Has that been announced?
No. It was a reference to Community..."6 seasons and a movie!". A joke, if you will, though apparently not a successful one.
Has that been announced?
Still, Universal appears to be the "main owners" for Killjoys - they're the ones putting out the Blu-rays, unlike Dark Matter.Space isn't involved in the production of Killjoys but it's parent company Bell Media is.
According to Mallozzi it was cancelled because SyFy didn't own any stake in the show so they made less money out of it then they do other series they broadcast.
According to Mallozzi it was cancelled because SyFy didn't own any stake in the show so they made less money out of it then they do other series they broadcast.
According to Mallozzi it was cancelled because SyFy didn't own any stake in the show so they made less money out of it then they do other series they broadcast.
TV these days is getting disturbingly monopolistic. If the producers of a product (the production company) and the vendors of a product (the network) are owned by the same people, that works against fair competition. I believe production companies are still required by law to offer their shows to any network willing to bid for them, so that there is fair competition, but networks are increasingly reluctant to air any shows they don't also produce. And too many shows get cancelled these days just for not being in-house productions, which hardly seems fair.
I watched Dark Matter up to a couple of episodes into season two - I was 50/50 on whether it was worth catching up on, but this decision tips it into another one of the (very) many 'genre' shows I tried but didn't persevere with.Bugger - well there's still The Expanse and Discovery. Pity DM didn't get a Blakes 7 style ending at least.
I've seen the first episode of The Expanse. Does it get better ?
Season 2 isn't available on Netflix until next Friday here but I hear it diverges from the novels and doesn't finish the second volume. I prefer the stories told in the novels - the first season was a pretty good adaptation for the most part but perhaps seemed to lose something in the process. Not sure what...I've seen the first episode of The Expanse. Does it get better ?
TV these days is getting disturbingly monopolistic. If the producers of a product (the production company) and the vendors of a product (the network) are owned by the same people, that works against fair competition. I believe production companies are still required by law to offer their shows to any network willing to bid for them, so that there is fair competition, but networks are increasingly reluctant to air any shows they don't also produce. And too many shows get cancelled these days just for not being in-house productions, which hardly seems fair.
So why did it go 3 seasons then? Why even air it in the first place?
What they haven't figured out is that pulling people's favorite series is going to make them less likely to trust the network and more likely adversely affect future revenue.
Meh, I think perhaps you're too forgiving - we should expect more for our money.
At least, everyone should now know to expect the worst of SyFy.
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