Beyond The Animated TV Grave: The Goode Family

  

Beyond The Animated TV Grave is a sub-series of Beyond The TV Grave, and takes a look at short-lived prime time adult animated series that aired on ABC, CBS, or NBC. This eleventh, and perhaps final, edition focuses on ABC's summer 2009 series The Good Family, which was pulled from its original time slot after two episodes, and canceled after airing its 13-episode season. Click here to view all articles in the series.

Background & Synopsis

The Goode Family was ABC's fourth attempt at adult animation. The first three, 1992's Capitol Critters, 1994's The Critic, and 2000's Clerks: The Animated Series, lasted a combined 15 episodes in their original time slots before relegated to a summer burn-off if not outright canceled on the spot. The Goode Family, however, had the potential to turn out differently. Of all the adult animated shows ABC, CBS, and NBC had premiered since The Simpsons debuted in December 1989, The Goode Family looked most like a show that would conceivably air in a time slot following The Simpsons. It was a political satire starring a staunch liberal California family who struggles with balancing their socially liberal values with their working-class conditions. It was created by Mike Judge, who also created FOX's King of the Hill. When ABC ordered The Goode Family straight to series in February 2008, King of the Hill was the show occupying FOX's Sundays at 8:30 pm time slot directly following The Simpsons. If another network were finally to recapture the audience of a FOX cartoon like The Simpsons or King of the Hill, it would be ABC with The Goode Family.

There would be no better network for The Goode Family to potentially find an audience than FOX. Had The Goode Family been ordered to series by FOX rather than ABC, it could have plausibly aired on FOX Sundays. Instead of moving King of the Hill to 7:30 pm in spring 2009 to make room for the new live-action series Sit Down, Shut Up, the time slot could have opened up for The Goode Family. Given Sit Down, Shut Up was quickly relegated to 7 pm and King of the Hill brought back to the 8:30 pm time slot, The Goode Family couldn't possibly have done much worse. It would have benefitted from airing in King of the Hill's old time slot, in between The Simpsons and Family Guy on FOX's signature Animation Domination night. 

In reality, The Goode Family ran on a network deprived not only of adult animated comedy, but of comedy in general. ABC carried just four sitcoms in 2007-08, three new and one returning. Two of the new sitcoms, Cavemen and Carpoolers, premiered together on Tuesdays and were either pulled or received no backorder. The other new sitcom, Samantha Who?, delivered high ratings after Dancing with the Stars but deteriorated on its own. Their one returning sitcom, the seventh season of According to Jim, crumbled when it returned midseason. The situation was so dire that despite its low ratings, According to Jim was still renewed and reruns were still being used to plug problem slots.

The Goode Family was one of five new comedies ordered to series by ABC in 2008-09, with According to Jim and Samantha Who? returning from the 2007-08 season. Whether it was a product of ABC being displeased with The Goode Family's output or simply a matter of not having an obvious schedule companion for it, ABC prioritized their other new sitcoms over their new cartoon. One of those was Surviving Suburbia, a Bob Saget-starring multi-cam family comedy. Originally meant for The CW, the series premiered in the spring on Mondays following Dancing with the Stars. Its ratings were mediocre at best for its Monday stint, which ended with Dancing with the Stars. Surviving Suburbia would then move to Wednesdays at 9:30 pm starting May 27, where it would follow the series premiere of The Goode Family. The second season of Wipeout would start off the night.

Ratings & Cancelation

The Goode Family was instantly rejected upon its premiere. Despite Wipeout bringing 8.7 million viewers to the 8 pm hour with a 3.3 Adults 18-49 demo rating, The Goode Family premiered to just 3.7 million viewers with a 1.6 A18-49 demo rating. That's also substantially less than the 5.2 million viewers King of the Hill brought in for its season finale on FOX on May 17. Surviving Suburbia dropped even further from there, returning to 2.8 million viewers with a 1.0 A18-49 demo rating. ABC would proceed to pull Surviving Suburbia from Wednesday nights and double-pump The Goode Family the following week. The results were even worse, with the new cartoon averaging just 2.4 million viewers that week despite 8.4 million viewers watching Wipeout in the hour prior. ABC would then pull The Goode Family from its time slot, pairing up both it and Surviving Suburbia on Fridays instead.

The Goode Family's ratings would continue to decline on Fridays, where it was tasked with leading off the night. It notched an abhorrently low 0.5 A18-49 demo rating on June 26, bringing in just 1.67 million viewers. It was down to a 0.3 A18-49 demo rating with 1.09 million viewers by August, and canceled the day after the airing of its season finale.

Aftermath

Just like how The Critic was rescued by FOX after ABC canceled it, there was a brief moment where The Goode Family had hope to return for a second season on another network. Comedy Central floated the idea, even rerunning the first season and giving the studio enough hope so as to order 10 more scripts, but they ultimately decided against picking up the series.

ABC used their fall 2009 schedule as an attempt to completely rebuild their comedy brand, hedging their bets on Hank, The Middle, Modern Family, and Cougar Town. The time slot that belonged to The Goode Family for two weeks in the early summer would belong to Modern Family in the fall. Just like The Goode Family could have plausibly been tried on FOX's Animation Domination block, one would have to wonder if The Goode Family would have better luck as a live-action comedy on their fall 2009 schedule. 

The Goode Family is available to stream for free on Peacock, Prime Video, The Roku Channel, PlutoTV, Plex, Tubi, YouTube, Shout! TV, Xumo Play, Sling TV, and The CW's app. It is also available to stream with a paid subscription on Fubo. It may not be fondly-remembered, but it is highly accessible.

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