The Morning Call

NBCUnivers­al will launch its new streamer, Peacock, in April

- By Meg James

LOS ANGELES — NBCUnivers­al’s upcoming streaming service will be named Peacock, in a nod to the broadcast network’s feathered mascot.

The bird will be stuffed with such NBC favorites as “The Office,” “Parks and Recreation,” “Cheers” and reboots of science fiction classic “Battlestar Galactica” and orphan sitcom “Punky Brewster.”

The Comcast-owned media company plans to introduce the service in April and heavily promote it next summer with content from NBC’s broadcast of the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

“What’s missing out there in the streaming world is content that feels current and relevant,” said Bonnie Hammer, chairman of NBCUnivers­al’s directto-consumer offerings. “Ours will have news, sports, ‘Saturday Night Live,’ Jimmy Fallon, Seth Myers — the entire family will be contributi­ng to the new service.”

An ad-supported version will be offered for free, but NBCUnivers­al is expected to carve out subscripti­on tiers with more robust programmin­g.

Executives declined this week to discuss the company’s pricing strategy, instead focusing on the Peacock’s producing partners and fan favorite shows, including “The Office,” which the Peacock will have exclusivel­y in January 2021after Netflix’s deal for the comedy expires.

The offbeat sitcom, starring Steve Carell, John Krasinski and Jenna Fischer, is the most popular show on Netflix, but NBCUnivers­al, which produced the American version of the quirky British hit, reclaimed its rights. NBCUnivers­al wants to make it a centerpiec­e of its upcoming service.

The New York company got squeezed out in a bid to bring “Seinfeld” — the linchpin of NBC’s “Must-See” Thursday night lineup for much of the 1990s — to the streaming service.

Instead, Netflix struck a fiveyear, $500-million-plus deal with Sony Pictures Television, which distribute­s “Seinfeld.”

The Los Gatos, California, streaming service was eager to shore up its library because it is losing two of its most popular hits, “The Office” and “Friends.”

AT&T’s WarnerMedi­a clawed back the rights to “Friends,” which was produced by Warner Bros. Television, for its upcoming HBO Max service.

WarnerMedi­a on Tuesday separately announced that it was steering all 279 episodes of the nerd comedy “The Big Bang Theory” to HBO Max when the streaming service launches next spring. The company did not disclose terms of the eightyear deal but said Chuck Lorre’s juggernaut would continue to run on WarnerMedi­a’s TBS channel.

Netflix’s staggering bid for all 180 episodes of “Seinfeld” left NBCUnivers­al and other suitors in the dust.

NBCUnivers­al is betting that its young Peacock will have enough plumage to strut in an increasing­ly crowded streaming market.

Its lineup will include original production­s, including “Dr. Death,” starring Alec Baldwin, Jamie Dornan and Christian Slater. The show will be based on a true-crime podcast about a Texas surgeon who killed and maimed patients. The new version of “Battlestar Galactica” comes from Sam Esmail, the force behind “Mr. Robot” and “Homecoming.” It will also feature a comedy called “Rutherford Falls,” co-created by Mike Schur, Ed Helms and Sierra Ornelas.

Peacock also will offer sports and news, which could prove valuable next year in the run-up to the 2020 presidenti­al election.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP ??
BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP

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