The Last Emperor (Payitaht: Abdülhamid) -- a Turkish TV series about the life of Abdül Hamid II, the 34th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire -- has drawn a broad international audience, especially in the Middle East and the Balkans.
Serdar Öğretici, the show's producer, spoke to Anadolu Agency as the series recently aired its 95th episode on state TV channel TRT1.
Öğretici said they decided to produce The Last Emperor after seeing the audience interest in the character Abdül Hamid II in Filinta.
"There are many documents and books [regarding the life and reign of Abdül Hamid II] available due to proximity of his reign to the current times and his reign's long duration, and also he was a visionary," he added.
Because it is a closer date to current time, and Sultan Abdülhamid Han reigned for a long time and he has a visionary, different style, we have many documents and books about him.
The hard-working directors and crew give Turkey an edge over the U.S. when it comes to filming TV series, according to Öğretici.
"We can create higher quality (content), because in one year they produce 10 episodes of 45-50 minutes, while we produce in 10 weeks episodes of much longer duration and spectacular […] we have more practice, our industry works very hard," the producer said.
"We are also keeping check on the credibility of the stories being told. A certain amount of fiction, of course, is unavoidable as we produce over 150 minutes of content per week. At the end of the day, we aren't filming documentaries; we are creating something watchable that doesn't contradict history," he added.