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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Jack Shepherd

Heathers TV reboot scrapped before premiere because of school shootings

Paramount

The TV reboot of Heathers has been scrapped by Paramount Network in the wake of school shootings across the United States.

While initially planned to debut on Spike TV in March, the satirical anthology series was delayed indefinitely following the deadly Florida school shootings that left 17 dead.

Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, the president of the network's development and production, Keith Cox, explained why the show would not be shown on their channels.

"This is a high school show, we're blowing up the school, there are guns in the school, it's a satire and there are moments of teachers having guns," Cox told the publication.

"It's hitting on so many hot topics. This company can't be speaking out of both sides of its mouth, saying the youth movement is important for us and we've done all these wonderful things to support that and at the same time, we're putting on a show that we're not comfortable with."

Despite Cox having distanced the network from the Heathers reboot, sources tell THR that Paramount initially believed in the series so much they almost renewed it for a second season before the first had aired. However, Cox says: “The combination of a high school show with these very dark moments didn't feel right.”

The reboot was set to feature an all-new set of Heathers, the original pilot being filmed back in November 2016, described by Cox as "before the climate changed." The comedic series would deal with topics such as teen suicide, showrunner Jason Micallef previously saying they wanted to tell "dark and edgy" stories that "hit every hot-button issue".

All ten episodes of the first season were completed, while a writers room had nearly finished work on season two. Sources tell the publication that the sophomore effort would have gone back in time, to the 1700s, and revolved around Marie Antoinette.

Paramount Network, owned by Viacom, made the decision to cancel the show after they went dark across all 17 of their networks earlier this year following the Florida high-school shooting. The cancellation was announced to the cast and crew last week, with some cast members reportedly relieved the series would not be released.

However, the network has decided to still shop the show around, hoping someone else will purchase the much-hyped reboot. Cox has mentioned Netflix as a possible alternative, the streamers already having one controversial drama, 13 Reasons Why, which also touches on sensitive subjects and has landed them in trouble. 

Meanwhile, aHeathers musical has been produced and debuts later this month. Read all about the production here

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