20080331

The Main Line

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A Jericho Junction guest post by Welcome2CHO
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PUBLIC RELATIONS 101:
Don’t forget who brought you to the party!

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In my scant few pieces of down-time this week, I’ve worked to put together a post about the disappointment felt not only about Jericho’s cancellation, but also by the way in which the bad news was conveyed to us (or not). During the course of this week – has it been a week already? Boy, time flies when you’re having fun (or not!) – my point-of-view and my words have changed a thousand of times already.
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So, this is what I’m going to do: I’m going to post for posterity’s sake my original thoughts, but certainly not belabor them. Why? Because it’s done. Can’t change it, can’t wish it away, can’t dwell too long on the past if we expect to move forward and have half of chance of resurrecting Jericho once again – a topic which I’ll further address in just a moment.
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However, my original thoughts are a lesson in how I believe a network should treat fans, especially those of the Jericho ilk. And maybe even more importantly, maybe we will see this as a reminder to ourselves about how we should treat one another. We rise and fall together, and if we ever forget that, the battle is lost.
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Quickly, let me say that I give my thanks to CBS for giving us Jericho in the first place and then feeding our addictions with the additional seven episodes in the abbreviated Season 2. CBS had no obligation to do that for any of us, but it did, and I am grateful. Without CBS bringing Jericho to us, there would have been no party.
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On the other hand, as a network leader, I would expect CBS to be a leader for ALL times -- when times are great, when times are bad, and all those other times in-between. While that means acknowledging and celebrating successes, it also means taking full responsibility for your actions and not hiding behind double-speak, mixed messages, the ‘blame game,’ or, worst of all, just hiding.
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In my over 20 years of working within the public and governmental relations arena, I have seen people, organizations, and companies who have been the truest of leaders and others who were only pretenders.
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The difference between the two? Those who are most successful and have garnered the most respect are the ones who, first and foremost, recognize the value and the dignity of the individual and have enough humanity about them to understand that people’s feelings do matter.
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Sure, I’m upset about the cancellation, but I’m a big girl, and like the rest of the Jericho fans, I understand the world of business and economic realities. What is more bothersome, however, is CBS’ not talking to me/us like a grown-up(s) and having the important dialogue we deserve – especially after all the money, man-hours, and emotion we, as non-paid, non-professional marketers, have invested to promote CBS’ product.
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So, if network leader CBS were actually listening to me, and I had a mulligan to cash in, this is how I would have hoped the network would have honored us (because, after all, we fans brought CBS to the Jericho party, as well). In my perfect world, I would have said to CBS:
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Don’t release a terse cancellation statement on a Friday afternoon, a little before 5 p.m., and on a holiday weekend to boot. That’s a well-known, over-used trick employed by those who have bad news to impart -- and choose to bury it over a weekend and avoid the inevitable emotional response.
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Don’t allow your Friday afternoon statement to the media to substitute for direct communication to your fans. These folks kept the home fires burning for Jericho and CBS for over eight months before the Season 2 debut. They cared enough about the show and its cast and crew to fight to bring it back, and they sacrificed much in their personal lives to do the work that was asked of them by CBS’ Nina Tassler.
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At a minimum, fans were owed a post on the Jericho Web site, an e-mail to fans whose e-mails CBS possessed, etc.…..something, anything that paid homage to the fans’ loyalty and their wholehearted investment in the network and the show. They are owed the honest heart-to-heart talk from CBS re: economic realities and the affirmation that fans, if addressed properly, can handle the truth.
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Don’t place the onus of losing Jericho solely and squarely on the backs of fans. We are not professional marketers with unlimited amounts of time and money to expend – especially since all of us have other family, job, and real-life responsibilities that we cannot ignore, no matter how much we love Jericho. We have no control over the faulty Nielsen ratings, the long hiatuses at critical points in the show’s story, the day and time slot in which the show is placed, etc.
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Despite those challenges, however, we worked with what we were given, and we made history with what we did. Any implication whatsoever that blame should lie, for the most part, at the feet of fans is a true shirking of its own marketing/promotion responsibilities by the network.
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Don’t allow the lack of network communication to kill momentum; don’t wait till the last minute to seem even the least bit excited about promoting Season 2. The lag time between CBS’ announcement to resurrect Jericho and the announcement re: the exact time of its return could be deemed Purgatory. The silence from CBS was deafening. Yet, frustrate fans were expected to keep the excitement going, while CBS appeared to have no excitement of its own til closer to the Feb. 12th debut of Jericho.
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Don’t confuse fans with mixed messages. Season finale vs. series finale ‘hints’ in episode-closing voice-overs. A revamp of the Jericho Web site that created a perception of buy-in from the network. Network pronouncements of pride on the online/download numbers vs. Nielsen ratings. The list goes on and on….
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Don’t rub salt in the wound with headlines on the Web site that shout “It Doesn’t Have to End: You’ve watched the finale…now re-live the entire series online.” Ouch! CBS has never communicated directly to the fans re: the show’s cancellation, and it hasn’t acknowledged the pain it has caused fans who SO believed Jericho could live on at the Tiffany Network. It HAS ended at CBS, so the ‘doesn’t have to end’ line feels a little icky. On the other hand, please don’t take the board and its contents away any time soon!! (See? I am SO conflicted! J)
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Telling your most loyal, active, and engaged fans – without actually directly telling them -- that you have, once again, canceled Jericho, and though it’s been nice, my friends, it is over…fini…done….not open for debate…not worthy of a direct dialogue…for once and for all, end of discussion: well, let’s just say there are nicer, more responsible, more humane ways to end our date to the Jericho party. Yet, I’m happy that CBS took me there, anyway.
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That said, I will try to stretch my point re: dignity and respect to include fans’ response. We have to have respect, not necessarily have universal agreement, but certainly show respect for each other and the efforts we need to marshal in order to save Jericho.
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That means no bashing of CBS, no bashing of other networks that may or may not be considering pick-up of Jericho, and no bashing of each other’s ideas and efforts. We need to practice a little PR 101 ourselves, and remember that each one of us fans involved in this fight is important and deserving of dignity and respect. It takes all of us to create another rockin’ Jericho party.
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For those who intend to move forward, there are plenty of places to jump on board and latch on to some good solid efforts: Try the great ideas at GenPatton’s “Homebase: The New Save Jericho Campaign Thread” on the CBS board. JerichoNet2 and JKI are running at full steam with an impassioned Save Jericho campaign. Try Jeritopia and Radio Free Jericho as well, plus other sites like SciFi, CW (in conjunction with Supernatural fans), etc. No matter where you go, just GO…and DO SOMETHING!! I am not ready to let Jericho go just yet. Are you?? The past is the past, so let’s take any anger and disappointment we have felt and move forward to build an even greater Jericho future together.
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Thank you so much J!!! -b

20080327

The Main Line

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Where have you been?
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I have really enjoyed watching Skeet Ulrich grapple with and fill out the corners of Johnston Jacob Green.
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From the pilot through episode 29 the requirements of this character have been to bring believability to a most unlikely hero. The Jake we first meet is a shady liar; white lies perhaps but designed to conceal a past which is less and less to his liking. He comes home attempting to turn his life around in episode 1. He needs money, left to him by his grandfather, to help him start a legitimate business. He is the prodigal son for whom a Father and brother seem to have little tolerance. Ulrich plays the role of that early Jake with all the beautiful nuances of a man hitting his thirties and discovering he is very unhappy with the direction his life is going. He has a confidence level that rises and falls depending on who he is talking to and how they are connected to him. These interactions seem to be informed by a real history and are the root of the “Hallmark” Like scenes that some people say turn them off of Jericho. This town and these people feel like our neighbors which is partially why I think some folks are disturbed. Ulrich is heartbreaking as Jake because anyone who has ever failed at something can see themselves in him. Had bombs not destroyed 23 American cities there is no telling where Jake would have gone after leaving Jericho.
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But the world goes mad on that day and the character of Jake comes back to his hometown again, this time driving a school bus full of children he has saved. Jericho, the show, almost lost me here but Ulrich amazingly pulls it off. He down plays the action hero stereotype to a point that a really amazing television character is born. A hero who balances his redemption and regret so realistically that we are left cheering each time he himself cannot believe what has just taken place. A hero who even when paired with Robert Hawkins refuses to lose his autonomy and a hero who can fly a plane or go to war with a neighboring town and still seem like someone we know.
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Thanks to a masterful performance by Skeet Ulrich the character of Jake Green is a refreshing take on the hero inside of us all.
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20080326

The Main Line

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EPIC 0207

20080324

The Linemans Lamp

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T h e...L i n e m a n ' s...L a m p

"BACK TO THE FARM"
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The end is near; it's right over there.
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As many of you already know I do not watch Jericho on television. I gave up my TV about 15 years ago because I found it to be a distraction. I have a hard time holding a conversation when a TV is on in the room. In that time I really got out of touch with what was on the tube. I heard about the big shows of course because coworkers always seem to be discussing television. Feeling left out used to make me a little sad but since I began watching shows online I have not felt left out. Now I can discuss shows with the best of them. But there is one thing I cannot do and that is feel the communion of watching Jericho at the same time as you TV viewers. I will have to wait til tomorrow which normally would be just fine but tonight I find makes me just a little bit sad.-03/25/08
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Jericho Bloggers choose new directions
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Lisa announced the discontinuation of the Jericho~On~CBS blog today and Jane of the Jericho Monster discussed the future of JM. -03/24/08
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20080321

THE MAIN LINE

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The laboring through what is still undone, as though, legs bound, we hobbled along the way, is like the awkward walking of the swan.
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And dying - to let go, no longer feel the solid ground we stand on every day is like his anxious letting himself fall into the water, which receives him gently and which, as though with reverence and joy, draws back past him in streams on either side; while, infinitely silent and aware,in his full majesty and ever more indifferent, he condescends to glide.
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-Rainer Maria Rilke
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Retribution anyone?
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There are those who believe it is open season on nuts.
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They see Jericho and its Rangers as being mortally wounded and will use this opportunity to strike. Some of them have been harboring a grudge and waiting for this moment. Don’t let them redefine the meaning of our success.
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Our reaction is being closely monitored.
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Let's not let this moment get the better of us.
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Let's not let this movement melt down.
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20080319

The Main Line

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EPIC 0206
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