Vancouver Sun

Streaming viewers grow frustrated as shows vanish

Licensing ‘windows’ create headaches for dedicated users of online services

- DAVID FRIEND

Marie Conception was TORONTO three seasons into the TV series Gossip Girl when Netflix yanked the entire show from its lineup.

Left hanging in the middle of the teen drama’s juicy plot twists, the Burnaby, B.C., resident says she questioned why she signed up for Netflix in the first place.

“You commit to purchasing Netflix or CraveTV because they have certain shows,” she says. “It’s a little upsetting when they pull stuff out for whatever reason.”

The frustratio­n is all too familiar for many TV viewers. You’re invested in Mad Men or The West Wing when the shows suddenly disappear from streaming services overnight.

Fans still complain about how Lost can’t be found, and Friday Night Lights went dark.

The reason TV shows or films are removed from streaming platforms can vary, though it almost always comes down to content licensing “windows,” the set periods of time a company gets the rights for a program.

Those contracts between a streaming company and a TV or film distributo­r are nothing new — they exist for traditiona­l broadcaste­rs, too. But in an era where many people stream much of their entertainm­ent, what’s available is suddenly a bigger part of the conversati­on.

How long a streaming licence lasts will vary depending on the show or movie. Many contracts are signed for around a year, especially for films, which guarantees services like Netflix have a steady rotation of content from some of Hollywood’s big studios.

TV series can have an even longer licence that stretches for several years and covers a number of seasons.

Sometimes, those rights switch to another service; other times they expire and disappear into the digital ether, especially in Canada where many popular shows aren’t available to stream.

The confusion over where to watch their favourite TV shows isn’t likely to subside for Canadians any time soon.

Next year, CBS Corp. plans to enter the market with CBS All Access, potentiall­y holding onto certain licences for TV shows it has a stake in, including The Big Bang Theory.

When Disney rolls out its streaming platform in the coming years, there’s a good chance it’ll eventually keep its most valuable new content for itself, rather than license it to Netflix Canada. Those negotiatio­ns are still open, and Netflix could make Disney an offer too attractive to refuse.

All of these decisions are part of ongoing talks that don’t affect viewers until they notice something has gone missing from their streaming library.

Mike Cosentino, senior vicepresid­ent of content at CraveTV, often hears the message loud and clear when he makes the call on what to stock on Bell Media’s platform.

“At the end of the day, if we do our jobs well enough, we’re renewing content that has a consumer appetite and reinvestin­g in new content,” he says.

But it isn’t always up to CraveTV, Netflix or Amazon Prime Video which entertainm­ent they can license.

For instance, viewers have urged Netflix Canada to stock up on past seasons of Game of Thrones, but the blockbuste­r TV show is owned by HBO, its biggest competitor. Bell Media owns the licences of HBO content in Canada, but hasn’t made them available on any standalone streaming service. Confused yet?

Things get even more complicate­d when you turn to Netflix Canada, who bought licences for TV series like Riverdale, which appear on the platform shortly after they air on U.S. television.

Those licences aren’t cheap, and the battle for content is getting more expensive.

Josh Scherba, executive vicepresid­ent of distributi­on and content at DHX Media, says the Halifax-based kids TV maker watched the value of its shows climb over the past five years as more streaming companies bulked up their virtual shelves. With more companies entering the market, the bidding increases.

“We think for the foreseeabl­e future that’s going to continue,” Scherba says.

Ultimately, consumers will probably foot the bigger monthly bill. Netflix Canada is already raising its monthly subscripti­on by a dollar or two saying it’s partly due to rising costs for buying content and making its own original series.

But streaming companies might have some explaining to do when the licenses for some of their “original series” end in the coming years.

Netflix brands a selection of its content as “Netflix Originals” even though it doesn’t actually own all of them outright.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-LIONSGATE ENTERTAINM­ENT ?? Mad Men, originally on AMC, is one of the shows picked up by streaming services. Because such series are only picked up for a set period of time by the streaming services, viewers are often left scrambling when those rights end.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-LIONSGATE ENTERTAINM­ENT Mad Men, originally on AMC, is one of the shows picked up by streaming services. Because such series are only picked up for a set period of time by the streaming services, viewers are often left scrambling when those rights end.

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