Los Angeles Times

Free to stream? TV’s latest big hit

Ad-supported players like Pluto and Tubi are growing fast amid consumer demand.

- By Stephen Battaglio and Wendy Lee

There’s a hot new buzzword in the streaming video business — it’s spelled f-re-e.

While Netflix is reeling over subscriber losses due to increased competitio­n and consumer sensitivit­y to inflation, free, ad-supported streaming services are on the rise, offering thousands of programs and films in every genre and hundreds of channels at no cost.

The two largest players — Paramount Global’s Pluto TV and Fox Corp.’s Tubi — were prominentl­y featured at their parent companies’ upfront presentati­ons for advertiser­s held last week in New York. The media companies will be selling ad time for their services with their other networks.

Amazon also is aggressive­ly moving into the field by rebranding its IMDb TV service as Freevee and developing exclusive original content for it — including a spinoff of the popular Prime Video police drama “Bosch” — to encourage viewer sampling.

“We strive to deliver customers the content they’d expect to see behind a paywall, but in an easy-to-navigate environmen­t that is freely available to all,” said Lauren Anderson, Freevee’s co-head of content and programmin­g at a presentati­on for advertiser­s in New York earlier this month. “No costs, no time slots, no arbitrary creative restrictio­ns.”

Madison Avenue is responding. Research firm eMarketer projects Pluto TV’s domestic ad revenues to grow by 53% this year to $1.24 billion. Tubi is expected to grow by 79% to $883 million. Both are on track to increase at a faster rate than the establishe­d leaders in the ad-supported video

streaming market, Hulu ($3.8 billion), YouTube ($3.06 billion) and San Jose-based Roku ($2.25 billion).

Disney’s Hulu was a pioneer of ad-based video on demand, or AVOD, and all of the major streaming players have or are planning on offering ad-supported tiers. Netflix is considerin­g ads, even though commercial-free binge-watching has been a key attribute of the brand, as a way to mitigate its current challenges.

But selling ads on major streaming platforms has largely been a means to offer lower-priced subscripti­ons. (Hulu’s lowest-priced adsupporte­d tier is $6.99 a month, while Paramount+ and Comcast’s Peacock go as low as $4.99.)

Consumers can watch free streaming services immediatel­y without signing up with an email address or entering any credit card data and watch them on any device. They also offer livestream­s of news, sports and entertainm­ent on free, ad-supported streaming television channels (called FAST channels), similar to what viewers watch on cable and broadcast.

RIGHT ON TIME

While free streaming channels have been growing rapidly in recent years, they are getting more attention as consumers currently cope with rising gas prices and other costs that have risen due to inflation.

“The business model of free is working quite well, especially as we enter some economic turmoil,” said Farhad Massoudi, founder and chief executive of Tubi, the San Francisco-based platform that was acquired by Fox Corp. in 2020 for $440 million.

Since the acquisitio­n, the service has grown from 25 million to 51 million users in the U.S. and Canada, who watched 3.6 billion hours of content in 2021, up 40% from the previous year.

The recent subscriber downturn at Netflix, coming in a period when competitor­s Walt Disney Co.’s Disney+, Warner Bros. Discovery’s HBO Max and Paramount+ saw significan­t gains, indicates consumers may have hit the wall in terms of how many video streaming services they are willing to pay for each month. Some are turning to the app Truebill, which helps them cancel their subscripti­ons.

Brett Sappington, vice president at Interpret, a Culver City-based consumer insights agency, said ad-supported services are a logical path to growth as the subscripti­on streaming business matures.

“The problem with subscripti­ons is that there’s really a cap on revenue,” Sappington said. “Once all of your subscriber­s pay, you’re done with the amount of revenue that you can get out of them other than getting them to upgrade to another tier of service. So the idea behind advertisin­g is it scales with viewership, so if you have people watching more content, you actually gain more revenue.”

Last year, no single free, ad-supported streaming service had more than 15% of U.S. consumers watching each month, leaving a lot of room for growth, Sappington said.

“In some households, we’re the primary streaming service and people watch us for hours every day,” Tubi’s Massoudi said. “In others, we’re a complement to their subscripti­on services, and we super-serve them with a category of content that they are really interested in that they don’t get enough of.”

Tom Ryan, chief executive and president of Paramount Streaming, said about 80% of the platform’s 68 million users throughout the world have a paid streaming subscripti­on, an indication that consumers are getting more sophistica­ted about mixing and matching services that meet their needs.

“I think in this inflationa­ry environmen­t, getting Paramount+ and Pluto TV for a combined total of $4.99 with ads is a massive value for consumers,” Ryan said. “And I think they’re starting to see that.”

For parent companies Fox and Paramount, the free streaming services offer advertiser­s a way to reach younger viewers who have largely abandoned their traditiona­l TV networks. The median age for Tubi users is 38, while broadcast networks ABC, NBC and CBS are above 60; Fox is well above 50.

WHAT’S OLD IS NEW

The developmen­t of the free streaming TV business has a striking resemblanc­e to the early days of cable, when the proliferat­ion of channels opened up new opportunit­ies for programmer­s and expanded consumer choices.

Massoudi, a Silicon Valley technologi­st, launched Tubi in 2014 with channels that offered Japanese anime and inexpensiv­ely acquired classical music performanc­es. Studios were not interested in selling their content to him, especially since he didn’t have the money to pay them.

Pluto’s initial offerings — curated short-form YouTube videos — were modest as well.

But as the audience grew for the services, so did ad revenue and the quality of the content.

“The more users we get and the more engagement we get, the more ads we can sell, the more revenue we can generate, and the more that we can pay content owners, which gets more content owners to put their content on the platform,” said Ryan, who co-founded Pluto TV in 2013 before the Los Angeles streamer was acquired by Viacom in 2019 for $350 million.

Just as TV studios and broadcast networks used sales to cable networks as a way to amortize program costs, media companies are seeing the same benefit from AVOD services and FAST channels. Paramount has channels devoted to the CBS drama franchise “NCIS,” and VH1’s “Love & Hip Hop” on Pluto TV, while fans of Fox’s hit reality show “The Masked Singer” can binge previously aired episodes on Tubi.

Fox holds the rights to the 2022 World Cup soccer tournament in Qatar, at a hefty cost of $425 million. Last week, the company announced that replays of the games airing across Fox’s channels this fall will be available for free on Tubi as soon as the final whistle blows.

As most of the games will be in the overnight hours in the U.S., Tubi expects demand to be strong among devoted soccer fans, even if they know the outcome.

Similar to cable’s early days, free streamers are giving new life to program libraries. Dozens of vintage programs, including “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson” and such iconic sitcoms as “I Love Lucy” and “The Addams Family,” have filled the pipelines of the services.

Documentar­ies, horror movies and films targeting Black and Latino audiences are abundant. About 20% of Pluto TV’s U.S. offerings are aimed at Latino audiences. Content aimed at diverse audiences has also been a major draw for Tubi — “42 channels of stories for every community,” Massoudi said.

The platforms are expanding the availabili­ty of live FAST channels as well. CBS News Streaming, ABC News Live and NBC News Now appear across various services, essentiall­y giving users a free 24-hour news alternativ­e to CNN and Fox News, which require cable subscripti­ons to watch online.

Fox News Media’s recently launched Fox Weather — a full-time digital forecastin­g service — is also offered as a FAST channel. There are more news and informatio­n channels in developmen­t.

Unlike cable, free streaming services develop many of their own channels from content they license. When viewers don’t watch, there is no contractua­l obligation to keep them.

“A channel doesn’t perform, then it’s not serving our user, and it’s not serving the content owner,” Ryan said.

Many of those content owners are compensate­d with a share of the ad sales Pluto TV generates.

Other media companies looking to expand their reach are providing content to AVOD and FAST channels. AMC Networks has developed channels that offer programs from its library to free platforms and sells most of the ads that run on them. The company introduced six new channels this year ahead of the upfront sales season and will roll them out across a number of free platforms.

“We’ve been big believers in free, ad-supported streaming for the past two years,” said Kim Kelleher, president of commercial revenue and partnershi­ps for AMC Networks. “We want to put our content everywhere viewers want to watch it.”

In addition to the ad dollars generated, Kelleher said the free channels help drive viewers to its linear channels AMC, WeTV, Sundance TV and IFC and subscripti­on services such as ALLBLK. When a series premieres on one of the company’s owned cable channels, AMC uses free streaming services to give viewers an easy way to catch up on past episodes.

The growth of free streaming has led to more competitor­s. Consumer electronic­s manufactur­ers Samsung, Vizio and LG all have their own free streaming video platforms built into their TV sets. (Pluto TV has provided the technology for them.)

In 2020, Comcast acquired Xumo, which will be part of the new package of streaming services it will offer to broadband customers.

As the field grows more crowded, pressure will be on the players to come up with content that stands out. It’s why Amazon has created original series for its Freevee service, premiering nine last year and premiering at least 16 for 2022.

“We’ve been motivated by this idea of creating a modern television network,” said Ryan Pirozzi, who co-heads content and programmin­g at Freevee.

Tubi is also planning on developing 100 original programs in 2021. While that can get expensive, Massoudi said the data from users will guide their decisions on what to make.

“We have a good idea of what they want to watch,” he said.

 ?? Eugene Gologursky Getty Images ?? TUBI Chief Executive Farhad Massoudi in 2019.
Eugene Gologursky Getty Images TUBI Chief Executive Farhad Massoudi in 2019.
 ?? Tyler Golden IMDb TV ?? TITUS WELLIVER plays the titular PI in Amazon Freevee’s “Bosch: Legacy.”
Tyler Golden IMDb TV TITUS WELLIVER plays the titular PI in Amazon Freevee’s “Bosch: Legacy.”

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