'Champions' Canceled at NBC as Producers Shop Mindy Kaling Comedy
SVOD partner Netflix will continue to carry the series internationally but passed on picking up the family comedy for a second season.
Champions will not cross another finish line at NBC.
The network has opted to cancel the comedy from writer and exec producer Mindy Kaling after one season. Sources say SVOD partner Netflix passed on picking up the family comedy for a second season but will continue to carry the show internationally after its June 12 streaming debut. Producers Universal Television, where Kaling is under an overall deal, are said to be in discussions to find a new home for Champions. It's unclear if Hulu, which has in-season stacking rights to the comedy starring Anders Holm, is among the destinations being discussed for the series. Hulu previously rescued Universal TV-produced The Mindy Project after Fox's cancellation.
Champions revolved around Vince (Holm), a charismatic gym owner with no ambition who lived with his younger brother Michael (Andy Favreau), a gorgeous idiot. Their simple life of women and working out is put on hold when Vince's teenage son is dropped off on their doorstep by Priya (Kaling, who recurred), one of his old high school flings.
Kaling penned the pilot alongside Mindy Project collaborator Charlie Grandy. The single-camera comedy hailed from Kaling's production company as well as 3 Arts Entertainment.
Champions, which premiered in March and wrapped its run in May,is among the comedies that have struggled to perform as part of NBC's Thursday night comedy block. Of them, Champions was perhaps the worst. Even with live-plus-seven-day lifts, it could only muster a 0.7 rating among adults 18-49 and 2.4 million viewers over its 10-episode freshman run. That made it the lowest-rated NBC series of the 2017-18 season and one of the five worst performers across all of the Big Four.
NBC's 2018-19 comedy lineup includes returning series The Good Place, Superstore, A.P. Bio and Will and Grace as well as new arrivals Abby's, I Feel Bad and Brooklyn Nine-Nine. It's worth noting that producers Universal Television was the driving force in moving Brooklyn Nine-Nine to NBC after Fox's surprising cancellation.
This season, multiple broadcast shows have gone on to find life after the cancellation ax. Among them: Brooklyn Nine-Nine (Fox to NBC), Lucifer (Fox to Netflix) and potentially Designated Survivor, which is eyeing new life at Netflix after getting the hook at ABC.
Meanwhile, NBC has yet to make a decision on the futures of comedies Marlon and Trial and Error. The former bowed June 14 and the latter returns in July.
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