Jake Johnson, one of the stars of Minx, has released a statement about the show's recent cancellation. In the statement, the actor says he hopes the show will find a new home to continue telling its story.
Minx is just the latest in a series of cancellations conducted by Warner Bros. Discovery. Unlike most of these shows, it was announced that Minx would be cancelled after it had already secured a renewal. The show, about a woman trying to run an erotic magazine for women in the '70s, was also removed from HBO Max. This was reportedly done so that Lionsgate Television, which produces the show, could find another streaming service willing to host it.
Johnson posted a message to Minx fans on his Instagram. "We’ve been removed from HBOMax but we’re still finishing the season. So thankfully they didn’t halt production. We’re about a week away from being finished shooting," his statement reads. "From what I am hearing S1 & S2 (and hopefully S3) will find a new home, the question is where." Johnson thanked fans for supporting the show and said the crew had done amazing work on the second season.
HBO Max has come under scrutiny for cancelling projects after they were nearly completed. For instance, Scoob! Holiday Haunt was completed but won't be released. Batgirl was also infamously cancelled after post-production was nearly finished. CEO David Zaslav has reportedly been cancelling projects like Minx to secure tax write-offs and increase Warner Bros. Discovery's profits.
It's not only smaller shows like Minx that have been removed from HBO Max. Westworld was cancelled after 4 seasons despite once being considered one of HBO's flagship series, and it had only one season to go before the series was completed. The series is now being removed from HBO Max's library entirely.
Even the DCEU seems to be undergoing some major changes. Wonder Woman 3 is not moving forward, despite the project being considered one of the safer releases on DC's release slate. Rumors have swirled about creatives being unhappy with the direction of HBO and HBO Max. This could present an issue with the network moving forward because if creatives become too weary of working with the network that cancels shows like Minx while they're in production, its status as the home of prestige television could be in danger.
Source: Jake Johnson/Instagram