Considering that NBC ponies up roughly $3 million per episode, and that NBC-Universal has recently issued a $500 million dollar cut in its overall annual budget, budget is everything, including stunts that can be resolved using cheaper CG effects instead of crash cars, as well as shortening the vehicle sequences. I don't think a better chase at the end would have saved "R&R All Knight" regardless; the script was so awful, even if the chase were as good as the classic one in the movie Bullitt... (well, okay, maybe that would have made things a little better)cloudkitt wrote:My only point is, budget is not an excuse for their lack of chase scenes.

Hopefully, the upcoming "retooling" will cut the budget fluffs and act more responsible with the money they're getting. If you ask me, NBC should do what Paramount did to Star Trek: Enterprise in that show's 4th season: strip over 1/3 of the show's budget, which actually led to the most critically acclaimed season for that entire series.
Viewership in TV is dropping all over the place, not just with KR, and networks know that its actually cheaper to keep risky shows (like KR, or in FOX's case, Terminator) active in the wretched global economy we're in rather than cancel them for fear of advertisers asking for their sponsorship money back.