Americanization, syndications, and the art
of
making money on TV
By Bert Ehrmann
2005-09-20 — Question:
why do Hollywood television producers "Americanize" (recast with American
actors and rewrite with American tastes in mind) British television
shows? It's a common enough occurrence. Over the years there's been
some 60 odd shows converted from Queen's English to American Slang
including Three's Company, Sanford and Son and All in the Family, all
based on British television shows.
A good example of a recent "Americanization" is BBC's The Office.
The Office ran from 2001-2003 on UK television and met great acclaim
there. When the series ran here in the US on BBC America, it met
with so much acclaim it garnered two Golden Globes.
In late 2003 it was announced that The Office was to be Americanized. Why spend
a lot of money developing an American version of a British show when surly
it must cost less to simply re-air the already complete British version than
to completely remake it? Surely a series that has only been exposed to a small
percentage of the population via an obscure channel could only do better if
exposed to a larger audience via a network channel?
Short answer: money. Long answer: an insane amount of money.
The American television half-hour comedy/hour drama series doesn't begin to
turn a profit until it's sold into the immense syndication market. And since
most television shows never make it to syndication, most shows never make money.
Television shows don't initially make money because they're so darn expensive
to produce. It can literally cost millions of dollars PER EPISODE in star salaries
alone to finance a show, not including everything else involved in television
production.
Take for example NBC's Friends and E.R. In 2002 it cost a reported $7 million
to produce a single episode of Friends and $13 million per episode of E.R.
That's around $168 million $312 million respectively for the entire 2002-2003
season for those shows. And no amount of commercial interruption's ever going
cover those sorts of costs.
Things begin to change, however, if a show's successful enough to have completed
around 100 episodes and can be sold into syndication. Syndication is where
a show like Gilligan's Island, which ran only three seasons in the 1960s, can
be resold and episodes aired all over the country and indeed the entire world.
And each time an episode of Gilligan's Island airs money is made.
Best of all, the money made is essentially "free money." Almost no money goes
into a show once it's in syndication yet millions can come out.
For example, TBS reportedly paid $140 million for exclusive cable rights to
Seinfeld for four years and shows like The West Wing and Law and Order can
bring in more than a million dollars per episode depending on which cable channel
airs it. And that's not counting the money earned from network television syndication
reruns (like on Fox), overseas markets and DVD sales. A show like Seinfeld
could literally air on thousands of stations across the world for decades to
come earning untold sums for Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David.
And that's why British shows are remade for American television audiences;
producers are eyeing all the money that could be made if they produce the show
and if that show makes it into syndication. Whereas a show like the British
version of The Office could be shown on NBC, the only money the studio would
make would be the relatively miniscule amount via commercial sales. A US remake
sold into syndication, however, might literally be a goldmine, earning perhaps
hundreds of millions for those involved in it.
The actual quality of the show matters very little; the show making it into
syndication matters very much.
That's why we're treated to sub-par remakes of Coupling and Doctor Who on American
television while the immensely superior original versions air on obscure cable
networks; it's the money. Always has been, and always will be.