Disney+ is about to expand its streaming service just as large swathes of the world are locked down because of the coronavirus. Here are some of the main streamers competing to entertain the millions in Covid-19 confinement across the planet.
Netflix
The American giant, which dominates the streaming market, began life in 1998 as DVD-by-mail rental company before dipping into video on demand as a perk for its customers. It set the template for the monthly subscription model that others were to follow in 2007, and now claims 167 million subscribers in 190 countries.
Netflix has successfully moved into production, with acclaimed films like the Oscar-winning Marriage Story and Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman adding to its mix of mostly bought-in top-end series. House of Cards, Money Heist, Stranger Things and The Witcher are among its biggest hits.
While series and documentaries have been its bread and butter, the streamer is now moving into game shows, reality TV and light entertainment. After a basic monthly subscription, viewers have access to a vast library of 4,000 films and 47,000 television programs in the Umited States, according to Ampere Analysis.
Amazon Prime Video
While the e-commerce giant launched it first video service in 2006, it wasn’t until four years ago that it really attacked the international streaming market.
It has since courted some of the biggest names in Hollywood and is making a one billion-dollar series adaptation of Lord of the Rings to bulk up its catalog of 12,000 films and 50,000 bought-in television episodes.
Amazon’s hefty archive also includes a number of daily soaps, which have hugely boosted its numbers. Now available in 200 countries, it claims to have 150 million subscribers, with the service free to Amazon Prime customers, which also takes in speedy delivery and music streaming.
Non-Amazon Prime customers must pay 5.99 euros a month. Its biggest hits so far have been the Emmy-winning “dramedy,” or comedy-drama, series Transparent, The Man in the High Castle and The Grand Tour, where the petrol-head former presenters of BBC’s Top Gear hit the road again.
Apple TV
Launched in November in 100 countries, Apple TV is one of the cheapest at US$4.99 per month, with a free year’s subscription if you buy an Apple telephone or computer. But so far it has a limited catalog, with the emphasis instead put on original programming carried by starry names.
Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Aniston and Steve Carell star in The Morning Show, its TV news drama, and Oprah Winfrey has also been persuaded on board with a new program of her own. Sixth Sense creator M. Night Shyamalan has scored a critical hit for them with his psychological chiller series Servant, and Steven Spielberg has signed up for a fantasy horror series called Amazing Stories.
Disney+ and Hulu
Disney+ has swept up 29 million subscribers in North America and Australasia in the five months since its launch in November. Many more are likely to follow when it pushes into eight European countries.
At $6.42 a month, it is aimed squarely at families with a plethora of Disney classics as well as the Marvel and Star Wars franchises. Disney also holds a majority stake in streamer Hulu, which scored a hit with The Handmaid’s Tale. Already well-anchored in the US and Japan, where it has 30 million subscribers, plans are afoot for European expansion.
Peacock
The arrival of two American entertainment heavyweights, NBCUniversal and WarnerMedia, could change the streaming game. NBCUniversal will begin its rollout of Peacock next month with 15,000 hours of shows such as Downton Abbey, Will & Grace and Law & Order leading its deep series archive that goes back to the 1980s.
With a free and premium version for $5 a month, it will be paid for with advertising, which Peacock said will be limited to five minutes an hour. Viewers must pay another $5 to go ad-free, with the service tapping into the Sky network’s programs and films in Europe.
Several free-to-air streamers are also in the mix, led by Tubi, which styles itself “the Free Netflix”. It relies on advertising, but Tubi said that ads would be limited to three or four minutes an hour as it expands into Europe, Asia and Australia.
HBO Max
The US cable network responsible for some of the most acclaimed television of the last 20 years, such as The Wire, The Sopranos and Game of Thrones, will start streaming in May. HBO Max will cost $14.99 a month in the US for a rich catalog that includes the Warnermedia empire and classic shows like South Park and Friends.
It will later expand into Europe and Latin America.
– additional reporting Severine Rouby
– AFP