Speaking at the premiere for Skeleton Crew, Dave Filoni confirmed to Extra TV that he is currently writing the second season of Ahsoka. Filoni, Lucasfilm’s Chief Creative Officer and creator …
TV shows traditionally run from fall to spring with a short break for the holidays. They used to be 23 episodes. That's a third more content in total and running over at least twice as much time. I don't recall anyone thinking the regular TV schedule was oversaturating.
Regular TV schedule is fine if there is some sort of prolonged break afterwards.
My point is that while star wars content is generally enjoyable, less is definitely more and if they would instead produce an occasional movie or season, released every year or two, people would get a lot less fatigued. And it would give the time needed to produce actually compelling content instead of deeply mediocre b and c plots with a star wars coating.
But thats no good as a subscription selling point I suppose.
If by prolonged break you mean 3 month summer, that's less than the average of 4 months we get now.
Also as a subscriber, yes I want new things. I'm paying for new things. It doesn't need to be new Star Wars and Disney (in this case) has plenty of brands that they can offer me a wide variety of content, new content, every month (ish).
Now in terms of quality, you can produce multiple things. Mando/Ahsoka, that's Dave Filoni & Jon Favreau. Acolyte, that's Leslye Headland. Skeleton Crew, that's by Jon Watts & Christopher Ford. They're not putting all this work on one person. It's spread out. These people are given the time to produce good work.
To be clear I have plenty to criticize about the content we're getting. But I don't feel fatigue. I think we're getting the content people intended and I think we're getting it at a good pace.
The first two episodes of Ahsoka were a bit ponderous, but I think it really picked up after that.
Everyone hated The Acolyte, but I really thought it was pretty decent and creative. The usual contingent of "woke haters" make it difficult to separate legit criticism (and to be sure it's definitely not perfect) from the usual hate-fans. The bad guy was again the best part of the show (as it should be) but he was really only in a couple of episodes.
Most recent season of Mando was okay. Not as good as the first two but way better than Boba Fett.
Problem is, though, that some of the hate fans have some valid points for the wrong reasons.
For example, it does feel a lot like the writers are ticking boxes. They have the usual Star Wars tropes, but also the "diversity" check boxes. It feels very obvious that there's the orphan, here's the misunderstood genius, here's the queer character, here's the obvious callback to casual fans, etc. etc.
You'll have your haters for everything deemed woke, those are idiots, but having formulaic, not very organic stories isn't exactly great.
That's totally my point. The people who hate everything aren't wrong about some of the things, but you can't just listen to reviews and get a clear picture. Some of the stuff they complain about is valid and some isn't. So the shows are usually way better than they insist, but that's not to say they are great. I have yet to see anything in Star Wars that didn't deserve some criticism but is still mostly worth watching. TRoS and the holiday special are the only real exceptions but BoBF was also pretty bad.