Santa Fe New Mexican

HBO Max debuts to take on Netflix, but is it too late?

- By Edmund Lee

HBO has been an innovator for much of its nearly 50-year run. Now, with the unveiling of HBO Max, it’s playing catch-up.

In the 1970s, when people still referred to it as Home Box Office, HBO was a pioneer in bringing recent movies to the American living room in all their uncut glory. Another innovation came in the late 1990s, when HBO ushered in the era of prestige TV with original programs built around protagonis­ts like Larry Sanders, Tony Soprano and Carrie Bradshaw who could not exist comfortabl­y within the limits of the broadcast networks.

But with the launch of the ambitious HBO Max streaming platform Wednesday, the cable channel is a late entrant to the streaming wars.

AT&T, the parent company of HBO since 2018, plans to spend more than $4.5 billion on the project over the next few years. The company hopes to have 50 million HBO Max subscriber­s by 2025 and envisions the service will eventually generate billions in annual profits as it takes on Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, Apple TV+ and Peacock, among others, in the increasing­ly crowded field of online entertainm­ent.

The idea of creating a major streaming platform drove AT&T’s decision to buy Time Warner, the media empire that housed HBO, TBS, TNT, CNN and the Warner Bros. film and television studios.

When it is fully up and running, HBO Max, available at $15 a month, will offer 10,000 hours of programmin­g with a wide range of content meant to appeal to every kind of audience, not just the HBO crowd.

The platform will include HBO series like Game of Thrones and Succession; sturdy sitcoms from the Warner Bros. television archive like Friends and The Big Bang Theory; some 2,000 Warner Bros. movies, including the eight Harry Potter films and blockbuste­rs featuring DC Comics superheroe­s like Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman; and original fare like Love Life, a series starring Anna Kendrick, and Let Them All Talk, a film directed by Steven Soderbergh and starring Meryl Streep.

Soon after AT&T completed its $85.4 billion purchase of Time Warner, John Stankey, a veteran AT&T executive with limited experience in entertainm­ent, broke down the divisions across the newly acquired properties to create WarnerMedi­a. Shortly after that, at a town-hall-style meeting in Manhattan before an audience of HBO employees, he let them know their territory was under a new boss.

“As I step back and think about what’s unique about the brand and where it needs to go, there’s got to be a little more depth to it,” Stankey said. “There’s got to be more frequent engagement.” To achieve that, he added, HBO had to become “broad enough” to attract a larger audience.

A leadership shake-up followed, one that included the departure of HBO’s chief executive, Richard Plepler, who had led the network to more than 160 Emmys.

Stankey was promoted this year to one of the biggest jobs in corporate America: chief executive of AT&T. He will take the reins from Randall Stephenson, the leader of AT&T since 2007, on July 1.

The future of the revamped AT&T largely depends on HBO Max.

The choice of Jason Kilar as WarnerMedi­a’s new chief executive was another sign of the company’s emphasis on streaming media. A onetime head of Hulu, Kilar is a veteran of the earliest days of on-demand video.

Kilar has charged ahead with putting together a future iteration of HBO Max that will allow for commercial­s. When it is ready, the company will be able to offer a cheaper version of HBO Max, in addition to the $15-a-month, ad-free version, that will be a direct competitor to advertisin­g-supported streaming services like Hulu and NBCUnivers­al’s Peacock.

HBO itself is not going away. The premium cable network, whose latest shows include The Plot Against America and Run, will continue under Casey Bloys, who took over from Plepler. But AT&T will focus on redirectin­g viewers’ attention to the new streaming platform. The phone giant hopes HBO’s 35 million subscriber­s, each of whom pays $15 a month, will shift their loyalty to HBO Max, which costs the same.

The HBO network can currently be bought in two ways: online through HBO Now, or through a cable provider, which offers digital access through HBO Go. HBO Max is an altogether new, much larger product that includes HBO proper.

A potential stumbling block for it is the cost. Netflix’s no-frills plan costs $9 a month. Disney+ charges $7 a month. But HBO Max is asking people to spend $15 a month at a time when household budgets are constraine­d by the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Even before the outbreak, industry analysts called the pricing “unreasonab­le.” Now many customers are looking to cancel their HBO accounts, largely because of the cost, according to a study prepared for the New York Times by the global research consultanc­y Kantar.

The analysis found 1 in 5 people who subscribed to HBO Now said they planned to cancel their subscripti­on in the coming months; a similar proportion said they planned to drop their subscripti­ons to the HBO channel through their cable providers. That’s a high opt-out rate. A little more than 7.4 percent of Netflix customers said they planned to dump their accounts, according to Kantar, and about 8.6 percent of Disney+ customers said the same. Amazon Prime Video appears more durable, with 1.2 percent saying they would cancel.

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