Chattanooga Times Free Press

Disney could get boost as Comcast drops Fox bid

- BY MAE ANDERSON

Comcast is dropping its bid for Fox’s entertainm­ent businesses, paving the way for Disney to boost its upcoming streaming service by buying the studios behind “The Simpsons” and X-Men.

Getting Fox would help the House of Mouse compete with technology companies such as Amazon and Netflix for viewers’ attention — and dollars.

Disney needs compelling TV shows and movies to persuade viewers to sign up and pay for yet another streaming service. It already has classic Disney cartoons, “Star Wars,” Pixar, the Muppets and some of the Marvel characters. With Fox, Disney could add Marvel’s X-Men and Deadpool, along with programs shown on such Fox channels as FX Networks and National Geographic. Fox’s production­s also include “The Americans,” “This Is Us” and “Modern Family.”

The deal would help Disney further control TV shows and movies from start to finish — from creating the programs to distributi­ng them though television channels, movie theaters, streaming services and other ways people watch entertainm­ent. Disney would get valuable data on customers and their entertainm­ent-viewing habits, which it can then use to sell advertisin­g.

For Comcast, dropping the pursuit of Fox lets it focus on getting European pay-TV operator Sky,

a deal that would help the Philadelph­ia-based cable and media company expand beyond the U.S.

Fox shareholde­rs are to vote on the Disney deal on July 27.

Cable and telecom companies have been buying the companies that make TV shows and movies to compete in a changing media landscape. Although internet providers like AT&T and Comcast directly control their customers’ access to the internet in a way that Amazon, YouTube and Netflix do not, they still face threats as those streaming services gain in popularity.

AT&T bought Time Warner last month for $81 billion and has already

launched its own streaming service, Watch TV, with Time Warner channels such as TBS and TNT, among other networks, for $15 a month.

Expect something similar from Disney after the deal closes. In addition to boosting the Disney streaming service, expected to debut next year, the deal paves the way for Marvel’s X-Men and the Avengers to reunite in future movies. Though Disney owns Marvel Studios, some characters including the X-Men had already been licensed to Fox.

Disney would also get a controllin­g stake in the existing streaming service Hulu.

Separately, Disney said

it will release new episodes of the “Star Wars” animated series “The Clone Wars” on its upcoming streaming service. The original “Clone Wars” series ran for six seasons, with the final one as a Netflix exclusive.

Comcast said Thursday that it would not raise its $66 billion offer for Fox. The Walt Disney Co. had topped Comcast’s bid by offering $71 billion. The U.S. Department of Justice has approved Disney’s bid as long as Disney, which owns the national sports network ESPN, sells Fox’s 22 regional sports networks. Disney may still need regulatory approvals outside the U.S.

Disney CEO Bob Iger

said he was “extremely pleased” with Comcast’s announceme­nt.

“Our focus now is on completing the regulatory process and ultimately moving toward integratin­g our businesses,” he said in a statement.

GBH Insights analyst Daniel Ives called Comcast’s move “the final chapter in this soap opera.” He said Comcast’s focus now is on getting Sky “to build a strong beachhead content strategy in Europe.”

Sky operates in Austria, Germany, Ireland, Italy and the U.K. It has 22.5 million customers, attracted by offerings such as English Premier League soccer and “Game of Thrones.”

 ?? AP PHOTO BY MARK LENNIHAN ?? Comcast said it’s dropping out of the bidding war for 21st Century Fox’s entertainm­ent business, instead focusing on its bid for Sky.
AP PHOTO BY MARK LENNIHAN Comcast said it’s dropping out of the bidding war for 21st Century Fox’s entertainm­ent business, instead focusing on its bid for Sky.

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