Here's another bizarre wrinkle: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Army_o...d:_The_Prequel
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Here's another bizarre wrinkle: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Army_o...d:_The_Prequel
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Jay Oliva? I'm in.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NqxlqzeXrQ
On May 27.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ojPPEVCwtaU
I do enjoy binging once in a while, but there are just some series that are better at little bits. I kinda wonder why Netflix and other streaming services do not use that to create buzz around some of their bigger shows, anime and not anime? Or at least with the ones relying more on cliffhangers, questions, or etc.
I think the problem is that Netflix (and other services) tries to apply the exact same treatment to every show regardless of situation. Sure, there are shows like Violet that definitely benefit from binging and that's fine, however, shows (not just anime) that rely specially on suspense, fan theorizing and whatnot can be great at attracting viewers. Take a show like Beastars (of, for non-anime examples, stuff like Rick and Morty or Game of Thrones) that by presentation and themes alone was very likely to create a conversation and buzz... if you, used the simulcast model on a show like that, aggressively market it on social media and even, say, release in the platform itself extra content such as discussions between, say, animation experts or critics or whatever, you could attract a lot of extra viewers.
I mean, isn't that what Disney+ is doing with shows like The Mandalorian or Wandavision?
I mean, things like that makes me believe that sometimes the guys in charge of making the decisions aren't always familiar with the strengths and weaknesses of their properties and why they don't market them correctly, which can even lead to quality content being forgotten or cancelled.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYcK1LQl_Fs
This looks so good.
Ha, I guess I should have expected it wouldn't be too grounded in historical reality. Looks good tho.