Netflix is killing off binge watching

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Netflix is radically altering the binge-watch model that had defined the streaming service for nearly a decade. Starting in October, Netflix will no longer release episodes of certain series all at once. Instead, it will release chunks of episodes on a weekly basis. On Tuesday, Hypebeast reported that Netflix is dialing back binge drops for original programming starting with the The Great British Baking Show and Rhythm & Flow. Will this new release schedule apply to future seasons of big shows like Stranger Things?

A few years ago, the idea of deleting your Netflix account would sound insane, but now that Disney+ and Hulu are threatening to make a better deal for families, the case can be made that Netflix is in danger of becoming irrelevant. To that end, it’s possible that Netflix is releasing certain shows on a weekly basis because it wants to create more value.

Here’s what we mean. If an entire season doesn’t become available all at once, the cultural value for that series obviously goes up. The best example of this is the fact that you can’t imagine a world in which HBO dropped an entire season of Game of Thrones on the same day, but you can easily imagine a future in which Netflix doles out Stranger Things one episode at a time. The hype around a series you can binge the weekend it comes out may have been a novelty a few years ago, but people with limited amounts of time — specifically parents — might benefit from a series that doesn’t spoil its own ending by having too much content out right away.

To put it another way, if you want to watch the new Dark Crystal, you’ll have to avoid the internet for the several weeks it will take you to finish it because those who have the luxury of bingeing it can easily spoil it for the rest of us. For busy people waiting to catch up on a series while their kid is sleeping, bingeing might be unrealistic and overwhelming.

However, just because Netflix is releasing The Great British Baking Show and Rhythm & Flow in weekly blocks, doesn’t mean Netflix is abolishing the binge model entirely. After all, both of these series are reality-based competition shows, so there’s an obvious reason to stretch out the hype. Plus, globally, Netflix already has a history of releasing episodes of popular streaming-only TV shows one at a time. Though Star Trek: Discovery streams on CBS All-Access in the US, in the UK and elsewhere, the show is on Netflix, which means global fans of that series already know what it feels like to Netflix and chill a week at a time.

But while this new model is a big change, many financial pundits believe that it’s too early to say that Netflix is in any serious trouble. Though Disney+ and Apple TV present huge competition for Netflix, some finance experts say that statistics don’t support a mass Netflix exodus just yet. True, Netflix stock has fluctuated a bit recently, but they’re not out of the game yet, and they’re hoping release new shows in a drip instead of a flood could better prepare them for the streaming wars to come.


https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/netflix-ditching-binge-start-releasing-150305987.html
 
Time for me to look for Netflix replacement, I was already getting frustrated by the fact that some good movies are not in English, Some of the shows I have binged watch were the first time I ever saw them. I never watched Orange is the New Black on a weekly basis but I did watch it over a three day weekend and I liked it. There is always someone building a better mouse trap I guess its time for me to find it.
 
it sure took a lot of words just to say, netflix needs people to tune in longer, and stretching out shows will help them get more bang for their buck

with their popular shows... because they got too many shows folks dont binge all the way through on, and too many of those shows will keep views down
 
it sure took a lot of words just to say, netflix needs people to tune in longer, and stretching out shows will help them get more bang for their buck

with their popular shows... because they got too many shows folks dont binge all the way through on, and too many of those shows will keep views down
Wrong.
 
i am all in
i might be showing my age but this binging shit aint for me

even if its a show i love i wanna watch over a period time and soak it
with the binging shit even if i decide to take my time, i cant participate in the conversation around the show and have to try to avoid spoilers

the only show I was able to Binge in one sitting was Russian Doll...because it was effectively a long ass movie split into 8 thirty minute segments
 
I never really binged anything on Netflix. At most i would watch 2-3 episodes of a show at a time. I still like having the option to binge if I ever wanted to though.

It's for those mornings after a late night bbq where the drinking gets out of hand.
 
So I read all that just for it to be clickbait and Netflix has no plans to change the binge watching smh
 
There are things that separate entities from others.. Sometimes those lil things is what catapult your bizz... Hopefully they don't shy away from their old format which was binge watching... That right there could actually turn people off

I predicted this exact thing in the Disney + thread....

wonder how this will all shake out
 
This sucks I binged Sons of Anarchy like a savage. Breaking Bad too. I was hooked like a fiend. Nigga didn’t go nowhere for days.
They're talking the first day a show is dropped. Not after. You can always go back to old seasons and watch til your hearts content.

Majority of their younger crowd will catch a new show and watch it all in one day or over a weekend.

But in that same notion, others will just wait till all shows air or a few and catch 3 hrs of programming or so.

Netflix is worried about their retaining customers but I still think we have some time to see what Disney is gonna drop. I don't feel like Disney is gonna be up to par with the level of movies and series Netflix is at "today".

3 yrs ago Netflix wasn't really saying shit. Today, they ain't nothing to fux wit. But they are not pleasing their shareholders and that's the underlying problem.
 
I predicted this exact thing in the Disney + thread....

wonder how this will all shake out
Netflix need to chill... Fall/winter season coming this is 1 of those times of yr when they are useful cause it's gonna get cold... When it's cold people are less active and more likely to stay around the house...when they stay around the house they need a form of entertainment... This is when they come in hand..binge watching is more likely to rise around this time a yr... There's a reason why network tv use to premier most new shows and new seasons once the fall starts and had reruns all through summers... Cause humans are predictable on how they move around when certain type of seasons hit
 
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