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Kevin Alexander's avatar

I kinds of gave up on trying to keep up with anything onscreen. The everything-all-at-once world we live in makes it too much effort. I'm sure I'm missing a lot of great stuff, but I'm also not sifting through a lot of dreck to get to it, either. I usually find one show, go all in, and then try to find another.

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Angeline Adams's avatar

It's interesting that you raise this because it chimes with something I've noticed with a few shows in the past couple of years. Take The Imperfects, or Everything Now. Both my jam, both much of my wider social group's jam, and if they'd come out in 2014 - 19 I think they'd have found their audience and got the Netflix three-season treatment, with cross-generational appeal to women (particularly) my age and Gen Z. Instead, I never saw a single friend mention either. That intrigued me, as Netflix used to make shows like these into sleeper hits.

But Ripley? Total silence in friend groups I'd expected to be all over it. I think it'll be just fine, mind you: it has much broader appeal as a throwback to that recent yet lamented "golden age of prestige television" era. It was primed for success with rights to all the books bought up, strong PR, and cinematic antecedents to reassure the casual viewer, "you know this, you like this: but it's polished up!" Which is in no way to belittle the show: it was an absolute feast; I devoured it. Same with AMC's "Anne Rice Immortal Universe" the network wants that to be its new Walking Dead tentpole, and lucky me, because I've been saying someone ought to give the books that treatment for years.

But things that aren't obvious "triple-A" shows not finding their audience? I think the "this generation is ADHD about telly" theory in the linked piece is lazy and wide of the mark. With streaming platforms increasingly making keep-or-cancel decisions more harshly than before, I keep hearing it said that audiences are less wiling to take a chance on new shows: they've had too many experiences of investing in a show only to see it cancelled after one season, plot threads and character arcs dangling.

So fewer shows get the degree of viral chatter on socials that the streamers have increasingly allowed to do their marketing for them. So people either don't hear about a show, or wait to see if it'll stick before jumping on board, and both factors doom it. I don't know how true the "Netflix reluctant to pay residuals" theory is; I've heard arguments pro and contra, but the mere perception that it's true may play a part in lack of audience buy-in...

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