Los Angeles Times

STAND OUT OR PERISH

Smaller services such as Tubi and Pluto TV will have to find a way to compete with the big boys.

- By Wendy Lee

SAN FRANCISCO — Fifty miles from Netflix’s headquarte­rs, entreprene­ur Farhad Massoudi is building an alternativ­e to the country’s most popular subscripti­on streaming service.

His company, Tubi, offers a library of shows and movies similar to Netflix, for free. With no monthly subscripti­on fee, Tubi is one of the nation’s largest ad-supported streaming services, used by more than 20 million people each month.

Over the past year, its library has doubled to more than 15,000 titles and so has its staff, now about 180. It has outgrown its headquarte­rs that once took up a floor inside a San Francisco building. By next fall, Tubi’s home office will have four floors to make room for additional engineers, product managers and other employees.

“We’re the king of comfort TV,” Massoudi, the 38-year-old chief executive of Tubi, said. “Regardless of how the world is shaping, we clearly are doing better both in terms of volume and the quality of content.”

Tubi is part of a wave of streaming services that has flooded the U.S. market; some cater to the masses and others are specifical­ly focused on genres like horror or anime. Over the last five years, the number of services that stream video over the internet has more than doubled to 271, according to research firm Parks Associates.

But the entry of Disney, Apple and WarnerMedi­a into the streaming wars could spell trouble for some smaller niche players while creating opportunit­ies for others. The number of streamers is expected to decline in the next several years, as services compete for consumer attention and wallets, putting more pressure on smaller players that may lack the cash reserves to spend on content.

“They can’t all survive in this type of environmen­t,” said Brahm Eiley, president of the Convergenc­e Research Group, a British Columbia firm that tracks streaming.

Consumers will be faced with more choices than ever and may become more critical over how much money they spend on streaming services that charge a subscripti­on. New entrants to the market have priced their services much lower than some of the incumbents — Disney+ will charge $6.99 a month and Apple TV+ will charge $4.99 a month. Those are similar to prices charged by niche streaming services such as Shudder, a $5.99-a-month outlet owned by AMC Networks that caters to horror suspense and thriller fans.

Eunice Shin, a partner at global consultanc­y Prophet, said some niche services “are somewhat in defense mode.” Already, some streaming services have shut down, like Korean drama-focused DramaFever, which was hurt by Netflix’s increased investment in Korean content, Shin said.

“They live in fear of any one of the larger streamers adding more of a budget toward that genre and creating a challenge for them,” Shin said.

But Miguel Penella, AMC Networks’ president of global directto-consumer, said it’s too early to say whether the cost of content will increase for his company.

He believes Shudder complement­s other streaming services and its focus on horror appeals to passionate fans. Shudder offers originals such as horror anthology series “Creepshow” and can go deep into the genre, with about 2,000 hours of programmin­g, Penella said.

“We believe that we can superserve a distinct interest in the marketplac­e,” Penella said. “Every program on Shudder is for you. You don’t have to spend time looking around for programs that may not be for you.”

AMC Networks executives believe that there is huge growth potential for Shudder because the horror genre is easier to understand in different languages and cultures. Shudder, and three other genre-specific streaming services owned by AMC, are projected to reach more than 2 million subscriber­s by the end of the year.

Massoudi believes a new rush of streamers will help his business, not hurt it. The new entrants will push more people to end their cable subscripti­ons and discover free, ad-supported services like Tubi, he said. “Subscripti­on fatigue is a real problem, and I think accelerati­on of (subscripti­on video-on-demand) services means the rapid decline for the traditiona­l TV business — that’s where we come in,” Tubi’s Massoudi said.

A Tubi spokesman declined to disclose the company’s finances.

Tubi, which launched as a free service in 2014, licenses all of the movies and shows in its library. It doesn’t go after the top 1% of licensed shows, such as “Friends” or “The Office,” a strategy that lets Tubi avoid bidding wars with other services like Netflix. Tubi also has no plans to fund its own original production­s.

“The heavy focus on originals is going to be a part of the strategy for most of these (other subscripti­on streaming) services,” Massoudi said. “We see a lot of value and viewership in the bottom 99%” of licensed programs, he added.

Those include shows that have already drawn big audiences on TV, like reality dating show “Bachelor in Paradise” (from 2018), “The Bacheloret­te (from 2017) and the sitcom “Anger Management.”

Tubi streams some movies that are missing on Netflix, such as the 2010 thriller “Shutter Island” starring Leonardo DiCaprio and the 2007 critically acclaimed film “No Country for Old Men.” Tubi has raised $35 million and has licensing deals with MGM and Lionsgate, which have also invested in the company.

Executives at Pluto TV believe it also will pick up more customers because its streaming service is free and supported by ads.

With 18 million monthly viewers, Pluto TV has more than 200 channels, including a Cribs MTV channel constantly showing episodes of a program touring mansions of celebritie­s. But unlike traditiona­l TV, Pluto TV airs fewer ads. Every hour, Pluto TV airs eight to 12 minutes of ads — half of what’s on traditiona­l TV, the company said.

“We’re trading on an establishe­d, long-standing massive consumer habit of being entertaine­d by television,” said CEO Tom Ryan, adding viewers don’t mind watching ads in exchange for a premium TV service. “There is a limit to the number of subscripti­ons they are willing to pay for.”

Viacom purchased Pluto TV this year for $340 million, an acquisitio­n that would boost its advertisin­g efforts and increase its presence in streaming.

Consumers likely will mix and match their VOD services. A quarter of U.S. broadband households use three or more services to stream video over the internet, according to Parks Associates.

“Consumers are more likely today to have multiple subscripti­ons and also use ad-based streaming services,” said Brett Sappington, a senior research director and principal analyst at Parks Associates. “They have this whole set, this portfolio of content that they watch.”

Some services that charge a subscripti­on fee are already making changes to better compete.

Crunchyrol­l, a San Franciscob­ased anime streaming service, said it has seen the cost of licensing anime content increase in recent years, reflecting competitio­n from Netflix and other platforms. Every quarter, Crunchyrol­l rolls out as many as 30 new series from Japan.

“(With) everything that is happening in the content space today, prices are going up just because there are more buyers,” said Eric Berman, Crunchyrol­l’s head of business developmen­t.

Crunchyrol­l has more than 12 million monthly active users, including 2 million subscriber­s who pay $7.99 a month to watch ad-free anime shows and movies. The streaming platform is owned by Otter Media, a division of WarnerMedi­a. Crunchyrol­l said it will partner on content with WarnerMedi­a’s streaming service launching next year, HBO Max, but declined to discuss details.

Founded in 2006, Crunchyrol­l offers its licensing partners more than just video services. The company also holds an annual expo that draws tens of thousands of fans and sells merchandis­e on its site. Last year, Crunchyrol­l began offering games that draw inspiratio­n from anime on its platform.

Crunchyrol­l also is making original production­s, working with creators in Japan and using data on its anime fans to identify stories that might appeal to them.

“In the future, it’s going to be a brand that stands for something that is fully encompassi­ng of everything that an anime fan holds true, dear and near to their heart,” Berman said.

 ?? David Butow For The Times ?? FARHAD Massoudi, CEO of Tubi, which streams its library of movies and TV shows with ads.
David Butow For The Times FARHAD Massoudi, CEO of Tubi, which streams its library of movies and TV shows with ads.

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