The Ankler

Outpitch, Outplay, Outlast: The New Rules for Selling Reality TV

In a tighter, cheaper, louder market, agents say only the boldest ideas — and noisiest pitches — are breaking through

I write about TV from L.A. and host The Ankler podcast. I interviewed a top agent about the unscripted market now and wrote about what industry insiders expect from new Amazon TV head Peter Friedlander and the agency using an AI assistant. I’m elaine@theankler.com

If you had to guess the top-rated reality series of the 2024–2025 TV season, you’d probably say Love Is Blind, Beast Games or The Traitors.

Close — but the crown still belongs to the old guard.

Per Nielsen’s year-end tally, CBS’s Survivor and NBC’s The Voice tied for the No. 52 slot among all broadcast and streaming shows. That’s Survivor’s 48th season and The Voice’s 27th — a little like seeing someone’s grandpa win a “hottest bachelor” contest. The old guys have still got it.

In a market overflowing with new reality swings, it’s the legacy franchises that continue to outlast, outplay and outdraw the competition. They speak to something primal — a clean premise, emotional stakes, and a price tag networks can live with. Like I said last week in the first chapter of our unscripted TV sellers’ guide, which featured a ruthlessly candid chat with a top non-scripted agent, if you’ve managed to build a series or franchise that speaks to viewers’ primal desires — and isn’t too pricey to produce — you’ve struck gold.

But the real challenge for producers and agents now is figuring out what new ideas can break through when audiences already have too much to choose from.

So I talked to half a dozen top agents who rep talent, showrunners and production companies across reality, competition and docu-follow TV to get a read on what’s actually working in 2025 — and where the business is headed next.

And over the next two weeks, I’ll take a closer look at both brand-funded and sports-related unscripted programming, so make sure you’re a paid subscriber for all the latest. But first!

In today’s Series Business, I look at:

  • Why Netflix is the “gold standard” — and the opportunity as some of its hottest shows are “starting to show age”

  • The precise strategy required to make a sale now, and how reps work with producers to hone pitches that “make noise and clear the clutter”

  • Who calls the unscripted shots now at NBCU, FOX, Netflix, Amazon, Disney-owned ABC and Hulu and more

  • How social media stars like Secret Lives of Mormon Wives’ MomTokers have opened new lanes in follow-docs

  • Which broadcaster has its eye on developing more buzzy U.K. formats

  • The pricey star-centered format now a no-go at every platform

  • What reps are hoping to see from David Ellison at Paramount, especially with the cable nets, after hitting “a brick wall” with the previous regime

  • Which shows are working at which platforms

Don’t stop here

Unlock the full story — and the no-spin reporting Hollywood trusts

Already a subscriber?

Related Stories