Current:Home > StocksThe streaming model is cratering — here's how that's hurting actors, writers and fans -AssetScope
The streaming model is cratering — here's how that's hurting actors, writers and fans
Chainkeen View
Date:2025-04-07 15:17:48
Ever had a show you've been meaning to watch disappear from a streaming service? Or have your favorite series get quashed? Cara Horton, a self-described "theater kid," feels your pain.
"I'm getting really sick of my favorite shows being canceled after one season when they're left on massive cliffhangers," says the 15 year old.
Horton was a big fan of the Netflix series Julie and the Phantoms which was canceled after one season. Now it's happened to her again with Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies, which was recently nominated for two Emmys.
Horton took a cue from a fellow-Phantoms fan and started a petition to save the Pink Ladies. Paramount Television Studios is shopping the Grease prequel to find it a new platform. But Horton sees a trend.
"I think streaming services have really forgotten that it takes a couple of seasons before a show gets big and picks up," she bemoans.
Like pulling the rug out from under you
Disney turned heads recently when it removed the sci-fi teen adventure Crater, a movie that reportedly cost $53 million to make. It vanished from Disney+ after just two months.
Betsy Bozdech feels lucky she got to watch Crater with her two kids before it got yanked. She calls the movie, "pretty emotional" and "intense."
"It's about friendship and separation. It was a great family movie night for us," she says.
Bozdech is the editorial director at Common Sense Media which reviews content for kids (including Crater).
"Sort of the promise when a lot of these streamers launched was that you got access to the whole catalog forever," says Bozdech. "So I think it's a little bit of a feeling of a rug being pulled out from under you."
For creators, the streaming business is 'soul-crushing'
If it's irritating for fans, imagine what it's like for the people who make the content.
Streaming is at the heart of the writers and actors strikes. The unions argue streamers operate in a way that makes it nearly impossible for most members to make a living.
Historically, writers, actors and others made money for the content they created and then, when their shows were rerun or sold to another network, they got more money in residuals. But with streamers, it's more typical to get a flat fee. And if your show gets taken down, it's kind of like taking it off the market.
When a writer works on a show that gets removed, "it's soul-crushing," says Zoe Marshall whose teen comedy Fantasy Football disappeared from Paramount+ despite an all-star cast and co-producers that included LeBron James' company.
Fantasy Football is about a teen girl whose father is an older, professional football player. His career is fumbling. When a bit of magic strikes, his daughter finds she can control his moves on the field with her video game console.
"I wanted it to be a smart picture about what it's like to be a smart, Black girl who has a positive relationship with her black father," says Marshall.
"When you manage to get something actually made, it is a tremendous feather in your cap professionally," says Marshall, "And people start to look at your work as references. When they can no longer watch what you've made, it can be a real hiccup in getting more jobs moving forward."
Streamers don't share data
"As far as Fantasy Football being removed, [Paramount] may never do anything with it again. So I may not see any additional residuals for something that made them an untold amount of money," laments Marshall.
"Untold" is the key word there. Streamers also don't share ratings, which makes it hard for creatives to negotiate future projects. A show can even become a hit and yet the actors and writers still don't make any extra money, as The New Yorker recently explained in a deep dive about Orange Is the New Black.
A glut of content?
Streamers themselves are having a rough time navigating the waters. On Disney's last earnings call, executives said that removing content would give them a tax write-off.
CEO Bob Iger explained another reason for removing content: There's too much of it.
When Disney+ first launched, he said they thought the way to attract subscribers was, "to flood the digital shelves as much as possible... We realized that we made a lot of content that is not necessarily driving sub growth, and we're getting much more surgical about what it is we make."
He also pointed out that a streamer can't just put shows out there and hope people find them. "You're spending a lot of money marketing things that are not going to have an impact on the bottom line."
Still, the beauty of streaming was that it was supposed to provide vast amounts of diverse content — something for everyone.
"What is the point of this golden streaming age if the creative people, the consumers, if they're all kind of agitated about ... not getting what they thought they were going to get?" asks Maureen Ryan, a contributing editor for Vanity Fair. She's been covering Hollywood for some 30 years. Her new book is called Burn It Down: Power, Complicity, and a Call for Change in Hollywood.
"It's a really rough moment. I think it's basically Streamaggedon's Reckoning. That would be the bad action movie I would make out of this," she jokes.
It's a "reckoning" that goes beyond the picket lines. All sides of the Hollywood labor standoff hope for hit shows. But in today's fast-paced culture, the time, talent, patience and money required are a tall order.
This story was edited for audio and digital by Rose Friedman. The digital version was produced by Beth Novey.
veryGood! (78)
Related
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Minnesota man freed after 25 years in prison files suit over wrongful conviction
- What to know about Texas’ clash with the Biden administration over Border Patrol access
- Love Is Blind Season 6 Cast Revealed: Meet the North Carolina Singles
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Solidly GOP Indiana doesn’t often see competitive primaries for governor. This year is different
- DirecTV, Tegna reach agreement to carry local NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox stations after dispute
- New York Knicks owner James Dolan and Harvey Weinstein accused of sexual assault in new complaint
- 'Most Whopper
- Judge denies request to dismiss case against man charged in NYC subway chokehold death
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Kendra Wilkinson Thought She Was Going to Die Amid Depression Battle
- GOP debate ahead of New Hampshire primary canceled
- Why Teslas and other electric vehicles have problems in cold weather — and how EV owners can prevent issues
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- St. Croix tap water remains unsafe to drink as US Virgin Islands offer short-term solutions
- 'We're home': 140 years after forced exile, the Tonkawa reclaim a sacred part of Texas
- Who is Jaish al-Adl, the Sunni group that Iran targeted in an airstrike on Pakistani soil?
Recommendation
Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
Senate clears first hurdle in avoiding shutdown, votes to advance short-term spending bill
The 19 Best Hair Masks to Give Your Dry, Damaged Hair New Life
Why did the Philadelphia Eagles collapse? The roster isn't as talented as we all thought
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Family warned school about threats to their son who was shot and killed at graduation, report shows
Proposed Louisiana congressional map advances to the House with a second majority-Black district
The Pentagon will install rooftop solar panels as Biden pushes clean energy in federal buildings