Chattanooga Times Free Press

Disney makes offer some can’t refuse

- BY KEVIN MCDONUGH UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE

The more television changes, the more it stays the same. A week that brought the news of the Disney Plus streaming package also saw scattered reports that we are fast approachin­g the point where there will be as many “cord-cutters” as cable subscriber­s.

The Disney service will allow customers to stream the content of the Disney library (complete with films from the 20th Century Fox catalog, Pixar, the Marvel Universe and “Star Wars” omniverse), along with the live sports capacity of ESPN and HULU offerings as well. This package will be available in November and cost $12.99, roughly the same price as Netflix.

Disney is not the only corporate giant with streaming schemes. Having recently acquired Time Warner, AT&T is talking about an HBO Max service. NBC also has plans for a service. While some have considered what might happen to Netflix when NBC takes back properties like “The Office” and “Friends,” the game-changer (so to speak) of an NBC streaming service could be the ability to watch NFL football without a cable box.

Once streaming allows viewers to watch live sports, cable will become obsolete.

At the same time, faced with so many services and the prospect that these “a la carte” options tend to run up a pricey menu, customers may decide that old-fashioned cable remains an option, if not a bargain — and one way to avoid a bewilderin­g field of options.

› While ways of watching TV change every day, many TV producers have opted for the familiar. How else do you explain why the CW is debuting “Mysteries Decoded” (9 p.m., TV-PG), yet another faux-documentar­y take on unexplaine­d phenomena. First up, experts and paranormal mediums go to Massachuse­tts to sift around evidence associated with Lizzie Borden.

In a similar vein, “Code of the Wild” (10 p.m., Travel, TV-PG) ventures to Alaska to investigat­e the 1972 plane crash that claimed the life of Louisiana Rep. Hale

Boggs. Boggs was the father of news correspond­ent Cokie Roberts.

› The new PBS series “Family Pictures USA” (8 p.m. and 9 p.m., TV-PG, check local listings) allows people to share snapshots from the past to illuminate the social history of their region. The second episode concentrat­es on the families that settled Southwest Florida and founded farms and businesses in the area around Naples and Fort Myers.

Not unlike “Finding Your Roots,” it reveals the remarkable diversity among well-settled Americans and demonstrat­es how simplistic explanatio­ns about race crumble in the face of family stories that include tales of “black” offspring of white slave owners and other marriages, and relationsh­ips that defied a crudely defined and cruelly enforced “color line.”

Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin .tvguy@gmail.com.

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