Re: Who is fed up with the studios attitude on releasing TV Shows?
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Originally Posted by MatthewA
And we don't know what a studio considers to be poor sales. They never publicly state the cost of producing a release which differs from show to show (and trying to get an honest budget figure out of Hollywood is impossible).
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Matthew, your argument seems articulate and reasoned, but I don't get it.
Why should they release these figures? So we can decide for them if they've made enough money to continue a series? Since when have consumers ever had that right? Who are we to decide these things?
Are you suggesting they then release a complete budgetary breakdown and the incredibly complicated calculations of what payments they have to make to profit participants on a given series? And if you were one of these profit participants, would you really think an explicit breakdown of how much money you made off your work was anybody's business on an internet message board?
Frankly, that's nuts.
And sure, advertise new releases if you can. Do you really think the studios haven't thought of this? But that costs money, money that is not necessarily recouped by significantly greater sales.
It is very easy to sit in contempt of these companies. I do it hourly. But please acknowledge that there are no easy answers, and some things will not sell, not matter how well done they are, and no matter how much money is spent to promote them.
Believe me, I have every reason to hate the studios. As a television writer/producer, I actually believe that a studio owes me a very significant chunk of money on a project I did that they are claiming is millions of dollars in the hole. Yes, creative accounting rules the day.
But I do not, and will never, understand the argument that the studios are purposely leaving money on the table through random odd behavior or some strange anti-show agenda.
We can talk around and around on this, and I'm sure I will take the bait and type some more about it. But it's really a very, very simple equation:
If you want it, buy it. If you don't, don't. Do not assume the existence of any season of a series is an implicit contract to release all seasons. And try to enjoy it.