Luca Shaw: There was sort of an outpouring of creativity or a willingness to take risks on projects when Netflix and Amazon started. He says now networks are getting more conservative because part of it is they're bigger right so they're trying to find the shows that can appeal to as many different people as possible. Shaw: The biggest hits are always surprises nobody ever sees them coming but there's more money and energy going into television than ever before.
Remember when everyone loved to complain how there were 150 channels on TV and nothing good to watch? It’s pretty hard to say that now. There are so many good shows being made.
Our new complaint: how hard it is to watch all those great shows, especially when they’re spread across so many streaming services—and most of them you have to pay for.
How did we get here? Bloomberg media reporter Felix Gillette has answers. He’s the co-author of the book It's Not TV: The Spectacular Rise, Revolution, and Future of HBO.
Felix joins this episode to break down why TV has never been better–and yet has never been more frustrating to watch. Bloomberg’s entertainment reporter Lucas Shaw also stops in to explain how this shift has changed the way Hollywood decides which shows get made--and which ones don't.
This episode originally aired in October of 2022.
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