I think there are different standards depending on what type of series you're looking at. I don't mean as in genre, but in the way they're produced and released.Agent Vinod wrote:I think we can rush to some judgement. The new standard is be good from the start at least with more channels and streaming services.
1) Released on a streaming service, one season all at once. You get 8-13 episodes where each one is, like Chuck described it in his latest Discovery review, like a chapter in a book. Since the entire season can be planned out in its entirety, you have a lot of freedom in what things you put in what episode, and the production wraps up way before its released, it makes for very consistent quality throughout. You're also much more likely to remember the season as a whole rather than individual episodes, so it doesn't matter if the first couple of them were simply building slowly towards the juicy stuff.
2) Released on a streaming service or on cable, one episode a week. You still get equally short seasons that can be planned out and produced before they premiere, but the format is more episodic by necessity, which in turn means that the episodes are more likely to vary a bit in quality, and you're also more likely to notice the ones below average for the series.
3) Shows with short seasons on network television. They're often written and shot ahead of time, but for some reason it often takes them longer to truly come into their own... I suspect that the reason is that most of them start out as a single pilot and then the show itself doesn't actually get developed until it has been picked up. The Expanse on SyFy did get their entire first season greenlit without a pilot and it feels a lot more like one of those shows on streaming services that are released on a weekly schedule than anything else on that network.
4) Shows with regular-length seasons on network television. Not only do they start out with a pilot, they will be very far from done with a season when it first starts airing, not to mention how long it takes to actually produce such a behemoth. Good luck planning anything out in detail under those conditions, not to mention that you may actually need filler material instead of looking for ways to cut stuff that both is and isn't filler.
It's simply impossible to make a type 4 show to adhere to the standards of a type 1.
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Edit: Shows on cable can be either type 2 or type 3, I guess. I'm not American and at least 90% of the shows from your cable channels that make it over here are from HBO.