As another summer draws to a close and the kiddies head from the pool to the school, now seems as appropriate a time as any to crown the winners and shame the losers from this brief TV season. Below are TheWrap's 11 standouts — good and bad, five winners and six losers — in our seasonal look-back. If we missed anything or you think we called it wrong, let us hear it in the comments section.
NBC's Got Scheduling Talent: Winner
NBC made some key scheduling moves this summer that have really paid off for the reigning fall, full-year and summer season ratings champion: The network moved "American Ninja Warrior" to 8 p.m. in an effort to target co-viewing and a familial environment, turning the pedestrian reality competition into one of summer's top shows.
IT did the opposite with "Hollywood Game Night," moving the former self-starter behind behemoth "America's Got Talent," which has also resulted in strong increases year over year.
Of course, there were shows to be sacrificed in the process, and we won't even mention "Welcome to Sweden" (OK, not after that mention), but NBC looks likely to finish first again in the key 18-49 demographic over these hot months. Enjoy it while it lasts, NBC, because CBS and Super Bowl 50 are coming for your crown this fall.
"0 Kids and Counting," TLC: Loser
It's rarely a good summer when you have to cancel your highest-rated series due to a molestation scandal. TLC took its sweet time considering the future of "19 Kids and Counting," eventually burying the show's cancellation on Emmy nominations Thursday.
Oh, and then there's the matter of the $19 million that writing down the show cost parent Discovery Communications. We'd say that qualifies for the undesirable half of this list.
Wide World of ABC's Sports Programming: Winner
When one thinks strong sports programming, they generally don't think ABC. But the Disney-owned broadcast channel made a splash early on this summer. The six-game NBA Finals finished as the highest-rated ever on ABC, which has hosted the championship series since the 2002-2003 season.