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Streaming service wars news and trends
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Warner Bros’ “Wonder Woman 1984” opened Christmas weekend to $16.7 million at the US box office—far behind the $103 million opening weekend of the first "Wonder Woman" film, but still the highest-grossing theatrical debut since the pandemic began. Regardless, WarnerMedia has made it clear that theatrical releases aren’t its priority: "WW84" is the first movie to debut under WarnerMedia’s new dual release structure, where films are released simultaneously in theaters and on HBO Max (free for subscribers).

 

WarnerMedia’s focus on HBO Max seems to have paid off. A company press release said that “nearly half” of the platform’s 12.6 million retail subscribers watched the movie on Christmas Day. (Retail subscribers are defined as those who subscribe directly to HBO Max, rather than getting it bundled for free via another service.) This success bodes well for the 16 blockbusters slated to be simultaneously released in 2021. That, along with the fact that HBO Max has finally become available on Amazon Fire TV and Roku, will likely help the company grow its subscribers strongly in 2021, after its rocky debut earlier this year.

 

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For those that have purchased Disney movies and collect up Disney Insider reward points, Disney Plus is now being offered with a 6-month FREE subscription for just 2,000 points.

DisneyPlus201231.JPG.d1b8090032780bd1062cfc778abfe48a.JPG

Much better than all those posters and color books Disney posts there to burn up points.

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I got in on a great one year sub deal with HBOMAX a while ago but when the year is up, not sure if I’ll continue at 15 a month. Disney costs me less than 6 bucks a month when I pay by the year and that’s a great value. Until they inevitably raise their rates. Netflix is free through my T-Mobile plan and I get AppleTV+ as part of my subscription bundle. Apple has very little content now but the future looks good starting with them acquiring/stealing the third series following Band of Brothers and The Pacific from HBO. 

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This movie looks ridiculous but my daughter really wanted to see it. Couldn’t find it on any streaming service so I bit the bullet and sent it to her through iTunes. Was still cheaper than Mulan. I should have waited as it will probably pop up on HBO or Netflix before long.

 

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I just finished it. Was intrigued for the first 30 minutes and then the writing went off the rails. Like a child wrote it. I looked into it and John Landis’s son wrote the story and after accusations of sexual misconduct, the director Roseanne Liang did a rewrite. Don’t know if the original version was any better but we will never know.

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Good Lord! Someone created yet another Frankenstein.

Discovery+ Launches In The USA

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The new year is kicking off with the launch of a new streaming service — Discovery+,  which offers programming from Discovery’s networks including HGTV, Food Network, TLC, ID, OWN, Travel Channel, Discovery Channel and Animal Planet.

 

Discovery+ actually launched in the United Kingdom and Ireland last fall through a deal with Sky, but the company is treating today as the big launch, as the service becomes available in the United States.

 

Despite the crowded field of competing streaming services (including the similarly named Disney+, ESPN+, Apple TV+ and upcoming Paramount+), Discovery+ is aiming to stand out with a focus on documentary and reality content — it bills itself as “the definitive nonfiction, real-life subscription streaming service.”

 

Plus, it’s priced at just $4.99 per month, or $6.99 if you want to go ad-free. And it will be free to some Verizon  and Vodafone subscribers. (Verizon owns TechCrunch.)

 

At launch, original shows available on Discovery+ include several “90 Day Fiancé” spinoffs, “Amy Schumer Learns to Cook: Uncensored,” “Bobby and Giada in Italy” with Bobby Flay, “House Hunters: Comedians on Couches Unfiltered” (in which comedians watch classic episodes of “House Hunters”), the nature documentary “Mysterious Planet,” “Judi Dench’s Wild Borneo Adventure and a whole lineup of preview episodes for the upcoming Magnolia Network.

 

Discovery says the service includes more than 55,000 total episodes, with plans to launch 1,000 hours of original content in the first year. And the content goes beyond Discovery-owned brands, with nature documentaries from the BBC and programming from A&E, The History Channel and Lifetime.

 

Discovery+ is available on Amazon Fire TV devices, iOS devices, Google TV/Android TV/Chromecast devices, Microsoft Xbox One and Series S/X, Roku and Samsung smart TVs (2017 and later models). The plan is to launch in 25 markets this year, including the Nordics, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain, as well as parts of Latin America and Asia.

 

“As we go live with Discovery+ today in the U.S., we are thrilled to be working with best-in-class partners to make it available everywhere our fans are,” said Discovery President and CEO David Zaslav in a statement. “Our ambition is simple: Bring consumers the definitive and most complete destination for real-life entertainment at a price point that makes this the perfect companion for every household’s streaming and TV portfolio. There is nothing like it in the market today.”

 

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20 minutes ago, media_junkie said:

Well I can say with 100% certainty that "Discovery+" is not a streaming service I'll be worried about getting.  

 

5 minutes ago, bentbryan said:

+1  

Disney has a bunch of stuff in that wheelhouse anyway 

Haters! But you'll come around when Captain Discovery & the Discovery Commandos becomes a reality. :sumo:

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41 minutes ago, Bosco685 said:

 

Haters! But you'll come around when Captain Discovery & the Discovery Commandos becomes a reality. :sumo:

Anything with commandos and I’m in. 
 

Errr that sounded weird. 

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After a year in which COVID-19 upended Hollywood, 2021 looms with a big question mark for home entertainment executives.

 

The pandemic accelerated the growth of streaming and made premium video-on-demand (PVOD) an economic and logistical necessity due to the closure of movie theaters. And despite the dearth of fresh theatrical product, the transactional end of the home entertainment business flourished.

 

In 2020, films that would have been major theatrical releases — including Disney’s live-action “Mulan,” Universal/DreamWorks Animation’s “Trolls World Tour” and Warner Bros. “Scoob!” — hit PVOD first before moving to other windows. Studios made the most of captive home audiences by seamlessly transitioning from PVOD to transactional VOD, and at the same time dug into their vaults and came up with creative ways to market catalog titles.

 

“COVID didn’t introduce new trends to entertainment, but it did accelerate what was already happening,” says Jim Wuthrich, president of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment.

 

With vaccine rollouts underway, the big question is when things will return to normal — or whether the changes have been so pronounced, so significant, that Hollywood will never return to its old ways. Whichever way the wind blows, industry execs say, the strides made by PVOD are unlikely to be reversed even once most of the country has been vaccinated and it is safe for theaters everywhere to reopen.

 

“COVID was clearly an accelerant to move more entertainment consumption to the home,” says Galen Smith, CEO of Redbox. “Event films will still be big theatrically, but there will be a push to accelerate consumers’ abilities to watch at home through PVOD and shorter overall windows — both digitally and on disc.”

 

The Redbox chief adds, “We don’t believe the theatrical model will return exactly as it existed prior to COVID. The evolution over the last year benefited consumers and content creators through the introduction of new products — and a number of them, like PVOD, are here to stay. PVOD has been a model the studios have wanted to add for many years, and I expect to see more PVOD releases in 2021. It’s another way to provide customers choice, which is good for them as well as for the industry.”

 

The mantra for home entertainment executives is to keep their fingers on the pulse of the industry, and on the consumer, and be prepared for more changes as well as more uncertainty.

 

“What we saw in 2020 was an anomaly, but it also demonstrated our ability to pivot and continue to monetize our content through the distribution strategies and platforms that are available to us and that make the most sense,” says Bob Buchi, president of worldwide home entertainment for Paramount Pictures. “All of these options — including traditional theatrical distribution — will continue to coexist in a post-pandemic world.”

 

Amy Jo Smith, president and CEO of DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group, says the industry needs to stop framing things as “normal,” whether that’s “‘back to normal’ or ‘a new normal.’”

 

“Our business is currently in an accelerated state of evolution, as the pandemic created the perfect environment for overdue experimentation with distribution models,” she says. “Many studios are working within this unique opportunity to offer consumers new ways to consume content at earlier points in its lifecycle, and consumers have embraced the change. There is no replacement for the experience of seeing a movie in a state-of-the-art theater, but we expect content owners will continue to meet entertainment lovers wherever it is that they choose to consume new content.”

 

Dametra Johnson-Marletti, corporate VP, Microsoft Digital Stores Category Management, agrees. “I think many consumers will be excited to return to the theaters when the COVID risk is nearer to zero,” she says. “That said, I also think that PVOD is here to stay, particularly for titles that are not forecasted to be box-office blockbusters and for a certain segment of viewers.”

 

Similarly, streaming is likely to enjoy continued high growth rates. Recent research from NPD Group shows that the average U.S. consumer now relies on seven different streaming video services, up from five in April, notes DEG’s Smith. “This is another case of the pandemic accelerating a trend that was already underway,” she says. “It’s great that consumers have so many streaming options at different price points and offering different content.” She adds that DEG’s D2C Alliance Steering Committee believes that “as consumers continue to customize their entertainment experience, subscription and ad-supported services will continue robust growth, as will large, mainstream services and those that offer more specialized content.”

 

The transactional end of the home entertainment business is perhaps the most fluid heading into 2021. Against all odds, the business didn’t collapse when the theatrical business did. But that doesn’t mean there weren’t some dicey moments — nor will it be all smooth sailing ahead.

 

Microsoft’s Movies & TV transactional service thrives mostly on new blockbuster content, Johnson-Marletti says. “With new production shuttered for much of the year, and top content releases pushed to 2021, our TVOD business certainly felt some headwinds,” she says. “Our team had to become very creative and scrappy as they worked with our studio partners to find unique avenues for growth. We had a multipart strategy that included shifting more focus to our catalog by bringing forward a lot of the fan favorite and classics for consumers to find more easily. We also focused on building great thematic and seasonal collections.”

 

The outlook for TVOD in the first two quarters of 2021 looks to be a continuation of last year’s trends, “with some positive light starting to emerge in the late April to early May timeframe,” says Johnson-Marletti.

 

The pervasiveness of vaccine adoption, the openness of the world (as it pertains to theaters) and new windows and rollouts will all be key inputs to how the back half of 2021 plays out, she says. “I definitely think the approach [we took in 2020] represents a viable set of tactics that will continue to serve our customers, partners and business well in the new year,” Johnson-Marletti says.

 

With the continued erosion of disc sales in 2020 — at the nine-month mark, combined consumer spending on Blu-ray discs and DVDs was down nearly 23% from the prior year, to a new low of $1.8 billion, according to DEG — digital retailers will likely continue to stress the collectability of digital movie sales, as they did with catalog product during 2020.

 

“It may not be widely known or understood, but in many ways digital movie collections offer a level of security, portability and confidence that discs cannot,” Microsoft’s Johnson-Marletti says. “Your entire library can be accessed from almost any device; it travels with you seamlessly, and you never have to worry about damaged or lost discs. To the purest of collectors, the absence of tangible boxes may not fully satisfy, but, again, there are many benefits that outweigh the cardboard. Lowering the cost of entry and creating compelling promotions and offers that inspire first-time adoption could be a way to spur greater digital movie sales.”

 

Despite the emergence of PVOD and continued growth in streaming, some observers expect theaters to stage a dramatic comeback once most of the country has been vaccinated.

 

As Paramount studio chief Jim Gianopulos pointed out last November, when theaters reopened in Japan and China, “audiences returned en masse, driving huge box-office returns for films that were available,” Buchi says. “Clearly, windows and consumer behaviors are shifting, but the theatrical experience will endure.”

 

Even so, Buchi says, each film and situation is unique. “For some films, like ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ and ‘A Quiet Place Part II,’ the theatrical model is optimal,” he says. “On the other hand, we found tremendous success with PVOD for ‘Love and Monsters’ and ‘Spell.’ Some films make sense for subscription streaming services. It is not one-size-fits-all, and every film needs to be evaluated individually.”

 

Ultimately, he adds, “we will continue to explore new distribution models and opportunities to bring our content to audiences wherever and however they want to enjoy it.”

 

Warner’s Wuthrich agrees. “Consumer empowerment is good for the industry and our goal is to meet the fans where they are — theaters, OTT, digital, physical,” he says. “While fans may have a preferred channel, they often participate in many, such as going to the theater, subscribing to HBO Max and picking up the Blu-ray. The multichannel experience could be one movie or across different movies, depending on interest.”

 

One thing is certain, says Wuthrich: “If we are successful in creating compelling stories, fans will continue to show up.”

Really interesting article about how the pandemic has potentially permanently changed studio release approaches.

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The fight for video streaming subscription dollars is the subject of the newest special report from Variety Intelligence Platform (VIP), “Dare to Stream,” which offers a comprehensive analysis of all the major U.S. players in the streaming wars. 

 

“Dare to Stream” is the fourth iteration of our U.S. SVOD landscape-focused report, which was first published in 2019. Since 2019, VIP has created a variety of special reports covering the biggest areas of growth within the media business — including free ad-supported streaming services, podcasting and blockchain technology. 

 

In “Dare to Stream,” the key metrics (reach, content spend, consumer satisfaction, catalog size) and notable recent developments of the major U.S.-based SVODs take center stage. The aim is to provide readers with a comprehensive and current picture of the video streaming market without getting bogged down by the details that should be well known to media business observers already. 

 

At the core of the report, VIP seeks to answer key questions that are surely on the minds of execs like WarnerMedia CEO Jason Kilar and ViacomCBS CEO Bob Bakish.

 

 

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