I feel like streamers these are always about the next thing, rather than the back catalog unless they build new stuff off of it. There are some exceptions like Friends that people will watch over and over again. But a lot of it seems to be create binge worthy content that will maintain subs, rather than content that will age for the long run. Fandom is now another source of revenue for actors through conventions.
Yup.
But the older, legacy fandoms, thats whee you know there’s a good chance that years from now a kid who *wasn’t even born* when the show was made is going to be watching it. And you want as much as possible of it to still be accessible.
It’s why old Trek, with its fairly stilted, classical dialogue and use of culture that has already stood the test of time as set dressing, is going to fare better than modern Trek.
Can you imagine if Darmok had featured Picard explaining the plot of Romancing the Stone as his story, rather than the Epic of Gilgamesh?
(I had to think really hard for something from the time thats already somewhat faded into obscurity there, because already the films and stories we remember are the ones that are standing the test of time lol.)
Bridgerton being staged by the aliens makes some of this episode make sense, but in the future, it’s unlikely people will know what Bridgerton is/was or why it was popular enough for Who to be doing it. And jumping to Austen by itself, or to the actual era, would make it a bit weirder, because the whole thing is through the lens of Bridgerton.
It’s not going to be as weird as Bad Wolf, which prior to Big Brother and Weakest Link making their comebacks would already have needed an accompanying note or parental commentary to explain what those were to get what was going on to any kid watching post about 2010.
Which goes precisely to what you’d saying about streamers focusing on the next big thing, and not worrying about back catalogue — having stuff that is likely to be somewhat evergreen being perhaps a little too dependent on other stuff that won’t be is a risky storytelling choice under those circumstances. Because stuff seems to fade faster now in some ways, than it did when we had VHS. (Willow on Disney Plus springs to mind at this point.)
We’re a petty post modern society, but we’re probably within ten or twenty years of a point where the Cleese and Bron Cameo in City of Death is just a weird scene in a weird serial that does stick out a little bit. At least it isn’t a thing around so much of the episode is built though.