#backlist and chill season 4
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list five things that make you happy then put this in the inbox of ten people who have reblogged something from you âšđ€
1) I get to meet my new nephew soon!
2) Our silicone wedding rings came in and they're super cute <3
3) the new season of Backlist and Chill is out :D
4) I'm working on a new Polyam triad story and they're giving me feeeeeels
5) and at least according to the calendar, its officially the harvest season so its energetically autumn which is the BEST time of year (Happy Lughnasadh everyone!)
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The Race to the âStreamersâ
As publishers in many parts of the world look for avenues in which their content can find more digital lifeâand profitâthe international video streaming platforms clearly are gaining rapidly in importance.
The film tie-in cover from Penguin Random House/Anchor
Margaret Atwoodâs The Handmaidâs Tale (Penguin Random House/Anchor), of course, is a good example of the book-to-platform pathway, having been developed by Bruce Miller with Atwood into a 33-episode, three-season series that put a 1985 novel on the 21st-century mapâwith entirely new content developed in the latter part of the series to keep the cinematic edition going.
Much more recently, as Publishing Perspectives has reported, Josh Malermanâs 2014 book Bird Box, in its screen adaptation directed by Susanne Bier for Netflix and Universal Pictures, has become the streaming networkâs biggest Netflix film release in terms of initial viewership. Nielsen counted 26 million viewers in the filmâs first week in its coverage area, and Netflix reported an overall 45 million accounts watching it in the same week, worldwide, setting a record for the network.
The platform now is seen in 190 countries. It produces original content in many of them, which is why youâll find so much dubbed and/or subtitled content appearing in your recommendations at times.
The folks at HarperCollinsâ Ecco Books probably donât mind seeing their four-year-old book bounce to No. 1 in the January 20 Apple iBooks bestseller list and register as No. 2 in the week of January 6 for Most Read Fiction on the Amazon Charts. It stands at No. 4 on The New York Times bestseller list in combined ebooks and print fiction, in the January 20 ranking and at No. 7 on the USA Todayfiction chart.
And while thereâs clearly a fast-rising interest in working with these content-hungry video streaming platforms, all that streams may not be gold.
Netflix released a big question mark just a week after Bird Box took flight as a hit when it released Bandersnatch, an interactive, spin-off episode of the Black Mirror series in which viewers can choose what happens next
Not this book: the bandersnatch is a fictional creature in Lewis Carrollâs 1872 âThrough the Looking Glassâ
Bandersnatch was hardly the first effort in interactive television entertainment, but some in publishing were watching closely on its December 28 release, because the premise of its appealâor âgimmickâ if youâre among the non-fansâwas its basis in the old concept of gamebooks.
With early examples going all the way back to the 1930s, the basic gamebook lives in print and uses numbered paragraphs or pages to let you Choose Your Own Adventure, as Bantam Booksâ 1980s and 1990s series was called. (Chooseco bought the trademark after Bantam allowed it to lapse.) Gamebooks generally utilize branching and/or role-playing to create plot options.
Digitally rendered screen iterations of the concept, of course, can generate a cooler, less engaged model, in which a viewer plays no role in a story but simply makes choices when prompted, as to one option or another in the progress of the story.
This is the case in Bandersnatch, which in David Slade and Charlie Brookerâs production puts forward a story of a programmer in 1984 who feels that heâs being made to make choices not his own. In at least one major branch of the story, it is the Netflix platform itself that appears to take on the role of a controlling entity âfrom the early 21st century,â the better to mess with the kidâs head. (The kid is played by Fionn Whitehead with what must have been a lot of patience required for the shoot.)
And what may have publishers watching this experiment on edge is the sheer breadth of response. The multiplicity of reactions has been almost as boggling as the often illogical-looking viewer choices in the show, and itâs hard to find reactions that arenât all for it or all against it.
Press Reactions: Game On? or Gimmick?
Fionn Whitehead looking for the next choice in âBandersnatch.â Image: Netflix/âBlack Mirrorâ
As James Gill writes this week at Radio Times, after such a siege of polarizing reactions, âNetflix has a choice to make. Should the streaming service continue to experiment with the choose your own adventure format?â And should publishers also explore this interactive format?
Kevin Fallon at The Daily Beast worked hard to get onto the fence, writing that the show is âa major accomplishment in storytellingâ but also âone of Black Mirrorâs lamest outings yet.â And where his appraisal might chill some bookish types who have hoped they might choose the make-more-shows-like-this option from books is in his observation, âIt turns out that when television starts to become a video game, the integrity of the story is muddied by the thrill of choice and control.â
Indeed, evoking the youth appeal of the original gamebooks, Fallon writes, âThe âthat thing you liked as a kid, but for adultsâ genre of entertainment tends to fall victim to its own gimmick, and thatâs certainly the case here, too.â
Of course, as in many discussions around such experimentation, itâs hard to keep the conversation focused on the formula, the format, the introduction of the new stop-and-start, choose-this, choose-that way of watching (which, in itself, some viewers have found annoying, too much work).
âIt turns out that when television starts to become a video game, the integrity of the story is muddied by the thrill of choice and control.âKevin Fallon, 'The Daily Beast'
Many say they didnât like the story, that the characters arenât engaging, and so onâall of which is perfectly legitimate criticism, but ironically may not be germane to the considerations a publisher brings to the table. A publisher, after all, would start, surely, with the belief that she or he had a good story, rich characterizations, engaging issues and developments.
The question, then, for the publishing house would be can this type of choose-your-own-viewing-experience be deployed to get the content in front of all those international eyeballs that a streaming platform offers. Or is the presumably safer option of looking for traditional film and/or television development the better course?
As one of our most seasoned observers, Janko Roettgers writes at Variety, âBandersnatch comes with five possible endings. Viewers who choose the quickest path, and decide against any do-overs, can make it through the film in around 40 minutes. The average viewing time is around 90 minutes. Altogether, there are over a trillion unique permutations of the story. However, this also includes relatively simple iterations that donât necessarily alter the story itself.â
Roettgers gets at several of the big challenges of the program that are important to understand in order to appreciate its sheer technical achievements. For example, at one point, the teamâs story outline simply crashed because Netflixâs branch manager tool had been overloaded. Pre-caching is used for two paths, and the filmmakers realized they had to keep the choices coming, he writes, or viewers would misplace their remote controls and not be ready for the next option.
But if, as the Black Mirror team members have said in interviews, the intent is to âadvance storytellingââand in other words, put aside the technical issues for a momentâa publisher is left with a very tricky choice. Do you pick up the phone and start talking up that backlist title you think could be a perfect candidate for development of this kind? Or dash back to something more traditional?
A graphic novel edition of âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ is scheduled to release in March
Publishers are watching a lot of the big hits of the streaming world come into being without a book behind them. Amazon Studiosâ award-winning The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel is one, with a third season in play. Created by Amy Sherman-Palladino, its 1950s aura might give you the sense of this being a show based on a book by someone whose name  youâll remember as soon as you hear it. And thatâs a dilemma for publishing houses: with so much content in production now, producers may be inclined to skip the search for a book and reach for something they can develop from scratch directly for the âstreamers,â as the big platforms are called.
What happens in the nether-reaches of big-streaming success? A graphic novel treatment of The Handmaidâs Tale is coming out from Penguin Random House/Nan Talese on March 26, with Renee Nault illustrating.
Is there really that much urgency to look for streaming development for books? Probably. As Paul Bond wrote Thursday (January 10) at The Hollywood Reporter, specialists are saying that âthe era of bundled streamers is near as households tire of paying an average $107 a month for cableâŠ
âAnd by the end of 2019,â he writes, âaudience demand for Netflix original programming will overtake that of its licensed titles, a December 13 report from Parrot Analytics and S&P Global Market Intelligence found.â
So it is that with a property still to find its way into the thicket of streaming screen development, the potential directions a publisher might go seem to be multiplying, quickly, and with a lot of good and bad choices to sort out. Just like in a gamebook.
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Season 4 Cate Tiernann Sweep pt1
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Backlist Booze Book Season 4
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The martini one is one of my fave drink pics Cyna ever took. It looks electric and alive!
Season 4 Cate Tiernann Sweep pt1
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