ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Saturday, October 19, 1996             TAG: 9610220117
SECTION: SPECTATOR                PAGE: 22   EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: HOLLYWOOD 
SOURCE: GREG BRAXTON LOS ANGELES TIMES 


FOX HOPES WORLD SERIES CAN BOOST ITS FALL TV RATINGS

Fox executives hope their broadcast of this year's Fall Classic will help halt a less-than-classic fall for the troubled network.

Despite a disastrous start to the month-old season, punctuated by the yanking of all its new series to date, a nearly 10 percent drop in household ratings from last season and some question marks surrounding upcoming programs, Fox TV President David Hill expressed confidence that the network's telecast of the World Series starting Saturday would mark the beginning of a huge turnaround.

Hill said Fox will use the baseball championship to aggressively promote its lineup of veteran series, such as ``Melrose Place,'' ``Beverly Hills, 90210'' and ``The Simpsons,'' and the premiere of its one remaining fall newcomer, ``Millenium,'' the highly anticipated project from ``X-Files'' creator Chris Carter.

``We see the World Series as very important,'' Hill said. ``It will bring eyes to the network that have never seen it. We'll promote our newer shows and showcase our existing ones. We will not make the assumption that everyone knows what's on our schedule.''

Hill, who became president of Fox TV in July, added that he and newly seated programming chief Peter Roth are aggressively pursuing talent for new programming, and are determined to restore a clear identity and vision for the network.

The two executives already have made several quick moves in their quest to revive Fox - ousting two of its new comedies, ``Lush Life'' and ``Love and Marriage,'' benching two other new shows, ``Party Girl'' and ``Big Deal,'' returning ``America's Most Wanted'' to the lineup and moving ``Married ... With Children'' from Saturdays to Sunday nights, where it has aired most of its 10 previous seasons.

``What Peter and I had to face is that we had to move quickly,'' said Hill, who laughed and quipped easily during an interview Monday as he talked how he planned to combat the network's poor start.

Hill, who was previously president of Fox Sports, said, ``Peter and I have come to the team while it's in training camp. There were a couple of rookies that didn't make it and had to be cut. But we've got some great free agents coming in at the end of the month. We've got the season premiere of `The Simpsons,' `Millenium,' `Ned and Stacey.'''

Hill and other industry insiders say many of the network's hopes depend on the launch of ``Millennium,'' which on Friday will assume ``The X-Files''' time period on Fridays. But some critics believe the new series, about an underground group of agents fighting the forces of evil, may be too intense and dark to appeal immediately to a large audience.

``We're not expecting `Millennium' to be a huge hit right off the bat,'' Hill said. ``But it's like a brilliantly made film every week; it transcends TV drama. It really is a tour de force. It's not going to start through the roof, but it will build and be a monster.''

He added: ``Yes, there is pressure across the board. There's no doubt that Fox hasn't had the clarity of voice in speaking to its audience that it had in its initial burst. Now Peter and I are determined to prove that Fox is back, that we are young, and that we are fresh. It will show in the way we look and the way our shows are positioned. We're rediscovering our roots.''

Fox will move ``The X-Files'' to Sundays starting Oct. 27 (unless there is a seventh game of the World Series, which would delay the move one week).

Neither Roth nor Hill is being blamed for the chinks in Fox's armor. The current prime-time schedule was put together by former entertainment president John Matoian, who resigned last month.


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