How do you think it is possible to save Lockwood and Co at this stage of cancellation? (I always pray for a miracle... Paramout + like gave me hope, but they took it away...)
Thanks for the question, Anon!
This week when I've heard "at this stage of cancellation", my knee-jerk response is the possibly uncharitable: "at just shy of a month?"
Netflix cancelled L&Co on May 12th, so Monday coming up will make a month. A month is, to be frank, a very quick time frame for a renewal. Excluding outliers like B99 (which may be the only show ever to have a next-day pickup), the one-month mark is generally when you see the fastest pickups start to happen (think Lucifer, a v quick pickup at a month).
That's the point that we're a weekend away from.
It feels like so much longer than that sometimes, mostly because Netflix waited nearly 5 months to cancel a show they never had any intention of renewing (for proof of this, see their cancelling of free publicity before the show even aired). It feels like we've been in the trenches for months, rather than just shy of a month.
Long answer short, we're approaching the point when shows have begun to be picked up, the one-month mark. One month is still quite quick, in all honestly, and many shows, including One Day At A Time (we hate to use ODAAT again as an example, but it's a great example) take months longer than that.
In other words, we think it's possible at this stage because it's been possible at this stage for the vast majority of cancelled-then-picked-up shows. We the mods are still as optimistic as we were in week 1, and at this stage we keep getting more crew interaction, more articles, and (most significantly) adding more viewers and fans every week.
LockNation is growing, not shrinking, and we intend to rise to meet it! As always, when you start to doubt, lean on us.
(As for Paramount+ twitter hiding replies/blocking a few people, it's honestly not a big deal. People running their live chat said they've gotten a lot of requests and have taken notice of our campaigning, and that's worth more than one poor beleaguered intern on twitter who might have liked something they weren't legally supposed to.)















