NBC Announces the Cancellation of Three Shows
According to reports from Deadline, NBC has made the decision to cancel Suits: LA, Lopez vs. Lopez, and The Irrational. The network announced all of the decisions on Friday afternoon.
Suits: LA was a high-profile spinoff of the long-running USA Network series Suits which was on the air for nine seasons from 2011 to 2019. Despite high expectations and a star-studded cast that included several returning characters from the original series, the spinoff had worse-than-anticipated numbers and has been canceled after just one season.
Lopez vs. Lopez is an American sitcom created by George Lopez that follows a dysfunctional family highlighted by a father and daughter reconnecting after being estranged for several years. While the show ran for three seasons on NBC, it will not get a fourth.
The Irrational is a crime drama that is loosely based on the life of Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist and professor at Duke University, and his book Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions. In the show, the protagonist uses his expertise to help the police and the FBI solve high-stakes cases. Though it was renewed for a second season, it has been canceled after two seasons.
After winning a bid over the summer, NBC is set to broadcast NBA basketball once again starting with the 2025-26 season, marking the return of the network's coverage of the league. However, with more basketball games coming to the show's schedule, the network obviously had to make room in its lineup, and these shows were all casualties of that process.
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Vox
an hour ago
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While early camps had been sleepaway camps, more day camps sprang up in the 1960s and '70s as more mothers joined the workforce and families needed summer child care. These camps were often generalized in their programming, offering activities like crafts and swimming. But in the late 20th century, camps started to become more specialized, focusing on single topics like sports, computers, or space rather than lanyards and nature walks. The shift may have been driven by families who wanted their kids to practice a specific skill at camp, rather than simply getting a taste of the outdoors, Smith said. Some camps also saw a demand for a more academic environment as anxiety around college admissions ramped up. Hollie Kissler, the director of a Portland, Oregon, day camp told Bloomberg that around 2001, parents started asking for worksheets and reading logs at camp. Campers then would have been millennials, the generation sending their kids to camp (and influencing camp offerings) today. Meanwhile, with families juggling more complicated summer schedules, more parents wanted the option of shorter camps for their kids. 'Even camps that used to have a nine-week schedule increasingly considered moving to a two-session schedule,' Leslie Paris, author of the book Children's Nature: The Rise of the American Summer Camp, told Vox earlier this summer. Today, the most common session length is one week, Henry DeHart, interim president and CEO of the American Camp Association, told me. The downsides of the modern camp experience Some fear that the trend toward shorter sessions could make it harder for campers to form friendships. Juliana, the reader who wrote to me, wondered if 1-week blocks might be less 'conducive to building community or finding your place at camp, since the cohort changes every week.' 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