Morning Sun

HBO Max, Peacock users surge as streaming wars heat up

- By Scott Moritz and Gerry Smith

AT& T’s HBO Max and Comcast’s Peacock saw a surge in sign- ups in recent months, an indication they’re gaining some momentum in an uphill fight against Netf lix and Walt Disney.

AT&T Chief Executive Officer John Stankey, speaking at an investment conference Tuesday, said HBO Max has added about 4 million new users in less than three months, putting activation­s at 12.6 million.

Peacock, meanwhile, has attracted about 26 million sign-ups since its launch, Comcast said Tuesday. That’s up from 22 million announced in October. But the service is free with ads, making it difficult to compare with HBO Max and other streaming platforms.

The two media conglomera­tes are playing catchup in a streaming industry with more entrenched players, including Netfl ix, Disney and Amazon.com. Netflix has 65 million subscriber­s in the U. S. alone, and many more overseas. And Disney has a trio of

services — Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+ — that it sells as a bundle.

But an influx of new programmin­g is giving HBO Max a boost. Shows like “The Undoing” and “The Flight Attendant” have helped fuel an “incredible pace” of customer gains, Stankey said in the presentati­on. It’s also bolstered the amount of time viewers spend with the service, a measure that’s up about 36% in the past 30 days.

The subscriber update comes just days after AT&T shocked Hollywood by announcing plans to put all its 2021 Warner Bros. movies on HBO Max at the same time they debut in theaters.

The shift in strategy created some blowback for AT&T. Director Christophe­r Nolan, who has a long relationsh­ip with the studio, criticized the plan on Monday, describing it as a betrayal of filmmakers. He also slammed HBO Max as

an inferior streaming service. Stankey used his presentati­on Tuesday to help justify the decision to have big-budget movies debut on HBO Max at the same time they open in theaters.

“It’s really important that we have a direct relationsh­ip with consumers,” Stankey said. With the pandemic shutting down theaters and disrupting TVshow production, “it’s important that these new distributi­on platforms scale

faster for fear of being left behind,” he said.

Comcast’s Universal studio has made similar efforts to shorten the theatrical window — the amount of time a movie plays exclusivel­y at cinemas — though it hasn’t taken as drastic a step as AT&T. In its presentati­on, the company said that shorter film windows will add value to its operations, but stressed that theaters remain a critical part of the business.

Comcast also has less riding on Peacock than AT&T does with HBO Max. Though Peacock generates ad revenue, it isn’t seen as an integral part of the cable giant’s business. For now, the service — launched nationally in July — is mostly a way to attract customers who may also use the company’s broadband services.

At AT& T, HBO Max is more central to its efforts to adapt to cord cutting — including people getting rid of the traditiona­l HBO network. In its early months, the service got off to a slow start. It’s more costly than the other major streaming platforms, and confusion over its use of the existing HBO brand may have kept some potential customers away. Stankey said the recent signups show that HBO Max is building a base of users that will only grow when big movies start hitting the service.

“The models that we’re putting in place are going to give us tremendous f lexibility,” Stankey said. “That’s the only way we’re gonna survive in this economy, in this market structure, moving forward.”

 ?? APPLE TV+, HBO MAX, NETFLIX VIA AP ?? This combinatio­n photo shows art for films (from left) “Wolfwalker­s,” on Apple TV +, “Let Them All Talk,” on HBO Max and “The Prom” on Netflix. All three are available now.
APPLE TV+, HBO MAX, NETFLIX VIA AP This combinatio­n photo shows art for films (from left) “Wolfwalker­s,” on Apple TV +, “Let Them All Talk,” on HBO Max and “The Prom” on Netflix. All three are available now.

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