Jack is back. Fox Broadcasting chief Kevin Reilly has announced
that 24 will be returning in 2014. According to Brian
Stelter of The New York Times, the show will run for 12 weeks
— meaning producers plan to deviate from its longstanding format, where each
hour-long episode represents an hour in realtime.
When it debuted in 2001, that unique approach established 24
as one of the first network programs tailored for binge viewing sessions.
The New Yorker's Emily Nussbaum shared that sentiment when we spoke
to her last November, crediting 24 for breaking the network tradition of
putting out procedural episodes, where "any individual hour could be
distributed in any order."
Scenes of torture inflicted upon terrorism
suspects were also a new sight for television audiences in a post 9/11 climate.
Fox plans to switch things up for Jack Bauer's ninth day-long
adventure. "What they'll be able to do is go in chronological order of the
day, but skip hours," Reilly said. That means each hour viewers see will
still be "real time," but 24's writers will be able to tell a
tighter, more engrossing narrative. Apparently that idea came from showrunner Howard Gordon,
who told Reilly that each 24-episode season of the show ultimately contained
about 12 episodes of compelling storyline.
Source: Theverge
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