WEDNESDAY WHINE: ‘Coming Up’ TV Previews Revealing Too Much

It doesn’t matter whether they’re at the beginning, before a commercial break, or at the end of a show, it always annoys me when TV shows feel it necessary to include…
‘Coming Up’ Previews that Reveal Too Much
Attention television producers: Believe it or not, there are people who are faithful to your show. There are viewers who follow your story lines (as unbelievable as most of them are) and enjoy watching them unfold each week. Why do you find it necessary to spoil many of the key moments in each episode with teasers, aimed at hooking casual viewers? Do you think that’s the only way you can keep people tuned in?
This practice seems to span all networks and genres. It’s like the producers (or perhaps marketing people) believe that every pivotal plot point needs to be revealed before an episode actually airs to make sure viewers are interested enough to tune in next week.
Recent (and recurring) examples include previews shown for NBC’s Heroes, FX’s Nip/Tuck, and ABC’s The Bachelor.
Lately, so little has been going on in each episode of Heroes that revealing anything in the “Coming up…” previews is revealing too much. The show has been light on content and heavy on repetitive dialogue so hearing the most important lines delivered in preview-form often ruins the surprise of what’s going to happen.
The folks at Nip/Tuck appear to think that their viewing audience doesn’t remember anything about any episode from the past. The “Previously on Nip/Tuck…” sequences that are shown at the beginning of each episode essentially reveal what the entire upcoming episode is about by including select sound bites, scenes, and characters from prior episodes. If you see a character that hasn’t been in the show for several episodes during this “Previously on…” segment, it makes it pretty darn clear that they’re making a return. Likewise if a specific plot point is mentioned in this segment, that’s what the upcoming episode will be about. This is on top of the “Next time on Nip/Tuck…” preview from the end of the prior week’s show revealing just about everything else about the episode. It’s like watching the whole episode before actually watching it.
And while I don’t actually watch The Bachelor, my wife does every week, so I see bits and pieces here and there, including what appeared to me to be a 5-minute “This week on The Bachelor…”, showing clips of everything that was going to happen over the course of the following two hours of television. For that show, I suppose it’s convenient because then viewers can just fast-forward to the end and see who gets the boot.
Another equally-annoying practice is editing these “Next week on…” previews in a completely misleading way, making you think something is going to happen when it never actually does. Editors will mix dialogue from multiple scenes, forming a preview for a story line that doesn’t actually exist. In a way, this is even worse than spoiling what is really going to happen as it just confuses the viewing audience once the actual story is revealed.
I believe that “Coming up”-style previews should be assembled with care, showing only enough to keep the viewer interested but without actually revealing any plot points, surprising character appearances, or anything else that would have come as a shock when watching the episode. But the world of television revolves around ratings, not viewer satisfaction, and if previews that show an entire episode-worth of information condensed into 30-seconds are what keep viewers around, it must make good business sense to keep them going. For me, it just annoys me and makes me not want to watch the shows anymore.
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Thankfully, I don’t have to deal with it so much.
Although I wish they’d stop revealing as much as they do with Lie To Me, that new show on Fox.
I’d rather have each episode be a surprise!
BJ
I totally agree. But they’re even worse with movie trailers. It’s like you’re watching the whole movie in 3 minutes.
In the same vein, your next whine should be about how movie reviewers give away too much story info in their reviews. I don’t read any reviews anymore until AFTER I’ve seen the movie.
All time favorite swerve in a preview:
In a preview of an episode in the third season of Lost, we see Hurley utter the line, “We’re all going to die.”
When the next episode opens, we see him say that line again, then we cut to a shot of him and two other characters playing Risk.
Awesome.
I don’t watch a whole lot of TV anymore. I don’t mind the previews/recaps of the shows I do see, so I guess the editors are doing a good job of previewing without giving away major plot points.
I do agree with movie previews, however. I hate it when something that should be a dramatic moment in the movie is spoiled by revealing that moment in the preview or commercial.
It’s a double-edged sword, however. Remember Hancock last year? Personally, I appreciated the fact that all the preview clips were from the first half-hour of the film, not really hinting at the main plot of the film. However, I know a lot of people were felt cheated that the movie they were promised in the commercials was not the one they got.
Of course, you can’t have it both ways. I have a good friend I had a big argument with because he and his wife went to Marley and Me expecting a light romp, and got a movie where the…
(SPOILER!)
…dog dies in the end. Never mind the fact that the movie was based on a best-selling memoir where you know from the book cover that the dog dies.
Oh, well. Can’t win them all.
That is so funny about Hancock. The reason I didn’t see that movie was because I felt like they gave the whole thing away in the preview!
Nope. The DVD commercials were a little different, showing a fight later in the film, but out of context. But if you can find the original theatrical release commercials, Charlize Theron doesn’t even appear in them.
I could be a little off on the exact times, though. I just remember seeing a commercial after getting home from seeing the movie for the first time, and realizing that everything in the spot (and every other spot I saw after that) was from before…
(SPOILER!)
… he goes to jail. That may be as late as 45 minutes into the movie, but I believe it was less.