USA TODAY International Edition

ENOUGH STREAMING ALREADY?

CNN+ plug being pulled, Netflix subscriber exodus serve hard lessons for services

- Chris Woodyard

LOS ANGELES – Thanks to Netflix and CNN, the entertainm­ent industry has just received a master class into what works and what doesn’t when it comes to streaming.

● Lesson One: Just creating a streaming channel, even one with a well- known name, is no guarantee of success. Viewers are showing their limits when it comes to paying for multiple services.

● Lesson Two: The streaming market will continue to grow, but with so many players at this point, some will struggle to find a place with viewers.

● Lesson Three: Content is still king. To succeed, a content channel needs to retain subscriber­s with original talked- about, exclusive shows, movies or specials, backed by a deep reserve of older, popular content that can be aired again and again to tide viewers over between hits.

“While consumers have been willing to add ‘ just one more’ streaming service in the past, they are less willing to do so

today,” said Brett Sappington, vice president with media insights firm Interpret. “There are so many competitor­s available, each with strong content libraries.”

Like many of life’s teachings, these lessons came the hard way in two big developmen­ts this week.

Netflix reported its first drop in global subscriber­s in a decade. The streaming service lost 200,000 subscriber­s for the first quarter instead of gaining the 2.5 million predicted. The company blamed rampant password sharing, but investors sent the stock plummeting more than 35% on fears that the giant’s days

of unlimited growth are running headlong into the reality of pressure from streaming competitor­s.

CNN Worldwide, meanwhile, pulled the plug on its CNN+ streaming services only three weeks into its start, apparently unenthusia­stic about the initial response. Though it has invested heavily in the startup, CNN has new corporate ownership. Discovery acquired it as part of WarnerMedi­a and it is expected to move back toward stronger news programmin­g and away from punditdriv­en content.

In the case of Netflix, former Hollywood Reporter editor Alex Ben Block said its disclosure shows that rivals are finally able to apply pressure to what had been a juggernaut.

“When it was the only game in town, everyone signed up,” he said. Now, “a lot of competitor­s are dividing up the same pie. I expected at some point the magic would evaporate.”

Though streaming competitor­s Disney, CBS and Paramount are formidable, he cautions of making too much of Netflix’s troubles. Netflix has more than 220 million subscriber­s worldwide, he said. Plus, streaming remains the future

“The incrementa­l content for CNN+ wasn’t ultimately compelling enough to drive paid use and meeting WarnerMedi­a’s standard of success.” Brett Sappington Vice president of media insights firm Interpret

of entertainm­ent – a “fundamenta­l change in the way content is distribute­d.”

While Netflix has massive reserves of that content, CNN was launching CNN+ with little to distinguis­h it from its regular basic cable programmin­g. Think Anderson Cooper and Fareed Zaharia with a mix of some of its special films and recent series involving food and travel.

“The incrementa­l content for CNN+ wasn’t ultimately compelling enough to drive paid use and meeting WarnerMedi­a’s standard of success,” Sappington said.

Still, even though there is a multiplici­ty of streamers, Sappington believes there is room for more if they can offer content that’s high quality and compelling.

“Future streaming competitor­s could include those with sports content, providers of short- form or live- streaming content or streaming services that are growing overseas that haven’t yet entered the U. S. market,” he said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES DANIEL SLIM/ AFP VIA ?? CNN Worldwide, meanwhile, pulled the plug on its CNN+ streaming services only three weeks into its start, apparently unenthusia­stic about the initial response.
GETTY IMAGES DANIEL SLIM/ AFP VIA CNN Worldwide, meanwhile, pulled the plug on its CNN+ streaming services only three weeks into its start, apparently unenthusia­stic about the initial response.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Viewers are showing their limits when it comes to paying for multiple services.
GETTY IMAGES Viewers are showing their limits when it comes to paying for multiple services.
 ?? EVAN AGOSTINI/ INVISION/ AP ?? CNN was launching CNN+ with little to distinguis­h it from its regular basic cable programmin­g. Think Anderson Cooper, above, and Fareed Zaharia with a mix of some of its special films and recent series.
EVAN AGOSTINI/ INVISION/ AP CNN was launching CNN+ with little to distinguis­h it from its regular basic cable programmin­g. Think Anderson Cooper, above, and Fareed Zaharia with a mix of some of its special films and recent series.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States