Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Netflix’s biggest detractor responds with own service

- LUCAS SHAW

Tired of people watching its shows on Netflix and Amazon, FX Networks is persuading pay-TV operators to sell an alternativ­e: FX+, a subscripti­on service offering hits American Horror Story and Atlanta without advertisem­ents.

The network last week announced plans to make FX+ available for $5.99 a month to the 4 million or so people who pay Cox Communicat­ions Inc., which joins Comcast Corp. in selling the service. FX, owned by 21st Century Fox Inc., is in the process of making deals with other pay-TV providers.

FX Networks Chief Executive Officer John Landgraf created FX+ so customers could watch all his shows on demand without decamping for Hulu, Amazon and Netflix, of which he’s a frequent critic. Landgraf, who witnessed the TV business fret about the videocasse­tte recorder and digital video recorder, has said Netflix is far more dangerous. Netflix has paid Fox for licenses to its shows, enticing millions of viewers away from Fox’s TV networks.

The company, which will spend $7 billion on programmin­g next year, could turn into a monopoly whose concentrat­ion of power would damage the TV business. Fox has been the biggest supplier of hit shows to streaming services Netflix and Hulu, according to a recent report by analyst Michael Nathanson.

Older episodes of Landgraf’s

biggest hits, from Atlanta to The Americans, have only been available to customers of those services. That has to stop, Landgraf said.

“We shouldn’t be licensing exclusivel­y,” Landgraf said. Just last year, Fox’s TV studio sold exclusive rights to reruns of FX’s biggest new hit, American Crime Story: The People

v. O.J. Simpson, to Netflix. “I may not be in control of the decision to license every show FX makes because not all are produced and owned by FX Production­s,” Landgraf said.

Cable networks need to focus on what they are good at, in FX’s case adult drama and comedy, because they can’t spend the money to offer something for everyone as streaming services gain, Landgraf, 55, said.

He has had to spend a considerab­le sum claiming rights to episodes of his shows, compensati­ng TV studios, producers and other profit participan­ts. FX+ now offers current and past seasons to 87 percent of the network’s shows, some of which rank among the most-watched on cable. The network has also been a frequent nominee and winner at the Emmy Awards.

The early results with Comcast have been encouragin­g. “They say they are very happy,” said Landgraf, who declined to provide specific numbers. “We went from zero to a lot of subscriber­s in a short period of time.”

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