The Morning Call (Sunday)

Frndly TV carves a niche in streaming market

Cord-cutters can get family-friendly channels on service

- By Stephen Battaglio

Kelly Arbaugh, a 58-year-old executive assistant for a wealth management firm outside of Philadelph­ia, was tired of paying $300 a month for internet and cable TV service, and this year became one of the thousands of U.S. households that cut the pay-TV cord each month.

But breaking up with your favorite channels is hard to do, so Arbaugh turned to Google for help. “I asked, ‘How can I get the Hallmark Channel and UPtv without cable?’ ”

The search turned up Frndly TV, a Denver-based streaming service that offers a modest number of channels — including her favorites — starting at $5.99 a month. The name conveyed what Arbaugh was looking for: an inexpensiv­e subscripti­on with “family-friendly” programmin­g that will never earn Emmy nomination­s or raves from TV critics but soothes her after a long day.

“2020 beat us up really bad in a lot of different ways — personally, financiall­y, career-wise — and I just wanted a break from it all,” said Arbaugh, who relaxes to Hallmark movies and UP’s reruns of the family sitcom “Reba.”

Frndly TV’s founders say the service, launched in October 2019, has nearly 500,000 subscriber­s. The privately held company does not disclose its finances, but executives said the platform already is profitable.

Its rapid rise shows how consumers are willing to mix and match the growing number of platforms in the TV landscape to get the video experience they want, including live viewing, a practice that hasn’t completely gone away among the older generation­s that grew up with it. Younger viewers tend to prefer watching shows on-demand, rather than when a network schedules them.

“A fallacy of cord-cutting is that people don’t watch live TV,” said Bassil El-Khatib, chief executive of Frndly TV. “Value is the biggest challenge. The primary reason for dropping cable is cost. We’re giving the channels that they love.”

Frndly TV is what the media business calls a virtual MVPD — multichann­el video program distributo­r. Such services include Sling TV, YouTube TV and Hulu Live. They stream live channels once available only with a cable box or satellite dish and are often referred to as “over the top” or OTT services, which according to data from research firm Parks Associates, are used in 14% of U.S. homes with broadband internet.

Frndly has managed to carve a niche in the increasing­ly crowded market.

While OTT services were touted as an inexpensiv­e replacemen­t for cable TV, it hasn’t quite worked out that way. Prices have been rising and not every offering has channel lineups as extensive as those offered in traditiona­l pay-TV subscripti­ons, requiring consumers to sign up for multiple services to satisfy their viewing needs.

Parks Associates found that in the third quarter of 2020,

31% of the households with broadband internet subscribed to four or more video streaming services. That was up from 14% a year earlier, a lift that was likely propelled by the COVID19 pandemic that kept people inside and starved for entertainm­ent.

In addition to Frndly TV, Arbaugh also subscribes to Discovery Inc.’s streaming service Discovery+ to get her fix of home improvemen­t and house-flipping shows on HGTV.

Phyllis Vanes, 68, a retired certified nursing assistant, gets YouTube TV to receive broadcast channels, which she can’t pick up with an antenna on the Oregon coast. She signed on to Frndly TV for Hallmark mystery movies, which she missed after cutting the cord four years ago.

Frndly TV founders Michael McKenna and Andy Karofsky came up with the concept of Frndly TV after recognizin­g that some of the most popular channels were not being offered on the big OTT services, which are largely aimed at millennial­s and Gen Z viewers. Both of them worked on the launch of Sling while serving as executives at the satellite company Dish.

They packaged 15 channels, some of which are among the most-watched on cable, according to Nielsen ratings, including UP, three Hallmark channels — packed with chaste romances, bloodless murder mysteries and old network sitcoms — and INSP, which airs classic TV Westerns. The channels are for TV fans who look for escapism, not prestige television that test artistic boundaries.

“People tell us ‘TV is stressing me out,’ ” said El-Khatib. “They’re saying, the needle keeps being pushed on violence and sex. It’s trying to push the envelope to engage you, and sometimes that’s good, but sometimes people want TV just to relax.”

Frndly TV also has three hunting and fishing channels from the media company the Outdoor Group; BabyFirstT­V, a channel for infants and toddlers; the Weather Channel; Game Show Network; and CuriosityS­tream, which carries documentar­ies that are far more sedate than Netflix’s “Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness.”

Frndly TV has marketed itself as a service that parents can leave on without worrying what their kids will see (one of its ad tag lines is “No Parental Controls”). The most graphic violence Frndly TV viewers are likely to see is a buck being killed by a crossbow during one of the Outdoor Channel’s “Meateater Marathons.”

Frndly TV has also attracted older consumers who are adapting to the new TV technology. The company keeps its customer call center in-house, and even the partners will get on the line to help consumers who are not tech-savvy.

Many customers are finding Frndly TV through Roku and other streaming devices such as AppleTV and Amazon Fire. The company is using Facebook for most of its marketing efforts.

Byron Allen, chief executive of Los Angeles-based Entertainm­ent Studios, which owns the Weather Channel, said he is looking at placing other channels in his company’s portfolio on Frndly TV.

He believes the proliferat­ion of streaming services that target audience segments will help sustain the demand for live TV.

“I don’t believe there is any such thing as cord-cutting,”

Allen said. “It’s audience migration. You didn’t wake up one day and say you didn’t want the Weather Channel or you didn’t want sports. You woke up and just said I want it at an efficient price and in an efficient way and the technology is affording me that.”

 ?? ALLISTER FOSTER/CROWN MEDIA ?? Jesse Metcalfe stars in “Christmas Under the Stars,” a holiday movie on the Hallmark Channel. Hallmark’s three channels are among the family-friendly live television channels drawing subscriber­s to Frndly TV.
ALLISTER FOSTER/CROWN MEDIA Jesse Metcalfe stars in “Christmas Under the Stars,” a holiday movie on the Hallmark Channel. Hallmark’s three channels are among the family-friendly live television channels drawing subscriber­s to Frndly TV.

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