When a brand new episode of AMC’s Interview With the Vampire aired the Sunday earlier than final, a specific kind of fuse was lit in on-line conversations across the present. The fifth installment of the second season, “Don’t Be Afraid, Simply Begin the Tape,” was an impeccably written and acted horror movie in miniature—the kind of factor you watch along with your mouth hanging open, earlier than pointing at your TV and saying, “Are you seeing this, too?!?!”
But when 1000’s took to social media to ask that very query, a lot of the commentary was underscored by confusion, even concern, that individuals have been, in reality, not seeing it, too—that they weren’t seeing Interview With the Vampire in any respect. For a present so good, many stated, it was felony that extra folks weren’t watching and discussing it, and that extra critics weren’t masking it. “That is one of the best present on TV proper now,” New York Occasions tradition reporter Kyle Buchanan wrote in one widely shared tweet. “I really feel gaslit that you simply’d all fairly discuss mid or unhealthy exhibits fairly than watch the golden commonplace!”
Some followers had already observed the diminished vital protection in comparison with the primary season, which was met with near-universal acclaim and earned the present and the performances of its lead actors, Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid, locations on many end-of-year best-of lists. If something, the present’s sophomore season had acquired an excellent greater proportion of glowing critiques, however the massive splashy occasion protection that different lauded exhibits typically obtain (and are receiving as we converse) was absent from notable mainstream retailers.
Plugged-in followers had additionally observed a drop in viewership from the primary season, no less than in keeping with publicly out there metrics, and prematurely of the June 9 episode, Slate revealed an article titled, “Interview With the Vampire Is the Best Show Almost Nobody Is Watching,” which laid out the these numbers plainly. Phrase began to unfold—particularly on up-to-the-minute platforms like X but in addition fanning out to locations like Reddit, TikTok, and even my home base, Tumblr, which is way extra prone to host gifsets, shitposts, or graduate-seminar-level analyses of the present than discussions of terrestrial tv rankings.
AMC had introduced IWTV’s second season earlier than the primary even aired, however midway by means of the second there hadn’t been a peep a couple of third—and with a story brewing about “one of the best present no one’s watching,” particularly within the wake of an episode that so many have been raving over, fan anxiousness began to ratchet up about its destiny. On X particularly, that groundswell shortly began to give attention to AMC’s advertising and marketing efforts—and followers’ accusations that the community wasn’t doing sufficient to advertise its personal present set off a firestorm that brewed for days. “The advertising and marketing selections AMC is doing with Interview With the Vampire is self harmful,” one fan wrote. Or, in the words of another: “So mad they bought me googling who’s head of promoting at AMC.”
There may be an enormous vary of explanation why a present in 2024—this one or some other—doesn’t have the attain it deserves; countless pixels have been spilled on streamer fatigue and fractured audiences prior to now few years. AMC, a darling of the prestige-TV-on-cable period, is in an particularly unusual place: Even when Interview’s first season was successful on its streaming service, AMC+, it was nonetheless held up as an example of a troubled business in transition. Two years and two Hollywood strikes later, the state of affairs is much more difficult. Because the business restructures and modifications who can watch what the place, a disconnect has emerged between what viewers like and what critics do. On the similar time, social media platforms—the loci of Twenty first-century phrase of mouth—proceed to implode, fracturing the dialog of an already dispersed viewers.