This is a bad deal I don’t watch ESPN but I have Hulu and I was considering getting Disney +. Have they said anything about bundling Hulu without ads though?
I have a feeling there will be a higher priced package option that will include Hulu w/o ads.A Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+ bundle at Netflix's price point is absolutely brilliant. I'll downgrade my ad-free Hulu in a heartbeat for free Disney+. I don't even want ESPN+, but it's free.
I believe they said there wouldn't. I know that the bundle we're doing right now, with Hulu and Spotify, does not give us that option.I have a feeling there will be a higher priced package option that will include Hulu w/o ads.
Maybe for now, but people would pay the extra money for no ads. The big difference between this bundle and Hulu + Spotify is that Disney owns all of these services whereas they don’t own Spotify.I believe they said there wouldn't. I know that the bundle we're doing right now, with Hulu and Spotify, does not give us that option.
Well obviously.remember this is starting price. I wouldn't expect it to last longer than 2 years before they do significant price increases.
They aren’t getting a lot of content (especially on the Fox side) for a long time.Well obviously.
It makes complete sense why Disney+ is starting out at a low introductory price given the lackluster Day 1 (and likely full first year) lineup as they regain content from Netflix and also Amazon.
Had they started with 99% of their catalog, they would’ve had less justification for raising the price, especially if original content doesn’t hit like they want it to.
That's gotta sting if you're Disney, especially since Avatar is a franchise I think they have a lot of faith will really stay big beyond just the first movie. I'd be surprised if an Avatar Disney+ show doesn't happen at some point, tbh.They aren’t getting a lot of content (especially on the Fox side) for a long time.
Matthew Ball (great follow if you’re interested in the business side of streaming) pointed out that Disney will have the streaming rights to Avatar 5 before Avatar 2.
Well, Disney owns FX so that really shouldn't be an issue. And I agree, probably not immediate, but when the Disney hype machine starts up for Avatar 2 in 2021, I think we'll see Avatar put on Disney+ for wider exposure in the lead-up to the movie. Although I think they're probably also likely to re-release the movie in theaters around that time (in which the film would pass Endgame for #1 worldwide once again in all likelihood).FXNow has Avatar for streaming.
I'd suspect, the film will eventually hit sooner than later on Disney+, but it won't be on the immediate.
Well, Disney owns FX so that really shouldn't be an issue. And I agree, probably not immediate, but when the Disney hype machine starts up for Avatar 2 in 2021, I think we'll see Avatar put on Disney+ for wider exposure in the lead-up to the movie. Although I think they're probably also likely to re-release the movie in theaters around that time (in which the film would pass Endgame for #1 worldwide once again in all likelihood).
I want to say HBO does?That's gotta sting if you're Disney, especially since Avatar is a franchise I think they have a lot of faith will really stay big beyond just the first movie. I'd be surprised if an Avatar Disney+ show doesn't happen at some point, tbh.
Who has the rights to Avatar and Avatar 2 for streaming?
I want to say HBO does?
To the best of my understanding, TV/streaming rights go through a hierarchy, depending on how old/famous the movie is. As the movie gets older, it drops down the list.
* Theaters
* DVD / PPV streaming (iTunes, Google Play, Amazon)
* “Premium channel” (Netflix, HBO, etc)
* Cable (FX, AMC, etc)
Take the Harry Potter movies. They’re now all viewable on ABC Family (or whatever it’s called now) but they were on HBO for a couple years after release.
The Potter movies were viewable on HBO last year while also available on freeform, before moving to SyFy as Universal was willing to pay a very high price for their extreme value. Potter is certainly not a good example.I want to say HBO does?
To the best of my understanding, TV/streaming rights go through a hierarchy, depending on how old/famous the movie is. As the movie gets older, it drops down the list.
* Theaters
* DVD / PPV streaming (iTunes, Google Play, Amazon)
* “Premium channel” (Netflix, HBO, etc)
* Cable (FX, AMC, etc)
Take the Harry Potter movies. They’re now all viewable on ABC Family (or whatever it’s called now) but they were on HBO for a couple years after release.