‘Scandal’ creator Shonda Rhimes: Why I left ABC for Netflix

Shonda Rhimes is oh-so-ready for a new creative challenge.

For 15 years, the prolific writer and producer churned out hit after hit for ABC Studios — “Scandal,” “Grey’s Anatomy,” “How to Get Away with Murder,” to name a few — cementing her and Shondaland, her Los Angeles-based production company, as the choice purveyor of primetime dramas, rife with crackling dialogue and plot twists. Then in August, Rhimes dropped the biggest plot twist of them all: She was leaving the lucrative pastures of network television for Netflix (NFLX).

Rhimes sat down with Yahoo Finance in one of her first media interviews since the announcement. For the 47-year-old writer and executive producer, Netflix’s popular streaming service offered the tantalizing opportunity to try new things creatively beyond the “soapy, twist-heavy dramas” she’s known for — a trademark she suggested was partly due to the constraints imposed by network television. She also says Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos saw eye-to-eye on the kinds of content she’d like to develop moving forward.

“On Netflix, I think, there’s not necessarily a sense of, ‘You have to make a particular kind of show for a particular kind of branded audience,'” ‘Scandal’ creator Shonda Rhimes told Yahoo Finance.
“On Netflix, I think, there’s not necessarily a sense of, ‘You have to make a particular kind of show for a particular kind of branded audience,'” ‘Scandal’ creator Shonda Rhimes told Yahoo Finance.

“There is this idea that when you work on network television, well, every network has a brand, kind of,” Rhimes told Yahoo Finance at Intuit’s (INTU) fourth-annual QuickBooks Connect conference, held in San Jose, California. “There’s a certain kind of show. And I feel like people thought — or think — that the Shondaland brand is a very specific kind of show that we make. And that is a show that we make because we are on ABC for our ABC audience, which I love and I’m proud of, and it’s a very big audience, and it’s worked quite well for us.”

Rhimes admitted she’s excited to develop new material on Netflix that longtime Shondaland fans may be surprised by. Episodes in a Netflix original series, for instance, don’t need to have a certain structure, or “construct,” to them, she points out. Creators have carte blanche to do anything they set their minds (and vast productions) to.

“On Netflix, I think, there’s not necessarily a sense of, ‘You have to make a particular kind of show for a particular kind of branded audience,” Rhimes added. “The brand of Netflix is just creativity. And that’s exciting: the idea that I get to write in whatever manner I want to write, in whatever form I want to write because I want to write it, versus having to really be savvy about the constraints of the time period. You have a time slot, so there are certain stories you can tell at eight o’clock or at nine o’clock or at 10 o’clock. You know what audience is coming to you, so you know what your advertisers are looking for. None of that is a worry in streaming.”