Follow-up toot:

Then, a small window after that where the episodes get closed captioning, foreign translations and marketing looks before going to air — wherever that may be.

More on that later hopefully, but such deals are very slow moving — there’s a lot to work out. Stay tuned!

  • StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    It was originally targeted for Nickelodeon, but children’s linear television viewing has dropped severely since 2017.

    Worse, Paramount’s US cable carriage deal with Comcast would have required Paramount to wait at least 6 months to stream after a Nickelodeon premiere. So, they flipped it to run first on Paramount+. The show got decent views, but didn’t necessarily get to the target family and kids. Paramount seems to be reducing its focus on reaching kids as a streamer.

    With Nickelodeon tanking further in the pandemic, it’s too expensive for them so the cable-led option is still a nonstarter.

    I’ve been trying to think of which non-Disney streamer has enough of a kids and family audience globally to make Prodigy both profitable and reach the target demographic.

    Distributor Wildbrain Spark (formerly DHX) has had a deal with Paramount+ and PlutoTV to carry some of its extensive kids library, so they could reverse and have Paramount license to them.

    Wildbrain Spark (run principally through YouTube) has 168 million subscribers globally and 21 million unique views monthly in the US alone. They tend to skew younger, but may be extending into the older school age and middle school market.

    • Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz
      ·
      1 year ago

      Yeah once I figured out the characters it seemed pretty obvious it was geared towards a younger audience, but I still like the show. I think my interest is mainly in it being the grittier side of the Star Trek universe where not everything is all hunky-dory. DS9 certainly had that feel to it.

      • StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website
        ·
        1 year ago

        Family oriented seems the target.

        It’s pretty gritty for kids, but many school aged kids are up for that. It’s especially so given that Prodigy uses the classic situation of exploited orphans who are given hope and opportunities for something better.

        It’s also taking advantage of the fact that Janeway in particular and Voyager generally has been the gateway for preteens into the franchise since its been available on streaming.