Jericho the Fallen Diablo
New member
I've heard it said by some people in the American animation industry that there is reluctance on the part of certain networks to allow their cartoons to have strong story continuity. Nick supposedly has handed down this kind of mandate at some points (which makes the wonderful Avatar even more of an anomaly), and I imagine that Disney Channel might as well (with some exceptions.) I interned briefly at a large animation studio once and this came up as a question among the interns during one of the meetings. One of my theories was that we seem to have a sort of ten year cycle where every decade or so we Americans seem to make a really strongly original (read non-comic based) continuity driven cartoon that kind of stands out. I suggested that Gargoyles was that show for the 90's (though there were other less known ones like Exosquad and Xyber 9) and that Avatar is that show for the 00's.
It's interesting, why is it that most of the big live action executives have been willing to embrace the idea of season long storylines (in genre Sci-fi shows of course, but also in dramas like Grey's Anatomy) but there still seems to be so much resistance among animation executives?
I know that many people say that kids do not have the patience to endure long story arcs, and character development but I don’t see it. The success of the Harry Potter series (though admittedly a book not a show) is evidence to me that young kids are perfectly capable of following a storyline if in fact they are interested. The ratings success of imported shows like DBZ earlier in the 00’s also seems to point to this. Yet we still here stories of writers and artist in the American animation industry having to fight to get story arcs included into their shows. Is it just an accepted mindset among the higher ups? Is it a concern that it makes it harder to rerun the episodes (which I don’t understand to me it seems like it would make it easier), what is it?
So I'm putting the question out there for anyone who has an interesting spin on why this might be.
It's interesting, why is it that most of the big live action executives have been willing to embrace the idea of season long storylines (in genre Sci-fi shows of course, but also in dramas like Grey's Anatomy) but there still seems to be so much resistance among animation executives?
I know that many people say that kids do not have the patience to endure long story arcs, and character development but I don’t see it. The success of the Harry Potter series (though admittedly a book not a show) is evidence to me that young kids are perfectly capable of following a storyline if in fact they are interested. The ratings success of imported shows like DBZ earlier in the 00’s also seems to point to this. Yet we still here stories of writers and artist in the American animation industry having to fight to get story arcs included into their shows. Is it just an accepted mindset among the higher ups? Is it a concern that it makes it harder to rerun the episodes (which I don’t understand to me it seems like it would make it easier), what is it?
So I'm putting the question out there for anyone who has an interesting spin on why this might be.