Originally Posted by little-monster:
“It's been a total flop. I would of thought The CW would of announced a reduced episode order by now. They can easily replace it next year with the third season of The 100”
It hasn't been a total flop. Its numbers haven't been substantially worse than Jane The Virgin and like Jane it has received strong critical praise which is part of the reason The CW picked the show up in the first place. Understanding that Monday night isn't really working commercially for them they wanted to try and angle Monday as a prestige night for them. You also have to factor in the various other elements that overtly come into play with CW decisions. At this point I don't think its dead.
Originally Posted by ntscuser:
“Wrong actress, wrong channel.
It should be on The CW with someone much younger playing the lead.”
I very much disagree with it being the wrong actress. The extent to which Supergirl has worked to date has been almost entirely down to Melissa Benoist. She's been fantastic throughout the series to date.
Originally Posted by leeowls87:
“A question has to be asked do we over sell Superhero shows as being this ratings winner when the facts suggests in reality that isn't really the case...”
I'm not entirely sure that's what the facts suggest.
Its worth remembering that Agents of SHIELD, Gotham and Supergirl all pulled in big numbers to begin with which is suggestive of there being high audience interest in these shows. Even Constantine got off to a decent-ish start (for a Friday series). The issue that needs to be looked at is why these shows can't hold onto that audience going forward and I think for the most part that can be laid at the feet of the shows themselves. Gotham and Agents of SHIELD for example were both terrible shows during their first seasons and in truth neither has become especially great since. Constantine was another show that simply wasn't very good. Its telling that The CW shows are the only ones that have really held their numbers because they're largely the only ones that are especially good although I have to confess I finding Supergirl relatively enjoyable to date and the size of its drop has surprised me somewhat.
Of course the other thing that might be worth taking into account on this point is the expectations game. And by this I mean the audience expectations of these shows. In hindsight Agents of SHIELD was never going to be anything other than a disappointment for audiences because there's simply no way it was going to have the budget or production schedule to match the Marvel films and ultimately that's what people wanted. I suspect Supergirl may have similar problems in that people want a big bold blockbuster but that's never really going to be delivered on television at least not broadcast television. In contrast to that I suspect people tend to just have lower expectations for a show that airs on The CW therefore its not quite held to the same standard which is ironic given that The CW shows are by far the best superhero offerings on broadcast television.