“Swat” has become the latest victim of CBS 'Primetime Bloodbath on Thursday.
The movement's drama was canceled after eight seasons, which is the third time that the show has faced an unfortunate end, as the main actor of the exhibition, Shimar Moore, said that they “challenge the possibilities.”
“We have been canceled again,” Moore said in a video posted on Instagram on Friday. “It is absorbed. It is sad.
“Not inverted twice, two years in a row. Now I don't know my history, but how many offers should you say that? I will say nothing. Or we are one of nothing. We did it and we are very proud. “
Moore revealed that he broke the news to the “most amazing crew in Hollywood” on Thursday.
“I had to deliver a speech today to my darts and say,” Hey, we have finished. He recalls, “There is nothing I can say to make this sound nice, good, optimistic and nothing.” “But I said” be proud “, because we challenged the difficulties and we made a successful TV program that the world loved to watch.”
The exhibition is followed by Lapd Swat Sergeant Daniel “Honcho” Harrelson – which Moore played – and his team high skills in the Los Angeles region.
It was originally renewed several times during its early seasons, CBS canceled unexpectedly after its sixth season in 2023.
The network changed its melody a few days later and called for “the seventh and last season.” Before another season was requested last April.
The final nail came in the coffin of the drama led by Shimar Moore after CBS did not hold conversations with Sony Pictures, unlike previous years, the deadline mentioned.
The exhibition, which is broadcast on Friday night at 10 pm, East time, is an average.
The executive producer and the show, Andrew Dettman, said he left the sad news, but thanked the staff and the crew he worked with during the show.
“They are really an extraordinary group of people who all worked hard, and they were allocated in all of these eight seasons, and they overcame countless challenges,” said Dettmann The Outlet. “I can't give them enough credit. I feel proud because I was part of the” Swat “family.
Dettmann claimed that the show was loved by the network's executives, but it was “changing companies” that occur in the industry that could have played a role in the types of offers that were renewed or renewed.
Moore addressed the network, saying that she could always change her opinion.
“I tell CBS, if you finish – I know it is about money, optics and politics – I don't think you are doing the right choice,” said the show. “But if I finished, I say thank you, honestly, frankly from my heart.”
Moore gave 90 percent of the 31 -year -old to dispose of the network between the series including “Criminal Minds”, “Young and the Restless” and “Swat”.
The actor on CBS suggested that they would make “a lot of people smile” if the executives changed their opinion and they hired another in the future of the show.
He even flirted with the possibility of capturing the width by a studio or another network including Netflix, NBC, Fox or ABC.
“If you are interested in a presentation on the automated pilot, the world is watching it, we would like to play,” he said.
Regardless of the fate of the series, Moore says he is enthusiastic about the “next chapter” of his life with his family, including his daughter.
“I didn't, my knee is ready, I lost 20 pounds, I am ready to go.”
“Swat” joined the likes of “FBI: Most Wanted” and “FBI: International” as external studio programs to be taught by the network before the start of the autumn television season.
It has been announced that FBI Spinofs “Modorn Wanted” will end after its sixth season and the “international” was canceled after four seasons, according to the deadline.