It's difficult to imagine that Friends, a show that ended 15 years ago, could be of any real importance to a modern streaming giant like Netflix.
In fact the sitcom, which features a bunch of 20-somethings living together in a time before streaming was even invented, is US Netflix's second-most watched show.
Today, Netflix announced that it's poised to lose its rights to broadcast the series to its original parent company, Warner, which plans to launch its own streaming service, HBO Max in the first quarter of 2020.
The blow follows another announcement in June that Netflix's number one series, the US version of The Office, is also being snatched back by its creators, NBCUniversal, to be broadcast exclusively in the US on its own yet-to-be-launched streaming service.
Old media, analysts are noting with no small amount of surprise, is suddenly bringing the fight to Netflix, and it looks like Netflix could be the one that gets knocked out, or at least very knocked around.
(Score: 2) by Joe Desertrat on Saturday July 13 2019, @12:08PM (1 child)
We can also expect a push by "old media" to increase legislative pressure on alternative streaming sites and their viewers, up to and including those watching "pirate" sites.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Saturday July 13 2019, @12:23PM
MAFIAA has its crosshairs on Kodi (pirate enhanced versions, and pre-installed boxes). I'm not sure that it is a huge threat to profits, given that it can still be confusing for users.
The alternative streaming sites (I like "illicit streaming sites") that are used by Kodi plugins are involved in a game of whack-a-mole as usual. But things could get worse if we have some site blocking legislation or host countries crack down on the sites to normalize their relationship with "intellectual property" holders.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]