Granted, but something made them skip over Go-Busters (which I also liked a lot), and it's likely because most people in Japan DIDN'T like it a lot (whether it be due to their theme, the writing, or that it had to follow the uber-successful Gokaiger). Also, their making 2 x 20 episode seasons per iteration of the Sentai franchise means Saban has the elbow room to be choosier both in the show they use AND the available footage to go with it. Saban had its best success with dinosaurs, so skipping the spies to go with the dancing dinos makes a lot of sense for them.
I'm sure someone has crunched the PR franchise numbers and discovered that in the US, you don't need 49-50 episodes of a show per year to enable the best net profits from toy and media sales, so between that and escalating franchise adaptation costs it made sense that PR seasons were getting progressively shorter. Saban seems to have found a sweet spot for now with the last few years at 20 episodes per year, also stretching out the shelf life and release schedule of the toys they're producing while they're at it - why sell a dino morpher for one Christmas when you can do it for two, and keep it current with a new recolour or gimmick or whatever?
They might even be able to go fewer and/or stretch it longer... Could they stretch it out to 2 or even 3 x 13 episode seasons and keep it profitable? Nickelodeon live-action shows do this, albeit with completely different merchandising models.
Mark
I'm sure someone has crunched the PR franchise numbers and discovered that in the US, you don't need 49-50 episodes of a show per year to enable the best net profits from toy and media sales, so between that and escalating franchise adaptation costs it made sense that PR seasons were getting progressively shorter. Saban seems to have found a sweet spot for now with the last few years at 20 episodes per year, also stretching out the shelf life and release schedule of the toys they're producing while they're at it - why sell a dino morpher for one Christmas when you can do it for two, and keep it current with a new recolour or gimmick or whatever?
They might even be able to go fewer and/or stretch it longer... Could they stretch it out to 2 or even 3 x 13 episode seasons and keep it profitable? Nickelodeon live-action shows do this, albeit with completely different merchandising models.
Mark