TV Cancellations: ‘The Exorcist’, ‘Lucifer’, ‘Designated Survivor’, ‘Quantico’, ‘Alex, Inc.’, ‘Great News’, ‘Taken’

By Chris Evangelista/May 11, 2018 3:20 pm EST

The networks have decided to snap their fingers and make several shows disappear. Designated Survivor, Lucifer, Quantico and The Exorcist have all been cancelled. So have Alex, Inc., Taken, and Great News. Your round-up of the latest TV cancellations is below.

The Exorcist Cancelled

It hasn’t been a great week for certain TV shows. Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Last Man on Earth and The Mick have all been cancelled by Fox, and the network apparently isn’t done giving some of its shows the axe yet. The Exorcist, a series based on the classic horror film of the same name, has been cancelled by FOX after two seasons. The show has developed a devoted following, but it wasn’t enough to save it at Fox. In fact, Variety reports The Exorcist was “Fox’s lowest-rated program this year, averaging 1.32 million total viewers and a 0.41 rating in the 18-49 demo.” Alfonso Herrera, Ben Daniel, Kurt Egyiawan and John Cho starred on the show, which tracked priests doing battle against demonic forces. Perhaps the most frustrating element of this cancellation is the knowledge that The Exorcist season 2 ended on a cliffhanger.

“If we’re lucky enough to get a season 3, this year we talked about how we wanted to bring in elements from other cultures and other faiths and start exploring other ways that other religions out there may be fighting the same battle,” said series creator Jeremy Slater. “They may have other methodologies and other names for evil, but they’re all kind of fighting the same thing. Each year we talk about doing that, and then when we start putting out 10 hours of TV on the board, we always realize we don’t have time to do it justice.” Slater also added this on twitter:

I know it’s easy to get angry at Fox, but the reality is that we were the lowest-rated drama on any network and they still brought us back for a second season, because they loved the show. There are no bad guys in this scenario. — Jeremy Slater (@jerslater) May 11, 2018

Quantico Cancelled

And here’s yet another ABC show that’s been shown the door: Quantico. Quantico ran for three seasons, with season three being shorter than the two seasons before it. The show had remained off the air for almost a full year before returning for its third season on April 26, 2018. Per THR, “After being off the air for nearly a year, the premiere opened to a lackluster 0.5 in the adults 18-49 demo and less than 3 million total viewers — tying its series low.” The show stars Priyanka Chopra, and focuses on “young FBI recruits who have come to the Quantico base in Virginia for 21 weeks of training to become special agents. The recruits have been thoroughly vetted and are considered the best and the brightest – but each one possesses secrets, including hidden reasons for enlisting.”

Quantico recently hired a new showrunner for season 3, Michael Seitzman, who told EW: “I wanted to make something that had evolved to another level…I really like the show, so I wanted to be very respectful to it. At the same time, it’s a third season, and you want it to evolve in the third season.” Apparently, this wasn’t enough to bring audiences back. Seitzman took to twitter to announce that the rest of season 3 will air despite the cancellation.

Alex, Inc. Cancelled 

Did anybody watch Alex, Inc.? I didn’t, because I didn’t realize it had aired. But it had, and it’s also been cancelled by ABC after one season. The show starred Zach Braff as a former radio producer who launches a podcast network. Per TV Line, Alex, Inc. “debuted to 4.6 mil and a 1.1 in the coveted 18-49 demo. Ratings have since fallen off.

Taken Cancelled

Taken, a show based on the Liam Neeson movie of the same name, has also been cancelled by NBC after two season. According to The Wrap, “the Clive Standen-led series was managing a 0.7 rating in the advertiser-coveted 18-49 demographic and a total of 4.4 million viewers in its 9 p.m. Friday time slot.” Per TVLine, Taken “stands as NBC’s lowest-rated drama.” The show serves as a prequel to the movies, showing the film series character Bryan Mills in his younger CIA days. Universal Television and EuropaCorp TV USA will now try to shop the show to a new network.

TV Cancellations: ‘The Exorcist’, ‘Lucifer’, ‘Designated Survivor’, ‘Quantico’, ‘Alex, Inc.’, ‘Great News’, ‘Taken’

By Chris Evangelista/May 11, 2018 3:20 pm EST

The networks have decided to snap their fingers and make several shows disappear. Designated Survivor, Lucifer, Quantico and The Exorcist have all been cancelled. So have Alex, Inc., Taken, and Great News. Your round-up of the latest TV cancellations is below.

The Exorcist Cancelled

It hasn’t been a great week for certain TV shows. Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Last Man on Earth and The Mick have all been cancelled by Fox, and the network apparently isn’t done giving some of its shows the axe yet. The Exorcist, a series based on the classic horror film of the same name, has been cancelled by FOX after two seasons. The show has developed a devoted following, but it wasn’t enough to save it at Fox. In fact, Variety reports The Exorcist was “Fox’s lowest-rated program this year, averaging 1.32 million total viewers and a 0.41 rating in the 18-49 demo.” Alfonso Herrera, Ben Daniel, Kurt Egyiawan and John Cho starred on the show, which tracked priests doing battle against demonic forces. Perhaps the most frustrating element of this cancellation is the knowledge that The Exorcist season 2 ended on a cliffhanger.

“If we’re lucky enough to get a season 3, this year we talked about how we wanted to bring in elements from other cultures and other faiths and start exploring other ways that other religions out there may be fighting the same battle,” said series creator Jeremy Slater. “They may have other methodologies and other names for evil, but they’re all kind of fighting the same thing. Each year we talk about doing that, and then when we start putting out 10 hours of TV on the board, we always realize we don’t have time to do it justice.” Slater also added this on twitter:

I know it’s easy to get angry at Fox, but the reality is that we were the lowest-rated drama on any network and they still brought us back for a second season, because they loved the show. There are no bad guys in this scenario. — Jeremy Slater (@jerslater) May 11, 2018

“If we’re lucky enough to get a season 3, this year we talked about how we wanted to bring in elements from other cultures and other faiths and start exploring other ways that other religions out there may be fighting the same battle,” said series creator Jeremy Slater. “They may have other methodologies and other names for evil, but they’re all kind of fighting the same thing. Each year we talk about doing that, and then when we start putting out 10 hours of TV on the board, we always realize we don’t have time to do it justice.” Slater also added this on twitter:

I know it’s easy to get angry at Fox, but the reality is that we were the lowest-rated drama on any network and they still brought us back for a second season, because they loved the show. There are no bad guys in this scenario.

— Jeremy Slater (@jerslater) May 11, 2018

Lucifer Cancelled

Lauren German, who also starred on the show, had this to say:

I’ve just been trying to tweet my thanks about your overwhelming response and I can’t because my twitter keeps crashing on my phone. #lucifer is trending #1 worldwide.😳 😈

— tom ellis (@tomellis17) May 11, 2018

Designated Survivor Cancelled

Sutherland played a low-level Cabinet member becomes President of the United States “after a catastrophic attack kills everyone above him in the line of succession.” After this, Sutherland’s character struggles with the Presidency while also trying to figure out who caused the event that killed everyone above him. The series was created by David Guggenheim, and also starred Natascha McElhone, Adan Canto, Italia Ricci and LaMonica Garrett.

Quantico Cancelled

And here’s yet another ABC show that’s been shown the door: Quantico. Quantico ran for three seasons, with season three being shorter than the two seasons before it. The show had remained off the air for almost a full year before returning for its third season on April 26, 2018. Per THR, “After being off the air for nearly a year, the premiere opened to a lackluster 0.5 in the adults 18-49 demo and less than 3 million total viewers — tying its series low.” The show stars Priyanka Chopra, and focuses on “young FBI recruits who have come to the Quantico base in Virginia for 21 weeks of training to become special agents. The recruits have been thoroughly vetted and are considered the best and the brightest – but each one possesses secrets, including hidden reasons for enlisting.”

Quantico recently hired a new showrunner for season 3, Michael Seitzman, who told EW: “I wanted to make something that had evolved to another level…I really like the show, so I wanted to be very respectful to it. At the same time, it’s a third season, and you want it to evolve in the third season.” Apparently, this wasn’t enough to bring audiences back. Seitzman took to twitter to announce that the rest of season 3 will air despite the cancellation.

Quantico recently hired a new showrunner for season 3, Michael Seitzman, who told EW: “I wanted to make something that had evolved to another level…I really like the show, so I wanted to be very respectful to it. At the same time, it’s a third season, and you want it to evolve in the third season.” Apparently, this wasn’t enough to bring audiences back. Seitzman took to twitter to announce that the rest of season 3 will air despite the cancellation.

Alex, Inc. Cancelled 

Did anybody watch Alex, Inc.? I didn’t, because I didn’t realize it had aired. But it had, and it’s also been cancelled by ABC after one season. The show starred Zach Braff as a former radio producer who launches a podcast network. Per TV Line, Alex, Inc. “debuted to 4.6 mil and a 1.1 in the coveted 18-49 demo. Ratings have since fallen off.

Great News Cancelled

This is, in a sense, the opposite of great news. Sorry.

Taken Cancelled

Taken, a show based on the Liam Neeson movie of the same name, has also been cancelled by NBC after two season. According to The Wrap, “the Clive Standen-led series was managing a 0.7 rating in the advertiser-coveted 18-49 demographic and a total of 4.4 million viewers in its 9 p.m. Friday time slot.” Per TVLine, Taken “stands as NBC’s lowest-rated drama.” The show serves as a prequel to the movies, showing the film series character Bryan Mills in his younger CIA days. Universal Television and EuropaCorp TV USA will now try to shop the show to a new network.