CBS: All Access Subs Up 200% Since ‘Star Trek’

A TV Creator’s Guide To Streaming Platforms

With the explosion of streaming services in Hollywood, agents and executives have more options than ever when it comes to where they take their TV shows. And now that Apple is the newest entrant in the increasingly competitive arms race for prestige programming, they have yet another attractive (and deep-pocketed) buyer. Here, the town’s top sellers weigh in on the perks, the digs and what each of these tech companies wants most from Hollywood.

‘No Activity’ Gets CBS All Access Premiere Date

YouTube’s Plan To Take On Netflix And Hulu

With a veteran television exec, talent like Demi Lovato and Google’s $86 billion in cash, the platform known for skateboarding videos and tween vloggers wants to join the battle to become a prestige TV player. “I want our shows to resonate in a big way with audiences,” says content head Susanne Daniels. “And once that happens, we’ll be on that list — like it or not.”

YouTube To Be Main World Series Sponsor

YouTube TV will be the first “presenting sponsor” of the World Series, with regular TV commercials during the event as well as digital exposure on MLB.com sites and in-stadium promotion.

Sports: How Streamers Could Disrupt Legacy Nets

Hulu To Add 207 New Titles This Week

Roku Unveils Faster Media Players, More

Nearly 2M Streamed Thurs. NFL On Amazon

Nearly 2 million people logged onto Amazon.com for the online retailer’s first livestream of Thursday Night Football, the National Football League said.

Americans Can’t Give Up Destination TV

Pay-TV subscribers in the United States are growing increasingly satisfied with over-the-top streaming TV services vs. traditional cable TV, but they also are spending nearly an hour more a week watching regularly scheduled television programming than they did two years ago. That increasingly complex consumer relationship with streaming and cable television is explored in detail in a trio of new J.D. Power studies.

Roku Shares Soar Over 67% In IPO Debut

Shares of video streaming firm Roku Inc. rose more than 67% in their market debut on Thursday, giving the U.S. IPO market a much-needed shot in the arm. Roku ended trading on the Nasdaq with a share price of $23.50, giving it a market capitalization of about $2.23 billion.

Netflix Commits To $400M Canada Investment

Under an agreement with the government of Canada, Netflix has agreed to invest a minimum of $500 million Canadian (about $400 million U.S.) in original productions in the country over the next five years. Netflix will establish a permanent, multipurpose film and TV production presence in Canada — the first time that the company has done so outside the U.S.

Roku Connects With Investors, Shares +16.6%

Shares of Roku Inc., a Fox-backed video streaming firm, rose as much as 16.6% in their market debut on Thursday, giving the U.S. IPO market a much-needed shot in the arm.

Roku IPO Aims To Raise More Than $200M

Roku, the emerging tech player whose streaming technology has helped power the TV industry’s great re-bundling, is planning an initial public offering it hopes will raise more than $200 million. At that price, the company is valued at about $1.3 billion.

Apple’s TV Strategy Becomes Clearer

The world’s biggest company is officially taking meetings as everyone from Jennifer Aniston to Steven Spielberg salivates over selling the first big show. One studio chief says, “Who wouldn’t want to be the Mad Men or House of Cards on Apple?”

Comcast Selling $18 Streaming TV Service

Comcast would rather you buy a lot of TV from them, not a little. But if you want to buy a little, they’ll sell you that, too: The biggest pay TV provider in the country is starting to sell an $18-a-month “skinny bundle” which gives you a handful of TV channels, primarily the big broadcasters. Comcast is marketing this one to a subset of its customers — those who use it for internet but aren’t paying it for TV.

’30 Rock’ Streaming On Hulu Exclusively

FuboTV: An Underdog With Upside

NFL’s Amazon Deal Could Be Streaming Test

The NFL’s Thursday night package is being carried jointly by CBS, NBC, the NFL Network and Amazon this year, but the 2018 package will soon be up for bid. There could be substantial interest from companies like Twitter — which aired Thursday night games last year — Amazon, and potentially other tech behemoths like Google, Apple or Facebook.

Vimeo Buys Livestream, Launches Streamer

Vimeo announced today its plan to acquire Livestream, a live video streaming platform that powers over 10 million events a year and many local broadcasters. Following the completion of the acquisition, Livestream’s offerings will be integrated into Vimeo allowing a seamless workflow. Vimeo is also rolling out Vimeo Live, an enterprise streaming service, it’s first in the live market.

FX Pulls Shows Off Rival Streaming Services

Which means Netflix and Amazon have to make more of their own shows. Fox, like other big studios/networks, has been making noise about reclaiming its old shows from other people — namely, Netflix — and it is starting to do that: If you want to watch old Fox shows, you increasingly have to watch them on Fox properties (or Hulu, partly owned by Fox).

DirecTV Now Has Another Meltdown

DirecTV Now, the AT&T-owned live streaming service which has experienced recurring technical issues since its debut, suffered another major meltdown last night while viewers were watching Sunday Night Football and other primetime programming.

Networks’ Streaming Apps Off To Slow Start

There’s a growing push by traditional TV companies to launch direct-to-consumer apps and services, with Disney the latest to announce plans. The subscriber numbers for these services are growing nicely, but the contribution they’re making to overall revenues for their parent companies are still pretty marginal — for now.

CBS Gets Ready to Vie With ESPN In Digital

CBS Corp. intends to launch a streaming-video sports outlet that will be more newsy and less focused on commentary programs, the company’s CEO Leslie Moonves said Thursday, while taking pains to demonstrate CBS’s business acumen compared to that of rivals like Walt Disney, Comcast, Netflix and 21st Century Fox.

IBC 2017

Telestream, IBM Enable High-Speed Live Video

Vantage with Lightspeed Live Capture powered by Aspera enables high-quality streaming to remote production teams for near real-time editing and production over standard IP networks.

Sling Wins Mayweather-McGregor Fight With PPV

‘Atypical’ Renewed For Season 2 By Netflix

Cord-Cutting Explodes To 22 Million

American consumers are cancelling traditional pay-TV service at a much faster rate than previously expected, according to research firm eMarketer. In 2017, a total of 22.2 million U.S. adults will have cut the cord on cable, satellite or telco TV service to date — up 33% from 16.7 million in 2016 — the researcher now predicts. That’s significantly higher than eMarketer’s prior estimate of 15.4 million cord-cutters as of the end of this year. Meanwhile, the number of “cord-nevers” (consumers who have never subscribed to pay TV) will rise 5.8% this year, to 34.4 million.

I Studied YouTube’s Audience for Three Years. Here’s What I Learned.

FuboTV Launches First National Ad Campaign

FuboTV announced today the launch of a new, national marketing endeavor that includes the company’s first TV commercials, premiering at the start of the new NFL season and introducing viewers to “Fubo […]

Netflix Content Spending To Pass $7B A Year

Netflix Chief Financial Officer David Wells says $7 billion a year on content might just be a starting point — as long as the company can continue to add to its more than 100 million subscribers around the world.

OTT Bundle In Works For Non-Sports Viewers

The Wall Street Journal reports that people who are tired of paying for TV sports channels they don’t watch will soon have a new option. Cable channels owned by Discovery Communications, Viacom, AMC Networks, A+E Networks and Scripps Networks Interactive will be part of a new streaming service expected to have a “soft launch” in coming weeks, people familiar with the situation say. Subscriptions will cost less than $20 a month. Journal subscribers can read the full story here.

Jill Gordon Names ‘Transparent’ Showrunner

NEWS ANALYSIS

TV To Take Ads From Streaming-Video Rivals

TV networks are ceding valuable ad time to new competitors who use the commercial breaks to tell viewers, essentially, to use their remotes to watch something interesting on one of their services. A shift in policy highlights the new world of video content.

Netflix To Add 6 Original Shows This Week

DirecTV Now Begins Adding CBS Stations

DirecTV Now has started adding local CBS affiliates, just in time for the first slate of National Football League games on Sunday. AT&T, which owns the live streaming service, announced last month that it had struck a deal with CBS to offer its local affiliates in 25 markets as well as the CBS-owned Showtime, CBS Sports Network, Pop and the CW. However, the telco did not reveal a launch date at the time of the announcement.

Plex Adds Amazon Fire TV And Web Support

Plex Live TV and DVR is now available on Amazon Fire TV, along with support for live TV on Plex for Web. Plex says that Amazon users will also get a new user experience since Amazon Fire TV is powerful enough to run the new Plex Android TV interface.

COMMENTARY BY JACOB GROSHEK

Rise of Streaming Won’t End Our Addiction To TV

Disney Streaming Service Just Got Bigger

Disney’s Star Wars and Marvel comic-book movies will be included in the upcoming service, making it the only way to stream those movies on demand in the U.S. as part of a monthly subscription. (So, not on Netflix.) A price hasn’t been announced yet. The service is expected in late 2019 after Disney’s current deal with Netflix expires.

FuboTV Adds NFL Network, Red Zone

Live streaming TV service Fubo.TV is adding more NFL programming in time for the kick-off of the 2017-18 season.  Through a new carriage agreement with NFL Media, NFL Network and NFL […]