NBC Exec Says "It Didn’t Just Make Sense" To Keep 'Community' "At That Level Of Audience"

Community"Community" is alive for at least one more season, thanks to a last minute save by Yahoo, who picked up the show just as contracts for everyone involved were about to run out. And apparently those movie talks are already sort of happening. But one player who has been curiously silent about all of this is NBC, who basically decided that the cult show wasn’t worth keeping around, and canceled it this past spring. Well, this weekend, NBC Entertainment chairman Bob Greenblatt told the press assembled for the Television Critics Association why the network ultimately axed "Community." 

"It didn’t just make sense for us to have another season of it at that level of audience," he explained, adding his doubts about whether the show will flourish online. “I don’t know if we we’ll ever know how many will watch it on on Yahoo, I guess we will, I’m curious if they’ll have a bigger audience with it than we did.”

And he wasn’t done there, with Greenblatt also distancing himself and NBC from the whole "six-seasons-and-movie" crusade, essentially implying it was never a reality. “That sixth season thing was created by them — I’m surprised they didn’t say ’10 seasons and a movie,’” he said. “And [the mantra started] before my time [at NBC]."

One gets the impression that the network really didn’t understand "Community," and that’s hardly a surprise considering how near the show came to being cancelled in previous seasons. Will Greenblatt and NBC be eating crow when "Community" returns this fall? We’ll soon see. [EW]