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The Next Cord-Cutters? The Networks

Roshan Dwivedi Published on : 07 August 2015
Dplay Discovery

The networks and studios are all on-board with this digital thing, and brushing off the old scenarios, repainted for a different age. The other day, David Zaslav, CEO of Discovery Communications, noted Discovery could put all of its content on subscription video on demand platforms and do great.

Everybody’s ramping up. The established networks are in that very odd position big companies get in when they realize, damn, we do have to change. It’s similar to when the big car makers had to acknowledge Japan. They did so by building cheaper, smaller, and unfortunately there for a while, worse cars.

Remember how a couple years ago, Fox, Disney and Comcast, the owners of Hulu, just wanted to jump off and sell the damn thing? Of course, they wanted to do it in that perfect broadcast monopoly kind of way: The new owner probably would not have been able to show rebroadcasts of their networks’ or studios’ programs. Which meant the new owner of Hulu would, in essence, be buying the stationery.

Then Hulu realized selling was idiotic and hit upon the sweetest concept going: A pay service with advertising and some demonstration of incrementally better content. For these owners, all of which make millions of dollars from getting cable operator to pay retransmission costs, Hulu is taking the dual-revenue stream to a new medium.

But here, consumers–that’s you–are playing the part of the cable networks. .

On 21st Century Fox’s earnings call yesterday, the Murdoch Boys made it clear they’re not in the buying mode, if for example, Disney and Comcast would like to part with Hulu now. According to Benjamin Mogil, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus, as quoted on Investors.com, “the two reiterated that the company is in more of a build vs. buy mode, basically ruling out any material M&A, seeing few gaping holes in the asset collection.”

Mogil continued: “While we believe that the company would be very interested in consolidating Hulu, such a move from the other partners seems unlikely, given the traction the service is having and the fear of not having equity in a viable subscription video-on-demand OTT platform.”

And yes, so that’s what’s needed. Another Hulu, or two or three. The big aching problem online advertisers have is a lack of “premium” content to surround themselves with, and the growing bigger problem the networks have is losing their viewers to online services where people aren’t that keen on commercials.

The answer is an almost-commercial free service that has premium content–like Hulu.  It’s ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox online content centers, with weirder series, some naughty language and subject matter protected from the FCC and the family values coalitions. Commercial content can’t just wither away. There are too many advertisers that need it. The networks need to be the cord cutters.

Read the entire story here.

Written by: Roshan Dwivedi

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