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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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It may not be news you want to hear, but it's happening anyway. If the linear channels don't produce more original content of their own, they will die. Sad, but true. Don't shoot the messenger. |
Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Perhaps someone needs to ask the BBC Director General Tony Hall why he's signed off on a deal to purchase UKTV or ask Comcast why they've bought Sky. Perhaps they should have spoke to you first OB.
Oh OB your comments gets funnier by the day.:D |
Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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I wouldn’t expect my jaw to drop far. I’ve already stated I expect distributors to vertically integrate through selling direct to subscribers. For a right-wing, free trade supporter, who embraces with open arms free market capitalism I’m surprised that what you consistently fail to demonstrate is where the money comes from to sustain all of these independent entities. It’s basic economics. All markets have finite size. Pay-TV is an already widely exploited market, by Comcast, Liberty and yes Netflix and Amazon. The delivery method is new but the market itself isn’t. |
Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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---------- Post added at 19:56 ---------- Previous post was at 19:55 ---------- Quote:
There's already only five major Hollywood studios left and they will all likely get bought out by the tech cos in the next few years. We've already got the next big merger about to start when Viacom and CBS come back together and John Malone has made no secret he wants to sell some/all of his companies out to them and merge that lot with a mobile player like Verizon too. Then, someone like Amazon will come and along and gobble the lot in one bite. |
Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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I would expect that the bulk of all the streamer's profits will be through DTC services, rather than going through a third party. Quote:
I never said that Comcast wouldn't be one of them, clearly they are, but more consolidation is coming and I'm certainly not clear what name plate will be on the front doors of the HQs of the Big 5 (or however many cos it will be) in the next five years, but probably Apple, Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Netflix. |
Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Why would it go the way of the supermarkets and not the Big Six energy suppliers? Consistently high and rising prices. They control end to end distribution.
Supermarkets are ‘kept honest’ to a greater or lesser extent by alternatives out there. Oligopoly is not equal to perfect competition. Not by a long shot. |
Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Amazon already has its own Studios.
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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When the Studios started up, everything was done in-house. They employed all their own craftsmen, controlled distribution of their content and had exclusive deals with the top actors. It will go back to that, I reckon, just in a modern way. At the moment, the Hollywood companies sell content to each other and many other broadcasters and distributors around the world. Soon, they will fully control their own content again, not sell it to others and probably sit around the table with the other big companies and fix the prices, if they're allowed to get away with it. ---------- Post added at 20:42 ---------- Previous post was at 20:41 ---------- Quote:
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Horizon, your views and mine aren’t actually a million miles apart on this in the medium to long term.
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Numbers play a big part in this and will determine things and who the winners will be and who the losers will be. If, as I expect, Netflix get at least half a billion subscribers, spending $20bn on content each year becomes sustainable. Will Disney or the Apple owned Disney (as I expect it to be) will they catch up with Netflix? Will there be a third truly global player, a fourth and fifth? We'll probably know within the next five years.
As for linear tv, I've said before, what linear tv channels that remain in the future, I expect they will act like shop windows into the streaming services. Perhaps the big streamers will take ads, perhaps not, but the free services will be what linear channels survive and I expect most of the pay tv channels to wither away. Well, that's what Murdoch thought and as he sold the bulk of his empire on that belief, I go with that. ---------- Post added at 21:28 ---------- Previous post was at 21:04 ---------- And just coming back to the comparison with the energy companies, the big tech/media/telco companies may not get everything their own way. I've spoken about for years about what I originally called the portals, which in today's terms would probably be called social media. As well as the big media/tech companies, there could literally hundreds/thousands of sites producing quality content and people come together from around the world on their favourite subjects and chip in to fund it, what we would now call crowdfunding. These sites may not attract the big name actors or directors, but that does not mean they would all be rubbish or not find their own niche. Look at youtube. There's rubbish on there, but also quality stuff. |
Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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Nobody forces you to subscribe to any TV service, do they? |
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