Tech12:29 · 1h ago

Netflix Struggles to Retain Viewers Beyond First Seasons of Hit Shows

WallaCenter
Translated & summarized from Walla by baba
The story · English

Netflix is facing a growing challenge in maintaining viewer interest beyond the initial seasons of its original series. According to Bloomberg's Lucas Shaw, data from Netflix reveals significant audience drop-offs in subsequent seasons of popular shows. For example, the anime "One Piece" lost over 30% of its viewers in its second season, "Nerves" saw a decline of more than 70%, and "Night Agent" dropped 50% in its second season and an additional 35% in its third. The live-action adaptation of "Avatar: The Last Airbender," a flagship title for Netflix in 2024, experienced a 60% decrease in viewers during its first week compared to the previous season, despite still ranking high in streaming charts.

While Netflix remains a market leader with more hits than most competitors and dominates many streaming viewership lists, the decline in sustained audience engagement is evident. In the first five months of 2026, Netflix had only two major hits: "His & Hers" and the fourth season of "Bridgerton." Independent analyses, including those by Entertainment Strategy Guy and What's on Netflix, confirm that many new and returning Netflix series struggle to hold audiences over time, even when they debut strongly.

This trend contrasts with traditional broadcast TV, where shows often grew their audience mid-run through weekly episodes and cultural momentum. Netflix’s binge-release model, where entire seasons drop at once, creates intense but short-lived buzz, making it difficult to build long-term viewer loyalty or anticipation for future seasons, especially with long gaps between them. Competitors like HBO Max have returned to weekly or hybrid release schedules, fostering ongoing conversations and cultural presence.

Netflix’s challenge is not just about individual series ratings but about viewer engagement overall. The company no longer reports subscriber numbers as before, so investors focus on how much time users spend watching and whether the content encourages continued subscription. Last year, Netflix’s total viewing time grew by less than 2%, suggesting that while subscriber numbers may rise, average viewing per user is stagnant or declining. Meanwhile, free or cheaper alternatives like YouTube and Roku are gaining ground.

Netflix is experimenting with live sports, podcasts, local collaborations, and a vast volume of new content to attract viewers, but these efforts have yet to significantly boost sustained engagement. The "second season curse" highlights a deeper issue: Netflix excels at attracting viewers to new content but struggles to create lasting emotional connections that keep audiences returning. Although Netflix has rebounded before with surprise hits, the company now faces a critical test of its ability to turn popular shows into enduring cultural phenomena.

Read the original at Walla
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