Brian Earl Spilner said:
It almost seems to be the norm at this point with all the major shows.
GoT
Westworld
Stranger Things
Better Call Saul
Silicon Valley
Any particular reason for this?
I mean with something like GoT (and even Westworld), I understand it. But for Silicon Valley? There is not much CGI, real locations, etc that would necessitate that.
It's obviously due to multiple factors, but if I had to distill it down to two, I'd say "quality" and "availability."
In terms of
quality, as has already been touched upon, it's really, really, really hard to produce 10 episodes a year at the level that even, say,
Better Call Saul does, a show with zero special effects. So multiply that times a hundred when you're talking about the scale of GoT or
Westworld. Even the most prolific movie directors can only average about one movie every other year. Now, try doing a TEN-HOUR movie EVERY year. And yes, in most cases, not all of the episodes are directed by the same person, but they ARE showrun by the same person, a task that is just as draining and time-consuming, if not more so. To that end, I would add "burnout" as a subcategory for all the reasons I've listen above. Sometimes these guys just need a break to recharge the batteries and/or come up with the next season's storyline.
As for
availability, all of these writers/directors/actors are trying to have careers in addition to the whatever shows they're currently working on. To wrangle the cast of
Westworld back together is a herculean effort in and of itself, and I'm sure one of the reasons they've switched gears so heavily in season three. But even the smallest of that bunch -
Silicon Valley - has an emerging movie star in Kumail Nanjiani, who's crazy busy with everything he's doing outside of that show. Also, I'm pretty sure Mike Judge just signed like a four-show deal with HBO, I think, and then Alec Berg, one of the other showrunners, ALSO showruns
Barry. And I'm sure he and HBO probably felt that it was more important to ride
Barry's season one success and get a second season out ASAP (which came out in less than a year after season two) than to get a sixth season of
Silicon Valley out the door; a show that, as much as I love it, is admittedly getting somewhat stale. But even this also goes back to "burnout" as some of the people just want and need to be creative on something else before returning to their "day job," or else the quality of that day job is going to suffer, and then we all lose.