âDownton Abbeyâ returns Jan. 5; PBS shrugs off spoiler problem
PBS wants âDownton Abbeyâ fans to know itâs sorry about all those spoilers. But not sorry enough to actually move up the showâs airdates.
The public broadcasting network revealed Tuesday that season 4 of the smash British period drama will return on Jan. 5, thus turning aside the entreaties of American fans upset that they canât see episodes until months after theyâve aired in Britain (British viewers will see season 4 this fall). By which point, of course, juicy plot details have spilled all over the Internet. Last year, for example, many stateside viewers found out online that producers killed off Dan Stevensâ popular character for the Season 3 finale, weeks before the season premiere had even aired in the States.
âWe donât want to disappoint the people that really love âDowntonâ and want to see it back,â
PBS President and Chief Executive Paula Kerger told reporters Tuesday at the TCA press tour in Beverly Hills.
PHOTOS: Behind the scenes of âDownton Abbeyâ
But âThe fact that people talk about it and that that word of mouth sort of travels once it premieres in the U.K. has actually benefited us,â Kerger explained.
Thatâs one reason the ratings are so high, Kerger believes. Last season, âDownton Abbeyâ became PBSâ most-watched drama ever, with an average of 11.5 million total viewers, according to Nielsen.
âItâs the second-highest rating of anythingâ on PBS since Ken Burnsâ âThe Civil Warâ documentary miniseries, Kerger said. âSo you kind of donât want to mess with that if itâs working so well.â
Kerger recognizes that by delaying a show for months, sheâs bucking industry trends toward on-demand distribution and binge viewing. When Netflix released its Emmy-nominated âHouse of Cardsâ in February, it made all 13 episodes available simultaneously.
But PBS believes that âDownton Abbeyâ is different -- the kind of program for which fans organize viewing parties and play dress-up.
âItâs one of those handful of programs, I think, that are on the air still that people do sort of want to have a collective experience about,â Kerger said.
What do you think of âDownton Abbeyâ and PBSâ handling of its premiere dates?
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Twitter: @scottcollinsLAT
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