ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Netflix Is Making Its Boldest Move Yet

Netflix has pretty much come to own every genre it's forayed into: documentaries (Ava DuVernay's 13th); political dramas (House of Cards); millennial comedies (Master of None, Love); supernatural thrillers (Stranger Things); women-centred dramas (Orange is the New Black); talk-shows (Chelsea); reboots (Gilmore Girls: A Year In The Life); critically-acclaimed films (Beasts of No Nation); stand-up (Amy Schumer's comedy special); superhero shows (Luke Cage, Jessica Jones); animated adult comedies (BoJack Horseman); and true crime docs (Making A Murderer).
Conspicuously missing from that list? Reality TV. But that's about to change with the streaming service's latest development strategy.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, Netflix is making a move into reality TV in a big way by investing in content including competitive reality shows and docu-soaps (as well as additional talk-shows). THR writes that by the end of 2017, Netflix's list of original unscripted series will be in the double-digits.
Netflix has a few advantages on its side. It will offer TV producers straight-to-series orders, meaning they won't have to go through the tedious process of first producing a pilot and waiting for review, approval, and input from executives before getting a full series order. They're also able to be more flexible in their negotiations and funding allocation. Sources tell THR that cable tier (lower quality) series will run £350,000 to £450,000 an episode and network tier series (higher quality) will run £800,000 and over.
"The competition should be scared out of their minds," said one unnamed producer. "These guys are monsters — they're coming in to play and play hard." Which means... more awesome reality TV for all of us! We're excited to see what Netflix comes up with.

More from TV

R29 Original Series

AdvertisementADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT