The real problem is that we have no idea what real streaming numbers really are, nor how that translates to any kind of greater business for them, nor what that should mean for the creatives :/
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Replying to @loudmouthjulia
It's within their interest for it not to be so I can't imagine them actually changing. Like right now we have no idea how many people actually watching "to all the boys..." - did that result in new subscriptions? did it actually *make* as much as six million dollars?
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Replying to @loudmouthjulia
Only netflix knows internally, and they keep it all a giant secret.
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Replying to @FilmCritHULK @loudmouthjulia
The studio only gets paid the licensing fee.
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Replying to @loudmouthjulia
Yeah, it's essentially the greatest (and most terrifying) business advantage of all time. They keep everyone who does shows for them in this constant state of guessing. "how are we doing?" / "... good enough"- Meanwhile, Netflix is actually losing cash on the whole.
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The whole goal wasn't about becoming the world's HBO - it was becoming the world's cable. And they're succeeding, if losing money along the way. But as they try to make it so they own every show under their belt, they're gonna hit more walls.
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