Animation Industry Downturn: Why It’s Happening Now

It’s been a weird year in 2025 – we have seen the animation industry dramatically shift from the busiest boom time we have ever had in TV animation to an absolute ghost town where it feels like nothing is in production.  Not many shows are getting pickups or greenlights at any of the studios, so it’s not localized (it’s everywhere).  

Lots of our animation friends are out of work, burning through their savings – some of them are getting ready to find other temporary jobs or even leave the industry entirely.  It’s obviously bad out there. 

Interns will ask me for advice as they prepare to enter the marketplace in this climate – they feel very apprehensive (and for good reason).  My response is to talk through the downturn, why it exists, when it will change, and what to do in the meantime.

Unfortunately, this situation feels like a lot of other downturns we have seen over the years in our industry.  Every time we have one, it feels horrible, and lots of people get a bit negative – kind of like when there is a big stock market downturn and everyone sells off their stocks in a rush of fear.  It’s hard to keep calm and everyone forgets how bad it was last time we went through something like this.

So that is number one.  We have gone through this before.  Downturns are part of the cycle of this business.

I won’t pretend like this isn’t the worst – it may be the biggest swing we have ever seen in terms of going from massive amounts of work to almost no work.  Many studios are just not picking up shows or greenlighting at the cadence that we have seen historically.

Why is there no work?

Well it’s probably a complicated stew of causes that are all colliding at the same time.  First off, we had the strikes – that pretty much put everything on hold (and caused some shows to get cancelled).  A side effect after the strikes is the costs of producing shows due to new union agreements went up significantly – those are big negotiated increases to rates and fringes across all unions, not just the ones that struck.  That means shows are now more expensive to produce.

The second factor on why we are seeing the downturn: studios decided to change business models and focus on profitability in streaming thus ending the ‘streaming wars’.  That means buying a lot less product (despite a perceived ‘unlimited’ inventory on streaming) and being careful in how and what is bought.  They are also now being much more strategic with launches and airdates, much more similar to traditional linear broadcast / cable.  

The final big factor is the current era of mergers and streamers.  These are two big categories disrupting the old “traditional” entertainment model.  These super mergers and acquisitions mean re-evaluating all business fronts and finding “efficiencies” to increase profits.    Simultaneously there is scaling back investments in old cable / dish channels where carriage fees are becoming less profitable and combining departments which removes jobs and head counts. 

The second factor is the new disruptor on the block – trying to figure out how to capture streamer (Youtube / TikTok / Twitch) subscribers.  How do you keep subscription streaming services like Hulu and Netflix from becoming the next cable / dish?

If you are following, shows are now more expensive and studios are being much more cautious because of a new business model and competitive landscape.  That recipe leads to taking less risks and going for known IPs and shows that are ‘safe’ bets.

When will there be more work?

So this all sounds quite terrible, when are we going to be on the other side of this / when will things go back to ‘normal’? 

Let’s start off by saying, we will very likely not be going back to the ‘normal’ of the giant boom era we just experienced.  It was wild but certainly not sustainable and definitely not profitable.  We are now in the conservative era of smaller / tighter budgets and schedules. 

We are starting to see a few projects getting picked up at the end of the year, which is a great indicator.  There was also an uptick in live action projects in the middle of 2025, and oftentimes animation tends to have a delayed effect of what we see on the live action side, which could be another positive indicator.  

Given what we have seen so far, it could also mean we see a few other projects start up before everything shuts down for the holidays.  Hopefully this means we should see more greenlights and pickups coming back in Q1 2026.  

What do we do in the meantime? 

It’s time to go through the list of usual hiatus suspects.  It’s not exciting, but being productive in the downtime is good.  That means working on our portfolio / website / resume / reel / samples.  Go take a class that we have been procrastinating on.  Work on that personal project.  Say hi to some friends and reconnect / network.  All these things feel like intangibles, but they make a positive difference in our careers.

To wrap up – we as an industry have gone through rough spots like this before and we will inevitably go through them again.  They are always tough to experience in the moment, but we always find a way to get through them.  Help support your friends, ask for help, and hang in there.  We’ll get through it together.

Mating Season Netflix Announced

It always feels a little silly when you work on NDA projects – you can’t really talk too much about what you’re working on, but this show was announced officially months ago so … here’s what I’m working on these days – it’s a new Netflix primetime animated sitcom from the creators of Big Mouth called Mating Season! This show is about animals telling their stories about friendship, love, relationships and sex.

We got to work with lots of our friends from Big Mouth – producing the show with Brutus Pink out of Titmouse again and it’s been a fantastic production so far. I’ll post more about the show later as more details get released – but for now, that’s what we have been working on!

Here’s the press release from Variety on the announcement:

Netflix Orders Adult Animated Comedy ‘Mating Season’ From ‘Big Mouth’ Team

Big Mouth – The Last Table Read

The writing team for Big Mouth conducts table reads to evaluate scripts with a live audience. For season 8’s final episode, Netflix hosted a celebratory event with cast and crew, marking a shift from remote reads due to COVID-19. The event captured the chemistry of the cast, resulting in a memorable behind-the-scenes video release.

One of the things we do as part of our writing production on Big Mouth is table reads – a process where we all get together and the talent and writers to do a real time read through of the script.  Many primetime adult comedy animated sitcoms do this exercise – one that is labor intensive and expensive, but typically worth it.  This is a good way to pressure test the script and see what’s working and what isn’t with a live audience.

For Big Mouth season 8, to celebrate the final episode table read, Netflix put together a big internal event at the Netflix animation studio with a large audience where we invited many more people than a normal table – family, friends and lots of people who had worked on the show over the years.  Even though this was back in 2024, the majority of our table reads from 2020-2024 had actually been remote / zoom tables since Covid.  Something we initially thought would be temporary, ended up being over 50 zoom tables!  Ending this show with a giant table read was a fantastic celebration for the cast, crew and Netflix.

In many table reads, it’s difficult to gather all the cast (or even the majority of them) for any given episode – everyone is off working other projects, busy shooting and you are doing these table reads usually twice a month.  When that happens, you have other talent or (more often) writers fill in the roles for any missing talent.  This being a big event, we managed to secure most of the talent for the episode and it’s amazing to see all those actors in one place!

Some of what you get to see with a live table read is the cast interacting with each other, messing around and enjoying the script.  I think everyone there knew how special this moment was – there was a kind of magic in the air.  It’s fun to watch this and see the actors riffing off each other and doing improv – we try to capture as much of that chemistry as possible in the record and hopefully it comes through in the final product.

I remember seeing them having cameras set up and filming the table read, but we weren’t sure what was ever going to be done with the footage.  Here we are over a year later and they released a video of the table read to the public as part of the promotion for the final season.

It’s a cool behind the scenes look at what was a very special event and something that most people would never get a chance to see, so I’m glad it’s out in the wild for everyone to watch.  

If you do end up watching the table read, you’ll get to see a peak behind the curtain at the beginning as Mark Levin (one of the creators of the show) does an intro to the table and talks about the history of the show along with some funny stories about executive notes and cut scenes that couldn’t make it into the series.

Also a nice article from Variety here about the last table read.

LDR – How Zeke Got Religion

Time to throw down a plug for the new Love Death & Robots on Netflix (specifically THIS short: How Zeke Got Religion) – it is one gorgeous piece of animation. I started going through the new LDR, but went straight to Zeke first, since I have friends who put their blood and sweat (and maybe some tears) into it.

If you are not familiar, no LDR short is easy to produce – the standards are always extremely high, things running hot and fast. These things are tough to make, so I have lots of respect for the teams that go through the gauntlet to get em done.

This LDR short, Zeke, has such beautiful shot choices, editing, animation and art direction. It’s got it all across the board – just well blended, solid filmmaking. It’s one of those shorts that you can pick any frame, any screenshot and it’s like its own piece of art. The amount of work that went into this is crazy.

Heads up to anyone squeamish – Like many of the LDR shorts, maybe don’t watch if you don’t like your animation on the graphic / gore side of the spectrum (like eyeballs popping out of heads / crushed skulls kinda stuff). But boy, do they make dismemberment look good!

Big props (B17 pun unintended) to Diego, Gigi and Riley – you guys killed it. This is one fantastic masterwork that reminds me of why we work so hard to make animation in the first place. Go watch the new LDR on Netflix and check out Zeke – it’s killer stuff!

Big Mouth Season 8 Dropped!

Here we are – at the end of a very gross era, Big Mouth season 8 (our final season) has dropped on Netflix this week! Go watch a few episodes (or all of em) and enjoy all the nonsense we have been tinkering on for the last 2 years.

Unlike most other primetime series, our characters actually age and change, and this season our characters got a little bit older and finally get to high school. I won’t spoil any surprises here, so you’ll have to see for yourself what changes happen this season with Andrew and Nick (and Missy) going to different schools.

This was also one of the most challenging seasons in some ways – we started this one way back in March 2023 and then almost immediately got put on hold because of the strikes. Our production luckily still had work finishing post on season 7 while the strikes were going on (and I ended up producing a pilot for Netflix around that time too since things were slow).

But fast forward to May 2025, and we have a season 8 drop on Netflix! I am very proud of this season and grateful for the fantastic team that put in so much dedicated work to bring it to life. It’s a beautifully animated close to the longest running series on Netflix and a show that means so much to a lot of fans out there.

And if you aren’t totally caught up on prior seasons of Big Mouth, you can still jump right in and be fine. Even though it’s somewhat serialized, you can pop in anywhere and enjoy the ride. Thank you to Netflix, the EPs, Titmouse, to the crew, and to our amazing fans for an incredible NINE year run with eight amazing seasons!

Human Resources Season 2 Trailer

Giving a shout out for the Human Resources season 2 trailer if you haven’t already seen it. It’s the Big Mouth spinoff show that seemingly no one knows about!

We worked on this show in-between / on top of seasons of Big Mouth, which made for a crazy schedule, but it also gave a lot of our team year round employment, which was awesome. I don’t think we could have asked for a better team than the crew that worked on this show.

Season comes out June 9! Very proud to have worked on this.

Big Mouth Season 6

Now that Big Mouth 6 has been out for a few weeks, I wanted to post and send out some thank you’s to the fantastic crew that built yet another amazing season.

This is actually the first Big Mouth season that we made 100% remotely (not in person / in the studio at all). Hard to believe you can make an animated series fully remote with everyone in different places. It’s a weird thing to hire people and work with them for a year and never even meet in person! We started this one back in January 2021, everyone still in their homes…

I remember Big Mouth 6 was a nice “break” for the crew. After us figuring out and producing the Human Resources season 1 episodes (which tended to be all big, filled with lots of new characters and locations) the crew was beatup and tired! Not only was it the work of figuring out a new show but it was also a much more complex series. When they came back to Big Mouth S6 – they already knew all these characters and what to do with them. It was returning to an old friend. No one ever thought Big Mouth was easy but it definitely felt a little easier compared to Human Resources when we got back into it.

Ok on to some appreciation for the many people who make this …

Big Gratitoad to all of the EPs – Mark, Jen, Andrew & Nick, writers team and Titmouse crew who put this together. Thank you Lioi, Rico & Andy, Henri, Bryan, Alex, Ross, Ybarra, Kelly, Pablo, Glenn (and stacks of other people who I won’t drag out a list a names here with). Shout out to our incredible design teams, board teams, dial editing, compositing, animatics, editorial, checking, timing, and production teams. These people make this show look good!

Thank you to all our partners at the studios in Korea, Konrad and the whole sound team at Margarita, our friends at Light Iron, our track team at Syncmagic, and all our record studios.

Appreciation for Chris, Shannon, Antonio and Ben for creating and running one of the best studios in the business where we can make this wild show. Lastly, thank you to all our partners and friends at Netflix – Moon, Porter, and the entire creative team, Mike K, Talar, Amy and the production team, David, Lauren and the post team, localization / globalization, marketing, and the army of everyone else at Netflix who helps put this thing out in the universe!

Thank you, thank you, thank you – everyone who works on this show – you make one of the best shows out there and we appreciate you all and the work you do to bring this thing to the fans year after year.

Animation News Last Month’s Wrap 10/6/22

Lots of news in the last month – did not include much of the Disney / D23 announcements (there were a ton). A couple unionizations, some layoffs, and a bunch of Justin Roiland projects. Here we go!

If you missed it, the Solar Opposites Halloween Special is up on Hulu…

Paloni Show! Halloween Special! set to stream on Hulu on 10/17
More Roiland stuff on Hulu! Should be good nonsense. Props to my friends who have been slammin n jammin on getting this out.

Production workers vote to join the Animation Union at Bento Box

Harley Quinn renewed for Season 4 with new showrunner (Sarah Peters)

Lightyear had a decent launch on streaming considering it was up against Stranger Things

Rango Director Gore Verbinski shops his Netflix feature around town

Pinocchio live action getting some mixed responses

King of the Hill not going to be at Fox
Sounds like it could very well find a home at one of the streamers, just won’t be airing on Fox

Pixar releasing their first longform series on Disney+ starring Will Forte
Wondering how this will look compared to their features – I’m sure it will be classic Pixar high quality stuff

More layoffs / restructuring at Netflix Animation

Rick and Morty Season 6 premiere getting some good numbers

Emoji Movie creating some competition for the Queen’s funeral

Disney Parks attractions first looks – Coco, Frozen, Moana, Zootopia, Villains
Lots of parks news and lots of new attractions based on Disney properties

Netflix debuts Entergalactic trailer and key art

Great cast for the new Andy Samberg Digman series at Comedy Central
Have some friends working on this as well over at Titmouse – looking forward to seeing it

Tooning Out The News Animators Vote to Unionize

Animation News Wrap 9/2/22

Here’s the cornucopia of animation trades news over the last month. Lots of HBO Max drama…

Emmys Individual Achievement Winners – Netflix almost swept it this year (lots of Arcane wins)
TV Academy Reveals Emmy Winners In Juried Categories

Good take from CNN on how Netflix is changing business models – this explanation is directly related to the changes at Netflix animation
Netflix is not in deep trouble. It’s becoming a media company

Dreamworks sets the Kung Fu Panda 4 Release Date (it’s March 8, 2024)

Love Death and Robots renewed for Season 4

Tubi orders Adult Animated Comedy Series from Julien Nitzberg about drug dealing bears – there’s not a ton of Tubi originals yet, so maybe they will start to have a presence in original animation

AMC shows off some ‘Pantheon’ trailer and key art finally – We have been making this at Titmouse and I haven’t seen much of it, so it’s cool to see how it’s turning out. Some definite Ghost in the Shell vibes.

Streaming views surpass cable for the first time (from Nielsen) – Everyone knew this was coming, so here we are at the crossroads where streaming is beginning to pass cable in scale

Ok, we have to talk about HBO Max here … lots of big changes this last month.

Lots of shows were to be pulled from HBO Max abruptly – 36 titles, with 20 titles being originals

Then we heard about more cuts from HBO Max – including a stack of Batman & WB projects, as well as the JJ Abrams Batman project

Cartoon Network creators then jumped in to blast Discovery’s decision (and handling) on removing these shows from HBO Max…
Fungies creator Stephen Neary “slams” HBO Max
Summer Camp Island creator Julia Potts reacts
Infinity Train creator Owen Dennis calls out HBO Max

So at least after all that, John Oliver called out HBO Max over pulling the series (no clip – not exactly surprising)

Ok that’s enough of that – I’m sure there will be more HBO Max stuff next time.

And closing this out on a lighter note – some footage of the lost American Sailor Moon pilot has been unearthed. It’s great and terrible in all the best ways.

Ok that’s it for this time. Stay frosty.

Animation News Weekly Wrap 7/31

Hi animation friends – trying a new thing this week where I collect some animation news stories from around the trades over the last week and plug it into this easy to quickie read format. Enjoy!

For the Rick and Morty fans – Adult Swim announced the premiere date for Season 6 (I’ll save you the click – it’s September 4)

GDT’s stop motion Pinnochio is looking magical – if you haven’t seen the trailer yet (it’s also below here and it looks incredible)

Good review on Deadline for DC League of Super Pets

And some early weekend BO results for DC League of Super Pets that look positive

And the power of the Minions keep going … Minions Rise of the Gru is the first animated film to pass the $300M mark during the Covid era

South Park is celebrating and doing a 25th anniversary pop up shop + experience that is touring the world! Hollywood date for the experience is set for August 20 (likely in that weird empty lot at Hollywood and Vine they use for pop ups / Halloween mazes)

Sad news – Paul Coker, Rankin/Bass Production Designer and MAD Magazine illustrator has passed away at 93. (Here’s a bonus link to a pinterest board of Coker illustrations)

I’m slightly biased and excited about this news for my friends – Brutus Pink (creators of Big Mouth and Human Resources) have renewed their deal with Netflix through 2026

That’s it for now. Have a great week everyone.