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I’m not against it completely, but you’ve got to admit that when they’re advertising the movie with a fart joke, it’s can be a bad sign. Teen Titans Go! to the Movies is the only exception I can think of offhand, and that trailer almost came across as though they were really making fun of movies that do that.

This. And some of them still don’t come to my area at all. I did get to see The Night is Short, Walk on Girl (which was amazing!), but Lu Over the Wall never came.

Yeah, I’m honestly baffled by the fact that people seem to have hated it so much even if they aren’t part of the group that’s against it because they were all women. I thought it was good. And I say that as someone who would have preferred an actual Ghostbusters III and is happy about the fact that they are doing it

The idea that it “cannot sustain a franchise” is ridiculous. Even if you didn’t personally like anything after the first movie, the general setup could absolutely sustain a franchise.

True, and it’s not too bad of a point (in fact, they actually do have a small amount of Machinima stuff on VRV already, and have for a while), but I’d be extremely surprised if they brought everything back. Practically nothing that was exclusive to the Fullscreen streaming service has been made available again ever

Honestly, that’s the only explanation I can think of that would make any sense.

I mean, if not for the extra ninety-nine there seemingly making it cost almost ten thousand dollars, that would actually be a great deal. I wish more stuff that’s originated on the Internet would get physical media releases.

Agreed for the most part, but not quite on the point where the company is “barely doing anything” with the IP. Depending on how little “barely doing anything” actually is, fan games might help to keep the IP in the spotlight for long enough for the IP holder to come around to making something with it again, or even

The “grand gesture” thing I could possibly see (though if they’ve already decided to do this, I honestly think it would be more likely that they’d scrap the brand entirely than that they’d do that), but everything else you’ve suggested could just as easily be done if the old content was still up. And even they wanted

I guarantee half the comments on any new channel that they make later will be nothing but complaints and people asking them to bring the old stuff back.

Anyone who cares about the name will already know what the old content was like, and now they’ve destroyed a good portion of the goodwill associated with it by doing this.

If you’re rebranding to that extent, then you might as well just change the name of the company. And at that point, you’re no longer associated with the old content, anyway, so you might as well keep it up.

“We are focused on creating new content with the Machinima team, which will be distributed on new channels to be announced in the coming months.”

It’s a random spreadsheet on the Internet. There’s seemingly no verification as to whether the people suggesting names for it are actually “women warning other women about abusers.” When it’s anonymous and there’s no risk whatsoever of making false accusations, the chances of false claims are obviously way higher than

Agreed to a point, but when it’s a spreadsheet on the Internet that anyone can anonymously submit names to, do you really think the odds of false accusations wouldn’t be higher than they normally would be under other circumstances? To be honest, I’m shocked that it isn’t being trolled already (or at least not in an

Not to mention that any fandom is going to have some people like this and blaming the people who aren’t (which is the vast majority) for not “calling it out” is completely unproductive.