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TV renaissance emerges after streaming clash, says top series producer Spotnitz

The once disruptive relationship between streaming producers and national broadcasters is now inspiring a global renaissance in television drama, says a producer of such blockbuster series as the Medici saga.

Charles Onians (Agence France-Presse)
Florence, Italy
Sat, October 13, 2018

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TV renaissance emerges after streaming clash, says top series producer Spotnitz US writer and producer Frank Spotnitz poses for a photocall for TV series 'Masters of Florence' during the MIPTV, on April 4, 2016 on the French riviera city of Cannes. (AFP/Valery Hache)

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he once disruptive relationship between streaming producers like Netflix and national broadcasters is now inspiring a global renaissance in television drama,  says a producer of such blockbuster series as the Medici saga.

“This is the best time ever for television, period,” Frank Spotnitz told AFP TV at the Medici Palace in Florence, the birthplace of the Renaissance and the setting for his latest dramatic bonanza, Medici: the Magnificent

“Everywhere. it's the best time ever, there's this explosion in drama, not just in drama but in high-quality drama." he said in an interview this week. 

"But I think it's even more exciting in Europe and I think you could argue it's especially exciting in Italy,” added Spotnitz, who started off writing for  the 1990s series The X-Files and more recently created the hit Amazon series based on Philip K Dick’s book The Man in the High Castle.

The second Medici series, one episode of which was premiered to journalists in Florence on Wednesday, will be shown first by Italian state broadcaster RAI and then streamed by Netflix.

It is produced by Italy’s Lux Vide, France’s Altice and Spotnitz’s London-based Big Light Productions, an example of European cooperation, made by a largely Italian crew and Italian-British cast, shot in English and later to be dubbed in Italian.

The Medici series charting the power-plays, backstabbing, sexual intrigue and artistic environment of Renaissance Florence as Lorenzo De Medici (played by teen heartthrob Daniel Sharman) rises to power, climaxes with an attempt on Lorenzo’s life in the city’s cathedral at the hands of the rival Pozzi family, headed by Jacopo Pazzi played by Sean Bean.

Just as the spirit of competition and patronage against a background of sporadic bloodletting created the Renaissance, so also the often tense relationship between traditional state broadcasters and Internet streaming services is now bearing fruit.

“They’ve been disruptive… They've completely changed the way television is made, you're seeing that all over the world,” said Spotnitz, with traditional studios from Hollywood to Europe having to adapt quickly, and viewers the undisputed winners because of the choice available.

One of Spotnitz’s upcoming projects is Leonardo which portrays the Renaissance polymath as a gay outsider and is being produced by The Alliance, a co-production group of top European broadcasters RAI, France Televisions and Germany’s ZDF, created specifically earlier this year to combat streaming giants like Netflix.

Read also: AT&T to launch streaming service, latest to counter Netflix

- Drawing younger audiences -

“I don't think the traditional broadcasters need to be in conflict with streaming services and I actually think that far more often than not they work in partnership together,” said Spotnitz, noting that, at the end of the day, the rivals provide different products.

“Netflix and Amazon are coming into these home countries, especially Netflix right now, and making shows in French and German and Italian, which is great, and they're shows that the traditional broadcasters would never make,” he said.

“But for the day-to-day programming the traditional broadcasters are doing things that the streamers would never do, so I think it's important that they are valued and remain strong and continue to draw in younger audiences.”

The American producer, 57, has worked in Europe for eight years, living in Paris and commuting to work in London.

“The tricky part of being a producer in Europe… is that we don't have these giant media corporations based in Europe (Amazon, Netflix, Apple TV)... so you have to still cobble together financing from different sources,” he said.

“On the other hand you're still truly independent which is really a big plus.”

The first Medici series, starring Dustin Hoffman, was a huge success, particularly in Italy where it drew many young viewers away from their phones and tablets and back to the television.

“That has been the challenge for traditional broadcasters, not just in Europe but in the United States as well, the ageing of their audiences,” said Spotnitz.

“I think the thing they need to do is to keep doing shows… which will draw in the younger viewers so they watch television as well, not just streaming,” he said.

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