ArsBrevis t1_j0s4alh wrote
Good. If we can't have quality & quantity, better to just have quality. A lot of Netflix shows have been downright embarrassing this year.
TheSeventhAnimorph t1_j0shull wrote
...and on the next streaming-related post, the top comment will be someone complaining about shows getting cancelled.
Seriously, the predominant views on this subreddit are bafflingly contradictory; people simultaneously complain about too many quality shows being cancelled, while also espousing the idea that reducing quantity is a good thing because it means they'll focus more on "quality" (while ignoring that their definition of "quality" is obviously not the one the services are using given the shows that are being cancelled - they're effectively advocating for the services to cancel more of the shows that they do like).
In reality, reducing quantity won't increase the quality of content at all; it will actually decrease the number of quality shows by anyone's definition and will reduce the number of niches that are getting any content at all.
CptNonsense t1_j0soqo3 wrote
Reddit thinks quality means "Shows that appeal directly, specifically to them that they also like personally"
lightsongtheold t1_j0usk0b wrote
It is still a puzzle even using that particular bit of logic why those folks think networks ordering less TV shows will result in them personally finding more TV shows they enjoy!
You know what happened at HBO when AT&T ordered them to produce more TV shows? We got more great TV shows than ever before!
DMPunk t1_j0uengm wrote
Yeah, that's what happens when there's millions of people using the subreddit. It's harder to get a consensus
Abradolf1948 t1_j0tcslw wrote
Because Netflix keeps canceling the actual good shows in the hopes that the next one they greenlight will be the next Stranger Things or Squid Game. The latter of which the original creator didn't even want to have a sequel in the first place.
StephenHunterUK t1_j0w8sw1 wrote
They are also applying a rather ruthless viewership vs. cost approach - they know how many people actually complete a series once they're started it and how long it takes them to do.
sirbissel t1_j0t24e6 wrote
Or they just go with semi scripted game shows and reality shows...
[deleted] t1_j0sk8rx wrote
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[deleted] t1_j0tlb0n wrote
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vadergeek t1_j0u14ok wrote
> If we can't have quality & quantity, better to just have quality.
But is there any reason to believe recent shifts will lead to higher average quality? Looking at, say, HBO and Amazon's recent output, I'm skeptical.
fiercetankbattle t1_j0wkjyz wrote
I was about to ask which ones, then I realised you probably mean anything that it’s targeted directly at mid 20s white males.
LetMeBangBro t1_j0ws349 wrote
> quality & quantity, better to just have quality
I'd rather take the quantity. Means there is a higher chance that someone takes a risk in distributing a new show and that ther eis a chance a show will appear to my tastes.
When distributors focus on quality, then they limit what they take on. And since media companies are risk averse, you get the safest, cookie cutter type media. And then you get the other distributors doing the same, needing their version of a specific hit.
burnabybambinos t1_j0s7oju wrote
Have to pay for quality talent to make those shows.... with Netflix giving away too many subscriptions, they cut-off freebies, and lost clients.
be-like-water-2022 t1_j0tdl24 wrote
Bad. What is happening is not quality over quantity but mediocre content over anything else. AI will make scripts and people will eat garbage as it delicious meal.
"All propaganda has to be popular and has to accommodate itself to the comprehension of the least intelligent of those whom it seeks to reach.
Through clever and constant application of propaganda, people can be made to see paradise as hell, and also the other way round, to consider the most wretched sort of life as paradise. "
Adolf Fucking Hitler
[deleted] t1_j0ssi4e wrote
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be-like-water-2022 t1_j0ti05e wrote
The Good Fight
2017 ‧ Legal drama ‧ 6 seasons
StephenHunterUK t1_j0w9x8c wrote
- Stranger Things - Fifth and final season due in 2024, spin-off planned
- Star Trek: Discovery - Renewed for fifth season
- The Grand Tour - has aired the first episode of what is deemed Season 5 by Amazon with a Central European-located one in the can.
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