Yeah, if it is two seasons then we'd need to do that. Thats why I think having periodic discussions rather than one at the end of the show might be useful for keeping people watching and engaged.
I have a few issues with the more periodic discussions. If someone has already watched the series we are watching they may have a harder time having a discussion because they have to make sure they don't give any info on later parts of the season. Another issue I have with that set-up is if the theme of the anime is something that needs the entire seasons completion, discussion may be difficult because again we don't have the full picture. I'm just a bit skeptical of having smaller discussion which may in turn weaken the content of the discussions.
Well, we still get that stronger discussion at the end once the whole thing is complete, but we also get to discuss how things progress to that point and possibly pick on some smaller details throughout that would get lost in one big discussion. I also voted for Shinsekai Yori, but Psycho-Pass is actually a good example of a show that frequent discussion could be meaningful for. There's a lot of stuff that happens that makes you think about that society and the pros and cons of something like Sybil, but they're not totally relevant to the overarching plot so they tend to get missed in discussions. And I guess rather than making another comment, I'll say that averaging around an episode a day is probably a decent pace. Like, if we discussed 6-7 episodes once a week it would take us two weeks to finish a 13 episode series and we'd have a decent amount to discuss at each point. Conveniently, 6-7 episodes in is frequently some sort of turning point in a show so something exciting will probably lie around those episodes.
If the discussion at the end is stronger why bother having the other discussions then? Even if we were to discuss smaller details you run the risk of discussing the details out of context without the completion of the entire series. The other thing is especially from that poll there are only four or five people that voted, and it is unsure whether those people will even discuss at all. I don't think this needs to be that complex of an endeavor when we only have a very small group of people watching, and probably less discussing to that depth.
Does every detail need to be in full context? That seems silly since it implies that you can't judge a show until you finish the whole thing, and you can't talk about what happened until you see what's going to happen. Just because the discussion at the end is stronger doesn't mean the others are meaningless. If I'm watching a show with someone each week, I'll frequently talk about every single episode with them, not just bottle the whole thing up till the end. And I'm not saying it needs to be complex. A discussion thread once a week is probably less complex for the participants than trying to discuss everything about a show after a month with no reminders or pacing. If there were two of us I would still say lumping everything into one thread weeks later is a bad idea.