Make America Great Again Hat in Kansas City

American telly series

Jericho
Jericho.tvseries.jpg
Genre
  • Post-apocalyptic
  • Activity
  • Drama
Created by
  • Stephen Chbosky
  • Josh Schaer
  • Jonathan East. Steinberg
Starring
  • Skeet Ulrich
  • Lennie James
  • Ashley Scott
  • Kenneth Mitchell
  • Brad Beyer
  • April Parker Jones
  • Alicia Coppola
  • Pamela Reed
  • Bob Stephenson
  • Gerald McRaney
  • Clare Carey
  • Richard Speight Jr.
  • Michael Gaston
  • Darby Stanchfield
  • Esai Morales
State of origin United states
Original language English
No. of seasons ii
No. of episodes 29 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Jon Turteltaub
  • Stephen Chbosky
  • Carol Barbee
  • Karim Zreik
Running fourth dimension 43 minutes
Production companies
  • CBS Paramount Network Television
  • Junction Entertainment
  • Fixed Marker Productions
Distributor CBS Television Distribution[i]
Release
Original network CBS
Picture format 1080i (HDTV)
Original release September 20, 2006 (2006-09-20) –
March 25, 2008 (2008-03-25)

Jericho is an American post-apocalyptic action drama television series, which centers on the residents of the fictional metropolis of Jericho, Kansas, in the aftermath of a nuclear assail on 23 major cities in the face-to-face United states. It was produced by CBS Paramount Network Television and Junction Amusement, with executive producers Jon Turteltaub, Stephen Chbosky, and Carol Barbee. It was shown in more than 30 countries.

Jericho ran from September 20, 2006, to March 25, 2008, on CBS. It was cancelled after its showtime full season, because of low ratings. A fan campaign persuaded the network to bring the evidence back for another flavor, of seven episodes, after which it was cancelled over again. In November 2008, Television Guide reported that The CW would air repeats of Jericho to supplant the canceled series Valentine.[ii] In 2007, Jericho was ranked number 11 on TV Guide's Top Cult Shows Always.[iii] In 2009, plans were announced for a feature film based on the serial, that was later cancelled,[4] and a continuation of the Jericho storylines in a comic-book series.[5] [half-dozen] IDW Publishing released a new comic-book series for Season three (in 2009) and Season iv in August 2012.

Synopsis [edit]

Commencement flavor [edit]

The storyline centers on the residents of Jericho, a small-scale northwest Kansas boondocks, in the aftermath of a nuclear assail on 23 major cities in the contiguous The states. The series begins with a visible nuclear detonation of unknown origin in Denver, Colorado. Despite initial belief that it was an blow, Dale Turner, 1 of the characters, receives a phone phone call from his mother in Atlanta, Georgia. The call is and so cut out past the sound of a nuclear boom. Upon showing this to others, information technology is revealed that the bombings were deliberate. Problems are compounded by loss of ability and modern communications, effectively isolating Jericho. Afterward, power is restored to Jericho past what is alluded to every bit the efforts of the U.S. authorities merely an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) from an unknown source disables all electronics.

While the commencement few episodes are almost restoring life afterwards the attacks, well-nigh halfway through the season some of the citizens meet with citizens of a nearby town, New Bern. At showtime, relations are established, resulting in a merchandise of windmills (for power), built in New Bern'due south factory, for supplies for food from Jericho's farms and salt from its mine (neither of which New Bern could supply on its own). Relations sour equally New Bern scapegoats Jericho for its problems and the New Bern sheriff eventually declares war, leading to the flavour'due south climax.

Several themes regularly addressed in the show include the gathering of information, community identity, public lodge, limited resources, the value of family, hardships of fatherhood and internal and external threats. The show likewise features several mysteries involving the backgrounds of major characters, the perpetrators of the assail and the extent of damage to the United states of america and its government.

The pivotal character in this story is Jake Greenish, the 32-twelvemonth-one-time son of Mayor Johnston Dark-green. Jake had fled the boondocks of Jericho five years before, when he became mixed upwards with the wrong people and was involved in questionable activeness. He briefly returns home to claim his inheritance, before being stranded by the catastrophe. After a somewhat awkward render domicile and a tense reunion with his male parent, Jake steps up to become a leader in Jericho, fighting to protect the boondocks and its citizens. Equally the people of Jericho struggle to survive in a changed globe, most remain unaware that 1 of the newest residents, Robert Hawkins, knows a lot more than about the attacks than he is letting on. It is later revealed that he is in possession of an unexploded nuclear bomb that was supposed to exist used in the attack but how he obtained it and what side he is on remain annihilation but clear.

Grey Anderson encounters a Federal Emergency Management Bureau (FEMA) camp outside of Topeka, where he learns that the attack on New York City was foiled by alert New York City Police who shot the bomber before he could detonate the nuclear bomb that he had in the back of a van. Mayor Green reports that the NYPD captured the van in New York with a xx-kiloton nuclear bomb on board but Washington, D.C. has been bombed. On the way dorsum from the FEMA campsite, Anderson'due south car is stolen by 12 looters and he is forced to walk home to Jericho. Anderson also reports that Lawrence, Kansas has been attacked. Robert Hawkins receives a morse lawmaking message on a ham radio stating that Denver, Atlanta, Chicago, Philadelphia, Kansas City, San Diego and several more cities non shown on screen have been attacked. A black box flight data recorder that Jake recovers from a crashed airliner indicates that air traffic control is non-existent, a mushroom cloud is ascent 16 km (9.9 mi) into the atmosphere and that flashes have also been seen towards Texas.

A radiation-fire victim walks into Jericho from Denver, leading a rescue party to Bear Lake but the 20 radiation-burn victims there are dead. Earlier the unnamed radiations-fire victim dies, while he is interrogated past Hawkins, information technology is revealed that he is an accomplice of Hawkins and that at that place is a traitor in the assault. In the flavour ane finale, armed residents of New Bern attack Jericho with crude mortars made at the factories in New Bern. The mortar bombardment injure people in Jericho. Jake and Johnston Greenish along with Robert Hawkins atomic number 82 a counter-attack on New Bern's forces outside of town, killing many of the attackers; Johnston Green is mortally wounded. Ground forces units arrive to separate the combatants just as the flavour ends.

Second season [edit]

Flag of the Centrolineal States of America

The military forces of the new Allied States of America (ASA), which now govern most of what was formerly the Western U.s.a., except the contained Republic of Texas, have restored order to Jericho and its hinterland, putting an abrupt finish to the conflict betwixt Jericho and its rival town, New Bern. As a semblance of normal returns to Jericho, the plot shifts away from day-to-day survival to life and political intrigue nether the ASA regime.

The garrison commander of the ASA Regular army'south newpost in Jericho, Major Edward Beck, asks Jake to accept appointment as the Sheriff of Jericho and the county. Jake reluctantly accepts the date with reservations about the ASA government'due south intentions. Known only to Hawkins and a select few, the September attacks were neither a foreign nor domestic terrorist act but a conspiracy of unknown perpetrators within the highest level of the former U.S. authorities, including the president and the secretary of defense of the new ASA government in Cheyenne. Hawkins must calculate his every move to avoid capture, piece together the trail of evidence and bring the truth to lite, before the conspiracy's mastermind buries information technology forever.

Jericho's residents deal with the reality of the new ASA government based in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Welcomed as saviors, the government's military machine and mercenary agents transform life in Jericho into a repressive police state, led past a private security contracting firm, Ravenwood, owned by Jennings & Rall, which has ties to and sponsors the leaders of the ASA government. When a Ravenwood contractor kills Bonnie, a deaf farm girl from the outskirts of Jericho, to conceal his embezzlement, the town is put on the edge of revolt as Jake and the deputies protect Mimi, the only witness to Bonnie's murder and the embezzlement.

Jake tin can no longer tolerate the methods of Ravenwood and the ASA regime in Jericho and leads an underground movement to remove them from power in the boondocks. He is arrested by Major Beck and interrogated. Jake refuses to break and escapes with the help of his mother and other town residents. The citizens of the town rebel against the local ASA soldiers. All of this causes Major Beck, a decorated former U.Due south. Army officeholder, to question his duty to a authorities that would treat its citizens the way the new ASA government is doing. He orders his men to stand down and return to their garrison.

Hawkins tries to transport the bomb to his contacts in the reborn Republic of Texas. The ASA military is tipped off and after a cursory chase, seizes the weapon. Hawkins narrowly escapes and the ASA military then transports the weapon to Cheyenne for safekeeping. Hawkins makes contact with Jake and the two travel to Cheyenne, where they retake the bomb from J&R contractors. Hawkins is wounded in a brief gun battle. The ii brand it to the Democracy of Texas embassy in Cheyenne with the only undetonated flop (in ASA territory) from the September attacks. The ASA's military is correct behind them. The Commonwealth of Texas is considered the swing state in the struggle for ability betwixt the Eastern United States, which is led by the legitimate surviving Usa regime, now governed from Columbus, Ohio and the Allied States. Texas has non decided which authorities to back. The Texan ambassador in Cheyenne shelters Jake and Hawkins at his embassy.

The ambassador informs his military forces at the embassy to tell the ASA forces outside the fence that any incursion into the embassy by ASA troops will be considered an act of war confronting the Republic of Texas. The ambassador manages quickly to smuggle Jake, Hawkins and the bomb to the Cheyenne airport. At the airdrome he secures a small diplomatic jet plane to carry Jake, Hawkins and the device to Texas. While they are en route, two ASA F-15 fighters intercept Jake and Hawkins and order them to plough around or be shot down. When Jake refuses to be escorted dorsum to Cheyenne, the 2 jets drib back to open fire. Two Republic of Texas Air National Guard F-16 fighters suddenly appear and shoot down the ASA planes. Jake and Hawkins brand it to Texas with the evidence and Hawkins ominously intones that a second American Civil State of war was always coming and the two of them accept fabricated history by giving the United States a fighting chance in the war to come.

Third season [edit]

Season 3 is non a television show, but a six-office comic book series "from the minds" of the original Jericho production team and written by the Jericho writing squad.

In April 2013, Jericho creator Stephen Chbosky revealed during a chat with Nerdacy that talks virtually a live-action season 3 remain ongoing. In his argument, Chbosky noted, "yous know William Morris Endeavor Bureau, who represents me, executive producer Jon Turteltaub and many other people, and they've been talking to Netflix and you never know. I can't say what it will be in season 3, merely I'thou excited for the new developments."[7]

In 2017, Skeet Ulrich gave a reason why the show didn't motion to Netflix:

We were close [to a third season] about iv or five years agone. Karim Zreik, one of the producers, called me and said, "Netflix has a schedule, they have budget, they have locations. Are you in?" I said, "Admittedly, with one proviso: That starting time script back has to fourth dimension-leap v years, and the globe has devolved style lower than nosotros could ever take imagined." And they were on board with information technology. And CBS wouldn't sell information technology. The deal wouldn't work for them.

Quaternary season [edit]

Season 4 is a continuation of the comic volume series released by IDW Publishing on August 15, 2012.[viii] The five issue story picked up after the events of Jericho: Season 3. The comic was written by Kalinda Vazquez, and the process was overseen by the television set series' writers.[9]

Characters and setting [edit]

Characters [edit]

Jericho features an ensemble cast of characters, forth with a number of minor and recurring roles. The series website listed eleven main cast members.[x] Alicia Coppola moved from a recurring role to a regular character in Feb 2008. Gerald McRaney did non have a regular part in season ii. Esai Morales was merely present in flavor ii.[11] [12]

  • Skeet Ulrich equally Jake Green
  • Lennie James as Robert Hawkins
  • Ashley Scott every bit Emily Sullivan
  • Kenneth Mitchell as Eric Green
  • Michael Gaston as Gray Anderson
  • Gerald McRaney as Johnston Green (season one simply)
  • Pamela Reed as Gail Green (chief flavour 1, recurring season 2)
  • Sprague Grayden as Heather Lisinski
  • Shoshannah Stern as Bonnie Richmond
  • Brad Beyer equally Stanley Richmond
  • Alicia Coppola as Mimi Clark (recurring season one, main season ii)
  • Erik Knudsen as Dale Turner
  • Esai Morales as Major Edward Beck (season ii only)
  • Emily Rose as Trish Merrick (flavor 2 only)
  • Richard Speight, Jr. every bit Bill Kohler

Setting [edit]

Jericho, Kansas is a fictional town. It is approximately 47 miles east of the Kansas–Colorado border (which would put it near the location of the real Colby, Kansas). Notwithstanding, a map (episode three: Jericho is Ness City, Kansas on the map) in the series seems to prove Jericho virtually the junctions of I-70 and Usa 83. That would place information technology near the real Oakley. Jericho is 90 miles w of the also fictional Rogue River, Kansas, and around 330 miles from the real Wichita. New Bern, Kansas is a neighboring fictional town which starts a war with Jericho in the wake of the national devastation. Jericho is served by one state highway and the (fictional) Cedar Run Route.

The metropolis's population is mentioned to be almost v,000 as mentioned in season 1 Ep. 2 "Fallout" (1,000 in 1957). Just later the great war between New Bern and Jericho, the population was reduced to iii,000. The city has 1 grocery store, owned by Gracie Leigh (Beth Grant).

Jericho is run by two mayors throughout the series. Johnston Green (Gerald McRaney) was the mayor at the testify opening and for virtually of season 1, but loses the election in the show. Gray Anderson (Michael Gaston), the other electoral candidate, wins the election in the prove.

Product [edit]

Early on evolution [edit]

The series originated as a feature flick idea of co-creators Jonathan Steinberg and Josh Schaer: a post-apocalyptic plot set amidst the trappings of "a little graphic symbol drama" movie, in the vein of The Day Afterwards, Threads, and Testament. Notwithstanding, they before long realized that a two- or two-and-a-half-hour-long film would however not carry the necessary length they felt such a concept required to properly explore the setting and the characters. Thus, Schaer and Steinberg decided to re-conceive the unabridged projection as a television serial, producing a handling out of the original feature screenplay. Director Jon Turteltaub and producer Carol Barbee then entered the picture, the pair having pitched the project to them. Turteltaub soon commissioned writer Stephen Chbosky to pen the airplane pilot teleplay based upon Schaer and Steinberg's series treatment.

One of Chbosky's major contributions to the structure of the serial was the introduction of a greater feminine chemical element to the storyline, opining that, "[Nosotros] could use some girls, a footling kissing, and some laughs." Another significant developmental influence were the September eleven attacks and Hurricane Katrina, and the sense of "[being] a spectator to a disaster, while not quite existence function of it." Co-creator Steinberg in detail felt that after nine/eleven, the United States saw some of the "best of people," and later Hurricane Katrina, some of the "worst of people," and sought to include both in the fabric of Jericho, with Katrina providing "lots of inspiration" for the testify's overall premise.[13]

Filming locations [edit]

Although Jericho is set in northwestern Kansas, most of the series was filmed on a studio backlot in Van Nuys, California.[xiv] [15] The airplane pilot and all episodes involving New Bern, Kansas, were filmed in Fillmore, California.[14] [xvi] Filming also occurred in Pasadena, California, including in front of the city hall, for scenes involving the Allied States capital of Cheyenne, Wyoming. The final episode to air included portions filmed at the Santa Anita race track. Some filming also took identify in Canada and in Long Embankment, California (specifically along Alamitos Bay). The commentary for some episodes on the Jericho Season i DVD includes the location of their filming.

First season [edit]

The get-go season of the bear witness premiered Wednesday, September 20, 2006 and concluded with a cliffhanger episode on May 9, 2007. Lackluster ratings prompted business organisation, as the testify hit a ratings low in early April.[17] The ratings were down 25% when the series returned post-obit the most three-month hiatus.[eighteen] During its starting time season, it ranked 48th, with an average of nine.v million viewers in the United states. Other Midweek night programs it competed with were Bones, Deal or No Deal, and ABC'southward one-act block.[19]

Though the producers seemed confident that the program would be picked up for a 2nd season,[20] CBS officially announced Jericho's counterfoil on May sixteen, 2007.[21] [22] [23]

Several online communities, including the official Jericho forums, launched campaigns in an effort to revive the show. Fans also sent just over 20 tons of nuts to CBS headquarters; this referred to a scene from the season 1 finale "Why We Fight" where Jake Green repeats Full general Anthony McAuliffe'south historic phrase "Basics!" from the Battle of the Burl.[24] The peanuts and other proceeds from the donations were donated to charities,[25] including the rebuilding effort in Greensburg, Kansas,[26] a town that was largely destroyed by a tornado in 2007.

Second season [edit]

In a response posted on the Jericho forum, CBS president Nina Tassler best-selling the fan response, stating, "We hope to develop a style to provide closure to ... the Jericho story."[27] CBS officials acknowledge the campaign was the largest the network had seen using digital means to protest a evidence cancellation.[28] President and CEO Leslie Moonves acknowledged that he was filtering emails from Jericho fans,[29] while senior vice president of communications Chris Ender said, "You accept to tip your hat to their power to get attending and make some noise."[28] [30]

In June 2007, Jericho executive producer Carol Barbee announced that CBS was discussing the possibility of the show's return for an eight-episode mid-flavor run.[31] A day later, Tassler posted an annunciation on the forum stating that vii new episodes of Jericho had been deputed equally a midseason replacement for the 2007-2008 television set season, with the possibility of an extension based on viewership.[32] The last of these 7 episodes was broadcast on March 25, 2008, and was not afflicted directly by the 2007 Writers Guild of America strike.[33] [34]

On Baronial 2, 2007, a video was released on YouTube showing clips from the start day dorsum at work for the Jericho cast and crew. It included a "thank yous" from the cast and crew to the fans for their efforts to revive the evidence.[35] Several months after, CBS released trailers announcing the second-flavour premiere,[36] including Morse code spelling "SPREAD THE Word".

Jericho returned for its second season on Feb 12, 2008 to mostly favorable reviews[37] [38] but with the lowest numbers the ratings had seen nonetheless.[39] In the early days of Jan 2008, the first three episodes of the second season leaked on the internet via a DVD screener source.[xl] The bear witness's second flavour has also premiered in Canada on CTV, mirroring the US circulate.[41]

The first two episodes of the 2008 flavor received the lowest ratings to date for the serial.[42] Jericho's ratings did increment somewhat for its tertiary episode, just dropped to fairly consistent but notwithstanding low ratings. The second flavour averaged vi.2 million viewers.[43]

On March 21, 2008, CBS announced that the network would non be renewing Jericho for a tertiary season.[44] CBS entertainment boss Nina Tassler stated that "The March 25 episode ... will exist the series finale. Without question, there are passionate viewers watching this programme; we simply wish there were more than. We thank an engaged and spirited fan base for keeping the show alive this long, and an outstanding team of producers, bandage and crew that went through creative hoops to deliver a compelling, high-quality second flavor. ... We're proud of anybody's efforts."[45] According to SyFy's source, 2 endings were shot for the March 25 episode. 1 involved a cliffhanger leading into a third flavour, while the other would wrap upwards the series and provide closure for fans who had worked to secure the series' render. One unidentified source said, "In that location are a lot of people hither who really care virtually what happens to Jericho, and I call back we all wanted to run into it succeed. Numbers are numbers, and [CBS] had to do what [CBS] had to do."[46]

Mail service 2d flavour [edit]

In early 2008, executive producer Ballad Barbee said talks were ongoing to notice another habitation for Jericho, perchance on a cable network, and raised the possibility of the Sci Fi Channel[47] [48] and broadcast networks such as The CW (co-owned by CBS).[49] Other possibilities may include a television or theatrical movie.[49]

In April 2008, The New York Times website reported that CBS Paramount Network Television set held talks with Comcast about finding a new home for Jericho.[50] Possibilities included an arrangement whereby Comcast would pay part of the serial' product expenses and then offering episodes in High-Definition before they air on CBS.[51] [52]

Jericho fans continued efforts to resurrect the series, including a one-folio advertizing in the April 25, 2008 edition of Variety mag. A second ad appeared in The Hollywood Reporter, as well equally banner ads on the Multifariousness and The Hollywood Reporter websites.

In January 2009, Television.com reported that a Jericho feature film is in development.[4] Since then at that place has been no motion picture or further Television receiver episodes.

Jericho comic serial [edit]

Season 3 [edit]

In March 2009, Devil's Due Publishing announced that all story lines from the TV serial would be continued in a comic volume series.[5] [vi] In November 2009, Devil's Due Publishing released the first issue of the vi-issue continuation of the Jericho saga. As of May 2011, IDW Publishing re-released the first three comics as Jericho: Redux, as well as issues 4, v and 6, thus completing its publication.[53] [54] In Baronial 2011, IDW collected all 6 comics into a 144-page graphic novel entitled Jericho Season 3: Civil War.[55]

Equally the publisher's description, posted at Amazon.com reads:[56]

Continuing right where the Jericho Flavor 2 television cliffhanger ended! This peculiarly priced edition collects the offset iii bug in one affordable parcel, to prep you for the series' continuation, also available this calendar month. Jake Green and Robert Hawkins are in the safe haven of Texas with the concluding remaining bomb from the first set on. From amidst the chaos, they're contacted by John Smith, the mastermind backside the kickoff strike, seeking assist. Every bit the Cheyenne army bears down on them, they must make up one's mind whether to side with their sometime enemy to fight a greater one ...

Season four [edit]

In Apr 2012, IDW appear a new series of Jericho comics, entitled Jericho Season 4, which picks up afterward the events of Jericho Flavour iii. The five-issue series, written by Kalinda Vazquez, with artwork by Andrew Currie and covers past Tim Bradstreet, was overseen by the original television series' writing staff.[57] As the publisher's description, posted at Amazon.com reads:[58]

Overseen by the original writing staff of the boob tube series, Jericho is back with a vengeance, with a whole new chapter of stories told in the show'southward official continuity. Jericho Season Four picks up where Season 3 left off. Though Jake and Hawkins are happy to exist back in Jericho, the challenges they confront are daunting. Not but are they fugitives in their own hometown, but they find themselves forced to play host to the newest member of the Jericho community - John Smith ... a man who some know as a friend of the resistance, but who Jake and Hawkins know as the man backside the September Attacks. But they know his secret. And but they tin end him from committing another heinous act.

Episodes [edit]

Clips from the airplane pilot episode became free to watch on Yahoo! TV several weeks before the episode actually aired on idiot box.[59] CBS is withal showing most, but not all, of the Jericho episodes on their Innertube website equally of January 2009,[lx] although they cannot be accessed from outside the U.S. CBS repeated the kickoff three episodes on the Sat nights following their original airings, as did Australia's Network Ten. All episodes from seasons 1 and 2 can exist seen on Netflix.

Each episode's opening title sequence is accompanied past an audio message in Morse code. The messages vary from generic references to cryptic clues, and are ever related to the current episode in some way. The messages were broadcast at 15 words per minute at a frequency of one thousand Hz. In improver to these messages, there is Morse lawmaking over the DVD menus. These messages say "Jericho Fans Made Tv History." (Season ane) and "Thank You lot Fans For Making TV History" (Season 2). Likewise, in the second episode, Robert Hawkins received several additional Morse code letters through a ham radio that he was fixing.

Ratings [edit]

Flavour Episodes Season premiere Flavor finale Boob tube season Viewers
(millions)
1 22 September 20, 2006 May 9, 2007 2006–07 ix.24
2 7 Feb 12, 2008 March 25, 2008 2008 6.16

Jericho : U.S. viewers per episode (millions)

Season Episode number Average
1 2 3 4 5 6 vii 8 9 x eleven 12 xiii 14 15 sixteen 17 xviii nineteen 20 21 22
1 11.66 11.47 10.83 10.86 ten.88 ten.56 ix.87 9.68 9.34 9.74 10.25 8.30 8.31 8.x 7.76 eight.52 8.00 eight.19 seven.66 7.56 8.03 7.72 9.24
2 7.09 5.86 six.90 5.67 5.84 5.73 6.02 N/A half-dozen.16

Audience measurement performed by Nielsen Media Research [ citation needed ]

Home video [edit]

CBS DVD & Paramount Habitation Entertainment have released both seasons on DVD in Regions i, ii & iv.

On June 5, 2018, CBS re-released the complete series assail DVD in Region 1.[61]

DVD proper name Ep # Release dates Bonus features
Region i Region 2 (UK) Region 2 (GER) Region 4
The Outset Flavor 23 October 2, 2007 March x, 2008 August 7, 2008 October four, 2007 Featurette: Edifice Jericho
Featurette: What If?
Commentary and Deleted scenes on select episodes.
The 2nd Flavor 7 June 17, 2008 September 29, 2008 June 18, 2009 July ten, 2008 Featurette: Rebuilding Jericho
Featurette: Nut Job
Commentary and Deleted scenes on select episodes.
Unaired Season finale alternate ending
The Complete Series xxx June 17, 2008
June five, 2018
(re-release)
August thirty, 2010 Oct fifteen, 2009 Northward/A Featurette: Tick Tick Boom
Featurette: Behind the Scenes "Cheers"
100 Reasons to Picket Jericho
Table Read
Napalm Action Sequence (from Season 2)
Train Action Sequence (from Season 2)
Cast Members' Memorable Moments.

Web-based necktie-ins [edit]

An online companion to Jericho is called Beyond Jericho. The television program gave the web address for the online companion. Beyond Jericho was to characteristic the "other survivors" of the nuclear attacks. According to Barbee, the story was intended to exist unique to the site, but as the season of Jericho progressed, the online story would dovetail into the episodes themselves. However, the site and "webisode" are at present unavailable, having been removed from the CBS website before the 2nd episode of the Telly show was broadcast.

CBS since decided to scrap the electric current webisode storyline, and instead released a new series of "prequel" webisodes named Countdown that take identify before the get-go explosion. Each of these new webisodes appeared meantime with the circulate of new episodes during season 1, and showed Robert Hawkins gathering information before the assail.

Beyond Jericho [edit]

The outset installment of Beyond Jericho began with an unknown human being calling someone on a jail cell phone, requesting a bribe of $i.2 million for a woman he kidnapped. He then disappears hush-hush through a metal trap door. While climbing down, he hears and feels a blindside, but thinks null of it. After conversing with an associate well-nigh their adjacent plans, he picks the adult female up and climbs back up to the roof. When he opens the door, information technology'southward surrounded past rubble. The entire urban center effectually them has been destroyed. Shortly after, rubble falls through the trap door. With the cell phone (apparently actually the victim's cell phone) dead, and assuming that the human's acquaintance is dead likewise in the collapse, they kickoff to climb through the rubble to find out what happened. Nearby, a manus with a surgical glove on emerges from the rubble, every bit the vignette ends.

Inaugural [edit]

Starting on October 26, Beyond Jericho was replaced by Countdown, which documents Robert Hawkins' efforts to acquire as much as possible about the effects of nuclear bombs before he moved to Jericho.[62] The webisodes practise not feature any of the regular characters, and consist primarily of Hawkins, draped in shadows, watching mini-documentaries.

The mini-documentaries feature adept interviews near the effects of a nuclear attack. They are simply minimally connected to each episode's plot. For instance, CBS' 8-episode plot summary reads: "A shadowy military unit bursts into the bedchamber Hawkins has just vacated. On his computer, they find a video." The video was a brusk documentary about FEMA'south response to Hurricane Katrina and their use of paramilitaries. The "shadowy military unit" then patiently waits until the documentary ends to resume its search for Hawkins.

Inaugural's sponsor, AT&T, is heavily promoted in the series using product placement. Nearly all dialog takes place as SMS messages on an AT&T cellular phone, and a full-screen AT&T logo appears in every episode when Hawkins views the practiced interviews. This spider web-based programming is not accessible from outside of the United states of america.[ commendation needed ]

JenningsandRall.com [edit]

Created for the Tom Tooman game, JenningsandRall.com is the purported website of Jennings & Rall, the corporate giant which plays an increasingly prominent role in the 2nd season of the series. The site contains a wealth of information about the company's mail service-holocaust global operations, with meaning hints regarding events in the show.

On November 1, 2008, the domain name jenningsandrall.com expired.

Tom Tooman [edit]

Tom Tooman is an alternate reality game that CBS ran in conjunction with Jericho, commencement in August 2007. The game began with a cryptic letter posted on a website, supposedly from a Tom Tooman of Lame Deer, Montana.[63] This letter was accompanied past a series of bar codes, some with decimal numbers and others with Mayan numbers. These numbers were used to create an IP accost for a 2nd website. More clues were released, also equally a blog on the CBS website connecting the game with Jericho.[64] The game abruptly ended when the series was cancelled, with no closure offered. A synopsis of the game and the puzzles appear at TomTooman.com.[65]

Encounter also [edit]

  • Locations in Jericho (TV series)
  • Continuity of Operations Plan – the Continuity of Regime plan for the U.Southward. government
  • List of nuclear holocaust fiction
  • Nuclear War Survival Skills – the official nuclear Civil Defense manual from Usa Department of Defense force
  • Nuclear weapons in popular culture
  • Survivalism

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Jericho". CBS.com. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 21 Oct 2017. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  2. ^ "CW Cancels Sunday Slate, Fills Gap with Jericho Repeats". Television set Guide. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on twenty April 2017. Retrieved 21 Nov 2008.
  3. ^ "Tv set Guide Names the Height Cult Shows Ever". Tv set Guide. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 23 September 2017. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
  4. ^ a b "Report: Jericho movie in development". TV.Com . Retrieved 26 January 2011.
  5. ^ a b "Devil's Due press release". Archived from the original on March 19, 2009. Updated 26 Apr 2020.
  6. ^ a b "Jericho Continues As Comic". DWSciFi.com. Archived from the original on January 2, 2013. Retrieved March 10, 2009.
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External links [edit]

  • Jericho at IMDb

bearthemnioncy75.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jericho_(2006_TV_series)

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