Cancel culture: why Netflix keeps binning popular TV shows

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Cancel culture: why Netflix keeps binning popular TV shows

Cancel culture: why Netflix keeps binning popular TV shows



'Dead To Me' will come to an end after its third and final season. Credit: Netflix

Ratings and critical acclaim couldn't save 'Ozark', 'Dead To Me', 'Dark' or 'Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina'


Three strikes and you’re out – you know the rules. It’s worked fine for generations when it comes to ball sports and getting drunk at work, but it’s always been a fundamental frustration of music fandom. You build up a lifelong dedication to a new act and live for their gigs, only to find them dropped after three albums because Nick Grimshaw doesn’t like them as much as you.

It happened in TV too, with great shows cancelled after a series or two if the figures weren’t exactly Friends, but a whole new strain of cancel culture is thriving at Netflix. The streaming giant is making a fine art out of ditching shows, the bodies piling up like a night on the razz with John Wick. Many, like recent one-season victims Osmosis, Mortel, Soundtrack and Spinning Out, understandably fell foul of Netflix’s extravagant practice of throwing huge clusters of original content at the ‘New Releases’ wall to see what sticks, but when it comes to what appear to be critical and commercial success stories like Dark, Ozark, Dead To Me, Glow and Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina, all cancelled after three or four celebrated seasons, it’s often baffling, and a little heart-breaking, to watch them prematurely carted off to televisual Dignitas, babbling the stories they’ve still got left to tell. The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt was even made to dig its own grave with a (great) final interactive episode before grabbing its talking backpack and beaming down the barrel of Netflix’s cold, cruel bolt gun.

Laura Linney as Wendy Byrde in ‘Ozark’ season 3. Credit: Netflix
It’s a tactic which, according to Judd Apatow in a recent NME interview, is more to do with driving subscriptions than entertainment. “Streamers don’t have that much interest in having shows for more than three seasons,” he said. “I think that they like getting all the publicity and that helps them get people to sign up. The model that used to exist for television was that shows were trying to create 100 episodes so they could go on syndication, which is where the money was. But because that doesn’t exist, there isn’t a financial motivator for allowing shows to survive for that long, unless it’s a gigantic hit.”

It’s a cynical approach that puts commerce over art, but in a world of limitless low-cost entertainment the casual consumer will have to want what the casual consumer gets. Working from a subscription funded model, the fifth season of even the most popular show since Game Of Thrones wouldn’t bring in much in the way of new memberships, faced with the daunting task of catching up on days’ worth of screen-time on a series they were never that drawn to in the first place. Feverish hype around a brand new show or a quickly-digested one-off works wonders though – nothing gets people ticking away their data quicker than easily alleviated FOMO. On balance, roping people in with high-profile new series is worth far more, buck-wise, than catering to an existing audience that isn’t going anywhere in a hurry.

Kiernan Shipka and Ross Lynch in ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’. Credit: Netflix
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There are benefits to the viewer too. The brazen act of jumping the shark is being gradually eradicated; shows are more likely to simply end on an eternal cliffhanger than ever get around to disappointing you. And we’ll see a welcome decline in the open-ended conundrum series, where writers specifically create shows which ask more questions than they answer purely in order to create a demand for further seasons, but never had the answers in the first place and just meander along mysteriously for years until they get a call from the money men to wrap it up quick in a final episode of off-the-top-of-the-head bullshyt, usually involving time travel. Lost? We all were.

The downsides, though, are undoubtedly greater. The nature of streaming services, unhindered by limited schedules and with a large and reliable budget base, is surely the place to let shows live, breathe and evolve for as long as there’s life in them. Psychological experts claim that familiarity with shows and characters can help our mental health in the form of comfort television – the dictionary definition of Dave or Gold – and I can certainly relate. I look forward to my annual three-hour South Park binge every bit as much as Glastonbury; I know them both back-to-front and I don’t care if this year’s edition isn’t as good as 2001, I’m just happy to be there.

We’re also going to see an increasing shortage of shows that allow characters to grow and develop through believable life changes, to reach their natural conclusion through relatable ups and downs; characters to really live with and believe in. The Breaking Bads, Sopranos and The Wires of the streaming age might be fewer and further between. The Golden Age Of Television seems to be turning into more of a gold rush.

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steadyrighteous

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TL;DR version:

A show isn't likely to "pop" or dramatically increase their subs after the 1st or 2nd season, and casts (and therefore the show) gets more expensive the longer it's on the air, so it makes better financial sense to make the 1st Season of a new show that may get you new subs and attention instead of paying more for a 4th Season of a show that isn't going to get you either.
 

AnonymityX1000

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Interesting, I think the larger problem is shows going too long than ending too soon. If a show doesn't make sense commercially anymore why keep it going? Hopefully, Netflix and other streamers works this into their decisions to green light something. A showrunner now needs to present a beginning, middle and end outline @ inception instead of just pitching a concept and making it up as you go along.
 
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calh45

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Interesting, I think the larger problem is shows going too long than ending too soon. If a show doesn't make sense commercially anymore why keep it going? Hopefully, Netflix and other streamers works this into their decisions to green light something. A showrunner no needs to present a beginning, middle and end outline @ inception instead of just pitching a concept and making it up as you go along.

This is what killed Lost. That could've been GOAT show if they weren't basically throwing shyt against a wall in the final two seasons
 

AnonymityX1000

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This is what killed Lost. That could've been GOAT show if they weren't basically throwing shyt against a wall in the final two seasons
Yeah, the last season especially and to a lesser extent the time travel season were really blah. But I got to admit one of the later seasons when the smoke monster was impersonating John Locke was fukkin' gangsta. I think that was my favorite.
 

ORDER_66

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Yeah, the last season especially and to a lesser extent the time travel season were really blah. But I got to admit one of the later seasons when the smoke monster was impersonating John Locke was fukkin' gangsta. I think that was my favorite.

That last season of lost was pretty damned good tho...:ld: the smoke monster becoming locke was fukking crazy...:wtf:
 

AnonymityX1000

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That last season of lost was pretty damned good tho...:ld: the smoke monster becoming locke was fukking crazy...:wtf:
The last season was when everyone was off the island not remembering their experience and the English guy who was in the bunker goes around reminding everyone and they just meet up in a church and realize they are all dead and there to greet Matthew Fox as he just died. Simultaneously they were telling the story of how Jacob and the brunette guy dueled and how the brunette guy created the smoke monster out of thin air using "light and air" or some dumb shyt. No it sucked IMO. :camby:
I believe the second to last season is the one I'm referring to. Matthew Fox brings John Locke's dead body back to the island and he thinks that resurrected him but really all that happened was when he came back the smoke monster started doing a killer impression of John Locke and he was dead the entire time.
 

ORDER_66

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The last season was when everyone was off the island not remembering their experience and the English guy who was in the bunker goes around reminding everyone and they just meet up in a church and realize they are all dead and there to greet Matthew Fox as he just died. Simultaneously they were telling the story of how Jacob and the brunette guy dueled and how the brunette guy created the smoke monster out of thin air using "light and air" or some dumb shyt. No it sucked IMO. :camby:
I believe the second to last season is the one I'm referring to. Matthew Fox brings John Locke's dead body back to the island and he thinks that resurrected him but really all that happened was when he came back the smoke monster started doing a killer impression of John Locke and he was dead the entire time.

Yeah the season was split into two different perspectives the island shyt and the afterlife shyt...:ehh: I figured it out and I appreciated the twist at the end where JACK figured it out all along that he died in the end... I knew what it was...:ld:
 

PortCityProphet

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Makes sense for their business model.
Get the new subs let a show do its thing tell its story then cut it cause the cost of shows ALWAYS goes up as time goes on.
And when youre sub based not commercial based aint no point in draining that cash for later seasons
 

MidniteJay

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IMO 4-5 seasons is a healthy amount. I don't need a long runner since most shows go doodoo after 5. I only get tight when a show gets clapped on a crazy cliffhanger like Angel or Dark Matter :mjcry:

Things will be fine as long as Netflix formats for a 1-3 season run or a mini/limited series style.
 
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