MoffettNathanson estimates that US pay-TV lost a total of about 900,000 subs in Q3 2023 – a worst-ever third quarter for the industry. That poor result left US pay-TV shrinking at a record pace of 7.3%.
US pay-TV subscriber base eroding at record pace::undefined
The distinction does seem a bit arbitrary, but I think it’s the difference between being able to pick what you watch on demand, and having a lot of channels that are just playing whatever.
Actually Disney’s CEO touched about that during that last town hall. They release the shows both on traditional TV and streaming. They realized that the demographics using either platforms don’t overlap so they decided to continue with a parallel release separately to increase their reach. (I was a camera operator filming the event, I’m not a Disney employee, nor do I support any of their opinions)
They mostly are, or owned by the same companies. The consumer cable companies also deliver Internet access for streaming so they’re still getting paid.
That’s the main issue here. There used to be a law that studios were not allowed to own movie theaters and so they had to open their movies to be purchased or leased by other distributors. Now, that law is gone and this is why we’re screwed.
Why is cable TV service, and TV streaming different? Can’t the cable service providers just be streaming TV providers? And compete globally?
The distinction does seem a bit arbitrary, but I think it’s the difference between being able to pick what you watch on demand, and having a lot of channels that are just playing whatever.
Actually Disney’s CEO touched about that during that last town hall. They release the shows both on traditional TV and streaming. They realized that the demographics using either platforms don’t overlap so they decided to continue with a parallel release separately to increase their reach. (I was a camera operator filming the event, I’m not a Disney employee, nor do I support any of their opinions)
They mostly are, or owned by the same companies. The consumer cable companies also deliver Internet access for streaming so they’re still getting paid.
Because content owners don’t need cable providers to stream over the internet.
HBO doesn’t need Comcast for streaming, they can (and do) stream themselves with HBO Go.
That’s the main issue here. There used to be a law that studios were not allowed to own movie theaters and so they had to open their movies to be purchased or leased by other distributors. Now, that law is gone and this is why we’re screwed.