The Office left Netflix once its contract was up not because it wasn’t popular, but because its owner, NBC, wanted fans to follow the show to their Peacock option. So they try their best to hold on to them - as long as those shows keep performing well and attracting a lot of eyeballs.Įven then, however, a show may leave. Still, popular “non-original” shows like The Office can help a streamer get and keep subscribers. Everything is much easier and more financially rewarding that way. Small wonder, then, that the streamers prefer to create their own original content. Mike Kellin (right) in “The Thirty-Fathom Grave” Otherwise they’ll have to jack up subscriber fees - and subscribers don’t like that. So you can see why streamers like Netflix want to keep costs down. It can even run into the millions of dollars. One is that, depending on the show, the price can be quite expensive. Seems simple, but you have to keep a couple things in mind. When that time is up, they can extend it or end it. Both sides negotiate a price and a time frame. So if Netflix, Hulu, or Amazon Prime want to stream TZ, they must pay what is, in essence, a rental fee to CBS. In the case of The Twilight Zone, the owner is CBS. So that’s what Netflix has decided to pay for.įor that to make sense, it’s important to know that streaming providers who want to carry a particular series have to pay a licensing fee to the owners of that series in order to do so. It’s the 30-minute tales that are seared in our memory. Whether you’re a fan of Season 4 or not (opinions vary widely in the Zone community), even those who like at least some of the hour-long episodes can’t deny that TZ was best-suited to the shorter-running time. Burt Reynolds channels Marlon Brando in “The Bard” For Season 5, TZ reverted to the half-hour format that had served it so well during its first three seasons. Eighteen of them (about half the length of a typical season back then) aired between Januand May 23, 1963. Season 4, for those who aren’t already aware, is when The Twilight Zone began producing hour-long episodes. It’s simply that they don’t want to pay for what is arguably TZ’s least-popular season. It’s not because Netflix couldn’t get the rights to Season 4 or anything like that. I’ve seen a lot of guesses on Facebook and head-scratching on Twitter, so let’s just cut to the real reason. You click the drop-down menu, and you see Seasons 1, 2, and 3 listed … and then 5. It’s a question I hear fairly often from Twilight Zone fans: Why doesn’t Netflix stream Season 4 of The Twilight Zone?
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