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TV networks are trying to catch up to Netflix by making their shows more 'binge-friendly'

Nathan McAlone,Reuters   

TV networks are trying to catch up to Netflix by making their shows more 'binge-friendly'
Tech2 min read

Reed hastings Netflix CEO

Getty/Kevork Djansezian

Netflix CEO Reed Hastings has led the way on binge-watching.

TV networks are changing the way they develop and release new shows, and even commercials, as they struggle to get in step with the "binge-watching" phenom eon made popular by Netflix.

What does this look like?

A big component is a shift toward serialized shows, where the plot unfolds with each episode. This form lends itself more naturally to binge-watching than a show that wraps up every episode.

Viacom's TV Land network is developing more serialized programming, and earlier this year TBS launched its new comedy, "Angie Tribeca," by airing the entire 10-episode season in a 25-hour "binge-a-thon" on TBS.

TV executives are also working with advertisers to change commercials, so binge-viewers stay engaged. Experiments include making brands part of the show on Turner. CBS, meanwhile, is studying whether commercials themselves should be serialized to tell a story.

Networks used to cringe at serialized shows because they did not lend themselves well to syndication. Out-of-order reruns can be confusing, so program developers preferred series such as CBS hits "The Big Bang Theory" or "NCIS," which wrap up a story in each episode.

But with the rise of binge-watching, TV networks see a chance to hook viewers through cliffhangers. They make batches of current episodes available on-demand through cable boxes or online apps, and sell them later to the likes of Netflix.

Forty-six percent of millennials watch shows after they air, according to media researcher Comscore. And 42 percent of viewers binge-watch multiple episodes of a show, one to two times per month.

At TV Land, creative and marketing executive Kim Rosenblum said one new show, "Impastor," was rewritten from the pilot to drive the story across episodes and attract binge viewers.

The show follows slacker Buddy Dobbs who escapes from his gambling debt by pretending to be a preacher in a small town. To encourage people to keep watching, writers developed a story line about thugs hunting down Dobbs, giving each episode a cliffhanger, Rosenblum said.

"Instead of it being every episode as a standalone, we added a storyline that was told more episodically as the mystery unravels," she said.

Turner has added original, serialized shows like "The Alienist" and "Good Behavior," to TNT, which traditionally has been rerun heavy.

Binging viewers are also less likely to watch ads because most are watching them via their DVRs, which allow them to fast forward past commercials. Forty-three percent of viewers prefer to binge watch shows via their DVRs, compared to only 19 percent who do so through video on demand, according to Comscore.

To address this, Turner is ramping up brand placement in its shows, for example filming a scene of truTV's "The Carbonaro Effect" at Papa John's Pizza, which sponsored the episode.

CBS is considering adding serialized commercials, to make sure that binge viewers are not exposed to the same ad again and again, and draw them in with a story, said David Poltrack, chief research officer at CBS.

It all comes down to networks realizing that streaming video has become one of broadcast television's biggest threats, and potentially its salvation, said Dave Morgan, chief executive of Simulmedia, a New York-based ad tech firm.

"If they don't get viewership, they don't get paid," he said.

(Reporting By Jessica Toonkel; additional reporting by Lisa Richwine in Los Angeles; Editing by Peter Henderson and Tom Brown)

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