Well, there a lot of procedurals that follow the episodic formula, right?
Theoretically, but much of the time, the greater emphasis is on the main characters' ongoing story arcs and problems, and the cases-of-the-week get relatively short shrift and coincidentally happen to resonate with whatever personal issues the main characters are dealing with that week. (That was done so extensively on Fringe that one episode even had the characters remark on the mysterious synchronicity of it all, though no explanation of it was ever offered.)
The tangent that I'm talking about started when you quibbled over what network Supergirl's first season was on.
Which I meant to symbolize the fact that it wasn't exactly like the other shows; a different network has different execs giving notes and influencing the show's emphasis and direction, so it won't necessarily be the same even with the same production staff. I meant to go back and add that clarification, but you replied before I could.
They're not at all the same type of show to my eye. Supergirl is a full-season (had a shortened season last time because it started late) network show that's superficially dabbling in serialized ongoing storylines...it doesn't even come close to a 10-to-13-episode, fully-serialized cable/streaming show. If you can't see or acknowledge the difference in format and storytelling style between a show like Supergirl or The Flash and a show like Daredevil and Jessica Jones, then we simply don't have enough common ground to continue this. We're not even speaking the same language.
And you're mistaking my use of Supergirl as one example of the overall pattern I'm discussing for a comment about Supergirl specifically. You clearly have a problem with that specific show, so let's just forget about that example altogether, because it's proven too distracting. I'm absolutely not interested in pitting individual shows' qualities against each other; I'm trying to have a larger conversation about overall trends and changes from era to era. My actual point is that shows today don't really seem to have single standout episodes like they used to, because it's all about telling one big multi-chapter story. You asked if there were any specific Daredevil or Jessica Jones episodes that stood out, but that's the question I would ask you, or anyone else, as an opportunity to refute my premise. I notice you didn't mention any specific episodes of DD or JJ that stood out for you; you're only speaking about their quality as overall works. And that actually supports my point rather than refuting it.
No storytelling style is going to survive being handled in a piss-poor manner. That's what Supergirl did. A better-crafted show could have given you a better adaptation of "For the Man Who Has Everything" within a serialized series framework.
You and I clearly have very different opinions of Supergirl. And I disagree with your conclusion. First off, the reason the episode had to serve so many plotlines at once is because it was the 13th episode, the end of their initial order, and thus would've had to serve as the season (or series) finale if they hadn't gotten the back nine pickup. So its issues were specifically because of the way series television is structured these days. Maybe if they'd chosen to do it earlier in the season, or later, they would've had more room to give it attention. But since they chose to do it as their maybe-finale, it had to share the episode with everything else that was going on. The individual story had to give way to the larger whole.
Second, I wasn't even saying the episode was bad. I was saying that it wasn't as much of a standout as it could've been because it was treated more as one chapter in the overall saga. What I was saying was not about "good" vs. "bad" at all, but about the question of whether the modern style of serialized storytelling is even compatible with the idea of doing an episode that's an adaptation of a single-issue story. The style these days is more focused on adapting larger story arcs, because individual episodes are just parts of a whole these days rather than wholes in their own right. As I said, even nominally episodic procedurals these days tend to be interested in their cases-of-the-week only to the extent that they can be used in service to the ongoing character arcs.
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