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Businesses Media Television The Almighty Buck Apple Entertainment

Apple's Plan For Its New TV Service: Sell Other People's TV Services (recode.net) 95

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Recode: After years of circling the TV business, Apple is finally ready to make its big splash: On Monday it will unveil its new video strategy, along with some of the new big-budget TV shows it is funding itself. One thing Apple won't do is unveil a serious competitor to Netflix, Hulu, Disney, or any other entertainment giant trying to sell streaming video subscriptions to consumers. Instead, Apple's main focus -- at least for now -- will be helping other people sell streaming video subscriptions and taking a cut of the transaction. Apple may also sell its own shows, at least as part of a bundle of other services. But for now, Apple's original shows and movies should be considered very expensive giveaways, not the core product.

All of this might very well work. Apple has an installed base of 1.4 billion users, and some of them will buy the things Apple promotes: Look at the success of Apple Music, which launched seven years after Spotify but quickly amassed 50 million subscribers due to a free trial period and prominent real estate on Apple's devices. Another reason this could work: Amazon has already been very successful with its own version of the same idea. Facebook is also bullish on selling TV subscriptions and is pushing would-be partners to sign up so it can launch later this spring or summer, according to industry sources. Similarly, Comcast (which is a minority investor in Vox Media, which owns this site) is rolling out Flex, a $5-a-month service that gives you a bunch of free content (some of which you can also get other places) and the ability to easily buy HBO, Showtime, etc. Instead of offering exclusive content, Comcast is offering subscribers a Roku-like streaming box.
According to people who've talked to Apple about its plans, Apple's new TV service will consist of selling TV subscription apps surrounded by millions of other apps in its main app store. "Apple plans on making a new storefront that's much more prominent for those who use Apple TV boxes and other Apple hardware," reports Recode. "It will also be able to offer its own bundles -- for instance, it could offer a package of HBO, Showtime, and Starz at a price that's lower than you'd pay for each pay TV service on its own."
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Apple's Plan For Its New TV Service: Sell Other People's TV Services

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  • Well this should be interesting.

    Innovate harder I guess.

    • They won't have to convince everybody that they invented cable to cash in; they only have to convince a few percent.

      Give them another 10 or 15 years, they'll probably invent radio too.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Well, think of all the services out there - it literally is a A La Carte menu of channels. Just you now have to manage a dozen subscriptions and services and logins and passwords and incompatibilities.

      Perhaps you're subscribed to Hulu and Disney and YouTube TV. You want CBS and you need to subscribe to CBS' online service. The sheer number of services makes it hard to navigate.and use.

      Apple can certainly aggregate all this into a simple interface to make it easier to subscribe, view and unsubcribe.

      • by GrandCow ( 229565 ) on Friday March 22, 2019 @06:19AM (#58314480)
        If they can do it and give a better price than buying them all separately... and I mean a REALLY GOOD price discount, maybe.

        Can I literally pick only the stations/streams that I want to pay for, and not a bundle that includes 30 things I don't give a mosquitos fart about?

        Last question: Will they refuse to put ads in to raise the revenue stream?

        If all 3 are a yes, I'm interested in at least seeing what the pricing is.
        • Question four is whether they will sell their 'service' to people who do not have any Apple hardware. If not, the hell with them.

          • Question four is whether they will sell their 'service' to people who do not have any Apple hardware. If not, the hell with them.

            Actually, I think it is more of a case that if you don't have any Apple hardware, then the hell with YOU. (:

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        I just wish there was a simple way to pay a reasonable price for what I want. Is that too much to ask?

        Like I can subscribe to Netflix for a month for 8 bucks and watch a season or two, maybe three. So let's say 30 hours of TV, or 30 cents/episode. And that's the upper limit, you actually get two steams for that and some people watch a lot more than 30 hours worth.

        Can I just pay 30 cents/episode to watch Game of Thrones, or The Man In The High Castle, or any other show?

        • Unfortunately, cheap access to media will never happen due to the greed of licensing. The lawyers of content producers have everyone over a barrel with licensing "deals" and there is very little anyone can do about it. i.e. If you want our _one_ show you have to license the rest of our crap that isn't as popular.

          Everyone thinks A La Carte is the solution but that just fractures the market with inconvenience and everyone nickeling and diming the customer.

          Apple would need to buy a few studios -- in order to c

        • I just wish there was a simple way to pay a reasonable price for what I want. Is that too much to ask?

          Like I can subscribe to Netflix for a month for 8 bucks and watch a season or two, maybe three. So let's say 30 hours of TV, or 30 cents/episode.

          That's just not reasonable. You want to spent 30 cents/hour for entertainment? How fucking cheap can you be? I've seen a lot of cheap motherfuckers in my time, but damned dude, you take the cake.

          Personally, I'd easily pay $1/episode for something like GoT, TMITHC, The Expanse, etc. if I had to, and that is still WAY cheaper than any other kind of paid entertainment options I am likely to have on a regular basis. I'd probably pay $2/episode for any of those 3 shows.

          30 cents/hr? You're fucking high.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            But Netflix/is/ 30 cents an hour. It's less if you watch more. I'm being generous.

            They can afford to make high budget stuff on that.

            Saying that I can't even buy it for a buck either.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'm not convinced this will help Apple's revenue stream significantly - I'd expect the majority of people who have Apple devices already know about Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, Youtube and iTunes; it does surprise me that some users sign up already through apps on their devices rather than through the websites, essentially allowing Apple via their App Store TOS to steal from the actual provider.

    If their aim is to bring attention to and promote lesser streaming services (alongside their own first party conte

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      The next step of course will be to block Netflix/Amazon Prime/Hulu apps forcing you to pay Apple and go through them. Anti-trust much?
      • How do you figure? You can get any of those other services without going through Apple and Apple has no way to prevent you from doing so.

  • rent-seeking (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 22, 2019 @01:33AM (#58313930)

    ... helping other people sell streaming video subscriptions and taking a cut ...

    Apple has a captive audience: It gives them the apex of rent-seeking behaviour.

    • ... helping other people sell streaming video subscriptions and taking a cut ...

      Apple has a captive audience: It gives them the apex of rent-seeking behaviour.

      Not with iTunes it doesn't, it runs on Windows too and releasing a iTunes for Android/Linux would not be a bad idea either. That being said, providing a single access point with a single subscription for multiple TV services seems like a pretty convenient service to me. I for one am not going to subscribe to Netflix, Hulu, Diseney, HBO, YouTube, ... the list goes on, and on, and on ... all individually, I'm going to subscribe to a subset at best. However, if somebody offered me a service that fuses all of t

      • Apple has a captive audience: It gives them the apex of rent-seeking behaviour.

        Not with iTunes it doesn't, it runs on Windows too and releasing a iTunes for Android/Linux would not be a bad idea either.

        iTunes is a dumpster fire. Even my mac-loving friends who won't contemplate switching to another platform say bad things about it on the regular. Who's going to want to run that garbage anyway, just to get easier access to streaming services they can get without it? Answer, no fucking body.

  • None of the political risk of making their own shows that might not sell. No politics, actors, movie scripts, reviews.
    Get to curate any political content found to be sinful.
    Get money for every show and movie allowed to use their closed garden.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    taking something everyone else is already doing / done, and copying and putting a 50% tax on it.

  • Appleâ(TM)s biggest hits havenâ(TM)t been when theyâ(TM)ve been first to the market but when theyâ(TM)ve been âoebestâ. MP3 players, smart phones and tablet computers; all existed before Apple made billions from them. All existed before Apple spotted the opportunity to create a tightly integrated solution that looked good and worked well for _most_ people. I donâ(TM)t know if they can pull off the same trick with streaming, but the world plus dog piling into it, fractured

  • Their business model is to build a walled garden and be the gatekeepers, only allowing services from outside to interact with the cattle if they pay a hefty fee. This is worst than taxes from the state because, for better or worse, taxes will came back as benefits like roads, conflict resolution (justice), education and health.
  • by Jedi Holocron ( 225191 ) on Friday March 22, 2019 @07:39AM (#58314622) Homepage Journal

    If they can produce a working and interactive aggregated guide for the "live streaming" services then they will have a winner. Amazon Fire TV does this to an extent with the "channel" or services you can buy through your Prime Video account, including any other the air channels you're streaming via a Recast.

    Most "streamers" need to subscribe to more than one service to get the channels they want to watch. Having one guide that covers whatever services you add is desired by a lot of people.

  • What TFA is really saying:

    The market is getting really fractured again, and pirating what you want to see is becoming more appealing by the hour

    Guess it's time to start torrenting once more. I already have to do that with whatever shows Netflix refuses to update (The Good Place, Colony, etc), and whatever shows Netflix won't/can't air (American Dad, Game of Thrones, etc). Disney leaving Netflix just meant I had to torrent those if I wanted them, and Apple making exclusive shows just means I will torrent those as well if they seem interesting.

    Cutting the streaming-pie into smaller pieces is bad for the industry, and it won'

  • Apple sells phones & computers they don't make. Why not sell content they don't make. This is a natural fit for them.

    • by larkost ( 79011 )

      By that argument, all of the computer companies, and most of the phone companies do not make their products either. Almost all of them are assembled by contract companies, such as Foxcon or Pegatron. And then you can argue that they don't make things either because they are just assembling those items from components provided by an army of other companies.

      All of that winds up with a useless argument. The reality is that Apple engineers the product, and is hyper-involved in directing the assembly and testing

      • Wow. Someone got their Apple fanboi rage nerve tweaked there.

        Not all companies are "computer companies". (And what is YOUR definition of a computer company? A company that produces microprocessors, software, boards, embedded systems, workstations, software, cloud services, IT support, Network security....?)

        Not all companies outsource their products.

        Not all companies offer a product as they offer services. (Some may even be "computer companies".)

        Not all companies that offer services do not outsource the

      • Prove it.
  • More ways for people who think Airplay is "DA BOMB" to pay the Apple tax so they can keep using their Apple proprietary protocols that they are addicted to. Me, I paid $100 for an android box, have cheap flash drives for other people's TVs and happily into the wild yonder I go.
  • So this is like Jeep selling the crazy shifter that no one understood and killed a version of Checkov that I loved, and offering a sensible shifter as a $1000 option. I wonder how long before cars don't come with instruments at all unless you pay for them. Need to know when to change the oil? Pay $500 for our 'pil alarm'. Capitalism just gets better and better. Imagine how it would be without regulations.
    • So this is like Jeep selling the crazy shifter that no one understood and killed a version of Checkov that I loved, and offering a sensible shifter as a $1000 option.

      Not just that, but Chrysler corp. had a superior option in the 1960s. I had a 1960 Dodge Dart that had push-button automatic. When you pushed the button for one gear, the previously-selected one would pop out, so you knew for sure what gear you had selected. They actually went backwards for the sake of being different, and as you point out, it killed someone.

  • by spire3661 ( 1038968 ) on Friday March 22, 2019 @10:19AM (#58315274) Journal
    This is exactly what Apple TV does now, it aggregates content. This is the entire function of the "TV" App on Apple TV. It coordinates services and presents a 'unified' search across them..
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Isn't this the Cable TV strategy?

    Apple seems to be looking at replacing Comcast, not Netflix.

    With all the "Cable" cutting, the missing piece would seem to be an online version of Cable TV.

    The question is, why would we be running into Apples ever loving arms for TV Bundles?!

    I think most of Apples user base either never knew Cable TV or have forgotten about it.

    $100/Mth for 8 streaming services? Add in few pic and choose TV station streams for $1.99? Or TV Stations Bundles for $10?!!

    This could indeed be a kil

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