The Firefly Effect: Difference between revisions

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Incidentally, many of these shows (including [[Trope Namers]] ''[[Firefly]]'') were on [[FOX]] — basically because Fox was likely to give the sort of show that gets this effect an initial run, but tended to be too Nielsen-sensitive to be patient. In the 2010s FOX has been experimenting to test the nature of this effect, as evidenced by ''[[Fringe]]'' (which seems to have escaped this trope, beginning its fifth season in the fall of 2012) and ''[[Dollhouse]]'' (if [[The Firefly Effect]] can apply to a show that has run for more than one season, then ''[[Dollhouse]]'' is it).
 
The rise of Streaming services like [[Hulu]], [[Netflix]] and Amazon Prime had deprecated but not totally eliminated this effect. For one side, streaming services tend to order full seasons and then release them in one go, making people feel more confident on invest themselves on series, fully confident that they will not be cancelled mid season. On the other side,there is equally probable that these series end not renewed for new seasons or even eventually removed from the service for lack of viewers.
 
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* For a while, people dreaded whenever [[Joss Whedon]] was given a media project on fear. ergo why people was surprised ''[[Dollhouse]]'' managed to get a second season.
* The Netflix Marvel series like ''[[Jessica Jones]]'', ''[[Daredevil]]'' and the adaptation of ''[[The Defenders]]'' suffered on public intewrest as their seasons went and people realized that the characters were not going to be incorporated to the main [[Marvel Cinematic Universe|MCU]] as originally promised, thus lessening viewersengagement.
 
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