The track DojaCat sampled might sound familiar to anyone 35+
Check out the original 4400 and White Collar. Those two do a good job of telling a story over the course of several seasons and have satisfying endings.Shows like that are also why I've come prefer the shows like the Arrowverse shows or Picard & Discovery, where they do one season arcs, or in the case of the later part of the Arrowverse, half-season. At least that way it's easier to get a solid story with a real beginning, middle, and end, instead of shows where they try to drag one story out for the entire run of the series. And that way we at least get some resolution to the storyline at the end season, instead of being left with no answers to mysteries. The only show I've seen that really managed to pull of one serialized story through it's entire run is Babylon 5.
Ehhh. I understand the appeal, I guess, but to me it started to feel very same-y. BtVS is probably the first show where I consciously noticed it. Hell, they even had, "the Big Bad" of each season. But by the time of DISCO it just got on my nerves, though I also didn't care for DISCO's tendency to become, "The Michael Burnham Hour". It just feels as though instead of doing reset button episodes the shows are now doing reset button seasons, perhaps exemplified by PIC's annoying gear changes between seasons to the point where each season almost feels more like its own miniseries than three parts of a larger unified whole.Shows like that are also why I've come prefer the shows like the Arrowverse shows or Picard & Discovery, where they do one season arcs, or in the case of the later part of the Arrowverse, half-season. At least that way it's easier to get a solid story with a real beginning, middle, and end, instead of shows where they try to drag one story out for the entire run of the series. And that way we at least get some resolution to the storyline at the end season, instead of being left with no answers to mysteries. The only show I've seen that really managed to pull of one serialized story through it's entire run is Babylon 5.
Oh I forgot about The 4400, I loved that show. It that did do a pretty good job of following one arc through multiple seasons. But I didn't think White Collar really had that deep of an arc, I thought it was pretty much just a case of the week show, with a few smaller arcs every now and then. I was a huge fan of that one too.Check out the original 4400 and White Collar. Those two do a good job of telling a story over the course of several seasons and have satisfying endings.
For White Collar, each season had its own arc, but it told one overall story with a nice ending.Oh I forgot about The 4400, I loved that show. It that did do a pretty good job of following one arc through multiple seasons. But I didn't think White Collar really had that deep of an arc, I thought it was pretty much just a case of the week show, with a few smaller arcs every now and then.
Person of Interest is a special case. It started out as an episodic series, and then developed story arcs in subsequent seasons.
I admit my ignorance of the American television landscape. Is procedural a more successful genre on network TV? From memory, of the most popular series on streaming platforms, only a very small percentage are procedurals (I think!).
Why does the Networks love Procedural Shows?It was always meant to have a bigger science fiction arc about the surveillance state and the rise of strong AI, but CBS pushed hard to keep it in an episodic procedural format as long as possible. It's important to recognize that it's usually the network execs pushing shows to conform to procedural formulas when the creators would generally prefer to do something more distinctive. Creators want to take chances, but executives want to stick with proven formulas and conventions, so there's a tension between them. As I mentioned before, that's why a lot of shows seem like ordinary procedurals in their first half-dozen episodes or so before the suits are appeased enough to let the creators start doing the shows the way they wanted to in the first place. Although sometimes it takes a lot longer to overcome the pressure to stay procedural, so you get something like Person of Interest or Lucifer.
I concur, variety in story arc lengths is always good IMO.I don't mind a show having a succession of distinct story arcs, but I'm annoyed by the contrivance of having them always take exactly one season.
I concur, variety in arc lengths & random odd single episodes really helps with variety.Especially with the modern trend of assuming that series take place in real time, so that, for instance, every Buffy big bad started to emerge around September and got defeated around May or June. (Though ST:TNG had done something like this first, always having a huge cliffhanger happen whenever the stardate year rolled back to 000.) I liked the way The Flash's later seasons broke up into 2 or 3 shorter arcs with the odd one-parter in between. I also liked the format of ST: Enterprise's final season, a mix of 3-, 2-, and 1-part storylines.
As for main plot continuity, I like a mix of Single Season Long, Multi-Season, Multi-ep Mini-Arcs, & Random Single Episodes.Still, I think my preference is for an episodic series with strong continuity -- something where the plots are episodic and the character development is serialized, and where one story's consequences are remembered and generate later stories or change the status quo in ways beyond merely driving a single long story arc.
I guess there's a certain comforting familiarity to them, plus you can just switch any episode on in any order and not be totally confused.Why does the Networks love Procedural Shows?
You would think the audience would get bored of them after so many of them are on the air?
If you think about it, pretty much every show we've mentioned here is a procedural, no matter how imaginative or extreme the premise :I guess there's a certain comforting familiarity to them, plus you can just switch any episode on in any order and not be totally confused.
If you think about it, pretty much every show we've mentioned here is a procedural, no matter how imaginative or extreme the premise :
- A sentient hologram who... FIGHTS CRIME!!!
- A man who can transform into any animal and... FIGHTS CRIME!!!
- An alien who seeks refuge on Earth from a conquering race and... FIGHTS CRIME!!!
But if you think about it, if you want to maintain an episodic structure, you're basically forced to use one of these three genres:A man with a super helicopter who fights crime! (and sometimes terrorists and sometimes hostile nations)
Why does the Networks love Procedural Shows?
You would think the audience would get bored of them after so many of them are on the air?
One of the beautiful things "ALIAS" did was end what you thought was going to be the initial Series-long Arc half-way through the 2nd Season.
That was definitely something I didn't expect. Of course the series ran for 5 seasons, so there were many Plot Arcs through-out the show's many seasons.
While that may be true, it did work out for the better in the end IMO.Except that was a retool forced on the show by ABC executives, who didn't like the SD-6 arc and ordered the showrunners to wrap it up prematurely and retool the show. The further story swerves in later seasons were also the result of network meddling to boost sagging ratings, or shaped by other real-life factors like Jennifer Garner getting pregnant. It was all a hell of a mess. I talked about it more on my blog some years back: https://christopherlbennett.wordpress.com/2014/12/16/reflections-on-alias-and-fringe-spoilers/
Luckily we're not in the TV Broadcast Era Dominating the Main Stream anymore.On the contrary -- historically, the bulk of the viewing audience wants the same formulaic things over and over, which is why things like procedurals and "reality" shows thrive for decades while more challenging and innovative things have a harder time of it. Lots of people just want TV to be something they have on in the background as a distraction, or something to let them turn their minds off after a long day of work, or something that they can rely on to deliver cozy familiarity rather than making them uncomfortable with novelty or deep thoughts. Some of us welcome more challenging and original entertainment that makes us think, but we're not the majority.
Network suits want the things that get good ratings, and that's determined by what the audience wants to see. If a given format has proven popular with audiences in the past, that's what the suits want to see more of -- proven sellers, safe bets, rather than more unusual things that are harder to sell to an audience and might not attract more than a cult viewership.
While that may be true, it did work out for the better in the end IMO.
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