Whatever the networks are selling this fall, viewers aren't buying.
Three weeks into the TV season, five new series have already shut down production or been canceled. Several others are on life support with little hope of recovery.
"The networks are desperate right now. They have to stop the bleeding," says Marc Berman, editor in chief of Media Insights, the online industry tracker. "The trigger finger is getting faster by the year."
For the most part, the new shows got a healthy initial sampling. Viewers simply didn't return for a second helping. And that is an indictment of the product.
ABC's "Revenge" dropped nearly 15 percent of its viewers over its first week; "Charlie's Angels" lost 19 percent; and NBC's "Playboy Club" plummeted more than 20 percent, from more than 5 million viewers to fewer than 4 million.
"It's been a lackluster year," Berman says. "The biggest hit is 'The X Factor,' and you look at it and you think, 'I've seen this before.'"
There's a tired familiarity to many of the new series.
"I don't understand this reliance on retreads," says media consultant Shari Anne Brill. "Did we really need another 'Charlie's Angels'?"