
At this point, though nothing has been made official, we all have a fairly good idea that Up All Night will never return to television. Christina Applegate quit the show. Emily Spivey, the series’ original showrunner, departed. Will Arnett signed on to Greg Garcia’s (Raising Hope) CBS pilot, and the networks are courting Maya Rudoplh for a variety show. Up All Night isn’t dead, but it’s dead. Now that most of the dust has settled, TV Guide ran a fascinating piece on what exactly happened behind the scenes that resulted in its demise, including the batsh*t idea NBC executives tries to push through to save the series, but which ultimately drove Christina Applegate off the show.

From the beginning, Up All Night was troubled. The pilot that we saw, and that many of us loved, was meant to set the tone for the series. However, because of Maya Rudolph’s sudden success in Bridesmaids, Up All Night began to be retooled even before the series went to air. They shifted focus away from the home life — which was what the show was meant to be about — and on Maya Rudolph’s talk-show, Ava. They brought in Nick Cannon, who was supposed to have a larger role, and they pushed the parenting angle to the background.
That backfired. Ava never really felt like an organic part of the show, and Maya Rudolph often felt like an annoying extraneous character. After a first season that saw ratings progressively tumble, NBC decided to shift focus, again. They canceled Ava, turned Christina Applegate’s character into a stay-at-home mom, and Arnett’s stay-at-home Dad became a contractor, struggling with a new business.
That obviously didn’t work, either. The show veered further and further away from its original concept, and after a third showrunner came in, Emily Spivey quit because Up All Night had little to do with the show she created. The show was pulled after 11 episodes, put on hiatus, and was being prepped for another reboot because the exec producer, Lorne Michaels, didn’t want to let a talented cast go to waste.
Then it got really weird. They weren’t talking about retooling Up All Night, they were talking about crapping all over it. From TV Guide:
[New show-runner Linda] Wallem and the writing staff began brainstorming ideas for the multi-camera version. One pitch placed a portal between the two worlds — the single-cam and multi-cam versions — that only baby Amy could see. Another idea put Wallem and her real-life partner, Melissa Etheridge, in front of the camera, perhaps with the action taking place in their living room.
Ultimately, a script was written in which Applegate, Arnett and Rudolph played actors portraying the characters Reagan, Chris and Ava on a fictional show called Up All Night. Off the show-within-a-show, Arnett’s character would live at home with his mother, and Applegate’s would be dating. Rudolph’s real-life pregnancy was being written into the storyline — and included a “who’s the daddy?” twist.
First off, I don’t even understand what the hell that first pitch even means. A portal between two worlds that only the baby could see? WHAT. Melissa Etheridge? Where did that even come from?
But it’s the second pitch that makes even less sense, because it was serious: They would have the real actors playing characters in a show-within-a show, but in the show itself, Will Arnett would play himself living with his Mom while the real-life fictional Applegate would be dating? Huh? And a “Who’s your daddy?” twist? I bet they were even considering letting viewers vote on who the Dad would be because that’s how stupid the idea is.
Anyway, it was the second concept — and the fact that it was being written and prepped for actual production — that eventually drove Christina Applegate away.
I think Christina got wind of the kooky things going on,” one source says. Applegate’s reps declined comment, but in a statement released after she quit, the actress said, “The show has taken a different creative direction and I decided it was best for me to move on to other endeavors.”
Thank God she managed to maintain her sanity and quit.
(Source)



NBC continues to drive the nails in its coffin
Non-Believable-Crap
I kind of really want to see an attempt to do a single/multi camera sitcom hybrid with a portal being visible exclusively through an infant. Although it probably would’ve come off worse than “Greendale Babies” did.
Sometimes I think every single person that reads Pajiba would make a better writer than these people. Even Craig.
Man, the pitch for the reboot sounds INSANE, i wish they’d have gone through with it.
I know, it’s inventive and odd. This sort of shit is just bad. Creatives need to be able to throw out crazy ideas and let them be discussed and hashed out. That’s how “let’s do a claymation and multiple timeline” episodes happen. The ship is burning and people are just airing their grievances, anonymously, of course.
Maybe the cast was behind this all along, and they were trying to tank it, so they could move on to better things.
Holy crap, that is nuts. I would kill for a behind the scenes look at them coming up with this, but they’d have been dumber than their ideas to let anyone film them brainstorming this shit.
No, no. They filmed it.
See?
Otto Man, you need your own NBC show. That was awesome.
Do you guys not see the potential this has?? Does no one remember the show Eerie Indiana, where Marshall woke up and his entire life was just turned out to be a TV show?
I want some of the weed those people were smoking. WTF
B*tshit for the win! They are Hurley and some escaped prisoners from Alcatraz spinning around the mobile over baby’s crib short of gaining one viewer!
I would like to pitch a reality show. Honestly. Here’s what I’d like: Give some NBC executives secret hidden cameras they are unaware of and just record the batsh1t insane things they ask producers to do.
I would not be able to stop watching it.
It would get great ratings and NBC would cancel it mid-season.
Cocaine is a helluva drug!
What in the actual fuck. Will Arnett walked away from Amy Poehler but not this?
HA!
Sounds like a wonderful acid trip.
I remember when i loved this show… then episode 2 came…
Seriously, the first season was solid and it had a can’t miss idea.
A show about young couples adjusting to raising their first kid? Hey, guess who’s at home watching TV? Young couples adjusting to raising their first kid.
I watched the fucking movie The Wiz in unrelated segments over four consecutive nights when my daughter was born because that’s what was fucking on. If there had been a TV show with Gob Bluth adjusting to fatherhood, I would’ve made it my religion.
Can’t miss? Well, NBC can. Nice work, fucksticks.
I remember finding it charming in the earliest incarnation, and even throughout it’s run it would maintain the “young couple adjusting to parenthood while still trying to be hip and cool.”
It reminded me of all of my friends, who were running off, getting married and having kids, and those early months where they were still living vicariously through me.
Anyway, I have to go drink a bottle of scotch in the shower.
a half hour of a man drinking a bottle of scotch in the shower would be a better idea for a TV series then whatever the hell the multi-cam baby multi-verse, and Melissa Etheridge’s living room concepts were.
This sounds like an episode of 30 Rock.
was just about to say that – Jack tanked the network with godawful show ideas. Maybe this whole “up all night” thing was a meta-manifestation of 30 Rock’s plot. Illuminati type shit going on up in here…
How does one go about being a television writer? Because it sure seems like a monkey with access to a keyboard coated in banana mush could pound out better scripts than this.
Working for NBC sounds awesome. It sounds like it’s basically a system of internet message boards where some boards draw creative, quality people and ideas (Parks and Recs), some just draw people who were told they were creative in the 1st grade and never really developed it but still believe it, and some that started out at the first time of board but then drew a bunch of the second kind of posters (The Office, Up All Night, I’m afraid Community)….I honestly wonder how many show pitches they get that just say “JEWS! HOMOS!”
I also like to think someone handed Christina Applegate the new idea during an on-set meeting, and she looked at it and then just held it over her head, said “I’m out” dropped it and walked away.
This would have either been a horribly entertaining failure or an act of shear genius. Good on Applegate for walking away from a project she didn’t believe in but I’m disappointed I never got to watch this.
First off, I never expected to read this, ” TV Guide ran a fascinating piece…”
Secondly, WTF is going on in this world? Sitcoms aren’t rocket science. Making a passable one for the masses seems to be beyond the reach of some people in Hollywood. I’m not even talking a GOOD show, just one people will watch and the actors will stay for to make a paycheck.
My first thought was, “Wow, TV Guide still exists?”
The whole show was shitty from the word go and I for one am glad it is gone and Community lives on, despite how bad Community has been lately.
The last 3 weeks have been ridiculously bad. Last week I think I smiled once because of something Troy said……… that’s it. It’s a shame.
I’m with you. I think at this point we’re just sticking with it for the sake of the kids (the cast; except for Chevy).
What will it take for NBC to stop killing television? Because whatever it is, Ill do it. Seriously…… seriously………………………. no, guys……………………………………seriously.
The Manchurian Uproxxer. We WILL be in touch son.
man, fuck nick cannon!