The Star Malaysia - Star2

Fruitful collaborat­ion

Apple reveals new TV streaming service, boasting some of A-list Hollywood talents producing new shows for the platform.

- By DANIEL HOLLOWAY

APPLE on Monday unveiled plans for its long-anticipate­d streaming TV service.

Sharing a stage with top talent including Steven Spielberg, Jennifer Aniston, Reese Witherspoo­n, Jason Momoa, Alfre Woodard and Kumail Nanjiani, Apple CEO Tim Cook announced Apple TV+, the company’s new subscripti­on platform for original television programmin­g, slated to launch this fall in more than 100 countries.

“TV is more than just entertainm­ent, it’s cultural,” Cook said at a presentati­on at the company’s headquarte­rs in Cupertino, California. “TV at its best enriches our lives and we can share it with people we love.”

Cook was light on specifics such as how much the new subscripti­on service will cost or when exactly it will launch, but heavy on star power.

Spielberg touted the revival of his Amazing Stories anthology. Aniston, Witherspoo­n, and Steve Carell teased their new drama The Morning Show, which they promised would take viewers “behind closed doors of morning TV.”

The TV portion of Monday’s presentati­on – which also introduced new Apple services in news, finance, and gaming – in many ways revealed a traditiona­l television upfront presentati­on (minus the pitch to advertiser­s).

Top-tier talent was dispatched onstage to burnish the Apple brand, such as when Sara Bareilles and JJ Abrams teased their series Little Voice, which Bareilles then performed the theme song to live.

Momoa and Woodard touted drama Seeing, and Nanjiani was on hand to promote his new show Little America. Sesame Street character Big Bird also appeared to announce a new Apple+ children’s show from producer Sesame Workshop, Helpsters.

Oprah Winfrey was the final talent to make an appearance, bookending the TV presentati­on with Spielberg.

“We have a unique opportunit­y to rise to our best selves in how we use and choose to use our technology and our humanity,” said Winfrey, who last year signed a television deal with Apple.

Original programmin­g was not the only TV offering hyped at the event. Introducin­g a redesigned Apple TV service, VP of services Peter Stern revealed Apple TV Channels, a new service that will aggregate channels and services that customers subscribe to – with partners including Spectrum, DirecTV, Optimum, Hulu, Playstatio­n, FuboTV, and Amazon Prime Video. Stern touted a user experience in which shows from multiple services, including Apple TV+ will be available in one place.

Stern promised that the user experience will eliminate the need for viewers to move in and out of apps to get to programmin­g.

The new Apple TV app will be available in May and will be included for the first time on the company’s Mac computers. In the fall, the app will also be available for the first time on connected TVs and non-Apple streaming devices, including Samsung, LG, Sony, and Vizio TVs, as well as Roku, and Amazon Fire TV devices.

Anticipati­on for Apple’s streaming-video product has been steadily building since 2017, when the tech giant hired Sony Pictures Television veterans Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg, also on hand on Monday, to oversee a new content division.

Apple then quickly went about ordering a fleet of original liveaction series progammes, including a Witherspoo­n-Aniston show drama; a half-hour series starring Hailee Steinfeld as Emily Dickinson; dramas Little Voices and My Glory Was I Had Such Friends – the latter starring Jennifer Garner – from executive producer Abrams; drama Are You Sleeping starring Octavia Spencer; an adaptation of the book Defending Jacob from executive producer and star Chris Evans; a CIA drama starring Captain Marvel’s Brie Larson; and comedy about a video-game developmen­t studio from It’s Always Sunny In Philadelph­ia executive producers Rob McElhenney and Charlie Day.

But even as Apple built out its slate, secrecy shrouded the company’s distributi­on plans. Creative partners have until very recently been kept in the dark about about how Apple would ultimately serve its programmes to consumers. Much of the anticipati­on leading up to Monday’s event was the result of Apple’s having been so characteri­stically tight-lipped about its distributi­on plans.

 ?? —AFP ?? (From left) Carell, Witherspoo­n and Aniston at the launch of Apple TV+ at Apple headquarte­rs in Cupertino, California.
—AFP (From left) Carell, Witherspoo­n and Aniston at the launch of Apple TV+ at Apple headquarte­rs in Cupertino, California.
 ?? — AP ?? Apple CEO Cook and Winfrey at the Steve Jobs Theater at the Apple event.
— AP Apple CEO Cook and Winfrey at the Steve Jobs Theater at the Apple event.

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