Seems to have had too many cooks in the kitchen.Also splitting the tv season  
is a sure way to lose viewers. Finally the writers and everyone associationed 
with the show began to beleive their own hype. Jumping the shark is never a 
good thing.

I think it would make a great comic book though. 




________________________________
From: Martin Baxter <martinbaxt...@gmail.com>
To: SciFiNoir2 <scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tue, May 18, 2010 1:21:45 PM
Subject: [scifinoir2] Fwd: 5 Lessons TV Should Learn After Losing "Heroes"

  



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Martin Baxter <martin.baxter. 0...@gmail. com>
Date: Mon, May 17, 2010 at 6:51 PM
Subject: 5 Lessons TV Should Learn After Losing "Heroes"
To: martinbaxter7@ gmail.com


Personally, I would've been into the show, had Option #5 been manifested.

============ ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= 
========= ========


NBC finally canceled Heroes, a move early adopters of the ultimately 
underwhelming superhero show probably saw coming soon after Season 2.
But all is not lost. Heroes‘ meteoric rise and ignominious fall leave behind 
much residual data for those looking to build faster, stronger, smarter and 
more resilient programming. Here are five ways upcoming NBC show The Cape — or 
any other superhero series knocking around television executives’ heads — can 
avoid an early demise.
http://www.wired. com/underwire/ 2010/05/5- lessons-heroes/


-- 
"Between getsumei no michi and the Zero...no better place to live."

(About little moments of happiness) "If this isn't nice, I don't know what is." 
-- Kurt Vonnegut, "A Man Without A Country"



-- 
"If all the world's a stage and we are merely players, who the bloody hell 
wrote the script?" -- Charles E Grant

http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=fQUxw9aUVik




      

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