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#41 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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![]() Quote:
And in reality the opposite would be true since if all the episodes are A (instead of some B and C) a studio might save on designs and sets. There is also the fact that the people involved need to make enough for a standard of living, and so with 9 episodes they might need to be paid a bit more compared to 20 episodes. |
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#42 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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I don't think there is any one answer for the OP, but basically production costs would be the biggest one. Then a close second would be marketing from the studios. Obviously they want a return, ASAP, on their investment.
I think the advent of the DVR has been, and will continue to be a huge changing factor. The days of the networks running 22 episode "seasons" has, greatly, changed because society has changed. Of course I'm talking about the US, we aren't solely a 9-5 work/eat dinner/watch 6pm news/watch episodic tv/then watch late night talk shows before bed, to repeat the next day. People are much more "on the go" these days, which is why streaming is so popular. Also the afforementioned DVR, which enables people another viewing option, and to "binge watch". Helped, in large part, by cable TV shows that have been highly successful, with only ~12 episodes, the networks(always moving at a glacial pace) are finally starting to realize that this recipe is works well with today's "on the go" society, and are starting to adapt to it...again, at a snails pace. And like others have already pointed out, actors/crew need a break too. For personal reasons and to work on other projects. Also "Seasons" transfers well to packaged media, when/if that show receives a home video release. So kinda my take on the whole "TV seasons" thingy. ![]() |
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#44 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Budgets and contracts.
Actors and actresses want timelines so they can work on other things. A backer of a TV season would want to know how many shows it has in one season and then you have the slots available in that particular station thats showing it. Some sets are temporary, take time to build and knock down. If you had a 10 year lease on the land you could probably do something a bit more permanent. |
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