Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Privileged Season 2 Episode 6

All About Appearances


Megan's relationship issues with the opposite sex reach a new level when she realizes that Jacob is still interested in his ex-girlfriend and Charlie decides to put the brakes on their friendship. Meanwhile, Laurel is persuaded by Megan to include Sage and Rose in her marketing campaign.

Originally called Surviving the Filthy Rich, this CW drama is an adaptation of the popular Zoey Dean novel How to Teach Filthy Rich Girls. In the series, Yale graduate Megan Smith recently moves to Manhattan with hopes of finding success in the field of journalism. However, when her plans go wrong, she accepts a job as the live-in tutor helping two wealthy high school students in Palm Springs get accepted at a top university. Privileged, from Alloy Entertainment in association with Warner Bros. Television and CBS Paramount Network Television., has reveived a 13 episode contract from The CW Television Network. The executive producers are Gilmore Girls' Rina Mimoun and Gossip Girl's Bob Levy and Leslie Morgenstein. 30 Rock's Michael Engler directed the pilot.
Though Privileged has attracted great reviews and a very devoted audience, the ratings just haven’t reflected the show’s quality.
With such poor numbers, the series is almost certainly destined to be cancelled after just one season and 18 episodes. The season ended with unresolved storylines and viewers will very likely be left hanging.
Do you think that the CW network should keep trying to find an audience for the show? Does it belong on another network, like Lifetime? Would you like to see the show continue or, at the very least, see the series come to a satisfying conclusion? If so, there are a few things that you can do.
Tell your friends and family members to tune in and watch Privileged, whenever it show sup. Maybe one of them is secretly a “Nielsen family” or knows one. Viewers are what matter most to the network.
Write to the CW. Let the network know how you feel about the show. Remember to keep it civil. Everyone responds best to courtesy.
Sign the petition below and let the network execs know you’ve signed it. Spread the word and ask others to do the same.

No comments:

Post a Comment