The Minearverse 5: Closer to the Earth, Further from the Ax
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls, The Inside and Drive), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
And if your budget is crappy, you look like a BBC show.
Bwah.
Honestly though, if you're a video podcaster, you don't need 6 million viewers to make money because your production costs aren't going to be even close to an episode of, say, Lost, or even Survivor. You're not going to be building expensive sets, you're not going to be shooting on film, etc etc. You're going to shoot on DV in your living room and do your editing and sound mix on your laptop. If you want your show to look good on a TV screen for the Apple TV or Tivo owners, the prices on HDV cameras are dropping like rocks lately. Final Cut Express is $99 if you get it preinstalled on a new Mac. Look at a show like Ask A Ninja or Cranky Geeks -- clearly, content matters more than production values (especially if most of your audience will be watching on a 3-inch iPod screen).
In the last writers' strike, television lost viewers to Blockbuster becauset when there was no new content on TV, people rented movies instead. This time around, television will lose viewers to YouTube and Tivocasts. If you're an independent online video producer, this is absolutely the time to start courting sponsors.
That said, I do hope the strike ends soon and everyone gets to go back to work.
The best example I can think of an online TV series, at the moment, is quarterlife: [link]
Also, [link] - Sanctuary's production values (in places) are actually some of the best I've seen in recent years. Somebody is taking a huge risk on that one - good luck to them.
Also, the pay? Fucking awful in comparison.
So. Very. True.
But re the BBC's production values - there's already a TON of BBC content on US TV screens that American audiences are happily watching without realizing. Almost everything on the Discovery family of channels is bought-in and reversioned (American narrators and edited for ads) BBC progamming, ditto the History Channel and a fair chunk of PBS. (Of course, the docs do tend to be produced at a higher level than the fiction for the very reason that they DO sell well over here, and Discovery as a co-producer means more money at the start. But Rome was a huge success, as was Hustle, and of course Dr Who on both BBCA and SciFi.)
I think, in terms of production values, that Britishy tell tends to look and be quite stagey; that at least until pretty recently, UK telly was largely influenced by the theatrical tradition, rather than the cinematic tradition. Whereas in the US, it's been more influenced by cinematic conventions.
'Course, I may be talking shite. But that seems to me a plausible explanation for the difference between
Casualty
and
ER.
(Because I don't
think
it's just about how much money is being thrown at shows in terms of lighting/sound/sets etc. Although maybe it's just that...)
Still, UK telly is getting shinier these days.
Well, I hadn't realized when I talked earlier, but it turns out a lot of writer-producers have clauses in their contracts stating they can't work on the internet except as part of the contracting employer's own efforts.
For instance, if a writer-producer was contracted with ABC, they can't work for anything but ABC web efforts. And since Disney/ABCis a struck company, they can't work for anyone then.
Now, they are talking about the studios using force majeur clauses that kick in after six weeks (in general, it will vary by specific contract) that void the contracts to get rid of some folks that they have been wanting to get rid of anyways. But they don't have to, and in some cases they may want to keep writer-producers under contract for no other reason to keep them from doing anything else. But on the bright side, that means they keep on getting paid (for the producer half of their job, at least)
So we may not see all of our favorite writers do anything other than catch up on their comic work in this time...
That is my limited understanding of the situation, of course. People with first hand knowledge, please feel free to correct me...
Part of the difference between Casualty and ER will be the budget, Fay. I don't have figures to hand, but I'm willing to bet ER is a $2m an episode or so production (if not more), which would likely pay for several series of Casualty with the BBC.
Certainly, when you look at Doctor Who - a show which has ratings Tim's networks could only dream of, in a country with a fifth of the population - that shows' budget is tiny. If you are wondering why, at the height of it's rating success it's shutting down production - a situation you would never get in the US - I think we can all work out why the people involved in a hit worldwide TV show might be looking elsewhere.
And all power to them. I would, too.
Tamara i tried to watch an ep of Blood Ties and i was supremely bored. not nearly enough vampire for me.
But when he is there, he is very pretty. That's enough. I'm easy.
Just heard - NBC have put Alyson Hannigan on unpaid leave over How I Met Your Mother. The SAG are up in arms as it violates everything, apparently. She's still under an exclusivity deal, but isn't being paid.
ETA: [link]
Kevin, I don't think HIMYM is NBC.
I want to say it's CBS, but Tivo has pretty much destroyed my ability to remember what's on which channel.