Back to the "Futurama"?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/eo/20060104/en_tv_eo/18076
By Gina Serpe
Wed Jan 4, 5:42 PM ET
What has Stewie Griffin wrought? How about a Bender rebirth.
Following the hugely successful resurrection of Family Guy, Fox execs
are reportedly in talks to bring Futurama back from the dead.
The studio has begun talks to revive the Emmy-winning animated series
and produce a limited number of new episodes, thanks to a resurgence
in the show's popularity on DVD and in reruns, Variety reports.
Reps for 20th Century Fox have declined to comment on the news, but
Variety says initial negotiations have begun.
If revived, it's unclear exactly which network would air the new
episodes. While Fox housed the original series, the show found new
life once reruns began showing on the Cartoon Network. Comedy Central
subsequently snapped up the off-air rights and will exclusively air
the repeats beginning in 2008.
The brainchild of Simpsons mastermind Matt Groening and writer David
X. Cohen, Futurama debuted on Fox in March 1999. The series revolved
around Fry, a pizza delivery boy, who is accidentally frozen for a
thousand years. He wakes up in the year 3000 and befriends sassy one-
eyed pilot Leela and the cranky robot Bender, who both work for an
intergalactic delivery service run by a distant nephew of Fry's.
After five seasons and three Emmys, including the 2002 prize for Best
Animated Series, Futurama was shuttered in August 2003.
Should the show make its way back to the airwaves, it would follow in
the footsteps of another Fox cult 'toon, Family Guy.
The latter show was brought back in 2004 thanks to robust rerun
ratings and staggeringly high DVD sales--the show ranks as the fourth-
biggest TV series seller ever. Since its comeback, Fox has produced
two more seasons and the direct-to-DVD movie Stewie Griffin: The
Untold Story.
For Futurama to return, the studio would need to re-sign the show's
production team, as well as voice stars Billy West, Katey Sagal
and John DiMaggio.
In the meantime, Futurama lives on in comic-book form, with all-new
stories continuing to be released by Groening's Bongo Comics.