Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by Fnord666 on Saturday July 13 2019, @10:16AM   Printer-friendly
from the pray-I-do-not-alter-it-any-further dept.

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.

https://www.news.com.au/technology/home-entertainment/tv/huge-threat-to-netflix-revealed/news-story/e86f7778556735d22e4cd9f054fb51af


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Saturday July 13 2019, @05:42PM (1 child)

    by VLM (445) on Saturday July 13 2019, @05:42PM (#866676)

    Why do people bother with TV/streaming at all?

    They don't anymore.

    Talk to "old people" like genx and older and its a statistical fact that something like a third of the population watched the last episode of MASH, TV had immense cultural influence.

    Today about two minutes with google and wikipedia will show that one of the top rated shows in the country "the good doctor" which is a stereotypical hospital drama with a twist that the doc is a super high functioning autistic, has something like 7 million viewers out of a population of 328 million people or about 2% of the population.

    TV lead American Western culture by being universally watched up to the 90s or so. Its an also-ran now, nobody watches anymore.

    In the 80s, lets say, you get six people in a room and the odds are excellent a conversation can break out about MASH and its cultural effects, or any other show of that era. In the late 2020s, if you want a conversation to spontaneously break out about the cultural impact of "The Good Doctor" you need to stuff the room with about one hundred people, and the other ninety eight are gonna talk about something other than TV so likely a TV related conversation will never break out.

    TV is dead as a cultural influence. It still makes money, just like telegrams and newspapers, although it no longer matters.

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 2) by legont on Sunday July 14 2019, @12:26AM

    by legont (4179) on Sunday July 14 2019, @12:26AM (#866751)

    If true, that's really cool! That means there is still hope.

    --
    "Wealth is the relentless enemy of understanding" - John Kenneth Galbraith.