The Hollywood Reporter - 06.11.2019

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THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 19 NOVEMBER 6, 2019


MURDOCH: DANIELE VENTURELLI/WIREIMAGE. IGER: MICHAEL KOVAC/GETTY IMAGES FOR LACMA. BERLANTI: ANGELA WEISS/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES.


BELL: HEIDI GUTMAN/NBCUNIVERSAL. HERRIDGE: COURTESY OF CBS. ELLISON: TIM MOSENFELDER/GETTY IMAGES. MAYER: ABC/BOB D’AMICO.


Illustration by Læmeur

Digital
Password Problems
Piracy may be next
front in streaming war p. 22
↑ Labor
M&A Fallout
Job losses widen in
entertainment sector p. 24

$194.72 (+3%)
FACEBOOK (FB)
The social media giant posts
quarterly sales and profit that
exceed expectations; daily
active users jump 9 percent.

$41.40 (-12%)
AMC NETS (AMCX)
Bernstein analyst Todd
Juenger reiterates his “under-
perform” rating after the
operator of cable channels
reports a quarterly loss
in sub fees and ad revenue.

streaming services.” Still, the
number of adults ages 30 to 44
paying for more than five stream-
ing services currently sits at a low
4 percent, per a THR/Morning
Consult poll conducted Oct. 24
to 28, and a July survey of more
than 2,000 adults found that a $21
bill across three services is the
optimal price point to woo many
subscribers. Given that subscrib-
ing to the four new services plus
Netflix and Hulu will cost upward
of $45 a month (not including
the cost of internet access), every
company will need to get creative
to turn these multibillion-dollar
bets into profitable ventures.
Though Disney is starting
from zero to build up its Disney+
subscriber base, Carmel Group
analyst Jimmy Schaeffler calls it
the “1,000-pound gorilla in every
room” thanks to the strength of
its brand, which will be on display
through its library and program-
ming like Star Wars-adjacent
The Mandalorian. Still, without
the advantage of a preexisting
large-scale direct-to-consumer
relationship with its fans, Disney
also is looking to other subscriber
acquisition tactics as it seeks
to hit between 60 million and
90 million members (and reach
profitability) in the next five years,
offering discounts in exchange for
three-year commitments and put-
ting the pieces in place to bundle
the service with ESPN+ and Hulu,
which already have 2 million and
28 million subscribers, respec-
tively. It also has struck a deal
with Verizon to offer Disney+ free
for a year to unlimited wireless
customers, expos-
ing it to as many as
18 million potential
new members.
Where Disney+
could struggle would
be in enticing adults without
children who aren’t swayed by a
lineup heavy with genre fare from
Marvel and Lucasfilm. But direct-
to-consumer and international
chairman Kevin Mayer shrugged

W


hen Disney+ launches
Nov. 12, the new
streaming service will
begin what Disney CEO Bob Iger
hopes is a quick journey to at least
60 million subscribers by the
end of 2024. Six months later, on
a still-to-be-announced date in
May, HBO Max will take off on its
own sprint to hit at least 75 mil-
lion subscribers in 2025.
Instead of the “streaming
wars,” it’s more like a streaming
race as each new entrant that
launches strives to reach ambi-
tious subscriber goals and carve
out a piece of the overall direct-
to-consumer video market. With
U.S. pay TV subscribers expected

As Disney, Apple, AT&T and Comcast bet big on
D-to-C services, lofty membership goals (as many as 90 million)
clash with analyst concerns over marketplace crowding
BY NATALIE JARVEY AND PAUL BOND
to drop from north of 100 mil-
lion in 2014 to 78 million by 2022,
per research from Sanford C.
Bernstein, every company has
recognized an opportunity to
lure those cable defectors (and
recruit digital natives) to their
services. But with four new offer-
ings — Apple TV+, Disney+, HBO
Max and Peacock — flooding the
market over the next year, it’s
anyone’s guess how customers
will respond to the glut of choices,
especially as the cost of several
subscriptions mounts.
“It is not a zero-sum game,”
contends Wedbush Securities
analyst Michael Pachter. “People
can subscribe to multiple

Greg Berlanti
The mega-producer’s record
scripted TV haul grows to
21 with series orders at HBO
Max for DC-inspired dramas
Green Lantern and anthology
Strange Adventures.

Jim Bell
The Tonight Show
showrunner, who had been
with NBC for nearly three
decades, abruptly exits amid
preparations for the network’s
2020 Olympics coverage.

David Ellison
The Skydance Media chief’s
pricey reboot of Te r m i n a to r
crashes at the global box office
with a $123.6 million debut,
likely ending hopes for sequels.

Digital TV’s Great


Subscriber Race Begins


Oct. 28-Nov. 4

Catherine Herridge
CBS News hires the veteran
Fox News reporter, the latest
high-profile journalist to
exit the conservative-leaning
network after anchor
Shepard Smith’s departure.

Mayer
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