Talk:Financial Interest and Syndication Rules

Page contents not supported in other languages.
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Paragraphs removed

I'm not really sure what these uncited paragraphs are trying so say, so I've removed them:

Fin-Syn, also known to some as the golden era of independent productions, is considered to be the deal breaker through networks and productions companies on the financial scale. The networks were no longer in greater control and the a higher chance at putting these production companies into deficit with their programs without asking for a higher percentage for syndicated revenues. Fin-syn was provided also because the production companies could not handle the non-major companies for the reason that they needed the funds before it was known whether or not a show would be a success for both ends.

Programs were now authorized to limit their number of hours for programming a week. It consumed of multiple financial norms, a variety of cost structure and aftermarket value, and opportunities for amateur production. Among this, Fin-Syn rules were creating some frustration between networks because competition was growing vastly however the audience got an upper hand for the reason that not just any show was/is created, there will be quality.

If anyone can figure them out and source them, feel free. —Eric S. Smith (talk) 18:35, 23 August 2011 (UTC)[reply]