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Small Screen: Could Roseanne resurface without Roseanne?

In the days since ABC abruptly cancelled Roseanne after its star鈥檚 racist tweet, there has been hopeful talk of how the network might salvage its top-rated show.
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Sara Gilbert, left, as Roseanne's daughter, Darlene, is behind an effort to keep the series alive.

In the days since ABC abruptly cancelled Roseanne after its star鈥檚 racist tweet, there has been hopeful talk of how the network might salvage its top-rated show.

Could there be a spin-off? Could some of its stars find a new comedy vehicle? Any resolution is a ways off, but there have been rumblings that Sara Gilbert, who plays the Conner family鈥檚 daughter, Darlene, is behind an effort to keep the series alive.
Deadline reported that Gilbert (who is credited with reuniting the cast the first time) and executive producer Tom Werner planned to meet with some of the show鈥檚 writers to 鈥渒ick around ideas鈥 for continuing the show in some form. TMZ went a step further, saying Gilbert 鈥渉as been calling other cast members to gauge their interest.鈥

ABC declined comment, but an executive who was not authorized to speak publicly said the network has merely agreed to consider any option for continuing the series as long as Barr is no longer connected to it. No proposals have been made, the executive said.

There鈥檚 clearly a financial incentive to continue: Although independent producer Carsey-Werner, not ABC, owns Roseanne, the network is obligated to help pay top cast members after renewing it for a 13-episode second season. According to Screen Actors Guild rules, they鈥檙e due to be paid for a minimum of seven episodes, even if none are produced.

The Hollywood Reporter says Gilbert and co-stars John Goodman and Laurie Metcalf negotiated pay raises, to $350,000 for each episode of the planned second season, which would translate to a $7 million-plus obligation under SAG rules. So revamping the show around some of them would provide a way to capitalize on that payout and keep writers and crew members employed.

A huge complicating factor is that Barr was not only Roseanne鈥檚 star, but also its co-creator and executive producer, so contractually she鈥檇 have to approve the plan and is entitled to a share of profits if the series continues in any form. That, in turn, could create more PR blowback for ABC, which would be financially rewarding her despite firing her, unless the studio can find a way to remove her.

While there鈥檚 no guarantee that a series built around Barr would succeed without her, ABC has few attractive options in rebuilding a fall schedule it had built around the show. In its nine episodes last spring, Roseanne averaged 23.3 million viewers, ranking as the top series on TV. Executives are now scrambling to find an acceptable replacement schedule ahead of the looming upfront ad-sales market, when the bulk of commercials for the upcoming season are sold.

In any event, it鈥檚 highly unlikely that a Roseanne replacement series could come together by September. More likely: A midseason tryout, if it happens at all.