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Old 12-07-2006, 04:13 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Fans drift away from 'The O.C.'

Rachel Bilson, Mischa Barton, Kelly Rowan, Melinda Clarke, The OC When "The O.C." debuted three years ago on the Fox TV network, the soapy teen drama was an immediate hit and attracted so much attention that Fox hoped it would become "Beverly Hills, 90210" for a new generation.

It has not turned out that way.

Now in season four, the show has plummeted in the ratings, with much of its young-adult audience vanishing, and the buzz that came with it gone too.

Of the 119 shows aired by broadcast networks, "The O.C." ranks No. 96 according to Nielsen Media Research – a position so low it risks being canceled, though the News Corp. network is publicly supportive. Fox notes that even with its low ratings the program is luring a bigger audience in its highly competitive Thursday time slot against the popular "Grey's Anatomy" and "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" than the show it replaced.

What went wrong at "The O.C."? A series of decisions – involving story lines, scheduling and casting – appears to have hobbled the program further as it slid.

"Shows aimed at young adults and teenagers are particularly fragile," says John Rash, director of broadcast negotiations at Interpublic Group's Campbell Mithun, a Minneapolis ad-placement agency. "In the case of 'The O.C.,' I think there were several mistakes." Among them, he says: The storytelling has been uneven and the show's time slot shifted too often.

Nobody agrees more than Josh Schwartz, the show's 30-year-old creator and executive producer. In a business where people rarely accept responsibility for missteps, Schwartz concedes his fair share. "Last season I wasn't as focused as I should have been," he says. "I've learned a lot about what to do and what not to do."

Schwartz had almost no TV experience before "The O.C." As a result, he says, he didn't have a clear idea of how his high school soap opera would unfold.

Would the quartet of quirky teens at the show's center progress a school year with each season, or would they linger in high school perpetually, the usual case with teen dramas? Schwartz decided on the former, which has introduced its own complexities since two of the characters have moved on to college.

Complicating matters, Schwartz decided early on to tackle dual plot lines. Along with chronicling the privileged lives of teens in a posh beach town in Orange County, the show would also examine the lives of their parents. Keeping all those balls in the air, however, proved difficult.

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