From W
ikipedia
This is another bit of context to keep in mind when following the Netflix thread.
Another post in what what was supposed be a fairly brief Netflix thread.
I want to move on to other topics, but this latest news item was just
too good an example of certain bad trends in journalism to pass up.
You may have seen the following news story earlier:
Netflix Acquires ‘The Blacklist’ For $2 Million An Episode
EXCLUSIVE: In what is believed to be the biggest subscription
video-on-demand deal for a TV series, I’ve learned that Netflix has
acquired the rights to hit NBC drama The Blacklist from Sony Pictures TV
in a deal that will net $2 million per episode. I hear Season 1 of the
series starring James Spader will debut on the streaming service next
weekend. As for future seasons, Netflix usually makes them available
shortly after the season finales.
Sony TV first tested the off-network market waters for The Blacklist in
March. While other streaming services, like Amazon and Hulu, do joint
syndication deals with cable networks, Netflix, which largely pioneered
the series SVOD business, insists on getting first dibs. Twentieth
Television just recently sold New Girl to TBS and MTV, more than an year
after prior seasons of the Fox series landed at Netflix in a rich deal,
said to be worth $900,000 an episode. Like was the case with New Girl, I
hear Sony TV has the right to also sell The Blacklist in cable and
broadcast syndication, with Netflix getting an exclusive first window.
The $2 million per-episode fee is said to be the biggest for an
off-network series paid by Netflix (or any others streaming company),
eclipsing previous record holder, AMC’s The Walking Dead, whose sale
price to Netflix is believed to be $1.35 million per episode.
For starters, you will notice that the headline is somewhat misleading.
Netflix did not "acquire" the Black List in the sense that, say ABC
would have. The show will still be running on NBC next year. Nor did it
acquire the rights to stream the episodes during the regular season;
those will presumably stay with Hulu. What Netflix did acquire was the
right to stream the previous year's episodes.
Furthermore, if you hit a few relevant Wikipedia pages and do some quick
back-of-the-envelope calculations, you will see it is difficult to see
how Netflix can justify this price-per-episode to its shareholders or
how Sony could have negotiated it.
It is the nature of television, whether broadcast or streamed, that
while the quality has a way of tapering off after a few years, the
commercial value tends to increased sharply once a show has established
itself. As a rule of thumb, it is not until programs approach 100
episodes that you start talking real money.
Just to put things in perspective, while a long running, syndication
friendly, proven hit like NCIS can bring in over $2 million a year. That
is very much an upper bound. The Blacklist is years away from having a
viable syndication package. Even when it gets there, its serialized
elements will probably keep it from making the really big bucks. A
forty-four million dollar deal one year into a series run is
extraordinary. It is almost inconceivable that Sony would not have
settled for much less.
I realize that the following point should be too obvious to bother with,
but the object of business is to bring in as much money as possible
while sending out as little as possible. If Netflix just paid $44
million for something which they could've gotten for 20 or even 10, this
would indicate a fundamental lack of confidence by the management of
the company.
Here though, we get into one of the great paradoxes of modern business
journalism. From a strictly logical standpoint, the best run businesses
are, almost by definition, those which do the most with the least. From
an emotional standpoint, journalists are most impressed by those
executives who spend extravagantly without apparent hesitation.
For lack of a better word, the willingness to sign large checks is seen
as a sign of virility. The bigger the check, the more positive the
impression it makes on the reporters covering the story. The soundness
of the purchase does not matter, nor does its positive or negative
impact on the executive's company.
Netflix has long been something of a joke within the entertainment
industry for its tendency to pay more than top dollar for properties
that have already been turned down by everybody else and yet Reed
Hastings' reputation as a visionary business genius simply grows
stronger.
Along similar lines, when Mark Zuckerberg paid an exorbitant amount of
money for a company the New York Times simply gushed with enthusiasm,
even though it was later revealed that the primary selling point of the
company was the fact that the founder
threw awesome parties.
Hastings and Zuckerberg may stand out but that doesn't mean they aren't
representative. Executives, particularly tech executives, are routinely
lauded for big, bold deals, even when those deals make no sense from a
traditional business standpoint. Like so much business coverage we see
these days, what is presented as rational analysis is a series emotional
reactions to charismatic personalities, catchy narratives and the
reflected glow of great wealth.