GQ (South Africa)

Netflix DVDS are still a thing

Netflix still has more than two million DVD subscriber­s – but the pandemic could be a killer blow

- Words by Amit Katwala

ERIC SIGNED UP FOR NETFLIX IN AROUND 2005 – drawn in by the convenienc­e. Instead of going to the local branch of Blockbuste­r to rent a movie, if you waited a couple of days it would arrive in the post. And there was a huge selection of titles – much wider than a small local rental place would be able to stock. By 2007, Netflix delivered its billionth DVD

– a copy of Babel, dispatched to a customer in Texas from one of its 42 national distributi­on centres across America, which served 6.3 million subscriber­s.

But the company’s business model was already starting to change. In January 2007, Netflix announced

the launch of its streaming service – which quickly ballooned into a tech giant, with billions of dollars to spend on producing its own original content, and 167 million subscriber­s across 190 different countries.

But Eric, now aged 41, kept on getting DVDS and Blu-rays by mail – sometimes he watched them and sent them back quickly, at other times they sat unopened for months on end. For most of us, the idea of deciding you want to watch a film, and then waiting for a rental copy to be physically mailed to you seems almost comically quaint. But Eric is far from alone. Of all the huge numbers marking out Netflix’s rapid growth, perhaps this is the most surprising: there are still more than two million people in the US alone getting Netflix DVDS by post.

Some subscriber­s value the wider range of options available on DVD. As Netflix has grown its streaming service, the selection of good films seems to have shrunk (even if the overall number has grown), as the company focuses its efforts on original television shows and documentar­ies.

For some customers, like Jennifer from San Francisco, DVDS represent the best way to see new releases as soon as possible. ‘There were more titles and newer movie releases than cable premium channels like

HBO and Showtime and I wanted to watch more of those,’ she says – although getting the most popular titles sometimes meant a long wait.

‘The selection is much larger than the streaming service,’ says Eric, who also has a Netflix streaming account, as well as Hulu, Amazon Prime and occasional­ly Disney+. ‘Streaming services may not be great if you want to watch a particular movie.’

Internet speeds are another factor. Some rural parts of the world still have poor internet infrastruc­ture, and streaming eats up allowances for customers who may have a monthly data cap.

For film buffs, image quality is a further considerat­ion. ‘There is still compressio­n in streaming movies,’ says Eric, who has just watched The Matrix Reloaded on Blu-ray and has Lawrence of Arabia and Sunshine in his queue. ‘I can notice compressio­n artefacts in streaming movies at times and they’re distractin­g. Also, I feel that certain movies are extremely appealing visually and I prefer those in Blu-ray.’

The company still makes a healthy amount of revenue from DVD rentals – almost $300m in revenue in 2019, according to a recent SEC filing – that’s dwarfed by the $20bn it made from streaming subscriber­s over the same period.

It’s unclear how much longer Netflix will keep its DVD service operating for. In 2011, it tried to spin it out into a separate brand (called Qwikster), which has seen subscriber­s paying separately for DVDS and streaming. The company was forced to U-turn after a customer outcry – it lost half of its stock value in two months, and shed 800 000 subscriber­s. In December 2019, Netflix CO-CEO Reed Hastings said he was in no hurry to get rid of it – and that he could see it lasting at least another five years.

Covid-19 has proven both a blessing and a curse from that perspectiv­e – people have a lot more time, and they’re realising that the streaming library doesn’t quite have the depth they’d like, so some are turning back to old media. But the service has suffered as a result of the pandemic.

The much-publicised problems the US Postal Service has been having means it’s been difficult for people to return and receive new discs – films are taking three or four days to arrive instead of one or two. And fewer movie releases means fewer and fewer new

DVDS – users on Reddit are complainin­g that none of the films near the top of their queue are available. ‘The only reason I haven’t cancelled is because of hope and curiosity,’ says Jennifer. ‘I’ve come close to cancelling.

I’ve gone down my title list of DVDS, as the older titles get closer to being mailed I’ve had to take out the titles I’ve watched already, and I’m left with not so much to watch. If they don’t come out with new releases soon, I may cancel my membership.’

‘The company still makes about $300m from DVD rentals, according to SEC filings’

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Netflix CO-CEO Reed Hastings
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