I feel like fancy metrics drive the conversation but sometimes it might be more instructive to do a totally subjective user-based sanity check (e.g. how much do I personally enjoy it?).
Netflix is supposedly growing massively but... is there anything good on it? So much of the content seems completely forgettable.
Furthermore, in the midst of a bad economy I'd imagine streaming services could be cut from the budget first.
Some of their content decisions are pathological from a viewer's standpoint.
Attack on Titan: 96% fresh on RT, and … they only get the first season? Like, why build your viewer up with a good show and not be able to finish the story?
One Punch Man: 86% fresh on RT. Only the first season.
SG:SG1, great show, but if you want to round it out w/ SG:U or Atlantis? No can do.
Inuyasha, (100%/93% on RT) … only the first 2 of 7 seasons.
> Attack on Titan: 96% fresh on RT, and … they only get the first season? Like, why build your viewer up with a good show and not be able to finish the story?
It's even worse than that. You can't access the English subtitles in some countries! I was watching in France and after reaching out to support they told me that their license didn't cover English subtitles lmao. And people wonder why handsomely paid people pirate stuff...
That's on you for using primevideo in the first place! Jokes aside, I hate that platform ever since it decided it was normal to play a show, that I was excited about, starting with the last episode. It ended up ruining the entire thing.
On the flipside when Manifest was canceled by NBC before its planned storyline could be completed, Netflix picked it up and has planned more than enough episodes to reach the end.
They consistently produce hits, to the degree that any network can these days. The Crown, Stranger Things, Sex Education, Russian Doll and Big Mouth all are still airing and all get rave reviews. They also come through with the occasional "cultural moment" stuff like Squid Game and Black Mirror. They also make a lot of "alt" comedy shows that I consider to be some of the best comedy content in recent years.
Aunty Donna (sketch), Middleditch and Schwartz (improv), Michael Bolton's Big, Sexy Valentine's Day Special (a one-off) and as someone else mentioned, So I Think You Should Leave. Plus Big Mouth and its spinoff, Human Resources.
The fact that stuff is so hard to discover is insane. They literally show the same limited crap on their front page despite such a large catalogue. I'm not convinced their algorithm choice makes sense.
The top of my Netflix page being "these are the top shows in your country today" has been super puzzling to me. Surely any kind of recommendation alg would see that my interests align 0% with the average person in my country?
A bunch of reality TV show recommendations? Thanks Netflix.
I recently signed on and did notice a prominent uptick in more mainstream movies and not the fringe garbage that everyone else passed on. But yeah, in general, Netflix has poor quality for the stuff that's on there long term.
I have always wondered if it was ever a possibility for Netflix to have been a platform company. In that, instead of trying and failing to be HBO, they could have licensed out their platform to the content holders to build their platform on. As in, could they have been the Azure/AWS of content streaming? That time is gone now, but I do wonder if it would have been a better long term solution for them as a company.
The “sudden cancellation” stories really feel like anecdotal stories to me. Cancellations have always happened and users just move on to another show besides a vocal minority of angry users
Is it that expensive in the US? It’s 7.99€/month in Europe.
For 1 month of series binging that’s not too bad, just be sure to cancel the subscription directly. We re-enable it maybe once or twice per year.
Back in the mail subscription day at least they had the $2 obscure DVD that you couldn't find anywhere else. Now it's just the same show with different casts in different settings.
Their Cowboy Bebop remake was awful and missed the point of everything, but seemed like they could’ve fixed it, so of course they instantly canceled it instead.
Netflix is supposedly growing massively but... is there anything good on it? So much of the content seems completely forgettable.
Furthermore, in the midst of a bad economy I'd imagine streaming services could be cut from the budget first.