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Changes afoot in the streaming industry

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30 June 2019, 06:50 PM
wtg
Changes afoot in the streaming industry
quote:
The most watched show on US Netflix, by a huge margin, is the US version of The Office. Even though the platform pumps out an absurd amount of original programming – 1,500 hours last year – it turns out that everyone just wants to watch a decade-old sitcom. One report last year said that The Office accounts for 7% all US Netflix viewing.

So, naturally, NBC wants it back. This week, it was announced that Netflix had failed to secure the rights to The Office beyond January 2021. The good news is that it will still be available to watch elsewhere. The bad news is that “elsewhere”, means “the new NBCUniversal streaming platform”.

As a viewer, you are right to feel queasy. The industry-disrupting success of Netflix means that everybody wants a slice of the pie. Right now, things are just about manageable – if you have a TV licence, a Netflix subscription, an Amazon subscription and a Now TV subscription, you are pretty much covered – but things are about to take a turn for the worse....

There are so many others. NBCUniversal is pulling its shows from Netflix for its own platform. Before long, Friends is likely to disappear behind a new WarnerMedia streaming service – along with Lord of the Rings films, the Harry Potter films, anything based on a DC comic and everything on HBO – that it is believed will cost about £15 a month. In the UK, the BBC and ITV will amalgamate their archives behind a service called BritBox. The former Disney chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg is about to launch a platform called Quibi, releasing “snackable” content from Steven Spielberg and others that is designed to be watched on your phone. YouTube is producing more and more original subscription-only content. Facebook is making shows, for crying out loud.

And this sucks. Watching television is about to get very, very expensive. There will be a point where viewers are going to hit their tolerance for monthly subscriptions – I may be able to manage one more service, but only if I unsubscribe from an existing platform – meaning that TV will become more elitist, tiered and fragmented than it already is. There’s a huge difference between not being able to watch everything because there’s too much choice and not being able to watch everything because you don’t have enough money.


https://www.theguardian.com/tv...source=pocket-newtab


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We are all visitors to this time, this place. We are just passing through. Our purpose here is to observe, to learn, to grow, to love… and then we return home. - Australian Aboriginal proverb

Bazootiehead-in-training



30 June 2019, 07:45 PM
QuirtEvans
quote:
Originally posted by wtg:
quote:
The most watched show on US Netflix, by a huge margin, is the US version of The Office. Even though the platform pumps out an absurd amount of original programming – 1,500 hours last year – it turns out that everyone just wants to watch a decade-old sitcom. One report last year said that The Office accounts for 7% all US Netflix viewing.

So, naturally, NBC wants it back. This week, it was announced that Netflix had failed to secure the rights to The Office beyond January 2021. The good news is that it will still be available to watch elsewhere. The bad news is that “elsewhere”, means “the new NBCUniversal streaming platform”.

As a viewer, you are right to feel queasy. The industry-disrupting success of Netflix means that everybody wants a slice of the pie. Right now, things are just about manageable – if you have a TV licence, a Netflix subscription, an Amazon subscription and a Now TV subscription, you are pretty much covered – but things are about to take a turn for the worse....

There are so many others. NBCUniversal is pulling its shows from Netflix for its own platform. Before long, Friends is likely to disappear behind a new WarnerMedia streaming service – along with Lord of the Rings films, the Harry Potter films, anything based on a DC comic and everything on HBO – that it is believed will cost about £15 a month. In the UK, the BBC and ITV will amalgamate their archives behind a service called BritBox. The former Disney chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg is about to launch a platform called Quibi, releasing “snackable” content from Steven Spielberg and others that is designed to be watched on your phone. YouTube is producing more and more original subscription-only content. Facebook is making shows, for crying out loud.

And this sucks. Watching television is about to get very, very expensive. There will be a point where viewers are going to hit their tolerance for monthly subscriptions – I may be able to manage one more service, but only if I unsubscribe from an existing platform – meaning that TV will become more elitist, tiered and fragmented than it already is. There’s a huge difference between not being able to watch everything because there’s too much choice and not being able to watch everything because you don’t have enough money.


https://www.theguardian.com/tv...source=pocket-newtab


People already rotate among subscription services. They'll just have to rotate among a greater number.

We may cancel STARZ soon to add Showtime (if Mary Anna agrees, I haven't discussed it with her yet).
30 June 2019, 09:30 PM
Steve Miller
You Tube TV is looking better all the time.

As is a rooftop antenna.


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Life is short. Play with your dog.

30 June 2019, 10:31 PM
Axtremus
Alternatively, watch less TV.


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www.PianoRecital.org -- my piano recordings -- China Tune album

01 July 2019, 08:56 AM
ShiroKuro
quote:
watch less TV


This says the gal who just bought a new 50' inch smart TV

Also,
quote:
And this sucks. Watching television is about to get very, very expensive.


That's funny because I already think TV is waaaay too expensive.

We watch TV Japan more than anything else (I know I've said that a billion times, forgive me!) But we pay $25 just for that, except that we can't get TV Japan without paying for some other basic cable service. If we could get rid of *every* other service, we would probably be quite happy with 1) TV Japan, and 2) Amazon Prime and the occasional individually purchased movie.

Ugh. All this technology, things should be getting cheaper not more expensive! VeryAngry


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My piano recordings at Box.Net: https://app.box.com/s/j4rgyhn72uvluemg1m6u

01 July 2019, 11:39 AM
Nina
The notion of a menu-driven channel service is just a pipe dream, I guess. Makes sense, as it's way too logical and doesn't provide opportunities to gauge the public into paying for channels they don't need. VeryAngry
01 July 2019, 12:38 PM
jon-nyc
Seems inevitable. Content ownership is what will be rewarded. Anybody can setup the technology to stream.


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If you think looting is bad wait until I tell you about civil forfeiture.