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    Innovation Village | Technology, Product Reviews, Business
    You are at:Home»Brands»Happily Never After – Disney Parts Ways With Netflix

    Happily Never After – Disney Parts Ways With Netflix

    4
    By Tapiwa Matthew Mutisi on August 10, 2017 Brands, Business, Content, Deals, Digital, Entertainment, Media, News, Press Release, Products, Startups, Streaming

    Walt Disney Co. – the world’s biggest entertainment company – recently said that they had plans to launch two online streaming services: an ESPN and a family film service that will be sold directly to their consumers. With such an announcement, Netflix has just gotten a hard reality check as Disney announced it would be ending its relationship with the streaming company in 2019 as it gears up to launch its own streaming service in response to falling revenues.

    It’s the most radical step taken by a major content maker in a time when streaming services are eating into their profit margins. It’s also a nightmare scenario for Netflix, whose library still relies heavily on non-original content.

    Disney owns some of the most popular media assets in the world, including the incredibly lucrative Star Wars franchise, Marvel assets and Pixar films. Likely, the new streaming services will have Disney mainstays and old titles in their library. The company said the service would start out in the United States before launching internationally.

    Disney’s streaming service would also offer subscribers access to exclusive original content, taking a page from the playbooks of Netflix and other distributors.

    Despite the fact Netflix is one of the most effective marketing and sales tools for content makers – being featured on the service’s library helped boost DVD prices for movies by independents and major studios – more and more customers are choosing to skip out on paying for television packages altogether. Disney said they had been recording lower sales and revenues in the last year, particularly as ESPN has been struggling with high cord-cutting and low subscription rates.

    Disney’s strategy to break away from “the Netflix drug”, is a bold move that might serve as a template for other media companies seeking to recoup the riches they have been losing to Internet-only streamers. Furthermore, the reliance on Netflix has had the effect of diluting media companies’ brands, likely contributing significantly to the retreat in revenues.

    It could be potentially more lucrative for Disney to try to make it on its own by cutting out middleman distributors who mark-up costs and restrict access to audiences. However, the company will likely be dishing out more money to set up the infrastructure necessary to run their streaming service, as well as the new original content it will be pushing out.

    It’s unclear what exactly will happen to Netflix’s current deal with Disney that allows it access to its Marvel intellectual properties. Disney CEO Robert Iger did not rule out the possibility of the breakdown of that particular relationship, but it’s difficult to imagine the relationship surviving a cut like this.

    Ironically, the news comes out just after Netflix announced the acquisition of Millarworld, a comic-book publisher that produced critically acclaimed works such as “Kick-Ass”, “Old Man Logan” and “Kingsman”. The two companies will be working together to create video content based on existing and forthcoming comic stories, as well as new publications under the Netflix brand.

    The merger is widely seen a hedge by Netflix against the possibility it would lose access to Marvel IPs via the Disney relationship, and it looks like Disney might be proving that to be true.

    Related

    Disney Entertainment ESPN Netflix Walt Disney Co.
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    Tapiwa Matthew Mutisi
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    Tapiwa Matthew Mutisi has been covering blockchain technology, intelligent technologies, cryptocurrency, cybersecurity, telecommunications technology, sustainability, autonomous vehicles, and other topics for Innovation Village since 2017. In the years since, he has published over 4,000 articles — a mix of breaking news, reviews, helpful how-tos, industry analysis, and more. | Open DM on Twitter @TapiwaMutisi

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    4 Comments

    1. Shola Araoye on August 10, 2017 10:31 am

      This is indeed happily never after for Netflix as Disney part ways with them. Thanks admin for the update.

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    2. Pingback: Facebook Introduces New Video Service | FIRSTPRESS

    3. Covenant Oyetade on August 10, 2017 2:46 pm

      This is a hard blow on Netflix. I’m still thinking of how Netflix would go about this unfortunate development because, it’s not clear if they were actually prepared for this.

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      • Tapiwa Matthew Mutisi on August 10, 2017 3:39 pm

        Netflix weren’t actually prepared for this kind of development, hence Disney gave them up until 2019.

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