Bangkok Post

Streaming apps suddenly face the coronaviru­s test

Even the most determined binge-watchers may soon see their well run dry

- TARA LACHAPELLE

There used to be entirely too much TV content for people to watch and not enough hours in the day. How quickly it will start to feel as though just the opposite is true.

What’s on TV is a relatively minor concern in the grand scheme of things: The novel coronaviru­s is now present. Hospitals worry they’ll run out of space and life-saving equipment, and so people are being advised to hunker down to slow the spread. In this social-distancing experiment, media companies such as Netflix and Walt Disney have a role to play. The isolation will only get more difficult as the days wear on. Entertainm­ent can help keep us from going stir-crazy and from giving in to the temptation to meet up with friends and go back to normal life.

Because this moment is so unpreceden­ted, it’s hard to foresee the economic impact, other than that it will be painful, a pain that will be felt most severely by hourly workers. That can make conversati­ons about what’s on Netflix feel tone-deaf. And still, it’s a very big part of how our consumptio­n habits will change in the ensuing weeks and months. It doesn’t take a survey to know that when people are stuck home, TV viewership will go up. The closest Nielsen can get to predicting how much is to look at the aftermath of a natural disaster such as Hurricane Harvey, which devastated the Houston area in August 2017. It found that total television usage surged 56% in that market after that storm. Likewise, when a January 2016 blizzard dumped more than 60cm of snow on New York, usage rose 45% and produced a 61% increase in streaming via TV.

At the same time, the surge in demand may expose more of the industry’s problems. Sports programmin­g is the biggest reason to still pay for traditiona­l cable TV, but for the moment there aren’t any live sports to watch. The NBA, NHL, MLB and other leagues have all postponed or cancelled games because of the virus (and so ESPN is having to get creative). The pandemic may in turn drive more households to ditch the cable bundle and switch to streaming-TV services. But as much as these services brag about the thousands of hours of movies and shows they have, which sounds like a lot, the truth is that people may grow bored with any of these apps relatively quickly when forced to spend so much extra time with one.

All of the media giants have been spending like mad during the last year on content to stock their new streaming apps, including expensive rights deals for access to re-runs of old favourites such as Seinfeld and Friends. That there isn’t enough to watch will be more of a feeling than a reality, but it speaks to the growing frustratio­n with the new TV ecosystems that are being created independen­t of one another.

In my own 11 days of isolation, much of it under the weather, I’ve run out of Netflix titles — not literally, but after endless scrolling and previewing, there doesn’t seem to be anything left that I want to see or can force myself to sit through. More content is being added to Netflix all the time, and normally that’s enough, but the five-day wait for the next season of Ozark suddenly feels like torture. Disney+ subscriber­s who signed up for and finished the first season of The Mandaloria­n are probably getting antsy, too, given that there’s not much else like it on the service. It announced last week, though, that Pixar’s Onward was made available early on demand for US$20 (600 baht) and that it will be added to the Disney+ library on April 3. Meanwhile, the outbreak has forced studios to halt production of upcoming programmes.

In theory, streaming is a more affordable alternativ­e to cable. The problem, as ever, is that everyone’s favourite content is being spread out behind different paywalls, and that won’t be much help for families feeling financial strain. Those facing the prospect of lost jobs or lost work hours won’t have the luxury of subscribin­g to everything.

There’s also the increasing­ly precious home-internet bandwidth. Already in Europe, Netflix, Amazon’s Prime Video and Google’s YouTube have all agreed to temporaril­y reduce the speed of their streams to avoid overloadin­g networks while so many people are working from home.

It could be that the extra time to binge on content leads to higher churn than the companies were previously expecting. For now, there are more questions than answers. But consumer behaviour will be interestin­g to observe as the streaming experiment meets the social-distancing experiment. Just don’t forget to wipe down the remote every so often.

Consumer behaviour will be interestin­g to observe as the streaming experiment meets the social-distancing experiment

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand