by hebitsukaiza » Tue Oct 21, 2008 5:28 pm
My thoughts on this are...
losing the show was a MAJOR revenue loss. Although the show may have been meant to promote CDs, the CDs weren't selling while the show was producing a real revenue stream from the commercial advertising that went along with it.
The majority of the women on this list have been, realisticly, irrelevant to the company for a good while now. As far as most would be concerned a lot of them weren't even in show business any longer. You might get some endorsement deals for a couple of them now and again, but it had little to nothing to do with the "Hello! Project" brand. But for the majority of the list, they were not churning out selling CDs, they were not making appearances outside of their concerts which were only breaking even.
Elder's Club was an attempt to rejuvenate these talents by hoping that people would go to see the old, classic Morning Musume and such-- it just didn't work out well (perhaps partially to do with that name choice!)
Since they already threw out their blurlesque-style Hello! Project group (but kept the members?), the only people on this list who had any reason to continue to exist as part of Hello! Project were Ongaku Gatas-- and their original point was to be a soccer team to promote Hello! Project, it was kind of bizarre that they were singing to begin with!
Of course, perhaps I have a bitter view on this as the only names on this list that I ever felt terribly attached to were Yaguchi and Konno and I made peace with them being laid off quite a while ago. Anyone else I really liked left the company ENTIRELY and was never part of this "elder club" thing or is still part of Morning Musume (and maybe 1 outside).
In effect, this is cutting down the roster and refocusing the Hello! Project brand back to the THINGS that made money for them in the past rather than the PEOPLE that were involved. The Ishikawa Rika and Yoshizawa Hitomi who were nationally recognized were very different people than those they have now become. Melon Kinebi was never important, Nakazawa and Yasuda spent more time in Morning Musume/Hello! Project being bashed about how they didn't belong there than they did being promoted as a key part (and I am sure their fans know different, but does the majority of the TV audience?)
Matsuura Aya imploded quite a while ago for reason that elude me, Maki and Miki already left the brand and while Nacchi might net some sales, it is not clear if association with the H!P brand is good for either. The same is true of Ishikawa Rika and Yoshizawa Hitomi-- while their names will always be associated with Morning Musume from a long time ago, a negative stigma became attached to the group while they were part of it (and in Rika's case, perhaps in a way BECAUSE of her presence).
Iida and Tsuji already have lives outside of this and don't need to be traveling the country on a pop star's schedule right now anyway.
All in all, outside of Gatas, this is effectively a 0-sum loss for the company and helps shrink the roster and brand down to a more managable size so they can focus on the areas they excelled in before-- otaku and children with their live action version of a goofball anime show.
So really, the death of having a television show is a much, much greater blow to the brand and the company than this is. This is making what was already technically true, officially so. There really isn't any difference between not giving someone any meaningful work for 2-5 years and transferring them out of the company.