2 Years After Fox Canceled 9-1-1, Its Decision Looks Worse Than Ever After Its Latest Failed Replacement

   

9-1-1 is a rare kind of procedural, providing stories built around first responders from emergency call center operators to firefighters to police officers who respond to the calls, and fans almost lost the series for good. 9-1-1 debuted in 2018 on FOX, and it was not long before it gained a spinoff in 9-1-1: Lone Star. Six seasons into the flagship series, however, Fox opted to cancel the show and shop it to another network, but keep the spinoff series in their lineup.

Networks cancel series for a variety of reasons: financial concerns, failed contract negotiations, low ratings, or even making room for new shows on their schedule they think will perform better. When Fox canceled 9-1-1, they still greenlit another first responder procedural, but now, they have canceled that one as well, and the cancellations reflect some difficult decisions for the network.

Why Fox Canceled 9-1-1 In 2023

Cost Played A Large Part In The Cancellation

When Fox announced the cancellation of 9-1-1, they did it with a caveat: the network sold the series to ABC. The cancellation of 9-1-1 was not something considered lightly by the network, and the biggest reason for the decision was a financial one.

When the 9-1-1 cancellation was announced in 2023, it was revealed that 9-1-1 cost the network about $9 million per episode to produce. That was a result of bigger names in the cast and having to pay a licensing fee to Disney’s 20th Television, which owns the series. With Disney being the parent company behind both 20th Television and ABC, the series would be marginally less expensive for ABC to own and air instead.

At the time, the spinoff series 9-1-1: Lone Star was a little less expensive for Fox to produce and air, a few million dollars less than the flagship series. Even the cost of that series likely caught up with the network, as the cancellation of 9-1-1: Lone Star was announced just before season 6 aired in 2024.

Series creator Ryan Murphy cited financial reasons for the cancellation:

Sadly, we all love ‘Lone Star,’ but the financials just didn’t work. It’s a Disney company that was on a Fox network, and it just was never going to work. And we had a long run of it.

 

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