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Golden Age of Television (2000s–present)

In the United States, the contemporary Golden Age of Television (also known as Peak TV or Prestige TV)[1][2][3] is a period widely regarded for its high number of "high quality", internationally acclaimed television programs.[4][5][6][7]

Named in reference to the original Golden Age of Television of the 1950s,[8] the period has also been referred to as the "New", "Second", or "Third Golden Age of Television". The various names reflect disagreement over whether shows of the 1980s and early-mid 1990s belong to a since-concluded golden era or to the current one.[19] The contemporary period is generally identified as beginning in 1999 with The Sopranos,[20][21] with debate as to whether the age ended (or "peaked") in the mid-late 2010s[20][22][23][24] or early 2020s (to the point of calling its replacement "Trough TV"),[25][26][27][28] or remains ongoing.[29][8] Multichannel linear television, such as cable and digital satellite, reached its peak in 2014 and has declined in viewers, reach and new content rapidly since then;[30][31] overall new series creation peaked in the early 2020s, following a several years-long competitive period known as the streaming wars, cresting shortly before the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes.[32]

It is believed to have resulted from advances in media distribution technology,[9][13] digital TV technology (including HDTV, online video platforms, TV streaming, video-on-demand, and web TV),[33][9] and a large increase in the number of hours of available television, which has prompted a major wave of content creation.[34]

History edit

Origins and early era edit

French scholar Alexis Pichard has argued that television enjoyed a Second Golden Age[35] starting in the 2000s which was a combination of three elements: first, an improvement in both visual aesthetics and storytelling; second, an overall homogeneity between cable series and networks series; and third, a tremendous popular success. Pichard contends that this Second Golden Age was the result of a revolution initiated by the traditional networks in the 1980s and carried on by the cable channels (especially HBO) in the 1990s.[36] Film director Francis Ford Coppola thinks that the second golden age of television comes from "kids" with their "little father's camcorder", who wanted to make films like he did in the 1970s but were not permitted to, so they did it for television.[37]

 
The cast of Firefly reuniting at a San Diego Comic-Con panel

The new Golden Age brought creator-driven tragic anti-heroic dramas of the 2000s and 2010s,[38] including 1998's Sex and the City, 1999's The Sopranos (named the greatest TV show of all time by TV Guide[39] and Rolling Stone[40]) [41][42] and The West Wing; 2001's Six Feet Under and 24;[43][41] 2002's The Wire (voted as the greatest TV show of the 21st Century by BBC in 2021)[41][44] and The Shield;[41] 2004's Deadwood,[45][41] Lost[46] and Battlestar Galactica;[41] 2005's Grey's Anatomy and Avatar: The Last Airbender;[47] 2006's Friday Night Lights;[41] 2007's Mad Men;[41] 2008's Breaking Bad;[48][41] 2010's The Walking Dead;[49] 2011's Game of Thrones;[14][50][51], 2012's Girls (HBO), 2013's House of Cards[52] and Orange Is the New Black;[53] and 2015's Better Call Saul.[54] Others appear in the Writers Guild of America 2013 vote for 101 Best-Written TV Shows.[55] Production values got higher than ever before[56] on shows such as Band of Brothers,[57] Mad Men, Breaking Bad, and Homeland to the point of rivaling cinema, while anti-heroic series like The Sopranos and The Wire were cited as improving television content thus earning critical praise.[58]

Stephanie Zacharek of The Village Voice has argued that the current golden age began earlier with over-the-air broadcast shows like Babylon 5, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (both of which premiered in 1993), and Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997).[17] TV critic Alan Sepinwall cites shows such as Buffy and Oz (which both first aired in 1997) as ushering in the golden age.[41] Will Gompertz of the BBC believes that Friends, which debuted in 1994, might stake a claim as the opening bookend show of the period.[18] Matt Zoller Seitz argues that it began in the 1980s with Hill Street Blues (1981) and St. Elsewhere (1982).[15] Kirk Hamilton of Kotaku has said that Avatar: The Last Airbender (2005) should be considered a part of the golden age of television, and recommended "the sophisticated kids show" to others.[59] With the rise of instant access to content on Netflix, creator-driven television shows like Breaking Bad, The Shield (2002), Friday Night Lights (2006) and Mad Men gained loyal followings that grew to become widely popular. The success of instant access to television shows was presaged by the popularity of DVDs, and continues to increase with the rise of digital platforms and online companies.

The Golden Age of television is believed to have resulted from advances in media distribution technology,[9][13] digital TV technology (including HDTV, online video platforms, TV streaming, video-on-demand, and web TV),[33][9] and a large increase in the number of hours of available television, which has prompted a major wave of content creation.[34] The increase in the number of shows is also cited as evidence of a Golden Age, or "peak TV". In the five years between 2011 and 2016, the number of scripted television shows, on broadcast, cable and digital platforms increased by 71%. In 2002, 182 television shows aired, while 2016 had 455 original scripted television shows and 495 in 2018. The number of shows are rising largely due to companies like Netflix, Amazon Video and Hulu investing heavily in original content. The number of shows aired by online service increased from only one in 2009 to over 93 in 2016.[60][61][62][63][64][65]

Late era and potential end edit

 
Costumes from Babylon 5, Supernatural, and The Vampire Diaries

An increasing reliance on rebooting and reviving existing franchises led to widespread belief that the Golden Age of Television was ending in the late 2010s,[22] with the caveat that some of these reboots (such as DuckTales,[66] Girl Meets World,[67] One Day at a Time[68][69] and X-Men '97[70]) share the positive reception and mature character development of original shows of the era. To address burnout from binge watching and concerns that the practice makes television more disposable and forgettable, streaming providers reduced their reliance on the practice in the early 2020s by returning to a more traditional model of releasing one new episode a week. A showrunner for an unnamed series on Netflix, a platform that has been especially aggressive toward releasing full seasons at once as a company policy, commented that the volume of existing content has made it more difficult to devote the time to binge watching.[23]

Quantity over quality edit

In the Watchmen writers' room, we would play this game called Is It a Show? Somebody would name a title, logline, and one of the actors, and we'd have to guess whether it was real. But the joke was it was always a show. Some were in their second or third seasons, and none of us — supposedly television professionals — had ever heard of them.

— Lost creator Damon Lindelof[71]

Ed Power of the Irish Examiner opined that "the sun began to set" on the golden age between 2013 and 2015, with the finales of Breaking Bad and Mad Men, and "Since then, television has reverted to its older tradition of quantity over quality."[20] Siobhan Lyons of The Conversation believes the 2022 finale of Better Call Saul marks the end of "the last of those defining, golden age shows," in a time increasingly oversaturated with streaming content and viewing options.[26] NPR noted in May 2022 that although television executives had predicted a peak in television series since the mid-2010s, the number of series continued to grow into the early 2020s, from 400 original productions across broadcast, cable and major streaming outlets in 2015 to 559 in 2021. The network noted that the major streamers, with the exception of Disney+ (which NPR attributed to the company's strong brand recognition), were seeing diminishing quality and, particularly in the case of Netflix, declining popularity.[72] A May 2023 essay in Harper's Bazaar declared the era of the time to be the "Age of Mid Television," noting that mediocre programs were gaining popularity due to the escapism they provide in an age where the real world brings greater anxiety.[73] Vulture expressed similar views in June 2023, speaking of Peak TV in the past tense and noting that the more artistic shows that marked the Golden Age of highbrow programming were also expensive and not particularly profitable, even if they drew new subscribers.[71] The New Yorker concurred in November of the same year, declaring the Golden Age to be over after a regression toward the mean; based upon several books on the topic, the article essentially argued that the same dynamics that drove the death of earlier Golden Ages in media (such as television's first Golden Age and the New Hollywood of the early 1970s) were also affecting the early 21st-century Golden Age of Television, namely that the technology innovations that had allowed highbrow programs to flourish were being capitalized upon by more profitable franchise products able to crowd out riskier projects for attention from financial backers.[74]

Streaming wars and aftermath edit

Around 2019, a period of intense competition began for market share among streaming services, a period known as the streaming wars. This competition increased during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic as more people stayed home and watched television.[75] Many services attempted to compete on quality. The streaming wars, combined with the decline of the popularity of mainstream films (along with said films increasingly relying on franchises that are less likely to garner awards), and the rise of independent films winning major film awards within the last six years, resulted in a historical first — the first film from a streaming service to produce an Academy Award winner for Best Picture: Apple TV's CODA over Netflix's The Power of the Dog at the 94th Academy Awards.[76]

The streaming wars were largely recognized to have ended in 2022, as the major streaming services lost subscribers and shifted their focus to profit over market share by raising subscription fees, cutting production budgets, cracking down on password sharing, and introducing ad-supported tiers.[77] HBO Max made a substantial cut to its library in August 2022, mostly to its children's television series, out of concerns that the quantity of content on the service (especially with its pending merger with Discovery+) was becoming overwhelming and difficult to find, and that the children's programming was not driving subscriptions or views on the service.[78] By the summer of 2023, other major streaming providers had begun to remove short-lived series from their catalogues and make them unavailable afterwards, something that had previously been a rare occurrence; this was particularly true of Disney+ (Disney had historically followed a similar model with physical media, known as the Disney Vault, which it had initially suspended in the early months of Disney+[79]) and Paramount+.[80] This also coincided with an increased emphasis on business models that draw revenue from both advertising and subscriptions, prompting streaming providers to focus on productions that have mass appeal while also reducing investment in high-risk projects targeting niche audiences.[81]

The COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath saw major reductions in the workforce and cancellations of multiple productions to save money on basic residuals and music licensing costs, which led to a worsening condition for writers and actors, setting the stage for the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes.[82] This led to fewer shows ordered by studios and streamers as the WGA strike ended[25] and fewer spec scripts being offered by writers to the studios, anticipating the cutbacks.[83] The Hollywood Reporter said in January 2024 that "Peak TV Is Over". It reported that the number of United States TV series in 2023 decreased to 481 from 633 in 2022 and 2021, and that the number would not likely increase in 2024.[32]

Rerun boom edit

Viewership patterns during the pandemic shifted rapidly toward reruns,[75] a trend that continued into 2023 as the streaming providers shifted away from original content and became open to non-exclusive licensing deals allowing popular archive shows to appear on multiple platforms.[84] A 2021 interview of social media influencers noted that the teen sitcoms and teen dramas from the early Golden Age, driven by continued presence in reruns and video-on-demand platforms, have stronger followings among Generation Z than contemporary shows; they feel that the latter are more geared toward pre-teens or adults instead of teenagers, try too hard to appeal to current trends, and lack a sense of familiarity compared to shows that have been around since they were born. This is attributed as a cause for the increasing number of reboots and revivals of shows from early in the era.[24] Even as the pandemic waned, cable television in particular—which suffered a 30% decline in viewer reach in the period between its peak and 2023—increasingly relied upon reruns and other archival programming. Compared to a peak of 214 original cable series in 2014, The New York Times noted that number had fallen 39% by 2022, and further in 2023. The Times dubbed this phenomenon "zombie TV," in that the channels retained a shell of an established cable brand, but without any of the original programming that had defined the channel's identity, as an undead zombie continues to function but without the soul or personality of its host body. The Times also commented that general-interest cable networks such as TNT, USA Network and TBS were particularly hard-hit, with TNT and TBS's combined original series output dropping from 17 series to 3. USA suffered a near-complete loss of its original scripted programming, though this was also partially due to the network absorbing more sports programming from the closure of sister network NBCSN, which helped keep USA's ratings among the highest on cable. Such cable networks have increasingly relied upon all-day marathons of acquired rerun programming to fill their schedules.[31] This has coincided with an even more dramatic decline in viewership, with general-interest cable networks and several of the more established niche networks losing over half of their viewing audiences in the same period; David Bauder of the Associated Press noted that the corresponding declines in viewership and original programming were triggering a vicious cycle, and that by the mid-2020s, cable television had lost its ability to create "appointment television" events, instead relying on "ghost" programming such as low-quality, low-cost reality fare and reruns.[30]

The streaming wars were also a factor in a shift toward free advertising supported television initiatives (FAST) in the early 2020s. FAST services typically rely on archival programming for the majority of their content, allowing the services to operate for free to the end user while splitting advertising revenue with the program owners (or profiting directly if the program and FAST service are owned by the same company). Tubi, the advertising-supported video on demand service owned by Fox Corporation, acquired the streaming rights to much of the content that HBO Max had jettisoned in 2023. Pluto TV relies on the extensive archival libraries of Paramount and its numerous acquisitions.[85]

Characteristics and criticism edit

Cultural references to "Peak TV" programming:
 
The Office promotional display in Scranton, Pennsylvania
 
An arcade game based on The Walking Dead
 
A Dairy Queen sign featuring Game of Thrones references

Characteristics of this golden age are complicated characters who may be morally ambiguous or antiheroes, questionable behavior, complex plots, diverse point of views, playful explorations of modern-day issues and would-be R-rated material.[86][87][88][89]

Genres of television associated with this golden age include dramas (especially ones originating on cable and digital platforms; some being called "peak bleak" due to the extremely pessimistic nature of shows like Succession and Game of Thrones[90]); sitcoms (especially ones that use comedy-drama which some critics would call "sadcoms"),[91] single-camera setup, or adult animation; sketch comedy (especially series linked to alternative comedy); and late-night talk shows (especially ones that emphasize news satire). Such were the shows' popularity and buzzworthiness that aftershowstalk shows specifically created to discuss a specific television program—were created and scheduled in the lead-out slot following Golden Age shows on linear networks.[92]

A key characteristic of the golden age is serialization, where a continuous story arc stretches over multiple episodes or seasons. Traditional American television had an episodic format, with each episode typically consisting of a self-contained story. During the golden age, there has been a transition to a serialization format. John R. Ziegler and Leah Richards note that the serialization format was previously already a key defining characteristic of Japanese anime shows, notably the popular Dragon Ball Z (1989), which distinguished them from American television shows at the time. Serialization later also became a key defining characteristic of American live-action television shows during the golden age.[93]

The era is not without criticism; the limited audience appeal of shows featuring unlikeable characters and too many showrunners embracing the "12-hour movie" structure of stories.[94][95] Shawn Ryan said "You're seeing ideas that should've been movies being elongated into eight episodes, and they don't have the narrative engines to sustain them for that long". New York said that "the expensive signifiers of prestige TV — the movie stars, the set pieces, the cinematography — became so familiar and easy to appropriate that it could take viewers six or seven hours to realize the show they were watching was a fugazi".[71] The number of original shows being produced has some, like FX CEO John Landgraf[96][97][98] and Time's TV critic Judy Berman,[1] worried about overwhelming the viewing audience to the point of what the latter called "peak redundancy".[1][99] Author Daniel Kelley said that this was also the Golden Age of bad TV with shows such as Zoo, Under the Dome, and The I-Land.[100] Derek Thompson of The Atlantic stated that TV replaced movies as "elite entertainment",[101] but the focus on prestige TV prevented more broadly appealing programs from airing. Damon Lindelof said "TV has become very artisanal", using Swarm as an example of a show that "everybody I know is watching" but his relatives have never heard of. New York quoted a "top agent" as decrying the contempt TV people had for mainstream audiences' tastes; "People seem to really like Two and a Half Men, and none of my writers want to write that. They all want to write Barry. And you know who watches Barry? Nobody".[71]

Newton Minow, whose landmark 1961 speech "Television and the Public Interest" had highlighted the end of the original golden age of the 1950s, commented that the state of television in 2011, in the midst of the modern golden age and 50 years after the speech, had lost the sense of shared community that the live linear television dominated by a small number of networks had provided.[102][103][104]

Mary McNamara of The Los Angeles Times cited the golden age of TV as one of the reasons behind the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike, which, along with the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike and the studios' use of artificial intelligence, effectively halted most scripted television production in the United States.[105]

See also edit

References edit

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  99. ^ Jeffery, Morgan (June 12, 2018). "Here's why the so-called Golden Age of TV might be coming to an end". Digital Spy.
  100. ^ The Golden Age of Bad TV: Ludicrous Shows You Can't Stop Watching | Observer
  101. ^ Netflix, 'House of Cards,' and the Golden Age of Television – The Atlantic
  102. ^ Newton Minow's Vast Wasteland Speech: How It Changed TV|Time
  103. ^ Does Minow Still Think TV Is a 'Vast Wasteland'?|Ad Age (subscription required)
  104. ^ How TV's 'Vast Wasteland' Became a Vast Garden|WIRED
  105. ^ Why is there a writers' strike? Blame the Golden Age of TV – Los Angeles Times

External links edit

  • Prestige TV: How to Know You're Watching a "Good" Show on Vulture

golden, television, 2000s, present, united, states, contemporary, golden, television, also, known, peak, prestige, period, widely, regarded, high, number, high, quality, internationally, acclaimed, television, programs, named, reference, original, golden, tele. In the United States the contemporary Golden Age of Television also known as Peak TV or Prestige TV 1 2 3 is a period widely regarded for its high number of high quality internationally acclaimed television programs 4 5 6 7 Named in reference to the original Golden Age of Television of the 1950s 8 the period has also been referred to as the New Second or Third Golden Age of Television The various names reflect disagreement over whether shows of the 1980s and early mid 1990s belong to a since concluded golden era or to the current one 19 The contemporary period is generally identified as beginning in 1999 with The Sopranos 20 21 with debate as to whether the age ended or peaked in the mid late 2010s 20 22 23 24 or early 2020s to the point of calling its replacement Trough TV 25 26 27 28 or remains ongoing 29 8 Multichannel linear television such as cable and digital satellite reached its peak in 2014 and has declined in viewers reach and new content rapidly since then 30 31 overall new series creation peaked in the early 2020s following a several years long competitive period known as the streaming wars cresting shortly before the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes 32 It is believed to have resulted from advances in media distribution technology 9 13 digital TV technology including HDTV online video platforms TV streaming video on demand and web TV 33 9 and a large increase in the number of hours of available television which has prompted a major wave of content creation 34 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins and early era 1 2 Late era and potential end 1 2 1 Quantity over quality 1 2 2 Streaming wars and aftermath 1 2 3 Rerun boom 2 Characteristics and criticism 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editOrigins and early era edit French scholar Alexis Pichard has argued that television enjoyed a Second Golden Age 35 starting in the 2000s which was a combination of three elements first an improvement in both visual aesthetics and storytelling second an overall homogeneity between cable series and networks series and third a tremendous popular success Pichard contends that this Second Golden Age was the result of a revolution initiated by the traditional networks in the 1980s and carried on by the cable channels especially HBO in the 1990s 36 Film director Francis Ford Coppola thinks that the second golden age of television comes from kids with their little father s camcorder who wanted to make films like he did in the 1970s but were not permitted to so they did it for television 37 nbsp The cast of Firefly reuniting at a San Diego Comic Con panel The new Golden Age brought creator driven tragic anti heroic dramas of the 2000s and 2010s 38 including 1998 s Sex and the City 1999 s The Sopranos named the greatest TV show of all time by TV Guide 39 and Rolling Stone 40 41 42 and The West Wing 2001 s Six Feet Under and 24 43 41 2002 s The Wire voted as the greatest TV show of the 21st Century by BBC in 2021 41 44 and The Shield 41 2004 s Deadwood 45 41 Lost 46 and Battlestar Galactica 41 2005 s Grey s Anatomy and Avatar The Last Airbender 47 2006 s Friday Night Lights 41 2007 s Mad Men 41 2008 s Breaking Bad 48 41 2010 s The Walking Dead 49 2011 s Game of Thrones 14 50 51 2012 s Girls HBO 2013 s House of Cards 52 and Orange Is the New Black 53 and 2015 s Better Call Saul 54 Others appear in the Writers Guild of America 2013 vote for 101 Best Written TV Shows 55 Production values got higher than ever before 56 on shows such as Band of Brothers 57 Mad Men Breaking Bad and Homeland to the point of rivaling cinema while anti heroic series like The Sopranos and The Wire were cited as improving television content thus earning critical praise 58 Stephanie Zacharek of The Village Voice has argued that the current golden age began earlier with over the air broadcast shows like Babylon 5 Star Trek Deep Space Nine both of which premiered in 1993 and Buffy the Vampire Slayer 1997 17 TV critic Alan Sepinwall cites shows such as Buffy and Oz which both first aired in 1997 as ushering in the golden age 41 Will Gompertz of the BBC believes that Friends which debuted in 1994 might stake a claim as the opening bookend show of the period 18 Matt Zoller Seitz argues that it began in the 1980s with Hill Street Blues 1981 and St Elsewhere 1982 15 Kirk Hamilton of Kotaku has said that Avatar The Last Airbender 2005 should be considered a part of the golden age of television and recommended the sophisticated kids show to others 59 With the rise of instant access to content on Netflix creator driven television shows like Breaking Bad The Shield 2002 Friday Night Lights 2006 and Mad Men gained loyal followings that grew to become widely popular The success of instant access to television shows was presaged by the popularity of DVDs and continues to increase with the rise of digital platforms and online companies The Golden Age of television is believed to have resulted from advances in media distribution technology 9 13 digital TV technology including HDTV online video platforms TV streaming video on demand and web TV 33 9 and a large increase in the number of hours of available television which has prompted a major wave of content creation 34 The increase in the number of shows is also cited as evidence of a Golden Age or peak TV In the five years between 2011 and 2016 the number of scripted television shows on broadcast cable and digital platforms increased by 71 In 2002 182 television shows aired while 2016 had 455 original scripted television shows and 495 in 2018 The number of shows are rising largely due to companies like Netflix Amazon Video and Hulu investing heavily in original content The number of shows aired by online service increased from only one in 2009 to over 93 in 2016 60 61 62 63 64 65 Late era and potential end edit nbsp Costumes from Babylon 5 Supernatural and The Vampire Diaries An increasing reliance on rebooting and reviving existing franchises led to widespread belief that the Golden Age of Television was ending in the late 2010s 22 with the caveat that some of these reboots such as DuckTales 66 Girl Meets World 67 One Day at a Time 68 69 and X Men 97 70 share the positive reception and mature character development of original shows of the era To address burnout from binge watching and concerns that the practice makes television more disposable and forgettable streaming providers reduced their reliance on the practice in the early 2020s by returning to a more traditional model of releasing one new episode a week A showrunner for an unnamed series on Netflix a platform that has been especially aggressive toward releasing full seasons at once as a company policy commented that the volume of existing content has made it more difficult to devote the time to binge watching 23 Quantity over quality edit In the Watchmen writers room we would play this game called Is It a Show Somebody would name a title logline and one of the actors and we d have to guess whether it was real But the joke was it was always a show Some were in their second or third seasons and none of us supposedly television professionals had ever heard of them Lost creator Damon Lindelof 71 Ed Power of the Irish Examiner opined that the sun began to set on the golden age between 2013 and 2015 with the finales of Breaking Bad and Mad Men and Since then television has reverted to its older tradition of quantity over quality 20 Siobhan Lyons of The Conversation believes the 2022 finale of Better Call Saul marks the end of the last of those defining golden age shows in a time increasingly oversaturated with streaming content and viewing options 26 NPR noted in May 2022 that although television executives had predicted a peak in television series since the mid 2010s the number of series continued to grow into the early 2020s from 400 original productions across broadcast cable and major streaming outlets in 2015 to 559 in 2021 The network noted that the major streamers with the exception of Disney which NPR attributed to the company s strong brand recognition were seeing diminishing quality and particularly in the case of Netflix declining popularity 72 A May 2023 essay in Harper s Bazaar declared the era of the time to be the Age of Mid Television noting that mediocre programs were gaining popularity due to the escapism they provide in an age where the real world brings greater anxiety 73 Vulture expressed similar views in June 2023 speaking of Peak TV in the past tense and noting that the more artistic shows that marked the Golden Age of highbrow programming were also expensive and not particularly profitable even if they drew new subscribers 71 The New Yorker concurred in November of the same year declaring the Golden Age to be over after a regression toward the mean based upon several books on the topic the article essentially argued that the same dynamics that drove the death of earlier Golden Ages in media such as television s first Golden Age and the New Hollywood of the early 1970s were also affecting the early 21st century Golden Age of Television namely that the technology innovations that had allowed highbrow programs to flourish were being capitalized upon by more profitable franchise products able to crowd out riskier projects for attention from financial backers 74 Streaming wars and aftermath edit Around 2019 a period of intense competition began for market share among streaming services a period known as the streaming wars This competition increased during the first two years of the COVID 19 pandemic as more people stayed home and watched television 75 Many services attempted to compete on quality The streaming wars combined with the decline of the popularity of mainstream films along with said films increasingly relying on franchises that are less likely to garner awards and the rise of independent films winning major film awards within the last six years resulted in a historical first the first film from a streaming service to produce an Academy Award winner for Best Picture Apple TV s CODA over Netflix s The Power of the Dog at the 94th Academy Awards 76 The streaming wars were largely recognized to have ended in 2022 as the major streaming services lost subscribers and shifted their focus to profit over market share by raising subscription fees cutting production budgets cracking down on password sharing and introducing ad supported tiers 77 HBO Max made a substantial cut to its library in August 2022 mostly to its children s television series out of concerns that the quantity of content on the service especially with its pending merger with Discovery was becoming overwhelming and difficult to find and that the children s programming was not driving subscriptions or views on the service 78 By the summer of 2023 other major streaming providers had begun to remove short lived series from their catalogues and make them unavailable afterwards something that had previously been a rare occurrence this was particularly true of Disney Disney had historically followed a similar model with physical media known as the Disney Vault which it had initially suspended in the early months of Disney 79 and Paramount 80 This also coincided with an increased emphasis on business models that draw revenue from both advertising and subscriptions prompting streaming providers to focus on productions that have mass appeal while also reducing investment in high risk projects targeting niche audiences 81 The COVID 19 pandemic and its aftermath saw major reductions in the workforce and cancellations of multiple productions to save money on basic residuals and music licensing costs which led to a worsening condition for writers and actors setting the stage for the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes 82 This led to fewer shows ordered by studios and streamers as the WGA strike ended 25 and fewer spec scripts being offered by writers to the studios anticipating the cutbacks 83 The Hollywood Reporter said in January 2024 that Peak TV Is Over It reported that the number of United States TV series in 2023 decreased to 481 from 633 in 2022 and 2021 and that the number would not likely increase in 2024 32 Rerun boom edit Viewership patterns during the pandemic shifted rapidly toward reruns 75 a trend that continued into 2023 as the streaming providers shifted away from original content and became open to non exclusive licensing deals allowing popular archive shows to appear on multiple platforms 84 A 2021 interview of social media influencers noted that the teen sitcoms and teen dramas from the early Golden Age driven by continued presence in reruns and video on demand platforms have stronger followings among Generation Z than contemporary shows they feel that the latter are more geared toward pre teens or adults instead of teenagers try too hard to appeal to current trends and lack a sense of familiarity compared to shows that have been around since they were born This is attributed as a cause for the increasing number of reboots and revivals of shows from early in the era 24 Even as the pandemic waned cable television in particular which suffered a 30 decline in viewer reach in the period between its peak and 2023 increasingly relied upon reruns and other archival programming Compared to a peak of 214 original cable series in 2014 The New York Times noted that number had fallen 39 by 2022 and further in 2023 The Times dubbed this phenomenon zombie TV in that the channels retained a shell of an established cable brand but without any of the original programming that had defined the channel s identity as an undead zombie continues to function but without the soul or personality of its host body The Times also commented that general interest cable networks such as TNT USA Network and TBS were particularly hard hit with TNT and TBS s combined original series output dropping from 17 series to 3 USA suffered a near complete loss of its original scripted programming though this was also partially due to the network absorbing more sports programming from the closure of sister network NBCSN which helped keep USA s ratings among the highest on cable Such cable networks have increasingly relied upon all day marathons of acquired rerun programming to fill their schedules 31 This has coincided with an even more dramatic decline in viewership with general interest cable networks and several of the more established niche networks losing over half of their viewing audiences in the same period David Bauder of the Associated Press noted that the corresponding declines in viewership and original programming were triggering a vicious cycle and that by the mid 2020s cable television had lost its ability to create appointment television events instead relying on ghost programming such as low quality low cost reality fare and reruns 30 The streaming wars were also a factor in a shift toward free advertising supported television initiatives FAST in the early 2020s FAST services typically rely on archival programming for the majority of their content allowing the services to operate for free to the end user while splitting advertising revenue with the program owners or profiting directly if the program and FAST service are owned by the same company Tubi the advertising supported video on demand service owned by Fox Corporation acquired the streaming rights to much of the content that HBO Max had jettisoned in 2023 Pluto TV relies on the extensive archival libraries of Paramount and its numerous acquisitions 85 Characteristics and criticism editCultural references to Peak TV programming nbsp Breaking Bad merchandise inside the Albuquerque International Sunport nbsp The Office promotional display in Scranton Pennsylvania nbsp An arcade game based on The Walking Dead nbsp A Dairy Queen sign featuring Game of Thrones references Characteristics of this golden age are complicated characters who may be morally ambiguous or antiheroes questionable behavior complex plots diverse point of views playful explorations of modern day issues and would be R rated material 86 87 88 89 Genres of television associated with this golden age include dramas especially ones originating on cable and digital platforms some being called peak bleak due to the extremely pessimistic nature of shows like Succession and Game of Thrones 90 sitcoms especially ones that use comedy drama which some critics would call sadcoms 91 single camera setup or adult animation sketch comedy especially series linked to alternative comedy and late night talk shows especially ones that emphasize news satire Such were the shows popularity and buzzworthiness that aftershows talk shows specifically created to discuss a specific television program were created and scheduled in the lead out slot following Golden Age shows on linear networks 92 A key characteristic of the golden age is serialization where a continuous story arc stretches over multiple episodes or seasons Traditional American television had an episodic format with each episode typically consisting of a self contained story During the golden age there has been a transition to a serialization format John R Ziegler and Leah Richards note that the serialization format was previously already a key defining characteristic of Japanese anime shows notably the popular Dragon Ball Z 1989 which distinguished them from American television shows at the time Serialization later also became a key defining characteristic of American live action television shows during the golden age 93 The era is not without criticism the limited audience appeal of shows featuring unlikeable characters and too many showrunners embracing the 12 hour movie structure of stories 94 95 Shawn Ryan said You re seeing ideas that should ve been movies being elongated into eight episodes and they don t have the narrative engines to sustain them for that long New York said that the expensive signifiers of prestige TV the movie stars the set pieces the cinematography became so familiar and easy to appropriate that it could take viewers six or seven hours to realize the show they were watching was a fugazi 71 The number of original shows being produced has some like FX CEO John Landgraf 96 97 98 and Time s TV critic Judy Berman 1 worried about overwhelming the viewing audience to the point of what the latter called peak redundancy 1 99 Author Daniel Kelley said that this was also the Golden Age of bad TV with shows such as Zoo Under the Dome and The I Land 100 Derek Thompson of The Atlantic stated that TV replaced movies as elite entertainment 101 but the focus on prestige TV prevented more broadly appealing programs from airing Damon Lindelof said TV has become very artisanal using Swarm as an example of a show that everybody I know is watching but his relatives have never heard of New York quoted a top agent as decrying the contempt TV people had for mainstream audiences tastes People seem to really like Two and a Half Men and none of my writers want to write that They all want to write Barry And you know who watches Barry Nobody 71 Newton Minow whose landmark 1961 speech Television and the Public Interest had highlighted the end of the original golden age of the 1950s commented that the state of television in 2011 in the midst of the modern golden age and 50 years after the speech had lost the sense of shared community that the live linear television dominated by a small number of networks had provided 102 103 104 Mary McNamara of The Los Angeles Times cited the golden age of TV as one of the reasons behind the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike which along with the 2023 SAG AFTRA strike and the studios use of artificial intelligence effectively halted most scripted television production in the United States 105 See also edit nbsp Television portal nbsp United States portal nbsp 1990s portal nbsp 2000s portal nbsp 2010s portal nbsp 2020s portal List of shows considered as Peak TV Multichannel television in the United States Streaming television 1990s in television 2000s in television 2010s in television 2020s in television Quality television Adult animation Binge watching Documentary film Hate watching Miniseries Telenovela New Hollywood Indiewood Cinephilia Soap opera Television film Art film Nerd culture Marvel and DC Comics Postmodern television Game shows True crime Pop culture fictionReferences edit a b c Berman Judy November 19 2021 Peak TV Is Over Welcome to the Era of Streaming Redundancy Time Stahl Michael June 23 2022 Is Prestige TV Over InsideHook 13 Rules for Creating Prestige TV Dramas Vulture Leopold Todd May 6 2013 The new new TV golden age CNN Plunkett John Deans Jason August 22 2013 Kevin Spacey television has entered a new golden age The Guardian Retrieved January 24 2015 Stephen McGinty A golden age of television The Scotsman REVIEW Shogun Premiere Resurrects the Golden Age of Television CBR com a b When The Golden Age Of Television Was amp Which Shows Screen Rant a b c d e Carr David March 9 2014 Barely Keeping Up in TV s New Golden Age The New York Times Retrieved January 24 2015 The CB Guide to the New Golden Age of Television Canadian Business Archived from the original on September 27 2021 Retrieved January 24 2015 Weisenthal Joe Robinson Melia 16 Things You Never Knew About The New Golden Age Of TV Business Insider Retrieved January 24 2015 Pichard Alexis Le nouvel age d or des series americaines Editions Le Manuscrit Archived from the original on February 26 2021 Retrieved August 14 2015 a b c Welcome to TV s second Golden Age www cbsnews com October 2013 a b Reese Hope July 11 2013 Why Is the Golden Age of TV So Dark The Atlantic Retrieved January 24 2015 a b Zoller Seitz Matt October 25 2016 Why the Golden Age of TV Was Really Born in the 1980s Vulture com Murray Noel September 14 2016 Making A Case For The 90s Television s Other Golden Age Uproxx a b Zacharek Stephanie 2015 Why Avengers Age of Ultron Fills this Buffy Fan with Despair The Village Voice Archived May 18 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b Gompertz Will November 2 2019 The Morning Show Will Gompertz reviews Aniston and Witherspoon s Apple TV drama BBC com Retrieved November 2 2019 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 a b c Is the golden age of TV over Irish Examiner October 24 2019 Retrieved September 12 2022 The golden age of TV is dead long live the golden age of TV The A V Club September 20 2013 a b Adalian Josef February 1 2018 Why Network TV s Obsession With Reboots Isn t a Bad Thing Vulture com Retrieved April 17 2019 My former Variety colleague Michael Schneider executive editor of IndieWire captured perfectly the jaded response many had to last month s reboot news Anyone else getting the sense that broadcast TV is embarking on its Farewell Tour by playing all the hits one last time he tweeted a b Press Joy May 14 2021 One Episode at a Time Please Is a Binge Backlash Brewing Vanity Fair a b Schwartz Deanna July 14 2021 Meet the teens running fan pages for 2000s TV shows that aired when they were babies Insider Retrieved July 17 2021 a b Amol Sharma Joe Flint September 30 2023 Peak TV Is Over A Different Hollywood Is Coming Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 2 2023 a b Better Call Saul s final episode is the end of the golden age of TV as we know it The Conversation August 15 2022 Retrieved September 12 2022 Adams Sam March 5 2023 Peak TV Is Over Welcome to Trough TV Slate Hollywood Made 14 Fewer Shows in 2023 Marking the End of Peak TV The New York Times The End of Peak TV Not So FAST Variety a b Bauder David February 29 2024 They are TV s ghosts networks that somehow survive with little reason to watch them anymore Associated Press Retrieved March 5 2024 a b Koblin John December 8 2023 Zombie TV Has Come for Cable The New York Times via Yahoo News Retrieved December 9 2023 a b Roxborough Scott January 19 2024 Peak TV Is Over as 2023 Scripted Series Releases Crash The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved January 19 2024 a b Lipsett Joe 2018 Defining Success in the Era of Peak TV A Case Study In Newman Emily L Witsell Emily eds ABC Family to Freeform TV Essays on the Millennial Focused Network and Its Programs McFarland amp Company pp 15 32 ISBN 978 1 4766 6735 5 a b Simon Jeff March 31 2015 Who put these shows on the air and why The Buffalo News Retrieved March 31 2015 TV s golden age is real The Economist November 24 2018 Pichard 2011 p 11 Francis Ford Coppola Apocalypse Now is not an anti war film the Guardian August 9 2019 Pandora s Box A Conversation with Peter Biskind about Peak TV Chronogram Magazine Fretts Bruce Roush Matt December 23 2013 TV Guide Magazine s 60 Best Series of All Time TV Guide Archived from the original on December 24 2013 Retrieved December 23 2013 Sheffield Rob September 21 2016 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time Rolling Stone Archived from the original on September 23 2016 Retrieved September 22 2016 a b c d e f g h i j The Revolution Was Televised by Alan Sepinwall Netflix s Mystery Science Theater 3000 revival is as funny and necessary as the original The Verge Young Alex September 21 2016 Rolling Stone s list of the 100 Greatest TV Shows proves we re really in the Golden Age of Television Consequence of Sound Consequence of Sound Why The Wire is the greatest TV series of the 21st Century BBC Culture Saraiya Sonia May 30 2019 Review The Deadwood Movie Gives the Golden Age Series What it Deserves a Fitting Emotional Sendoff Vanity Fair Retrieved May 31 2019 Keveney Bill Lost 15th anniversary Here s to polar bears brainy sci fi Sawyer and Kate USA TODAY Sholars Mike February 21 2014 It s All Geek To Me The Golden Age Of Animated Television HuffPost Canada The Huffington Post Canada Lawson Mark May 23 2013 Are we really in a second golden age for television Television amp radio The Guardian Guardian News amp Media How The Walking Dead changed the course of the TV revolution Stuff co nz Kakutani Michiko June 24 2013 Brett Martin s Difficult Men Sees a New Golden Age for TV The New York Times Retrieved October 1 2015 Plunkett John Deans Jason August 22 2013 Kevin Spacey television has entered a new golden age The Guardian Retrieved January 2 2016 Thompson Derek February 7 2013 Netflix House of Cards and the Golden Age of Television The Atlantic How Orange Is the New Black set the blueprint for a Breaking Bad and Mad Men free TV landscape The Independent July 26 2019 Jurgenson John August 8 2022 How Better Call Saul Refined the Art of Television The Wall Street Journal 101 Best Written TV Series List Writers Guild of America West Retrieved January 31 2020 Films and Television Are Merging The Royal Ocean Film Society on YouTube Band of Brothers sequel series will follow the US Air Force in World War II Entertainment ie Telephilia Has Television Become a More Relevant American Medium Than Art Film IndieWire May 17 2013 Avatar The Last Airbender Is One Of The Greatest TV Shows Of All Time Kotaku September 18 2018 Sepinwall Alan August 18 2015 Peak TV in America Is there really too much good scripted television HitFix Retrieved January 2 2016 James Meg December 16 2015 2015 Year of peak TV hits record with 409 original series LA Times Retrieved January 2 2016 Littleton Cynthia December 16 2015 Peak TV Surge From Streaming Services Cable Pushes 2015 Scripted Series Tally to 409 Variety Retrieved January 2 2016 Leslie Ian April 13 2017 Watch it while it lasts our golden age of television Financial Times Retrieved August 13 2017 Flint Joe December 21 2016 Peak TV Still Going Strong With 455 Scripted Shows in 2016 Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved August 13 2017 Koblin John April 12 2019 Hollywood Upended as Unions Tell Writers to Fire Agents The New York Times p B1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 13 2019 DuckTales Season 1 2018 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Archived from the original on December 2 2017 Retrieved February 23 2018 Bowman Sabienna January 7 2017 Girl Meets World Has Become a Landmark Show for a New Generation of Fans Bustle Retrieved January 8 2017 Best of 2017 Television Critic Top Ten Lists Metacritic Archived from the original on January 2 2018 Retrieved March 15 2019 Best of 2018 Television Critic Top Ten Lists Metacritic Archived from the original on December 4 2018 Retrieved March 15 2019 X Men 97 First Reviews Marvel s Best Release in Years Critics Say Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved March 21 2024 a b c d Adalian Josef Brown Lane June 6 2023 The Binge Purge New York Holmes Linda May 3 2022 There s too much TV to keep up Have we hit the limit NPR Retrieved May 6 2022 Greenidge Kaitlyn May 5 2023 It s Time to Embrace the Era of Mid Entertainment Harper s Bazaar Retrieved May 7 2023 Schulman Michael November 6 2023 Boxed Out The Twilight of Prestige Television The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Retrieved November 6 2023 a b Renshaw David April 27 2021 Is rewatching old TV good for the soul bbc com Retrieved April 30 2021 Apple TV Beats Netflix to Streaming History With CODA Best Picture Win Decider Pallotta Frank August 11 2022 The streaming wars are over CNN Sherman Alex August 19 2022 Here s why HBO Max is pulling dozens of films and TV series from the streaming platform CNBC Retrieved August 21 2022 Perez Sarah March 8 2019 Disney s forthcoming streaming service will kill the Disney Vault Tech Crunch Retrieved March 9 2019 Blair Elizabeth July 24 2023 The streaming model is cratering here s how that s hurting actors writers and fans All Things Considered Retrieved July 28 2023 Watercutter Angela The Anticlimactic Death of the Streaming Wars Wired ISSN 1059 1028 Retrieved August 30 2023 Jennifer Maas July 11 2023 Peak TV Has Peaked From Exhausted Talent to Massive Losses the Writers Strike Magnifies an Industry in Freefall Variety Retrieved August 31 2023 Goldberg Lesley Rose Lacey Goldberg Lesley December 7 2023 It s Quiet Too Quiet in Hollywood Where Are the Deals The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved December 9 2023 Porter Rick February 6 2024 How Comfort Shows Conquered Streaming TV The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved February 10 2024 Morrison Sara May 24 2023 The Wild West of streaming TV is here and it s free Vox Retrieved November 4 2023 Reese Hope July 11 2013 Why Is the Golden Age of TV So Dark The Atlantic Kilkenny Katie February 27 2018 New Book Challenges Myth That TV s New Golden Age Is Just a Boy s Club The Hollywood Reporter Ventura Elbert April 5 2013 Tired of TV s Golden Age The American Prospect Szalai Georg February 21 2024 Peak Caution Instead of Peak TV BBC Drama Boss Promises True Boldness and Braveness The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved February 25 2024 The Secretive Extravagant Bighearted World of The Rings of Power the Most Expensive Show Ever Made Time Aroesti Rachel October 11 2016 No laughing matter the rise of the TV sadcom The Guardian Yahr Emily August 9 2013 After the show is the after show TV networks look to capitalize on biggest hits Washington Post Archived from the original on March 3 2014 Ziegler John R Richards Leah January 9 2020 Representation in Steven Universe Springer Nature p 10 ISBN 978 3 030 31881 9 Streamers Need To Learn Love Nonfiction Too The best TV episodes of 2022 EW com Ming Christopher November 3 2021 The End of The Golden Age of Television and Why Content is No Longer King Christopher Ming Blog There has never been a better time to be a bad actor The Week Streaming s Golden Age Is Suddenly Dimming The New York Times Jeffery Morgan June 12 2018 Here s why the so called Golden Age of TV might be coming to an end Digital Spy The Golden Age of Bad TV Ludicrous Shows You Can t Stop Watching Observer Netflix House of Cards and the Golden Age of Television The Atlantic Newton Minow s Vast Wasteland Speech How It Changed TV Time Does Minow Still Think TV Is a Vast Wasteland Ad Age subscription required How TV s Vast Wasteland Became a Vast Garden WIRED Why is there a writers strike Blame the Golden Age of TV Los Angeles TimesExternal links editPrestige TV How to Know You re Watching a Good Show on Vulture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Golden Age of Television 2000s present amp oldid 1218331544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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