So I stumbled on this article on Netflix as I was browsing the bedrock of journalism, Yahoo.
Some streaming services provide users with an option to select a lower-priced tier with ads. Hulu and Peacock are two such examples. Netflix executives, however, have said on numerous occasions that the company will never embrace advertisements. Analyst Michael Nathanson of MoffettNathanson...
www.yahoo.com
They talk about how Netflix has not grown at the same rate as if it’s some major problem which I have a big issue with but that’s for another time. The focus is on Netflix and how it could grow more. Seems to me, outside of the live sports programming mentioned in the article, Netflix could really benefit by doing two things:
1. Begin having show(s) that only air once a week like old school tv. Sure, this goes against the grain about what the streaming model is in 2021 but I think people crave this. Water cooler tv is sorely missed IMO. Look at shows like Mare of Easttown. That week of dialogue between friends and co-workers, the speculation about whodunit, and reading articles online is attractive. Very attractive. Netflix doesn’t have to end streaming entire seasons at once altogether. Hardly. I simply think the addition of one show like this (at first) could be huge and an added weapon in their arsenal. Murder mysteries are probably the best genre for this. Others could be as well I suppose. If it works with one show, maybe do this 2-4x a year.
2) Quality over quantity. The amount of garbage on Netflix is seemingly endless. I wonder how much it costs to film their movies that cater to the dumbest common denominator. I’m guessing between 2-5M. And there are sooooo many of them. Shows too. Would they not be better off filming 80 crappy movies a year instead of 100 and utilizing that money on say 1-2 movies of better quality to attract an audience with brains as well? Idk what the solution is here but sifting through piles upon piles of garbage, and looking at the time to see it’s then an hour later, has become an act in futility. One other route would be to add better older movies from say pre 1990. Not necessarily the obvious ones like Chinatown which is on there now I believe but some really good 2nd and 3rd tier movies which would attract an older audience and probably not cost very much for Netflix to gain their rights. Seriously, if they stopped filming just five crappy films a year and saved 10 million, I’d have to think they could add many, many older films, thus broadening their consumer base.