How did it go 4 seasons without me ever hearing or seeing anything about it?
I feel for the fans, I felt this when they axed Friends from College... smh
All in a day, I guess
#SaveODAAT has also been the #1 trending topic worldwide damn near since the Netflix announcement.
This show probably isn't $$$ to produce and has a very underrepresented,vocal audience championing it, hard to imagine it isn't picked somewhere. Even if it wouldn't be wholly " profitable", the sheer positive press and goodwill it will generate for whichever service picks it up would be enough
I'm not sure about that. This is the first time I've ever seen it talked about in-depth (...possibly at all?)
3. There are probably a lot of Netflix shows that fall under this category. They seem to enjoy spending on content but not necessarily advertising.
I have hope. A fool's hope.
This is where my hope hinges.
I've had a thread that's consistently been hitting the front page every few days or so over the past month. Might be selective perception but I'm glad you're giving it a shot!
https://www.resetera.com/threads/ya...oot-of-one-day-at-a-time.99024/#post-18854466
3. There are probably a lot of Netflix shows that fall under this category. They seem to enjoy spending on content but not necessarily advertising.
The only time I ever saw this is when I left my Wii U on and it cycled through stills of like 5 different Netflix originals that I've never heard of. They need to do a far better job on that front.
This was the remake/revisioning of the original One Day at a Time? I saw previews, but I don't have Netflix. It seemed like an interesting show, and I really like Rita Moreno.
Deadline said:There was some immediate interest ā I hear that on Thursday, CBS Corp executives made an inquiry about possibly picking up the show for their streaming platform CBS All Access. But that inquiry hit a snag.
There is a standard clause in virtually all deals for Netflix series from outside studios that prevents the shows from airing elsewhere for a significant period of time ā said to be two to three years ā after they are canceled by the Internet network. That's why none of the popular but recently deep-sixed Marvel series could migrate to the upcoming Disney+ direct-to-consumer platform, and why CBS TV Studios' well received comedy "American Vandal," canceled by Netflix in October after two seasons, would not move to the studio's sibling CBS All Access.
Deadline has an interesting write-up on how finding a new home for ODAAT could be harder than it seems.
According to the article, apparently CBS Corp. is interested in picking the show up for a fourth season and airing it on their streaming platform, CBS All Access (home to shows like Star Trek: Discovery and The Good Fight). However, there is a strange rule that Netflix has incorporated with nearly all of its shows:
So, if CBS All Access is interested in ODAAT, they would have to wait 2-3 years until this Netfilx rule passes. It's a hard sell for a different streaming network to wait on a show since a lot of things can happen in that time, most notably that the cast and crew could move on to different shows. However, if CBS proper (the actual network) were to pick up ODAAT, they could air it in the fall with no problems. We'll just have to wait and see unfortunately.
Hmm I mean it doesn't seem so strange, but surprised no way around it. Like CBS paying them upfront to buy out the no-compete clause.
Then again... it may not be worth it
It would get CBS positive press, which they could use in just about any form. Fingers crossed.
Holy crap! Thank you, Pop! (Now to find a way to watch it...)
Lol ouch.
Altered Carbon better have a HUGE budget. I feel for the fans, I felt this when they axed Friends from College... smh
All in a day, I guess