The Long Wait is OVER! A Top TV Exec Slams Years-Long Gaps Between Seasons!
Years Between Seasons: A Major Problem for TV Shows
Let's be real: waiting YEARS for the next season of your fave show SUCKS! Katherine Pope, the president of Sony Pictures Television (the brains behind awesome shows like The Last of Us and The Boys), totally agrees! She's calling out this ridiculous trend of these crazy long gaps. And she’s right!
Take The Last of Us. Season 1 hit us in early 2023. Season 2? Early 2025. That's a TWO-YEAR WAIT. The Boys is another example, which also has gaps longer than two years between those seasons! Those kinds of insanely long waits for even some of the greatest shows on television isn’t exactly good for the viewer; and demonstrates how some issues simply go completely overlooked and harm the television viewing experience on some fundamental levels.
Katherine Pope Sounds Off: "Absolutely Untenable and Not Fair!"
At the Mercato Internazionale Audiovisivo market (via The Times), Pope didn’t hold back, folks. Here's her savage quote:
"It is so frustrating. Those long delays are just absolutely untenable and they are not fair to the fans. I’ll sit down with my husband and we’ll be like: ‘OK, what happened last season?’. That experience of watching eight episodes then two years later getting another eight is just not good. In such a saturated world, we can’t afford to lose fans. It is hard enough to get them."
Pope's spot-on! She describes it well, highlighting some fundamental issues and pointing out a major challenge, creating more difficulties for people wanting those continuous, excellent television experiences, making it that much easier for viewers to lose interest; abandoning a show after an initial run simply because those production times continue to get longer. This point must really emphasize the reasons why shorter waiting times would generate much more overall enjoyment, especially during an era in which consumers must compete amongst an ever-growing landscape of potential shows!
The Long Wait Isn’t New – but It’s Getting Worse!
Those long gaps between seasons are increasingly normal. Even top shows on huge streaming platforms like Netflix and Max often suffer! Consider Stranger Things and Wednesday (Netflix), House of the Dragon (Max)—all taking way, way longer than two years between seasons. And that doesn’t exactly mean that these shows were bad. It is really the underlying trend which matters and which needs solving and these kinds of productions merely serve as examples of that common issue.
This wasn't always the case! Think back to those 2000s shows like Lost and Breaking Bad. The gaps between seasons? Barely even a full year! Waiting months—intense, yes, but it felt like progress rather than this current, painful hiatus that hurts so much! That might've been the most popular form of storytelling, as that particular style could be incredibly effective; making fans stay excited and keeping interest high – which is important if shows hope for maintaining loyal fans over longer time periods. These extremely long times could completely destroy the potential fanbase!
Our Take: The Need for Faster Turnarounds (Without Sacrificing Quality!)
We totally agree with Pope. No one wants rushed, shoddy seasons! We just really don’t want those ridiculously long delays; as highlighted in her interview! The current industry standard requires a serious rethinking! It can be achieved, yet it is exceptionally difficult due to other factors.
Big-budget shows, with intense visuals take FOREVER to create. And to keep those fans–those cliffhangers in shows like House of the Dragon show what that means! Huge studios and those involved need solutions that don’t hurt the quality.
Conclusion: Let's End Those Years-Long Hiatuses!
Those long gaps between tv seasons create serious difficulties and hamper viewer satisfaction; generating unexpected but significant levels of difficulty in maintain a loyal following; creating problems on all sides! They need changes! This industry-wide problem could be solved yet doing so might create many unexpected and far larger issues that producers and other staff have little preparation for. It involves a serious reevaluation across how much of a show's creation really can occur at which times! This discussion brings critical issues into those aspects involving media creation! That's why Pope’s comments were important–a call for that change needed throughout the whole television industry!