LOCAL

'Jersey Shore' canceled after 6 seasons

The Washington Post
This undated image released by MTV shows the cast of "Jersey Shore," from left, Paul " DJ Pauly D" Delvecchio, Deena Nicole Cortese, Vinny Guadagnino, Jenni "JWOWW" Farley, Mike "The Situation" Sorrentino, Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi, Sammi "Sweetheart" Giancola and Ronnie Magro in Seaside Heights, N.J.

All good things must end, even "Jersey Shore," which will fold up shop at the end of its upcoming sixth season, MTV announced Thursday. The show that saved MTV will premiere its sixth and final season Oct. 4.

Unveiled to an unsuspecting public in December 2009, "Jersey Shore" is another of those tragic TV industry stories. The Situation, Snooki and the rest of the gang still had so many neighborhoods to terrorize, and so much binge-drinking, hooking up and emotionally fraught fighting to accomplish.

But some of the stars had become distracted with starring in their own spinoffs. MTV decided to pull the plug before the show's ratings got any lower and costs got any higher.

The show's headliners are reportedly making more than $2 million each for the sixth season, which works out to about the same paycheck per episode as the adults on ABC' s "Modern Family" will get for that show's upcoming season. The rest of the "Jersey Shore" cast make about what the "Modern Family" kids are slated to make this coming season.

But "Jersey Shore" ratings have slipped noticeably since the heady days at the start of its fourth season when it hit 8.8 million viewers - an MTV record. The network tried to broaden the show, sending the gang to terrorize Florence, Italy, for that fourth season. But the cast clearly hated playing fish out of water, the locals weren't impressed and viewers began tuning out.

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The show's return to Jersey for Season 5 didn't help revive the ratings. By that season's penultimate episode, ratings were back down to first-season levels. "Jersey Shore" continues to be cable's No. 1-ranked series among 12- to 34-year-olds, but here, too, the ratings have taken a big hit.

Besides, the show's happy hedonistic days are behind it, what with Mike "The Situation" Sorrentino now living with a sober coach and giving interviews to MTV's Sway about the "rainy days" he's had since struggling in rehab with his addiction to "prescription drugs." And Snooki is now a mom. Where's the fun in all that?

Thursday's announcement marks The End of an Era, MTV said modestly.

The news was unveiled Thursday to give fans time to grieve and clear their schedules for a mess of "Jersey Shore" send-off programming, starting almost immediately after the holiday weekend.

On Sept. 6, MTV will celebrate "Jersey Shore" all day long, until it takes a break to telecast the 2012 Video Music Awards. Beginning at 11 a.m., MTV will run a "Jersey Shore" marathon featuring past episodes that should have, but did not, win awards, for Best Bromance and the like. That will be followed by the retrospective show "Gym, Tanning, Look Back" at 6 p.m., in which cast members reminisce like middle-aged folk at their high school reunion.

At 7 p.m., the gang will gather - at the VMAs' pre-show red carpet - for the first live interviews since MTV announced the show was kaput. The network threatened that other things also were in store, including an after-show each week during Season 6, a "scintillating reunion special," etc.

Although the show will be gone after this coming season, it will live on in spinoffs. "Snooki & JWoww," which wraps its first season Sept. 13, has already been renewed for a second season. But don't hold your breath on "The Pauly D Project," which had a lousy opening.