I’m sure a proper Marxist could say something about the stead decline of profit. But if TV studios are strapped for cash, you’d never know from that validations of their parent companies.
it’s no wonder no film actors would be caught dead in a TV show until prestige television broke out of that mold.
There was definitely a jump from TV to Movies that people didn’t want to come back from. But there’s also only so many hours in the day, and half of making a movie was the market you did after filming was completed.
But at the end of the day… People remember Cheers and Cosby Show much more vividly than The Critic or Joey.
Hah. That’s a fun time capsule. They’re whining about 1.4 million per episode, which just seems so quaint now. the figures going around are 6 mill per episode in season 1 of Stranger Things and 30 mill per episode in season four. Even adjusted for inflation Quantum Leap wouldn’t know what to do with that much money.
I mean, here’s an article from 1992 complaining that TV costs too much to produce.
I’m sure a proper Marxist could say something about the stead decline of profit. But if TV studios are strapped for cash, you’d never know from that validations of their parent companies.
There was definitely a jump from TV to Movies that people didn’t want to come back from. But there’s also only so many hours in the day, and half of making a movie was the market you did after filming was completed.
But at the end of the day… People remember Cheers and Cosby Show much more vividly than The Critic or Joey.
Hah. That’s a fun time capsule. They’re whining about 1.4 million per episode, which just seems so quaint now. the figures going around are 6 mill per episode in season 1 of Stranger Things and 30 mill per episode in season four. Even adjusted for inflation Quantum Leap wouldn’t know what to do with that much money.