Savage.
"It speaks to the culture that we live in now and the way that kids communicate," Schwartz said.
Schwartz and Savage will exec produce "Gossip Girl" along with Alloy's Bob Levy and Leslie Morgenstein.
Schwartz said the week's news was "bittersweet."
"It's an exciting time for me, but it comes with some sadness," he said. " 'The O.C.' was my first."
From comingsoon.net
http://www.comingsoon.net/news/tvnews.php?id=18249
vinni2
01-04-2007, 09:56 AM
http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/organgrinder/2007/01/the_oc_axed_so_long_chrismukka.html
Guardian UK
The OC axed: so long, Chrismukkah
By Jason Deans / Television 03:00pm
We've been on the run, driving in the sun, looking out for number one, California here we come... well not any more. Fox has cancelled The OC. No more festive Chrismukkah episodes, then.
To be honest, it's not a huge surprise. The OC's ratings on the Fox network in the US have been heading down the toilet ever since the splendid first series. Creatively the show has gone the same way - a great premise, but it had no legs and ended up rehashing the same situations and storylines as the second and third seasons progressed.
However, let's rewind three years. It's hard to overestimate how much I loved the first series of The OC, which began on E4 and Channel 4 in the UK in early 2004. I avidly watched repeats, got the DVD, and the soundtrack CDs, with their mix of indie tracks you knew and loved, and those you didn't but came to love. Death Cab for Cutie, anyone?
At the time, I got as much stick for my obsession with this trashy teen drama as I now do for banging on about Battlestar Galactica.
But the great trick OC creator Josh Schwartz pulled off was a show that had its cake and ate it. Viewers could gawp slack jawed at the disgustingly rich, pampered Orange County lifestyles depicted in The OC. But at the same time The OC ripped the piss out of this Beverly Hill 90210-style glamour and wealth through Seth and Sandy Cohen, the characters played by Adam Brody and Peter Gallagher.
In its early days The OC was hailed as replacing Sex and the City as TV's leading fashion barometer. I wouldn't know about that.
Yes it's trashy, cheesy, melodramatic. But the first series was bloody fab trash TV, satisfyingly self aware and tongue in cheek. What I loved about The OC's first series was the irony and self-deprecating humour provided by Seth and Sandy, the Seth-Summer-Anna love triangle, the Nana, the pop culture references, the soundtrack.
After the first season, well... it was downhill. Fast. Series two had its moments - Rainy Day Women, Julie Cooper-Nichol's porn video shame, Seth and Zach competing for Summer's affections, Seth's whipped cream-covered spring break. And then Series three - bobbins, except the belated masterstroke of killing off Mischa Barton's whiny bore Marissa.
Still, some great moments to remember, like when lawyer Sandy is helping Julie deal with the guy trying to blackmail her over the porn vid. Julie: "I'm so screwed." Sandy: "I know. I saw the footage." More Sandy quotes here.
On Tuesday at 9pm, when The OC fourth season starts in the UK on E4, I'll be watching Battlestar Galactica on Sky One. Though I may just catch the T4 repeat the following Sunday afternoon - just for old time's sake.
____________________
Mediapost.com
http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticleHomePage&art_aid=53362
Pink Slipped: 'O.C.', 'Megan Mullally' Get Cancellation Orders
by Wayne Friedman, Thursday, Jan 4, 2007 8:00 AM ET
FOX'S "THE O.C." AND NBC Universal syndication talker "The Megan Mullally Show" will leave the airwaves.
"The O.C." has been a young-teen cult hit since it arrived on Fox in August 2003. But the show never lived up to its fuller potential after its move to Thursday night in 2005--an effort to give it a broader TV audience.
This season, Fox waited until after the Major League Baseball playoffs in November to start "The O.C." in a 9 p.m. time slot. But all that gave ABC's new 9 p.m. show "Grey's Anatomy" a running head start, since it had been on since September.
"They had the same audience as "Grey's Anatomy," says Bill Carroll, vice president and director of programming for Katz Communications. "Since then, they have been struggling."
Fox tried to save the show by moving it off Thursday night. It will air new episodes starting tomorrow, running through Feb. 22, when it airs its series finale.
___________________________
http://www.medialifemagazine.com/artman/publish/cat_index_31.asp
Teen steam doused: Fox bids adios to 'The O.C.'
Nearly a year after Mischa Barton’s shocking death on “The O.C.,” the rest of the cast is following her out the door. Fox has canceled the fourth-year teen drama after a dramatic dip in ratings this year. The finale will air Feb. 22. “O.C.” has averaged a 1.8 in adults 18-49 this year, down a third from last season’s 2.7 average. Speculation began almost immediately after its debut over whether it would last a full season. During an interview late last year, Fox scheduling guru Preston Beckman told Media Life the network wanted to give the show a few months to find its footing before making a decision, despite the disappointing ratings. “Even though it did not come back to the levels we wanted it to, do we want to see lower ratings if we put something else on? There’s no guarantee they’d improve,” he said. Fox has not yet announced what will take the show’s place in the Thursday 9 p.m. timeslot, where it faces brutal competition from ABC’s “Grey’s Anatomy” and CBS’s “CSI.”
jillian
01-04-2007, 02:50 PM
at this point i just hope that the cast members get good roles in new movies and shows.
iwantalexback
01-04-2007, 08:37 PM
Don't series finales air in May?
BenBrazilianFan
01-04-2007, 08:52 PM
Season 4 was not a full season. And we won't have repeats, so that's why the end in february:)
vinni2
01-06-2007, 02:39 AM
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/06/arts/television/06josh.html?_r=1&ref=arts&oref=slogin
NYTimes
The OC’: A Fast Start, a Faster Finish
By EDWARD WYATT
Published: January 6, 2007
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 5 — The end was in sight for “The OC” by at least last summer, according to Josh Schwartz, the wunderkind creator of the show that, with its glamorous locations, beautiful actors and hip soundtrack, defined new trends for music, fashion, celebrity and, of course, television.
After a stunning debut on Fox in 2003, in which the series drew nearly 10 million viewers each week and a particularly high number of adults between the ages of 18 and 34, according to Nielsen Media Research, the show’s ratings fell in each of the last two seasons.
It entered the fourth season without its most recognizable face, the pouty rich girl played by Mischa Barton, who was killed off at the end of the previous season. Fox, meanwhile, demonstrated its lack of confidence by leaving “The OC” in its 9 p.m. Thursday time slot to face off against “Grey’s Anatomy” and “CSI.”
Fox ordered only 16 episodes, down from more than 20 in each of the first three seasons, and its budget for promoting the show’s return, Mr. Schwartz said, made clear that hopes for the series this year were not high.
“We tried to be realistic about it,” Mr. Schwartz said. “Few shows get to have their last season be their best. So if this was going to be the last season, we wanted to write the show we wanted to do and the show the fans wanted to see. It was creatively liberating.”
Fox, for its part, declined to address its reasons for ending “The OC.” No network executives were quoted in the news release, issued on Wednesday, announcing that this season would be the show’s last, and a spokesman for the network said Friday that no one would comment for this article.
When “The OC” had its premiere, it was quickly compared to “Beverly Hills 90210,” “Dawson’s Creek” and other series that drew raves for their chronicles of teenage angst. But while “90210” lasted 10 seasons, “The OC” will not even make it to the 100-episode milestone, considered a benchmark for profitable syndication.
It did, however, influence the culture. Orange County’s Newport Beach community became a tourist destination for young fans. At least two reality-based television series drew on the fame of “The OC”: “Laguna Beach,” an MTV series that billed itself as “the real Orange County,” and “The Real Housewives of Orange County,” a Bravo reality show that follows a gaggle of women from their tennis lessons to Botox sessions.
Thanks to its heavy use of mood music from emerging rock and alternative-music groups, “The OC” became known as a showcase for new bands, and it produced a half-dozen soundtrack albums featuring groups like Death Cab for Cutie and vocalists like Imogen Heap.
For all of its focus on good-looking rich kids, the show was also about adults, winning praise for developing parental characters with their own storylines and concerns. The show also created what were arguably the first Jewish heartthrobs on television: Sandy Cohen, played by Peter Gallagher, a public defender married to a wealthy gentile developer; and his son, Seth Cohen, played by Adam Brody, who dealt with his mixed religious heritage by promoting the family’s adoption of Chrismukkah as its winter holiday celebration.
Reviewing the show’s second-season premiere, Virginia Heffernan, a New York Times television critic, wrote: “In tone, diction, fashion and music, Mr. Schwartz knows just how to keep it credible with its swooning fans. But he is also mindful of the strict rituals that define television drama, and his discipline in tightening the world he has created — rather than giving in to impatience and blowing it apart — is admirable.”
In the end, however, the weakness of “The OC” might have been that it was too much the product of one person, conceptually, if not in practice. Just 26 when Fox agreed to broadcast the show, Mr. Schwartz was the youngest person in network television history to create and produce his own one-hour series.
He worked furiously, writing or revising every episode of the first season and several in the first part of the second year. After that, he cut back, and while other longtime collaborators like Stephanie Savage continued to work closely on the show, many fans expressed the opinion that the second and third seasons did not match the originality of the first.
Mr. Schwartz disputes that. “I really believe in my colleagues,” he said, citing his particularly close association with Ms. Savage and Robert De Laurentiis, a show-business veteran who has served as an executive producer since the first season.
In fact, Mr. Schwartz will be producing a new series with Ms. Savage. The CW network has signed the pair for “Gossip Girl,” an hourlong teenage drama set in New York City and based on the book series of the same name. NBC, too, has signed Mr. Schwartz for a series, a dark comedy-drama titled “Chuck,” which Mr. Schwartz has developed with Chris Fedak.
For now, Mr. Schwartz, who grew up in Providence, R.I., not on the California coast, said he was focused on “delivering the most satisfying finale we can” for “The OC.” The remaining episodes will feature an unexpected pregnancy and more of the show’s familiar love-triangle tussles. All of which could work to raise the size of the audience from the fewer than four million who have tuned in for each episode this season, according to Nielsen. But it is unlikely that the series will win any reprieve from what, for such early promise, could be viewed as an early death.
__________________
http://tv.ign.com/articles/753/753067p1.html
Ign.com
The O.C. Is Cancelled
Seth, Ryan, Summer and the rest of Newport go off into the sunset.
by Eric Goldman
January 4, 2007 - Having taken quite a strange road from out of the box pop culture hit to ratings also-ran, The O.C. will be ending its run next month. It had been widely speculated that this would be the last season, but FOX made the official announcement this week, confirming that the February 22nd broadcast of the series will be the final episode.
After its debut in the summer of 2003, The O.C. became a major hit with a much sought after young audience, and made instant teen idol stars out of cast members Mischa Barton, Ben McKenzie, Rachel Bilson and Adam Brody. However, the ratings began to dwindle after a move to Thursday night, and the third season was highly criticized for not being up to par quality wise, for a series that had received unexpected initial acclaim for its sharp and witty writing.
The cancellation will no doubt make for mixed emotions for fans, because the show is believed by many to be having its best season since the original, having been revitalized after last season's surprising death of Barton's character Marissa, and the addition of two well received new cast members, Willa Holland and Autumn Reeser. However, the ratings have been lower than ever, as the show has faced huge competition from Grey's Anatomy and CSI this season. Fans can be glad that the show is at least going out on a dramatic high note, but of course many viewers wish the series would continue for another season.
O.C. creator Josh Schwartz has a busy development slate, with possible series in the works for both NBC and The CW. In the press release FOX released, Schwartz said, "The O.C. Season Four finale will also be the series finale. This feels like the best time to bring the show to its close. Thanks to the hard work of our cast, crew and writers, we have enjoyed our best season yet, and what better time to go out than creatively on top. It has been an amazing experience and a great run. For a certain audience, at a certain time, The O.C. has meant something. For that we are grateful."
There had been some talk that The O.C. could be picked up by The CW, if FOX let it go. However, Schwartz has nixed those rumors, saying the show will not be moving to another network.
___________________________
vinni2
01-07-2007, 03:09 AM
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-ed-oc07jan07,1,1750244.story?coll=la-news-comment
LATimes
For O.C., life goes on
Fox may have canceled the series that made Orange County hip, but the real O.C. remains elusive.
January 7, 2007
IN A SENSE, there never would have been a real Orange County without the fictional O.C. Or at least the reality soaps "Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County" and "The Real Housewives of Orange County" never would have been approved by television executives or mattered to audiences until Peter Gallagher and his teen co-stars on Fox TV's "The O.C." accomplished the impossible: They made Orange County hip.
Those are words that impel us to stand back and admire. Within three years, Orange County was transformed by a TV show from, well, Orange County to "the O.C." The county once best known for white-bread suburban conservatism and best loved for Disneyland was now the destination of travelers worldwide who couldn't wait to walk where Marissa, Ryan and Summer had placed their expensively shod feet. The venerable Crab Cooker restaurant hasn't been the same since.
At the height of the soap's popularity, a county supervisor suggested renaming John Wayne airport "The O.C. Airport." Good thing the change never flew. "The O.C.," Fox announced last week, has been canceled; its last episode is scheduled to air next month.
It's a double blow to tony Newport Beach, where the series is set. Last year, Fox put an early end to "Arrested Development," a satirical Emmy-winning comedy about a family of home developers that was truer to certain aspects of Orange County life (witness the repeated shots of a lone McMansion on a ruthlessly bulldozed hillside) than any of the above-mentioned shows. Now Laguna Beach and the foothills of Orange County, where the housewives live, will present their glossy, shallow and mostly white version of Orange County to the world. But even they will inevitably fade from prime-time popularity.
Will there be a real Orange County after the TV versions are gone? Of course. The county has never been well-represented by its fictional doppelgangers. In a case of truth being more dramatic than drama, the O.C. has long been far more diverse ethnically, economically and philosophically than any of the shows reflect. Some of its school districts are more than 90% Latino. It reliably elects Democrats to Congress. At UC Irvine, almost half of the students are of Asian descent.
The county may miss the money from all those TV-loving tourists. But if "Dallas" is any indicator, the glamour and interest will continue through the magic of reruns — in which wealthy, fashionable teenagers and their hip homes need never age or die.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/chi-0701070118jan07,1,4913969.column?coll=chi-news-col
Unsurprising `O.C.' demise devoid of drama
Published January 7, 2007
A product is white hot. Then it's not cool. Then it goes away.
You want to learn from its mistakes, but at the very least it's like watching a meteorite burn bright and burn out as it streaks across the night sky, mesmerizing even if it's inevitably followed by more shooting stars.
The imminent demise of Fox's "The O.C.," announced last week, was both predictable--and predicted.
The program, once popular enough to support a line of Chrismukkah products such as the yarmulke/Santa hat combo "yarmuclaus" for interfaith fans, has had its audience dwindle to about 4 million viewers this season.
That's down from an audience of around 10 million back in 2003-04, the soap's first season. Both Fox and marketers valued it then for its mix of older and younger viewers, including close to 2 million teens, conferring a certain hipness upon it.
Its brief shining moment was fueled in part by Fox's decision to run it behind "American Idol" for the second half of its rookie season. It hemorrhaged 3 million viewers in Season 2, another million in Season 3 and 2 million more this season. When the show exits Feb. 22, its teen audience looks to be less than one-fourth what it once was. So how did it fall so far so fast?
"It's half a business thing, half a creative thing," said Alan Sepinwall, the sharp-eyed TV critic of New Jersey's Star-Ledger and author of "Stop Being a Hater and Learn to Love `The O.C.,'" a paperback rushed onto shelves after the first season and apparently remains, to his great surprise, in print.
If "The O.C." was a beneficiary of a post-"Idol" slot its first season, it suffered in its second from being moved to Thursdays, where Fox was last modestly successful six to seven years earlier with counterprogramming such as "Martin" and "Living Single."
Emboldened by CBS' successful incursion on NBC's vaunted Thursday lineup, Fox made its own play for a cut of the movie-studio ad cash floating around and thought the youth-friendly "O.C." was the show to pry it loose.
"They got cocky and decided they were going to use it as a beachhead," Sepinwall said. "The rhetoric you heard out of Fox, even as viewership fell, was: `Look at what we had there before. We're doing fine.' ... They said they were making money, but at the same time they were devaluing [the show] because they put it somewhere very few people were going to find it."
Whatever the network was saying publicly, privately it was getting anxious, and business concerns quickly became creative concerns.
Josh Schwartz, who, in dreaming up "The O.C." at age 26, was said to be the youngest creator of an hour-long broadcast network series, threw everything he could think of into the first season. But by the second, he began to realize why most shows milk a juicy story arc like a love triangle for a full season rather than just two weeks.
"There are only so many cotillions that can be interrupted by a fistfight, so then they tried to introduce new characters people didn't necessarily like," Sepinwall said. "Then the third season was a complete mess. [Schwartz] said he bowed too much to ratings pressure, listening to the network too much in terms of doing sensational stories that were supposed to goose the ratings but didn't."
That third season culminated last spring in the death of Marissa Cooper, played by Mischa Barton, a polarizing figure. Teen girls seemed to love Marissa. Many grown-ups cheered her demise, loudly.
When "The O.C." returned this season in the 8 p.m. Thursday slot that had become the toughest on television, it got clobbered by ABC's "Grey's Anatomy," CBS' "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation," NBC's "Deal or No Deal" and virtually tied the CW's "Supernatural." A Wednesday tryout the next week fared little better, sealing its fate.
"The shame is it's been really good this year," Sepinwall said. "Because [Schwartz] tried all those things last year to goose the ratings and none of it worked, he's decided to do what he likes. ... It's been one of the best dramedies on TV.
"It didn't matter how good it was this year. People talk about the resurgence of `ER' in the ratings. It's not that it's up much over the last few years or that it was ever that far down. It was still a relatively successful show. It's just that when you're pulling 12 to 14 million, that 2 million difference is not that big a deal. When you're pulling 6 million and you lose 2 million, that's huge."
It's a law of nature that what goes up will come down. But not everything does so spectacularly as falling stars.
----------
philrosenthal@tribune.com
Note: The author made an error when he said the OC was in the 8 p.m. timeslot.
vinni2
01-12-2007, 09:34 AM
http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20008247,00.html
'The O.C.' Wipes Out
Fox's teen drama went from watercooler hit to washed up in barely four seasons. What went wrong?
''I don't know that shows like [The O.C.] are necessarily designed to run forever, but just to be a blast while they're on,'' says creator Schwartz
By Jennifer Armstrong
It spawned one of the stickiest TV catchphrases of the last few years, introduced ''Chrismukkah'' to the national lexicon, and made comic-book geeks suddenly sexy. It revived the dormant teen-soap genre, brought emo to the masses, and helped make irony so cool that it wasn't. And now, in fewer than four years, Fox's once-signature drama The O.C. has gone from pop-culture-permeating phenomenon to cancellation.
When Fox announced on Jan. 3 that The O.C.'s Feb. 22 episode would be its series finale, there was one question to be asked: How did a show whose first season was so hot flame out so fast? The answer lies in the nature of the modern TV landscape, where new series come and go in one episode and big buzz is often followed by big backlash. The O.C. debuted to impressive numbers in August 2003, drawing 7.5 million viewers and turning its mostly unknown cast into bona fide stars. Soon came a supersize 27-episode season order, along with an insatiable fan appetite for the show's fast-paced action. ''We burned through a lot of story [in season 1],'' says creator-exec producer Josh Schwartz. ''We wanted to put it all out there on screen, and that's why the first season was so fun.'' Adds Craig Erwich, Fox's exec VP of programming, ''The show just hit a nerve — [they had] to go for it.''
But then came the hangover: Massive media attention meant that by season 2, some fans decided that The O.C. was no longer too cool for school. ''It's like being a band,'' Schwartz says. ''The cool kids discover you, then you become super popular, and that audience goes, Oh, I can't like it.'' It didn't help that with only four core teen characters — who'd already fought and made up ad nauseam — Newport Beach started to feel awfully claustrophobic. ''I don't know that shows like this are necessarily designed to run forever,'' Schwartz explains, ''but just to be a blast while they're on.''
The O.C.'s unique blend of comedy and over-the-top melodrama was a blast — at least most of the time. ''When it worked,'' says Schwartz, ''it was something you hadn't seen before.'' When it didn't, an audience-infuriating nut named Oliver materialized, as did gratuitous girl-on-girl action. And in a semi-shocking development last May, the lead female character died in a car crash. ''We were trying to keep pace so as to not get canceled, and it got overcooked,'' admits Schwartz. Yet he defends those widely derided story lines. ''People still talk about them, for good or ill. When we didn't do anything, people would be like, 'Why hasn't anyone gotten drunk or gotten in a fight?''' Adds Benjamin McKenzie, who broke out as punch-happy bad boy Ryan Atwood, ''At some point you're going to have feelings about doing the same thing over and over again. Around the third season, we reached a slow point. That was hard.'' Even harder were three time-slot changes — the most fatal being a switch from American Idol-driven Wednesday to ultra-competitive Thursday. Once Grey's Anatomy moved onto its block last fall, says Schwartz, ''we kind of knew what was going to happen.''
One bittersweet coda: The O.C. is now enjoying a creative — though not a ratings — resurgence. (It's currently averaging only 4.1 million viewers weekly.) ''I wanted to remind people of the first season,'' says Schwartz of lighter plots like Seth and Summer's on-and-off engagement and the surprisingly sweet romance between Ryan and Taylor Townsend. ''It was really creatively liberating, not worrying about ratings.'' Cast members agree — especially 28-year-old McKenzie, who's spent four years playing a teen. ''It feels like a natural death,'' says the actor. ''We're surrounded by family and friends, and we've said all the nice things we want to say to each other.'' But could The O.C. be resuscitated on The CW, as rumored? Not likely. ''You don't want to stay too long at the party,'' quips Schwartz, who's now developing the teen soap Gossip Girl at The CW, and the spy comedy Chuck for NBC. ''Because somebody might start a fistfight.''
Another article:
"Chino greets the cancellation with a shrug"
http://www.dailybulletin.com/news/ci_4990806
maalibu
01-13-2007, 02:08 PM
Looks like Mischa's got a new Fran
Mischa Barton has kept her fans guessing with her on-again, off-again relationship with grunge rocker Cisco Adler.
But an insider says she has also found time to get cozy with a co-star on her upcoming film, "Don't Fade Away."
The lucky young man is actor Fran Kranz, an old high school buddy of Jake Gyllenhaal.
"They hooked up on the set in North Carolina," says a pal. "But I wouldn't say they were dating. It's more casual than that, even though it's ongoing."
Play safely, kids!
Source: New York Daily News - News & Views - Ben Widdicombe's Gatecrasher: Kim-Ray J tape seen as hot seller (http://www.nydailynews.com/01-11-2007/news/story/487517p-410518c.html)
Babis05
01-13-2007, 02:13 PM
they can't be canceling the best show ever...
LoVeThEO.C.
01-13-2007, 07:43 PM
I don't want the show to end..This will forever be the saddest news there is:( :(
OCgirl411
01-13-2007, 10:05 PM
Me too i don't want the show to end, it is the best show ever
jillian
01-15-2007, 01:21 PM
new mischa bebe ads are in the new instyle with hillary swank on the cover.
vinni2
01-16-2007, 04:18 AM
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117957461.html?categoryid=13&cs=1
Barton to 'Fade' in on indie
Drama budgeted under $10 million
By DAVE MCNARY
Mischa Barton will topline coming-of-age drama "Don't Fade Away" for newly minted production shingle Origin Entertainment Group.
Beau Bridges, Ja Rule and Ryan Kwanten also star.
Project, about an engaged Manhattan couple forced to deal with a father's unexpected illness, is written and directed by Luke Kasdan, nephew of Lawrence Kasdan.
Nicole Peluso, founder of Origin, is producing with Arik Ruchim; Kasdan and Irina Ginzburg exec produce. Pic's been shooting in North Carolina and is prepping for lensing in Gotham.
Origin, funded by private equity, focuses on films budgeted under $10 million and sporting strong female characters.
Related:
http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/news.php?id=5103
>>Newpsie_14<<
01-16-2007, 04:39 AM
they can't be canceling the best show ever...
yeah they can't!I'm gonna cry again because of FOX!:crying: :crying: :crying:
Thanks Josh for changing my life, and FOX for ruin it!