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Tag: Hysteria

  • Peacock Needs More Hits. Could Halloween Horror Boost Its Catalog?

    Peacock Needs More Hits. Could Halloween Horror Boost Its Catalog?

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    When Peacock became the streaming hub for the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, it didn’t quite go to plan, with users complaining about limited viewing options and a glitchy interface. It was, to quote NBCUniversal Media Group chairman Mark Lazarus, a “big digital middle finger,” as well as a microcosm of Peacock’s early days: a streamer that had yet to find its footing. Fast-forward to the summer of 2024, and Peacock’s coverage of the Paris Olympics was a rousing success on multiple fronts. For one, you could watch any event on the platform in addition to Gold Zone, which was basically the Olympian equivalent of NFL RedZone. More importantly, Peacock’s viewership rose by one-third in July, the highest growth for any streaming service that month. By any measure, Peacock delivered on the big stage.

    But while the streamer mastered its Olympics coverage, it’s not the kind of thing that’ll necessarily keep subscribers around for the long haul. (Some shrewd users might pay for Peacock for the duration of the Olympics, cancel it, and repeat the cycle in four years’ time.) Instead, what’ll really give Peacock a foothold in the Streaming Wars is a consistent stream (pun unintended) of must-watch programming. Depending on what you’re looking for, Peacock already has something to offer. On the sports front, NFL fans have access to Sunday Night Football, while soccer obsessives like myself get their Premier League fix on the platform. (Soon, Peacock will add NBA coverage to its sports catalog, which, unfortunately, comes at the expense of Inside the NBA, a show so sacred it should be protected in the Constitution.) There’s also plenty of reality TV to savor, from the Bravoverse to buzzy originals like The Traitors. But there’s one area where Peacock continues to flounder: scripted series.

    With the notable exception of Poker Face, the Peabody- and Emmy-nominated crime comedy from Rian Johnson, Peacock hasn’t created many scripted dramas capable of cutting through the noise. Some of its prestige efforts have simply been bad (Apples Never Fall), premiered at a time when subscribers’ attention was pulled elsewhere (Those About to Die coincided with the Paris Olympics), or, worse yet, were pretty good but never found a sizable audience (The Resort). It’s harder than ever for original shows to command attention when they aren’t available on Netflix or attached to big-name IP, so this isn’t a Peacock-specific problem. Still, it doesn’t bode well for future series, however good, if their popularity on the service feels so capped.

    Could capitalizing on spooky season change things for the better? From classic Universal monster movies—and their modern remakes—to Blumhouse hits like Get Out and M3GAN, NBCUniversal has long been a reliable home for horror. (Not to mention, there are enough horror fanatics out there to support a niche streamer catering to their interests, so demand for this stuff exists.) If the majority of Peacock’s prestige swings aren’t connecting with audiences, perhaps genre projects can move the needle.

    In the past two weeks, Peacock has put that theory to the test by premiering two high-profile horror series, Teacup and Hysteria!, which scratch a different itch within the genre. In the James Wan–produced Teacup, a ranch in rural Georgia becomes enveloped in a mysterious, invisible force field that traps its unlucky inhabitants, who soon realize they aren’t alone in the woods. No less an authority than Stephen King has praised Teacup as “all killer, no filler.” Meanwhile, Hysteria! takes place in small-town Michigan at the height of the ’80s satanic panic, as a high school heavy metal band exploits the cultural moment to rebrand and gain more followers—even if it puts a target on their back. (The series also boasts an ’80s horror icon in The Evil Dead’s Bruce Campbell, who plays the town’s police chief investigating a teenage boy’s disappearance.)

    Between the two shows, Teacup is the one that holds plenty of promise. The mystery-box component of having characters trapped by sinister forces is a compelling hook, but the key to Teacup’s longevity is whether the biggest questions surrounding the series will deliver satisfying answers. Without giving too much away, I actually think Teacup would generate more buzz if audiences knew more about what iconic horror properties the show was aping and how they fit into the larger story, which is largely absent from the marketing. Long story short: If the idea of John Carpenter’s The Thing taking place on a rural farm sounds intriguing, Teacup is well worth a watch. (As one would expect given the Carpenter comp, Teacup boasts some gnarly body horror for all you sickos out there.)

    Of course, The Thing is a tantalizing premise for single-location horror, but that makes it a better fit for a feature film rather than an eight-episode season of television. Teacup also has plenty of room for improvement, namely that its setup is far more interesting than any of the one-dimensional characters, who are mostly elevated by a talented ensemble that includes Yvonne Strahovski, Chaske Spencer, Scott Speedman, and Rob Morgan. The good news is that, should Teacup be renewed, its second season promises to have much bigger aspirations—expanding its scope to something more in the vein of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. But a series like Teacup needs an engaged audience to go along for the ride; a mystery box might not have a future if nobody wants to unpack it in the first place.

    Whereas Teacup’s biggest problem is that the show’s most marketable elements are withheld from viewers, Hysteria! fully embraces its similarities to the pop culture properties that inspired it. With an emphasis on punk teens and how a community views them while satanic panic is in the air, Hysteria! feels like Stranger Things’ Eddie Munson subplot stretched out to the length of a series, especially when it’s implied there’s a demonic presence making its way into the town. (That said, the sinister vibes are less Upside Down and more upside-down crosses.)

    Unfortunately, Hysteria! can’t quite decide what type of show it wants to be; story lines alternate between teens forming a satanic cult as a marketing stunt for their heavy metal band (fun!), a religious zealot dialing up paranoia among the locals (one-note and tiresome), and a mother (played by Julie Bowen) who fears something evil has rooted itself in her home (underdeveloped). For a horror series, Hysteria! also commits the cardinal sin of never being all that scary, even when characters are supposedly possessed or buried alive in a satanic ritual. It’s all a bit too unfocused—mildly creepy in one scene, mildly amusing in the next, always unsure of itself. As a result, Hysteria! is resigned to a fate that’s arguably worse than simply being bad: It’s forgettable.

    Forgettable isn’t what Peacock needs out of an original series, especially when almost every streamer on the market can boast some brand-defining hits. For some subscribers, Peacock is already filling a need, whether it’s through an impressive collection of reality TV or live sports offerings unique to its platform. (As long as NBCUniversal holds the rights to the Premier League, I’ll remain a loyal user.) But if Peacock is going to maintain a steady level of interest amid so many options, it can’t just rely on special events like the Olympics that come and go in a flash. Peacock is still making some headway in the Streaming Wars, but when it comes to scripted series, the service could stand to ruffle more feathers.

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    Miles Surrey

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  • Hysteria! Interview: Peacock’s Satanic Panic Pop-Horror Series

    Hysteria! Interview: Peacock’s Satanic Panic Pop-Horror Series

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    Satanic Panic is having a resurgence in pop culture (see: Eddie Munson in Stranger Things), but did it ever really leave? You can certainly feel its lingering effects whenever social media is weaponized to spread misinformation. Hysteria! creator Matthew Scott Kane aimed to infuse that spirit into his new Peacock series; it’s set in a small Michigan town circa 1989, as heavy metal-loving high school kids clash with their conservative parents. There’s also a supernatural mystery afoot, to the consternation of the local sheriff played by cult movie legend Bruce Campbell.

    Ahead of Hysteria!‘s arrival just in time for a spooky-season binge, io9 talked to Kane and his fellow writer and executive producer David A. Goodwin to learn more about the show’s origins, intentions, riff-tastic soundtrack, and more.

    Cheryl Eddy, io9: Satanic Panic “nostalgia” has popped up in recent years—it was a prominent theme on Stranger Things, and there was a documentary on its origins that came out last year, Satan Wants You. How does Hysteria! approach Satanic Panic in a way that brings something new to the conversation?

    Matthew Scott Kane: I can’t speak to the documentary that came out … I tried to avoid all Satanic Panic-related media for the last year or so just to stay focused on the one I have in front of me. But I think really what we’re doing is we’re trying to make connections between then and now. When I first wrote this script back in 2019, there were a lot of anxieties on my mind that I think a lot of other people were feeling as well. Unfortunately, I think they’re still feeling them today, which is that there are a lot of ways right now for the truth to get mangled and disseminated, and for that dissemination to completely change a lot of people’s view of reality and what the world is around them. 

    So I wanted to kind of take that outlook and perspective of what’s going on right now and in the last several years and apply it back to the Satanic Panic, when I felt like something very similar was happening. This is a time where some people genuinely believed that the Smurfs and He-Man and all sorts of cartoon characters were trying to lure your kids into some kind of secret Satanic underground. We did it this way because it’s a lot more fun to go back and look at this period and talk about heavy metal and John Hughes movies and Video Nasties and all that sort of stuff. But that to me is where I think we stand out from other stuff. 

    David A. Goodman: I think that the core of the show—I came to the show after Matt had written the pilot, and what I really connected to and I think [how] it connects to Satanic Panic is this universality of a parent’s fear of what their kid is up to. Is my teenager going out into the night and getting into trouble? And the answer is yes. The fear of those parents, and how it manifests, ends up being something that’s not just [happening] during the Satanic Panic. Every generation goes through some version of this. And the Satanic Panic—there’s a bit of nostalgia for the ‘80s, the pre-internet age and pre-cell phones, and yet the world was changing. It ends up being a great way to experience that, and also add this level of horror and crime procedural and comedy.

    © Peacock

    io9: You mentioned heavy metal. Hysteria! was clearly made by people with a love of metal. What are your backgrounds in that department? Also, did you set out with a list of songs you knew you wanted to include on the soundtrack?

    Kane: To answer your first question, what my background is with metal is being gifted a lot of ‘80s metal albums for Christmas over the course of my childhood. Iron Maiden and Metallica and all that kind of stuff was definitely something that was just sort of given to me from my dad and my brother as well—he was two years older than me, so he was always the one that was two steps ahead of me. I was in a band in high school, but it would be an embarrassment to call us metal. We weren’t even close. 

    Getting to the music for the show, we had an incredible music supervisor named Jen Malone, who did the songs for Wednesday as well as Euphoria, as well as a number of other huge things. And a lot of what you hear on the show, I’d say about 75% of the songs were in the script … the idea was “We want to set this scene to this song for a reason.” And then the other 25% was a collaboration of, “We’re not sure what this moment needs.” Jen has a much deeper wealth of knowledge than either David or myself in terms of the music side of it. She could come in and give us buckets and buckets of great options for things that we never would have found. 

    Goodman: I have no background in metal. I had never listened to it before starting to work on this show, although I was surprised to discover that I did like some metal songs. I didn’t even know that they were called metal. Matt gave me a real primer on what I needed to listen to, and I’ve grown to love it. It has so much depth. I think that’s the other piece of it that gets dismissed so easily as superficial and nasty and dangerous. There’s so much depth to the music, to the lyrics of these great bands who do this music. This has been an enormously expansive creative experience for me as I’ve been exposed to something that I had dismissed. So that’s been my experience on the show.

    Hysteria Bruce
    © Peacock

    io9: Bruce Campbell plays a character that feels both totally suited to him, but also different than anything we’ve seen him do before—the level-headed town sheriff trying to roll with all the crazy stuff going on around him. How much of the role was tailored to Bruce once he came aboard? And is he the reason the show is set in Michigan? 

    Kane: He’s not the reason the show is set in Michigan, but him being from Michigan helps the connection. So much of the crew and myself, I grew up in Southeast Michigan. I looked up to Bruce and Sam Raimi my entire high school career, and Bruce was sent the pilot script while we were casting. We had written the first four episodes or so, and we sent him the pilot script and he responded really well to it and signed on board. But then very, very quickly after Bruce signed on the writers’ strike hit, so we didn’t know how this role was going to fit Bruce. But miraculously—or it shouldn’t be miraculously, he’s an amazing actor—he came in and he hit it out of the park in the first four episodes. And then after that, it was really fun to write for Bruce Campbell now that we knew who we were writing for. It was a blast. He’s a legend for a reason. He came in and gave us a great performance. 

    Goodman: Both Matt and I are such huge fans of his. I didn’t even quite believe it when the news came in that he was going to be in the show. And [he was] just such a pleasure to work with, a pleasure to write for, and [he] created a part that has a lot of levels to it. Genre actors, they have to do two jobs. They have to create their characters and then make them believable in a world that bends reality. And that’s his resume. 

    Hysteria! arrives on Peacock October 18.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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