If the pilot's story had continued with Micheal Knight(Hoff)

It just so shocking with the popularity of the 08 TV movie, that NBC would kinda say, " It was watched enough to become a series, now lets omit things of the pilot......"

Moderators: neps, Matthew, Michael Pajaro
I'm pretty sure that's what Michael was referring to. To elaborate further on that, I thought it was sad that from a technical standpoint, the original series was superior to the '08 series in many ways in terms of stunt work. To me, it's a lot more gratifying seeing a REAL turbo boost and K.I.T.T. (almost) really driving on his own. The backdoor pilot took this a step further with remote control and I wish they continued to use that method for the rest of the series.2nddaniel2011 wrote:Michael Pajaro wrote:Now if you were looking at it from a very practical standpoint, here's one word that the pilot had in abundance that the series didn't: Auto-Cruise. (2 words?)2nddaniel2011 wrote:Granted, you didn't see any steering wheel shots, whilst kitt drove on his own, they usually had the windows blacked out.
That's pretty much what I meant.. We were TOLD KITT was in Auto Cruise, but we didn't really "see" it because of the blacked out windows. In contrast, the two-hour movie had the best Auto Cruise footage of any episode, from any series, hands down. I just think they really did a great job showing us a self-driving car in the movie.2nddaniel2011 wrote:Granted, you didn't see any steering wheel shots, whilst kitt drove on his own, they usually had the windows blacked out.
In some ways i understand the keep it in the family thing but in some ways i dont because if that was really the issue NBC/Universal wouldve had either TOS or 2008 series of Knight Rider along with the shows T.J. Hooker and Charlies Angles T.O.S. that they already have on the Universal Digital Cable Channel. Maybee the reason is dollar signs.DJGM wrote:Re: the earlier suggestion of new Knight Rider on another network . . .
There is the issue that NBC/Universal own all the TV rights to the Knight Rider franchise, and they might want
to keep it an exclusive property within the NBC/Universal "family". Thing is, what if another network like CBS
(for example) offered NBC/Universal a licensing deal to broadcast new episodes on their channel alongside
the variations of CSI and NCIS, and even alongside the updated version of Hawaii-Five-O ?
Would NBC/Universal still want to "keep it in the family", or would the dollar signs take precedence . . . ?