Maybe "The Ultimate Fighter" Needs Drama After All
Sam Caplan notes how this season of TUF has changed up the priorities of programming content in response to fan criticism and flagging ratings:
A big concern is the fact that in response to the criticisms of hardcore fans, the show has focused less on drama inside the TUF mansion and focused more on the actual fights. Despite the fact that the past two episodes of TUF have featured a total of four fights, the ratings have yet to respond.
I always thought this was what the show needed, too. My belief was that nothing had more drama than the fight, so why bother watching bored young men get drunk? It turns out that if the problems American Idol is facing are any indication, drama is exactly what the show needs:
This season of "American Idol" had talented singers, a doe-eyed teenage contestant for the prepubescent crowd, visits from pop royalty, stinging comments from Simon Cowell and jaw-droppers from Paula Abdul.
So why have some fans and observers found it a dull slog as the show builds to its David Archuleta vs. David Cook finale next Wednesday?
Because contestants who were good but not memorable made for mediocre television, watchers say. Where was the drama, the unpredictability, the oddball personalities? In short, where was the fun?
Perhaps what TUF needs is drama, but not the type of drama the producers at Spike have been doling out. To some extent, I sympathize with the challenges of creating drama. The fact is fighters are dying to fight by the time it's their turn to do so because the monotony of training is hard to deal with. Their lives in the run-up to a fight are predictable and grueling, which is only interesting in the initial glimpse. Anything beyond stage one coverage becomes mundane. What's the answer, then? I'm not sure. Perhaps bringing back the challenges or opening the house to let the fighters roam Vegas could do the trick, but neither of those options come without risk and challenges. The fact is while it's very clear the show needs changes, the avenues for change aren't easy to navigate.
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I think the problem is a tired format. Same goes with American Idol, though I always hated that show. How long can you really expect to milk to exact same scenario?
by Popetastic on May 19, 2008 1:43 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
No More Drama!!
I LOVE TUF!!
I love that they made it more about the fighting this time and less about the Biatches in the house (I Love my fighters but come on – they had that Gabe Rudiger who was a total DUCHE) I LOVE THAT EVERYONE had to FIGHT their way on the show!!
If they are getting poor ratings it is def bc the show has gone on for soo long but Dont take it away!!!
by Angelamytwin on May 19, 2008 3:12 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
And this season we have that douche Jeremy May.
When this season first started, someone else had the right idea about fighting to get into the house. Let the coaches evaluation have some real bearing, other than who gets to train with whom. For example, if a fighter wins via lay and pray yawnfest, he gets the boot. If a fighter loses but gave it a hell of an effort, he gets another shot. That kind of thing.
As for the format itself, it’s a reality show – of course it needs drama. Like it or not, the bigger the ass the more people will watch. The fights are great, but to me it’s like watching the IFL or Bodog. Good fight, but if I don’t care about either fighter then I don’t care about the fight.
This is something pro-wrestling learned a long time ago—people want someone to root for, and to root against.
by mythbuster on May 19, 2008 4:06 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
As much as they’ll bitch about it, I think Dana should make the coaches live in the house with the fighters. At this point -given the absurd mediocrity of the fighters in the past few seasons- its the only thing that’d get me to watch anymore.
Giving me two servings of feces doesn’t increase my desire for feces or make me want to share that feces with my casual fan-friends.
I know it’d be a bitch for them to leave their families, but teams would be able to bond and strife in way we’ve never seen before.
by asa on May 19, 2008 7:02 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Additionally
They could use it to start their own training, so they’d actually have to incorporate the teams into it. And even have the coaches fighting on the finale. That’s a good payoff they’ve denied fans for a while, and would allow them to make the finale an even larger ratings draw. I think the prime time exposure could outweigh loss of a PPV main event. Or even do it for upper-tier guys you’re trying to push into the stratosphere. I think they’ve really just gotten into the habit of using it as a weekly ppv ad/undercard chum factory.
I don’t think it works without the coaches in the house though. I think we need a combo of quality action with intimacy. Basic dramatic narrative stuff here: and audience needs an emotional connection to a pro/antagonist in order for conflict to have weight with said audience.
I’m sure this is rambling, but its such a crazy amalgam of possibilities …
by asa on May 19, 2008 7:12 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs

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