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Hiatus (television)

 

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Hiatus (television)



 
 
In television scheduling, a hiatus refers to a break of at least several weeks in the normal schedule of a television program. It can occur during a season of a television program, or can be between television seasons (usually starting in June and ending in August when shooting starts for the next season). In recent years, some television shows have been placed "on hiatus" by their networks for long periods of up to several years, effectively canceling them while leaving viewers and producers with the possible hope of the shows' eventual return.

times television stations will implement a hiatus for their programs for the sheer purpose of splitting up a season, just so it will run for longer until the next season is completed.






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In television scheduling, a hiatus refers to a break of at least several weeks in the normal schedule of a television program. It can occur during a season of a television program, or can be between television seasons (usually starting in June and ending in August when shooting starts for the next season). In recent years, some television shows have been placed "on hiatus" by their networks for long periods of up to several years, effectively canceling them while leaving viewers and producers with the possible hope of the shows' eventual return.

Planned Hiatus

Many times television stations will implement a hiatus for their programs for the sheer purpose of splitting up a season, just so it will run for longer until the next season is completed. An example of this is NBC's show Heroes
Heroes (TV series)

Heroes is an American science fiction dramatic programming created by Tim Kring, which premiered on NBC on September 25, 2006. The series tells the stories of ordinary individuals from around the world who inexplicably develop Superpower , and their roles in preventing disasters, usually foreseen in images produced by precognitive painter...
, which took a 2 month hiatus starting in February 2007 and returned at the end of April 2007. Some programs also go on hiatus so that their networks can reserve episodes for airing during ratings sweeps
Nielsen Ratings

Nielsen Ratings are audience measurement developed by the AC Nielsen Company, to determine the audience size and composition of broadcast programming....
, wherein networks compute their advertising fees based on their programs' ratings during that period. Programs "return from hiatus" in time for the sweeps period so as to generate high ratings, and as such usually include special content in programming such as guest stars, controversial and unexpected plots or topics, extended episodes and finales. An example of this is South Park
South Park

South Park is an United Statesn animation situation comedy, notorious for its toilet humour, surrealism, and often black comedy, which satirizes Subject matter in South Park including religion, politics, violence, abuse, sexuality, and mental disorder....
, which usually airs 7 Episodes during the spring Ratings Sweep & 7 Episodes during the fall Ratings Sweep.

Cancellation


A network may put a show on hiatus before canceling
Cancellation (television)

In television, cancellation refers to the termination of a television program by the television network, typically because of low viewership. Shows whose runs end due to a mutual creative decision by its producers and cast are not considered to be "cancelled" but rather "concluded"....
 it. This may be to:
  • evaluate the series' quality.
  • warn the producers in an effort to push them to produce a more profitable product.
  • fill its timeslot with another program to compare ratings.