Can CBS Still Call NCIS: Hawai'i off-peak?
Cancelling Hawai'i was already divisive long before CBS's most recent year's audience numbers became public. Following NCIS: Los Angeles and NCIS: New Orleans, it is the third spinoff from the venerable police procedural series to terminate. Having said that, the Lachey-led series ran the shortest on the air among all the canceled off-shoots in the universe. The fact that NCIS: Hawaii came to a cliffhanger and Tennant's next case was set up makes its sudden ending more annoying. It will stay unsolved now, unless CBS changes its first assessment on the project.
The finest illustration is CBS's change of opinion on the cancellation of SWAT following Shemar Moore's public remarks on the desire of the show to remain. All the same, there is history of networks reversing their choices on programming. The finest illustration is CBS's change of opinion on the cancellation of SWAT following Shemar Moore's public remarks on wanting the show to run indefinitely. Antoon's complaints about NCIS: Hawai'i's surprising ending would not be able to do what Moore did basically on his own. But it might generate conversations among his co-stars and the people the show was drawing in. This could force CBS to at least give greenlight NCIS: Hawai'i season 4 some thought so the show might wrap with a fitting send-off instead of a cliffhanger.
Viewership Data of CBS Shows Reveals NCIS Hawai'i Cancellation Mocked
One of NCIS's stars mocks its demise using CBS's ratings statistics weeks after it was canceled. Premiering in 2021 as part of NCIS' growth with spinoffs, the Hawai'i outpost of the esteemed agency unveiled a brand new team headed by Vanessa Lachey's Jane Tennant. Emphasizing crimes involving military and national security, NCIS: Hawai'i was only beginning to build a strong following when the network shockingly shut it off. Although the spinoff was doing enough to keep going, it isn't as well-known as its original show. Sadly, CBS believed differently.
Series star Jason Antoon, who portrayed cyber intelligence expert Ernie Malik, parodies the show's cancelation in view of the contentious nature of the ratings data. View his X posts below: With Antoon's initial social media tweets stressing NCIS: Hawai'i being 16th overall most-watched series for the 2023–2024 season—a notable leap in the charts from its prior year. He also mentioned its series capper ranking, at number 11 in terms of the largest 7+ Day bump for finales.
After a decade, before CBS can act, an Unexpected NCIS Project Reunites Gibbs' Best Team,
Should the cancelation of NCIS: Hawai'i be reversed, the audience might have to wait some time to find out about its broadcasting plan. Although NCIS season 22 will keep its previous timeslot, Mark Harmon's NCIS: Origins will cover Leroy Jethro Gibbs' agency origins, effectively displacing the spinoff's old block. CBS will thus have to come up with a fresh schedule for the small screen return of Tennant and her team.
NCIS: Hawai'i may be seen on Paramount+.
Looking at the NCIS Series
Naval Criminal Investigative Service, or NCIS, emphasizes the sometimes complicated and always entertaining dynamics of a team compelled to cooperate under great pressure. The NCIS team consists of NCIS Special Agent Timothy McGee, an MIT graduate with a knack for computers who has lately graduated to senior field agent; the charismatic, unpredictable and resilient NCIS Special Agent Nicholas “Nick” Torres, who has spent most of his career on solo undercover assignments; and sharp, athletic and tough NCIS Special Agent Jessica Knight, a formidable REACT agent specialized in hostage negotiations and high-risk operations. Running the morgue and having progressed from assistant to fully licensed medical examiner, the naive Jimmy Palmer is helping the team; and forensic scientist Kasie Hines, Ducky's former graduate assistant. NCIS Director Leon Vance, a brilliant, highly skilled agent constantly dependable to upend the established quo, is in charge of supervising activities. From murder and espionage to terrorism and stolen submarines, these special agents look at all offenses involving Navy or Marine Corps affiliation.
Source: X and Jason Antoon
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