In a holiday staff memo, NBCUniversal CEO Jeff Shell called 2020 a "bad dream," but he touted Peacock's launch and laid out streaming stats.
deadline.com
The top driver of premium subscriptions and engagement, Shell revealed, is Premier League soccer, a hallmark of the service's live sports strategy and a point of differentiation with rival streamers. (Peacock also had some exclusive hours of U.S. Open golf coverage last June and will stream an NFL playoff game in January.)
Universal Television's Saved by the Bell is the No. 1 Peacock original, with three out of 10 new users of the service making it the first thing they watch. Current NBC and NBCU cable shows routinely top the Peacock Premium charts when they are made available the day after their linear premieres, Shell noted. And viewing of key library title Parks & Recreation quadrupled after becoming exclusive to Peacock in October, a good sign for The Office.
I would love for Netflix to produce some NBC style comedies right now. I believe Saved by the Bell, A.P Bio are from 30 Rock writers.
My friend do have a Peacock account, but without good VPN I cant use it.
Germany has produced some good stuff like Dark and Barbarians for Netflix that also saw international success. And The 100 is one of those licensed shows that has been doing really well for them.
So why not mix that up! Tribes of Europa comes out Feb 19.
Set in 2074, the continent has been split into several warring Tribal states, fighting for control. Three siblings, Kiano, Liv, and Elija are caught up in the conflict when they come into possession of a mysterious cube.
The Mandalorian firmly in first place of twitter trends this Friday. To me, another point in favor of traditional weekly releases instead of Netflix's all at once dump.
these days it's pretty rare for netflix to advertise anything this far in advance of its premiere, so that alone tells me they see this as (potentially) one of their bigger shows
Agreed that FA season two could be a real let down if the creative team doesn't think very carefully about what they're trying to achieve. But I do think there is enough room in that world to create an interesting follow up that explores some new areas.
Re: Flight Attendant- has there been a show that is built on a murder mystery (or very similar premise) that has successfully run for more than one season? The immediate ones that I can think of, The Killing and Twin Peaks, clearly suffered in their second seasons.
Re: Flight Attendant- has there been a show that is built on a murder mystery (or very similar premise) that has successfully run for more than one season? The immediate ones that I can think of, The Killing and Twin Peaks, clearly suffered in their second seasons.
Re: Flight Attendant- has there been a show that is built on a murder mystery (or very similar premise) that has successfully run for more than one season? The immediate ones that I can think of, The Killing and Twin Peaks, clearly suffered in their second seasons.
No, but (without really spoiling) one would think this show will simply transform to not be a murder mystery show at all, but something else. In that sense it may work.
I haven't seen Broadchurch yet (criminal, I know). Was it an all new mystery or carry on from the first season? Also, I don't know if this applies to Broadchurch but I think the concept works okay if what carriers over is the procedural element (ie detectives/investigators) but the mystery and supporting cast are new.
Re: Flight Attendant- has there been a show that is built on a murder mystery (or very similar premise) that has successfully run for more than one season? The immediate ones that I can think of, The Killing and Twin Peaks, clearly suffered in their second seasons.
Yeah I just found out this week that Search Party is totally not the show I thought it was. For some reason I had it in my head that it was some TBS (I think) show about people stuck on a tropical island or something? Not even sure what show that is. Watched the Season 1 trailer for Search Party a few days ago and, yeah, totally not what I was thinking. Looks intriguing though.
I haven't seen Broadchurch yet (criminal, I know). Was it an all new mystery or carry on from the first season? Also, I don't know if this applies to Broadchurch but I think the concept works okay if what carriers over is the procedural element (ie detectives/investigators) but the mystery and supporting cast are new.
There is a new mystery but we see how the fallout from season 1 impacts the lives of the characters tied to that story. Broadchurch is much heavier than FA and thinking back to some of those episodes I don't really want to re-watch them even they they are objectively well done.
There is a new mystery but we see how the fallout from season 1 impacts the lives of the characters tied to that story. Broadchurch is much heavier than FA and thinking back to some of those episodes I don't really want to re-watch them even they they are objectively well done.
Yeah I just found out this week that Search Party is totally not the show I thought it was. For some reason I had it in my head that it was some TBS (I think) show about people stuck on a tropical island or something? Not even sure what show that is. Watched the Season 1 trailer for Search Party a few days ago and, yeah, totally not what I was thinking. Looks intriguing though.
Re: Flight Attendant- has there been a show that is built on a murder mystery (or very similar premise) that has successfully run for more than one season? The immediate ones that I can think of, The Killing and Twin Peaks, clearly suffered in their second seasons.
If we'll accept "was good but not quite as good", I'd say Veronica Mars managed alright. Season 2 was a definite step down from season 1, but it was fun in its own right and almost managed to set up the show to move beyond the whole Lily Kane angle. Then season 3's shortened mystery arcs took things down another notch, but I don't think we're talking a Twin Peaks-level or god forbid Killing-level fiasco.
Then the books, movie, and eventual season 4 I think proved out there was decent content left to tell in that world/with those characters, although the end of season 4 is them just flat out
sending Veronica off to go adventure somewhere that wouldn't involve most of the familiar characters or locales.
So maybe that was their limit.
I still have a few episodes of The Flight Attendant to watch (watching with family so slow going), but I'm not sure it's set up the overall world to give it space for future seasons--it doesn't really have a lot so far that exists outside the immediate mystery. But the show's been really solid so far so might as well see what the writers have cooked up.
2020 marks the 10th year of these threads - thanks so much to everyone who has participated over the years! *Rules* - Each person makes a list of up to 10 entries. No more than 10, please. Their #1 will get 10 points, #2 will get 9 points, #3 will get 8, and so on. Unranked lists will not be...
If we'll accept "was good but not quite as good", I'd say Veronica Mars managed alright. Season 2 was a definite step down from season 1, but it was fun in its own right and almost managed to set up the show to move beyond the whole Lily Kane angle. Then season 3's shortened mystery arcs took things down another notch, but I don't think we're talking a Twin Peaks-level or god forbid Killing-level fiasco.
Then the books, movie, and eventual season 4 I think proved out there was decent content left to tell in that world/with those characters, although the end of season 4 is them just flat out
sending Veronica off to go adventure somewhere that wouldn't involve most of the familiar characters or locales.
So maybe that was their limit.
I still have a few episodes of The Flight Attendant to watch (watching with family so slow going), but I'm not sure it's set up the overall world to give it space for future seasons--it doesn't really have a lot so far that exists outside the immediate mystery. But the show's been really solid so far so might as well see what the writers have cooked up.
Germany has produced some good stuff like Dark and Barbarians for Netflix that also saw international success. And The 100 is one of those licensed shows that has been doing really well for them.
So why not mix that up! Tribes of Europa comes out Feb 19.
The CW is plotting a spinoff of its football-themed high school drama series All American, Deadline has confirmed. We hear the project is still in the dealmaking stages.
Huh! Rating for CW series that not DC often hover around 0.1 too much, ratings practically meaningless for them. Streaming views for this must be good enough for another spinoff.