I hear friends complaining about how bad all new TV is, and I don’t get it. I watch some new shows of course but none of them go back and rewatch old shows, it’s weird to me. They have to have a constant stream of new programming. I’ll kick on the office, how I met your mother, scrubs, parks and rec, Seinfeld, so many old shows that I loved and just hang out with them
New American shows are made with a different set of economics than shows 20+ years ago. Outside of remakes or sequels, the typical American sitcom is dead.
True. All of the shows I mentioned didn’t hit their stride until season 3 or so. They would never make it today. Netflix will kill a show now if it doesn’t make Office amounts of money by episode 4
You also have major changes to the writing process, part of it which came up during the writers’ strike.
There used to be a whole team of writers writing for the show and they would tighten up scripts in a very collaborative writing process. Studios don’t want to pay for it any more.
I hear friends complaining about how bad all new TV is, and I don’t get it. I watch some new shows of course but none of them go back and rewatch old shows, it’s weird to me. They have to have a constant stream of new programming. I’ll kick on the office, how I met your mother, scrubs, parks and rec, Seinfeld, so many old shows that I loved and just hang out with them
New American shows are made with a different set of economics than shows 20+ years ago. Outside of remakes or sequels, the typical American sitcom is dead.
True. All of the shows I mentioned didn’t hit their stride until season 3 or so. They would never make it today. Netflix will kill a show now if it doesn’t make Office amounts of money by episode 4
You also have major changes to the writing process, part of it which came up during the writers’ strike.
There used to be a whole team of writers writing for the show and they would tighten up scripts in a very collaborative writing process. Studios don’t want to pay for it any more.