For the third time in one year, a production company has made a television show about the Los Angeles Rams. NFL fans, welcome to Hollywood.

Ideas are often recycled in show business. Remakes are a huge motif of both new movie and new television programming pitches. Familiarity is a key way to drive a devoted audience. Plus, partnering with an NFL franchise is a great strategy to capitalize on an already engaged fanbase.

So that’s why Amazon likely decided on the Rams for their new season of All or Nothing.

New team. New city. New identity.#AllOrNothing: A Season with the Los Angeles #Rams. pic.twitter.com/Kci7PBEfDC — All or Nothing (@allornothingtv) March 31, 2017

The better question, however, is why anyone would want to think about the disastrous 2016 season.

It’s not like anyone forgot they fired their coach midseason and finished the year with twelve losses and just four wins. Plus, with new players and a new coaching staff, wouldn’t fans want to look forward and not in the rearview mirror?

This will be the third TV show about the Rams 4-12 season. They're screaming to you about their priorities. — TurfShowTimes (@TurfShowTimes) March 31, 2017

During the league meeting media availability earlier this week, new Rams coach Sean McVay spoke about the new identity the team is implementing:

“I think you’ve got a vision for the team and then you have a vision for each individual player within the framework of the team. We talk about this a lot, we’re trying to be a culture of we, not me. It’s always about the team and really, what’s going to help us establish that is our character and our communication. That’s football character and kind of that mental make-up.”

It’s not going out on a limb to say that fans would rather learn more about McVay, the youngest coach in NFL history, than rehash old memories of Jeff Fisher.

Wouldn’t new defensive coordinator Wade Phillips, a football veteran who also has an incredible Twitter presence, make for better television?

Related Rams defensive coordinator Wade Phillips has best Twitter in the NFL

Most Rams fans would rather learn about new players like Connor Barwin, Kayvon Webster, Andrew Whitworth and Robert Woods than see more clips of Benny Cunningham, T.J. McDonald and Brian Quick.

We may learn something new about the failed first year back in Los Angeles. In fact, we will almost definitely learn a lot of new facts about the team. But this doesn’t seem like productive news for the team.

If anything, it feels more like an unfortunate distraction for a team that has a desperate need to leave its past behind.