The result was merge to Futurama (season 6). Black Kite (t) (c) 20:16, 14 August 2010 (UTC) reply
There is no such thing as Futurama season 7. It appears the article creator is in error, and may have confused the production seasons with the broadcast seasons of the show. The episode listed on the article is for Season 6, and the only citation present on the article specifically states this. .: Alex :. 08:34, 6 August 2010 (UTC) reply
Comment There appears to be a major misunderstanding here. Due to the erratic nature in which Futurama is broadcast on television, there are more "broadcast seasons" than actual production seasons. Wikipedia features Futurama season articles by production season (as opposed to "broadcast season"), as this is the order and categorisation featured on the DVDs and the true, intended order of the episodes. Production Season 6 is being shown as two seperate "broadcast seasons", which is were the confusion originates. The first half is being shown this year, and the second half is being shown next year.Therefore, it is entirely incorrect to have an article called "production season 7" as it simply does not exist in any way shape or form; hence why I have nominated this for deletion. The show's own creators even acknowledged just the other day their uncertainty for "Season 7". -- .: Alex :. 16:46, 6 August 2010 (UTC) reply
Comment The assertion that this is a "South Park" situation is more crystal ball nonsense, flying in the face of referenced evidence that was reverted for being "incorrect". Verifiablilty is the Wikipedia standard, and a source exstsis that says they will be split. The continued arguements of the number of 6ACXxx episodes is also speculative, since The Simpsons (season 21) had both LABFxx and MABFxx codes, and American Dad! (season 5) had both 4AJNxx and 5AJNxx codes. It is not a given that those codes would air in the intended seasons. And as long as we're being speculative, it would be unprecedented for a cable network to order a 26 episode season of anything. Even The Simpsons on network never exceeded 25. Comedy Central's budget would never provide for a single 26 episode season. Even the split South Park season is only 14. KnownAlias contact 19:42, 6 August 2010 (UTC) reply
In reply to KnownAlias The source that exists say that the season will be split into two. It doesn't say two production seasons, it just says two seasons. Countless sources exist that state that it will be split into two broadcast seasons. Clearly the source in question is talking about them splitting production season 6 into two broadcast seasons. The Simpsons production codes only overlap from season to season when the episode is a hold-over from a past production season. The extra production code values exist when extra episodes are added mid-season or when they're produced by different people to the rest of the run. This hasn't happened in Futurama yet. As for American Dad!, that season 5 list refers to the show's broadcast season. We're discussing Futurama's sixth PRODUCTION SEASON. It would not be unprecedented for a cable network to order a 26 episode season of a show if they intended it to be aired as two separate airdate seasons. They would most likely have just ordered 13 episodes to begin with but they were striking a deal with Fox as well and obviously they had to order a lot of episodes at once to make it financially viable -just as how they had to make 4 straight-to-dvd movies rather than just one for financial reasons. And as for the only split South Park season being 14, no. They've split their seasons in half since at least season 7 but 14 is still mid-season. Look at the airdates. Omega cyber turnip ( talk) 01:04, 7 August 2010 (UTC) reply
In Reply to Omega cyber turnip I spoke poorly. I didn't mean Season 14 of South Park, I meant, in defence of Comedy Central not ordering a single 26 episode season, that South Park doesn't exceed 14 episodes. As for the rest, you continue to speak of the PRODUCTION season, but you filled the table on Futurama (season 6) as if there's no difference between a production season and a broadcast season. Yes, there is only ONE production season. Comedy Central ordered 26 episodes, and that's how the producers chose to produce it. But it is NOT one broadcast season, there will be a sixth and seventh season. This was discussed on the talk page, where you should have brought the matter up further, instead of unilaterally changing information to your preference and understanding. I'm not even saying I agree with it completely; Futurama should be listed by broadcast season for each season like any other page, but that is not the consensus that was reached in this case. The consensus didn't start broadcast order until season 6. And I am defending the consensus, whether you (or even I) like it or not. KnownAlias contact 02:04, 7 August 2010 (UTC) reply
In reply to the reply I filled the table before I was aware that people were having a difference of opinions on how season 6 should be listed -I'm fairly new here so sorry, I didn't mean to ruffle any feathers. Wikipedia lists Futurama by production seasons, hence production season six should be listed as production season 6. There is also an option to view the episodes by broadcast order, this is where the page for this season should go (albeit, as season 8, not 7). Even if people decide that it's broadcast seasons 6 and 7, that shouldn't have any impact on the production season pages on Wikipedia. This is a page for production season 7 that we're discussing the deletion of and you basically just admitted yourself that it doesn't exist. Omega cyber turnip ( talk) 02:39, 7 August 2010 (UTC) reply
The 26 episodes of season 6 were ordered together and each one has a 6ACV production code ranging from 6ACV01 to 6ACV26. Script pages have been released which confirm episodes from the second run to have a 6ACV code and not a 7ACV code which they would have if they were 'production season 7'. Here are two of said images: ' http://pool.theinfosphere.org/images/e/e4/6ACV24_Production_Script.jpg' and ' http://pool.theinfosphere.org/images/6/68/Production_script_cover_of_6ACV14.jpg'. Comedy Central may refer to the second run as another season but it means another broadcast season, not production season. They do a similar thing with South Park each year by splitting each season into two 7-episode runs, but each year's 14 episodes still only officially constitutes one production season. Omega cyber turnip ( talk) 17:36, 6 August 2010 (UTC) reply
The result was merge to Futurama (season 6). Black Kite (t) (c) 20:16, 14 August 2010 (UTC) reply
There is no such thing as Futurama season 7. It appears the article creator is in error, and may have confused the production seasons with the broadcast seasons of the show. The episode listed on the article is for Season 6, and the only citation present on the article specifically states this. .: Alex :. 08:34, 6 August 2010 (UTC) reply
Comment There appears to be a major misunderstanding here. Due to the erratic nature in which Futurama is broadcast on television, there are more "broadcast seasons" than actual production seasons. Wikipedia features Futurama season articles by production season (as opposed to "broadcast season"), as this is the order and categorisation featured on the DVDs and the true, intended order of the episodes. Production Season 6 is being shown as two seperate "broadcast seasons", which is were the confusion originates. The first half is being shown this year, and the second half is being shown next year.Therefore, it is entirely incorrect to have an article called "production season 7" as it simply does not exist in any way shape or form; hence why I have nominated this for deletion. The show's own creators even acknowledged just the other day their uncertainty for "Season 7". -- .: Alex :. 16:46, 6 August 2010 (UTC) reply
Comment The assertion that this is a "South Park" situation is more crystal ball nonsense, flying in the face of referenced evidence that was reverted for being "incorrect". Verifiablilty is the Wikipedia standard, and a source exstsis that says they will be split. The continued arguements of the number of 6ACXxx episodes is also speculative, since The Simpsons (season 21) had both LABFxx and MABFxx codes, and American Dad! (season 5) had both 4AJNxx and 5AJNxx codes. It is not a given that those codes would air in the intended seasons. And as long as we're being speculative, it would be unprecedented for a cable network to order a 26 episode season of anything. Even The Simpsons on network never exceeded 25. Comedy Central's budget would never provide for a single 26 episode season. Even the split South Park season is only 14. KnownAlias contact 19:42, 6 August 2010 (UTC) reply
In reply to KnownAlias The source that exists say that the season will be split into two. It doesn't say two production seasons, it just says two seasons. Countless sources exist that state that it will be split into two broadcast seasons. Clearly the source in question is talking about them splitting production season 6 into two broadcast seasons. The Simpsons production codes only overlap from season to season when the episode is a hold-over from a past production season. The extra production code values exist when extra episodes are added mid-season or when they're produced by different people to the rest of the run. This hasn't happened in Futurama yet. As for American Dad!, that season 5 list refers to the show's broadcast season. We're discussing Futurama's sixth PRODUCTION SEASON. It would not be unprecedented for a cable network to order a 26 episode season of a show if they intended it to be aired as two separate airdate seasons. They would most likely have just ordered 13 episodes to begin with but they were striking a deal with Fox as well and obviously they had to order a lot of episodes at once to make it financially viable -just as how they had to make 4 straight-to-dvd movies rather than just one for financial reasons. And as for the only split South Park season being 14, no. They've split their seasons in half since at least season 7 but 14 is still mid-season. Look at the airdates. Omega cyber turnip ( talk) 01:04, 7 August 2010 (UTC) reply
In Reply to Omega cyber turnip I spoke poorly. I didn't mean Season 14 of South Park, I meant, in defence of Comedy Central not ordering a single 26 episode season, that South Park doesn't exceed 14 episodes. As for the rest, you continue to speak of the PRODUCTION season, but you filled the table on Futurama (season 6) as if there's no difference between a production season and a broadcast season. Yes, there is only ONE production season. Comedy Central ordered 26 episodes, and that's how the producers chose to produce it. But it is NOT one broadcast season, there will be a sixth and seventh season. This was discussed on the talk page, where you should have brought the matter up further, instead of unilaterally changing information to your preference and understanding. I'm not even saying I agree with it completely; Futurama should be listed by broadcast season for each season like any other page, but that is not the consensus that was reached in this case. The consensus didn't start broadcast order until season 6. And I am defending the consensus, whether you (or even I) like it or not. KnownAlias contact 02:04, 7 August 2010 (UTC) reply
In reply to the reply I filled the table before I was aware that people were having a difference of opinions on how season 6 should be listed -I'm fairly new here so sorry, I didn't mean to ruffle any feathers. Wikipedia lists Futurama by production seasons, hence production season six should be listed as production season 6. There is also an option to view the episodes by broadcast order, this is where the page for this season should go (albeit, as season 8, not 7). Even if people decide that it's broadcast seasons 6 and 7, that shouldn't have any impact on the production season pages on Wikipedia. This is a page for production season 7 that we're discussing the deletion of and you basically just admitted yourself that it doesn't exist. Omega cyber turnip ( talk) 02:39, 7 August 2010 (UTC) reply
The 26 episodes of season 6 were ordered together and each one has a 6ACV production code ranging from 6ACV01 to 6ACV26. Script pages have been released which confirm episodes from the second run to have a 6ACV code and not a 7ACV code which they would have if they were 'production season 7'. Here are two of said images: ' http://pool.theinfosphere.org/images/e/e4/6ACV24_Production_Script.jpg' and ' http://pool.theinfosphere.org/images/6/68/Production_script_cover_of_6ACV14.jpg'. Comedy Central may refer to the second run as another season but it means another broadcast season, not production season. They do a similar thing with South Park each year by splitting each season into two 7-episode runs, but each year's 14 episodes still only officially constitutes one production season. Omega cyber turnip ( talk) 17:36, 6 August 2010 (UTC) reply