Netflix recently canceled The Abandons. I haven’t seen the show yet, but I was excited about the premise and the people involved, so I added it to my watchlist to give it a try soon.
It seems the series ends on a cliffhanger, and since Netflix has already announced the cancellation, we’ll never get a resolution—just like with so many other streaming shows.
What Netflix doesn’t seem to understand is a basic lesson of storytelling: sometimes a story needs time to develop. That applies to the world, the plot, and especially the characters.
Seinfeld, The Office, and even Breaking Bad needed a few episodes to find their tone—and their audience. The best example I can think of is Star Trek: The Next Generation.
The first season isn’t good. In fact, it’s bad compared to what the show eventually became. Luckily, the network didn’t pull the plug. In season two, the series experimented with a different tone and more philosophical ideas. By season three, it had established itself as an all-time great, delivering five years of sci-fi perfection.
The first season of The Simpsons wasn’t great either. But the network allowed the creators to experiment, and they went on to create one of the most successful and longest-running shows in TV history.
In short: Let stories develop.
Netflix produces a lot of trash. It would be better to focus resources on fewer projects and give creators the time and freedom to develop them properly.
And this is a general lesson for storytelling: if you have a premise you love, stick with it. Develop it year by year, book by book, issue by issue.
Sometimes greatness just needs some time to unfold.
