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by nordsieck
2711 days ago
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> We will likely see them start to show their films in theaters to maximize revenue Seems unlikely to me. They're doing it on a very limited basis right now, but that's not for revenue; it's to get the movies in the running for awards. > offer one-time access for people to watch a film but not sign up for a subscription Seems unlikely. The number of people who think Netflix is expensive enough to avoid, and don't have friends they can mooch off of or get a group buy with is pretty small. > they're probably going to have to turn their series into events by showing new episodes on schedule, once a week. I'm really curious about this one. I have no idea why they would possibly want to do this. In network TV land, broadcasters have time slots for shows so they can more efficiently sell advertising slots. Even if Netflix decided to start advertising, they can just tie ads directly to videos being watched. |
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Traditional tv shows can also get buzz by people chatting and theorizing about them week to week as the episodes trickle out. This isn’t really possible with the Netflix binge model.
They can also release faster since episodes trickle out as they are done. Not sure how often this happens vs editing and releasing later.
Whether this type of “buzz” actually is that important from an economic perspective or if it just generates a bunch of noise online and at the water cooler, I don’t know. So far Netflix seems content to drop content using the binge model.