Amazon will no longer let audiences vote on Korean College Girl Room Salonwhich TV pilots they want to see developed into full-length series.
According to an Entertainment Weekly report, executives from Amazon Studios told a group of reporters on Saturday that the company would be halting its innovative practice of letting audiences vote on which TV shows are eventually made.
Amazon Studios started conducting viewer polls six years ago as an attempt to gain feedback on some of the pilots it developed. The process was used to vet some of the company's most popular shows, including Transparent and Man in the High Castle.
Now, going forward, the company will begin focusing on traditional metrics to gauge a shows viability. Amazon Studios will begin to solely rely on preview audiences and case studies, which are the norm for traditional broadcasters such as NBC, CBS, and Fox before they develop shows into a full-length series.
The voting feature did allow Amazon Studios to get deeper insights in regards to which TV show pilots would be popular with its viewers, but it also increased the time between pilot and series launch. Since the polls have been in use for six years, Amazon has likely collected data that it is turning into insights on its audience.
Time will tell if Amazon ever switches back to sharing pilots for feedback, but for now, the traditional TV route is the path for faster releases.
Topics Amazon
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
American Sports and the Forever War
Best Cyber Monday deals under $25: Lego, Echo, Crock
Cyber Monday robot vacuum deals live: The best Roombas and Sharks still at record
Best Black Friday Sonos deals: Era 300, Ace, Beam at record lows
Best Black Friday deals that make great stocking stuffers
Black Friday Ninja deals: Ninja Slushi in stock, plus the Creami and air fryers on sale
Cyber Monday Kindle book deals: Save 93% in on popular reads
Black Friday Ninja deals: Ninja Slushi in stock, plus the Creami and air fryers on sale
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。