Chattanooga Times Free Press

Paramount+: Mountain or a molehill?

- BY MAE ANDERSON

NEW YORK — Paramount+ debuts Thursday as the latest — and last — streaming option from a major media company, this time from ViacomCBS. It’s betting that consumers are willing to add yet another paid streaming service in an increasing­ly crowded field.

Its backers hope a smorgasbor­d of offerings — live sports and news, reboots of properties like “Frasier” and “Rugrats,” original shows like “Star Trek: Discovery” and the ViacomCBS library — will entice viewers. But its relatively late entrance to a competitiv­e landscape and a $4 price increase compared to its predecesso­r, CBS All Access, could make it a challengin­g sell.

“Paramount+ has a mountain of challenges ahead of it,” said Tim Hanlon, CEO of Vertere Group, playing off the Paramount+ tagline, “A mountain of entertainm­ent.” (The venerable Paramount logo features — you guessed it — a mountain, and the streamer’s recent ad campaign featured a number of characters from its shows climbing a snowy peak.)

Over the last year and a half more and more streaming services have debuted to challenge the reigning triumvirat­e of Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime. Disney+ kicked things off in late 2019, followed by WarnerMedi­a’s HBO Max, NBCUnivers­al’s Peacock and Discovery+.

In a way, ViacomCBS is

a pioneer; CBS, then a separate company, debuted CBS All Access in 2014. The new service effectivel­y rebrands All Access and adds other Viacom Properties channels including Comedy Central, BET, MTV and Nickelodeo­n.

But Paramount+ could have a brand awareness problem, Hanlon said. Most people associate the name Paramount with the mountainou­s title card that appears before movies. “Most consumers have very little understand­ing that Viacom, Paramount and CBS have the same parent, so the marketing team has a big job in front of it,” he said.

Second, the pricing may leave some scratching their heads. The ad-free tier launching Thursday is $10 a month. That’s the same price as CBS All Access’ ad-free

version, and $4 more than ad-supported CBS All Access, although the new service will offer a lot more material, including live news and sports. A $5 monthly ad-supported version will launch in June, but it won’t include the live local CBS stations that CBS All Access offered. Showtime and BET+, both owned by ViacomCBS, will remain separate subscripti­on services.

Still, the service also has some potential advantages over others. CBS All Access, Showtime and BET+ now have nearly 30 million subscriber­s, some of who will shift to Paramount+. ViacomCBS projects that those services will reach 65 million subscriber­s by 2024, with most of the growth coming from Paramount+.

ViacomCBS plans to increase its investment in streaming, from $1 billion a year to at least $5 billion annually by 2024. It will introduce 36 original shows in 2021, including a spinoff of “60 Minutes” called “60 Minutes+,” a documentar­y series about the making of “The Godfather,” a reboot of MTV’s “The Real World” that reunites the original New York City cast from 30 years ago, and series based on movies including “Fatal Attraction” and “Flashdance.”

“Viacom really has all assets they need to have a thriving business,” said Brian Wieser, GroupM global president of business intelligen­ce. “A meaningful investment in original programmin­g attracts people to the platform. And a deep library causes people to stay. Put those two together and you could have a viable successful service.”

But they may not be taking bold enough steps to stand out, said Colin Gillis, director of research at Chatham Road Partners. ViacomCBS said some of the studio’s films, including “Mission: Impossible 7” and “A Quiet Place Part II,” will go to its fledgling streaming service, Paramount+, after 45 days in theaters. But that’s not as bold a step as HBO Max has done, releasing 17 of their films on HBO Max the same day they’re released in theaters.

“That type of strategy, plus being late to the market, looks a lot like a ‘me too’ move’,” Gillis said. “If they want to act like a second tier streaming service, they’re doing a fantastic job.”

 ?? WILLY SANJUAN/INVISION/AP ?? Alex Kurtzman, from left, Heather Kadin, Anson Mount, Sonequa Martin-Green and Ethan Peck participat­e in the “Star Trek: Discovery” show panel during the CBS All Access presentati­on at the Television Critics Associatio­n Winter Press Tour at The Langham Huntington in Pasadena, Calif., in 2019.
WILLY SANJUAN/INVISION/AP Alex Kurtzman, from left, Heather Kadin, Anson Mount, Sonequa Martin-Green and Ethan Peck participat­e in the “Star Trek: Discovery” show panel during the CBS All Access presentati­on at the Television Critics Associatio­n Winter Press Tour at The Langham Huntington in Pasadena, Calif., in 2019.

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