Ahead of the merger with Showtime Paramount+ has cancelled more shows. The most surprising of which is Star Trek:Prodigy

The animated coproduction with Nickelodeon was very well received and had been renewed for a second season. The second season is in post production and will be sold to another streamer/broadcaster.

My view is that cancelling already renewed content is a sure fire way to lose subscribers.

  • I’m gutted, really enjoyed prodigy and was looking forward to watching it with little boy (once he was old enough)

    Fingers crossed they find a buyer and we can at least get to see the second series

    • OP said season 2 is in post-production and it’ll get sold to another streaming service probably. It’s not dead yet, I think. Especially not with Across the Spiderverse raking in cash and making animation (hopefully) look more tempting to corporates.

      • I think you’re right, Amazon has seemingly done well with Picard and Lower Decks (outside of the US) so it’s possible that they will want to add another Star Trek.

        Paramount’s big mistake is having poor availability (taking too long to roll out Paramount+ and then having staggered release dates for shows in different areas) and complicated distribution arrangements that means they make less money.

        In essence they treated streaming like DVD/Blu-Ray distribution which negates the benefits of streaming to the consumer.

  • A thing I also don’t understand is why they are scrubbing the service from some of the cancelled shows (you can’t view the previous seasons either). Why?

    A show I was going to watch, but now can’t, was Queens of the Universe, a song/talent competition for/by queer people. We already don’t have that many queer shows, let me at least watch the first season of it.

      • Ngl, I still feel like they’re shooting themselves in the foot with this in the long run. Sure, this saves them $$$$ on residuals, but it also reduces the variety of their library (an important part of attracting subscribers, it’s not all about the big headline titles) and makes people feel less secure that their favorite shows will be finished or remain available, so they might not even start watching until it’s finished, and that kills early viewership numbers.

        I feel like more and more people will subscribe for a month, binge one or two shows, and unsubscribe until the next big thing they’re ibterested in comes out.