Japanese Dramas and the Streaming Success Story That Wasn’t: How Industry Practices and IP Shape Japan’s Access to Global Streaming

I examine the relative absence of Japanese dramas in the global streaming landscape. Contrasting this to their 1990s and 2000s boom in East Asia, I argue that structural rather than cultural factors play a central role in this development. At present, a split exists between the domestic market for J...

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Main Author: David Humphrey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Michigan Publishing 2023-07-01
Series:Global Storytelling
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.publishing.umich.edu/gs/article/id/3668/
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author David Humphrey
author_facet David Humphrey
author_sort David Humphrey
collection DOAJ
description I examine the relative absence of Japanese dramas in the global streaming landscape. Contrasting this to their 1990s and 2000s boom in East Asia, I argue that structural rather than cultural factors play a central role in this development. At present, a split exists between the domestic market for Japanese dramas and the transnational one, where only a few, largely off-mainstream dramas find traction. Through a discussion of streaming’s prehistory and present in Japan, I contend that the split stems, in part, from three issues: television networks’ continued dominance, industry practices that favor advertising-based revenue models, and the adoption and impact of international intellectual property regimes on Japan’s media industry in general. I argue that these issues and the split that they inform stand to have significant consequences for Japanese dramas, as well as other media genres, in the emergent era of streaming. Although Japan’s media industry has largely been able to navigate the incursion of US-based streamers into its domestic market and maintain control there, it has become increasingly reliant on mostly US-based platforms to distribute its content abroad.
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spelling doaj-art-8b7f62d40e8d44c583281663c6e555a72025-08-20T01:52:41ZengMichigan PublishingGlobal Storytelling2769-49412023-07-013110.3998/gs.3668Japanese Dramas and the Streaming Success Story That Wasn’t: How Industry Practices and IP Shape Japan’s Access to Global StreamingDavid Humphrey0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7699-6903Linguistics, Languages, and Cultures, Michigan State UniversityI examine the relative absence of Japanese dramas in the global streaming landscape. Contrasting this to their 1990s and 2000s boom in East Asia, I argue that structural rather than cultural factors play a central role in this development. At present, a split exists between the domestic market for Japanese dramas and the transnational one, where only a few, largely off-mainstream dramas find traction. Through a discussion of streaming’s prehistory and present in Japan, I contend that the split stems, in part, from three issues: television networks’ continued dominance, industry practices that favor advertising-based revenue models, and the adoption and impact of international intellectual property regimes on Japan’s media industry in general. I argue that these issues and the split that they inform stand to have significant consequences for Japanese dramas, as well as other media genres, in the emergent era of streaming. Although Japan’s media industry has largely been able to navigate the incursion of US-based streamers into its domestic market and maintain control there, it has become increasingly reliant on mostly US-based platforms to distribute its content abroad.https://journals.publishing.umich.edu/gs/article/id/3668/streamingintellectual property (IP)industry studiesJapanese dramasJapanese media
spellingShingle David Humphrey
Japanese Dramas and the Streaming Success Story That Wasn’t: How Industry Practices and IP Shape Japan’s Access to Global Streaming
Global Storytelling
streaming
intellectual property (IP)
industry studies
Japanese dramas
Japanese media
title Japanese Dramas and the Streaming Success Story That Wasn’t: How Industry Practices and IP Shape Japan’s Access to Global Streaming
title_full Japanese Dramas and the Streaming Success Story That Wasn’t: How Industry Practices and IP Shape Japan’s Access to Global Streaming
title_fullStr Japanese Dramas and the Streaming Success Story That Wasn’t: How Industry Practices and IP Shape Japan’s Access to Global Streaming
title_full_unstemmed Japanese Dramas and the Streaming Success Story That Wasn’t: How Industry Practices and IP Shape Japan’s Access to Global Streaming
title_short Japanese Dramas and the Streaming Success Story That Wasn’t: How Industry Practices and IP Shape Japan’s Access to Global Streaming
title_sort japanese dramas and the streaming success story that wasn t how industry practices and ip shape japan s access to global streaming
topic streaming
intellectual property (IP)
industry studies
Japanese dramas
Japanese media
url https://journals.publishing.umich.edu/gs/article/id/3668/
work_keys_str_mv AT davidhumphrey japanesedramasandthestreamingsuccessstorythatwasnthowindustrypracticesandipshapejapansaccesstoglobalstreaming