Another rundown on streaming profitability
https://jacobsmedia.com/has-streaming-turned-out-to-be-fools-gold/
https://jacobsmedia.com/has-streaming-turned-out-to-be-fools-gold/
ABC has had the NBA for 20 years and that whole time they haven't been able to put together as good a presentation as NBC had. Bring back the NBA on NBC. Bring back Roundball Rock!superunknown said:
Bump for this..
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/02/13/nbc-sports-prepared-to-make-nba-bid.html
Article is mostly talking NBCU throwing in on NBA rights after 20+ years away but as you could imagine, there's a lot of streaming talk.
Picking out a few interesting quotes..Quote:
NBCUniversal executives have informed the NBA of their interest, said the people, who asked not to be named because the discussions are private. NBC Sports wants a package that would include playoff games to air on NBC's broadcast network, two of the people said. Some regular season games could be exclusive to NBCUniversal's streaming service, Peacock. The NBA could also decide to force media companies to simulcast all games on streaming to increase reach, the people said.
Apple and Amazon have also expressed interest to the NBA in buying carved-out streaming packages, said people familiar with the matter. Amazon currently has a deal with the NBA allowing it to stream games in Brazil.
Regarding my edited post upthread that just said "nevermind" ... it was somewhat related to this. I happen to know a couple of people involved in Amazon's ventures into live programming. I feel pretty confident in saying that Amazon isn't messing around...that couple of people I know are involved know everything there is to know about delivering ads in live sports programming.Quote:
It's possible NBCUniversal will be directly competing with Warner Bros. Discovery to be the league's second traditional TV partner, along with ESPN. NBCUniversal can offer a broadcast network (NBC) to air NBA games if pay TV providers begin dropping cable networks, such as TNT and TBS, that run mostly reruns of scripted programming when sports aren't on. Comcast also owns Sky, which could give the NBA another international broadcast outlet.
"What you have today is programmers selling us content at increasingly higher prices and asking us to distribute that to largely all of our customers, and at the same time, selling that exact same content either into streaming platforms or creating a direct-to-consumer product themselves at a much lower cost," said Chris Winfrey, CEO of Charter, the second largest U.S. cable provider, in comments published by CNBC last week. "Our willingness to continue to fund that for programmers when that content is available for free elsewhere is declining. That means within the linear video construct, you'll see an increasing number of distributors deciding it no longer makes sense to carry certain content."
So...this quote. Is Winfrey basically threatening to pull content that's also available via streaming? Or is this a negotiation tactic? Nobody's subscribing to Charter (Spectrum/BrightHouse/Time Warner Cable all roll up to Charter) to see Spectrum News and Circle TV.
Warner Bros. Discovery and HBO Max's merged streaming service reportedly sets pricing.https://t.co/5nwdmlcYza
— Collider (@Collider) March 10, 2023
TCTTS said:Warner Bros. Discovery and HBO Max's merged streaming service reportedly sets pricing.https://t.co/5nwdmlcYza
— Collider (@Collider) March 10, 2023
Quote:
Although no name has been officially picked for the relaunched platform, reports say that Max is still being strongly considered. Whatever the name is, the HBO branding will almost certainly be scrubbed from the title. The Wrap recently confirmed a report that insiders at Warner Bros. Discovery were concerned that the HBO name was a turnoff to potential new customers.
TCTTS said:
I've been seeing people on Twitter dunk on that quote all day long. It's so stupid.
It makes no sense at all. HBO is a huge brand that is recognized world wide and synonymous with great content. Why would you ever ditch that, especially in a currently flooded market with stupid little streaming companies that everyone immediately disses when they launchFL_Ag1998 said:TCTTS said:Warner Bros. Discovery and HBO Max's merged streaming service reportedly sets pricing.https://t.co/5nwdmlcYza
— Collider (@Collider) March 10, 2023
From that article...Quote:
Although no name has been officially picked for the relaunched platform, reports say that Max is still being strongly considered. Whatever the name is, the HBO branding will almost certainly be scrubbed from the title. The Wrap recently confirmed a report that insiders at Warner Bros. Discovery were concerned that the HBO name was a turnoff to potential new customers.
Why the hell would the HBO name be a turnoff to anybody? IMO HBO has more or less been at the top of the mountain for quality original content since The Sopranos aired. Meanwhile, what has the Discovery channel been putting out? Dr. Pimplepopper...90 Day Fiance? The minds at Discovery/WB can't be that dense, can they?
TCTTS said:
It's definitely not the late night erotic movie thing. Also, HBO/HBO Max has 75+ million global users, which sure would be a lot of rich pretentious people.
TCTTS said:
For things like a name change, user features/experience, etc, yeah I've seen that kind of stuff leaked to gauge reactions. But as for actual film/TV projects being considered, casting ideas, release date changes, etc, I really can't think of any instances where that kind of info has been purposefully leaked with the goal of garnering audience opinions. Studios *will* leak casting info sometimes in order to force an actors' hand, though. Like, if they want some big name to sign they'll leak that they're looking at another name, as a negotiating tactic, but that's about it. Otherwise, studios pretty much know what they're doing and have their methods/reasoning for that kind of stuff.
streaming has been such a catastrophic failure it's not only cannibalized theatrical business and coached audiences to "just wait for streaming," we've now got Bob Iger looking to the classic theatrical rollout + physical media strategy that dominated the market for decades https://t.co/mIHT5xRHgd
— Brendan Hodges (@metaplexmovies) March 11, 2023
Wow so trading DVD dollars for negative digital pennies was a bad call, weird, who could’ve guessed. https://t.co/kfHsQc81ow
— Sonny Bunch (@SonnyBunch) March 11, 2023
Quad Dog said:
Interesting quote there at the end "everything will eventually go to streaming, but not yet"
I wonder what he's sees that he is waiting for? What change enables all streaming if we aren't there yet?
FL_Ag1998 said:
I hear what you're saying and unfortunately you're likely right. But while cable may have been the perfect model for the cable companies, and maybe some consumers who watch a ton of TV, for most consumers it was time for a much needed revamping of the system. Streaming just provided the push to get it started.
Yes, anybody who put some thought into what was happening as streaming took off realized they needed to be careful what they wished for. It was obvious that suddenly we'd have to start paying a lot of individual monthly bills, and we'd have to pay more to get all the channels we got before.
But that's just it - most of us didn't want all of the channels being forced into those bundles. There were so many crap channels that wouldn't have survived without being able to leach onto those bundles. And even a big boy like ESPN was actually an emperor with no clothes - it was only able to afford the rights to sports leagues because it was being artificially propped up by cable bundles.
I hope that if monolithic entities like Apple, Netflix, Amazon and Discovery/WB start consolidating everything again and offering bundles, then at least they try to rethink the paradigm. For example, offer a la carte bundles of 5, 10, 15, etc streaming services that I get to choose from like a menu. Don't force ESPN or Bravo on me just so I can get HBOMax.
Quad Dog said:TCTTS said:
It's definitely not the late night erotic movie thing. Also, HBO/HBO Max has 75+ million global users, which sure would be a lot of rich pretentious people.
I was talking about the reputation before streaming existed. That stuff sucks around with the older crowd.
as in SkinemaxIowaggie said:Quad Dog said:TCTTS said:
It's definitely not the late night erotic movie thing. Also, HBO/HBO Max has 75+ million global users, which sure would be a lot of rich pretentious people.
I was talking about the reputation before streaming existed. That stuff sucks around with the older crowd.
I would think the "Max" part, and not the HBO part would be what could associate it with that crowd.
I am surprised that would go away from the HBO name since it has such a strong connection with premium television.
double aught said:
What does "in the digital depth" mean? And what's a C suite?
Quote:
Conducted by creative analytics company CreativeX, the analysis of the creative quality of more than two million paid ads across platforms such as Meta/Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, YouTube, TikTok and Russian social network VK, representing nearly $2 billion of media spend, found that nearly 70% of that spend was on ads that did not meet basic platform standards.
As a result, CreativeX's report says, nearly $1 billion was invested in ads that did not meet basic creative best practices for Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and Amazon. That translates to approximately 55% of media budgets wasted on under-optimized creative ads during 2022.