This was the promise of the streaming age: You can have everything, you can have it everywhere, and you can have it all, at once. Subscribe to our platform and youâll have access to our huge library of âcontentâ forever, on demand, whenever you want it. You want more? Look, itâs right there in the plus sign at the end of the platformâs name. (Why did everyone do that?)
This utopian fantasy was in serious contrast to the old way of watching TV, where youâd sit yourself down to watch your show at the time it aired or you wouldnât see it at all unless you were lucky enough to catch it in reruns. Once your show was canceled, you couldnât watch it anymore. We got VHS recorders, and then TiVos, sure, and eventually you could buy a show on tapes or DVDs after it had aired. But these all require intention and planning, an action on the part of the potential audience member. Streaming? That would be easy.
Turns out the utopian fantasy was a fantasy for a reason. In recent months, big studios have started pulling content off their platforms, sometimes at baffling speed. Paramount, for instance, recently announced that it hadnât just reversed course and canceled Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies instead of its previously announced renewal, but was yanking the show â which had its finale June 1 of this year â off the Paramount+ platform altogether, along with a bunch of other shows. Disney+ lost Y: The Last Man and Willow, among many others, and Warner Bros. Discovery gave Westworld, Genera+ion, and The Time Travelerâs Wife the boot ahead of the relaunched Max platform.
Why, you might very reasonably ask, would anybody do this? If a show is just sitting on a hard drive somewhere, not hurting anybody, whatâs the harm of leaving it there? Maybe itâs not the most-watched show on the service, but who cares?
Companies care, as it turns out, especially about their balance sheets and their shareholders. Getting the exact reasons that big entertainment studios like Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery do anything at all is a bit like trying to ascertain the secrets of the universe: You know theyâre out there, but absolutely nobody is going to give them to you straight. Itâs a business run on smoke, mirrors, secrecy, misdirection, and some kind of lopsided magic.
Regardless, we can detect a few reasons that giant corporations would want to take, say, FBoy Island off their digital platform. Theyâre not ideological reasons, unless you count the simple fact that Hollywoodâs only ideology (circa 2023, anyhow) is profit margins. The content of the content, so to speak, is not of interest to the executives. This is all about belt-tightening. The studios have their reasons
The first way that removing a show from a platform saves money is tied up with some of the reasons that the WGA is striking and SAG-AFTRA is considering it: residuals. Production companies pay members of various guilds (like the WGA) a fixed percentage every year if their show is available on a streaming platform. Calculation of the precise rate is byzantine and renegotiated every three years by the guilds, and can range from a pittance to a livable income, depending on the deal that was cut for that show. But itâs a cost that the company incurs, and if they remove the show entirely, the cost is eliminated.
Often, however, shows removed from a platform donât go away entirely. In the case of Westworld, for instance, Warner Bros. Discovery removed the show from its platform (now called Max) but licensed it to free, ad-supported channels operated by Roku and Tubi. That means you can actually watch Westworld now, entirely for free, as long as youâre willing to sit through some ads â and it means Warner Bros. Discovery starts making some money on Westworld again.
What you canât necessarily do is watch it at literally any time you want to. These free channels, called FAST (for Free, Ad-Supported Television), operate on a linear model, which is basically the same way cable TV works. You flip through channels and watch whatever is âon TVâ right now. What makes FAST different from traditional cable or network TV is that itâs distributed over the internet, so you can watch on your laptop or device or smart TV, instead of over cables or airwaves.
But wait, you might ask: Doesnât Warner Bros. Discovery now have to pay residuals to everyone involved with Westworld? Yes, it does â but the residual rates for FAST are currently lower than the SVOD rates on streaming platforms, which in turn are far lower than on broadcast television like network or cable. Additionally, Warner Bros. Discovery is getting payment from Roku and Tubi â thatâs what it means to âlicenseâ your show. So thereâs income and less outflow, and thatâs a net positive on the balance sheet.
Speaking of balance sheets, thereâs one more reason this might happen. For companies like Disney, Paramount, and Warner Bros. Discovery, every show on their platform is an asset. If an assetâs value declines more rapidly than anticipated, you can âwrite downâ its value, meaning itâs now worth less; that ultimately creates a loss on your balance sheet, which translates to a tax deduction. If you remove a show from your platform, itâs now âimpairedâ in terms of earning power, and thus literally worth less. Itâs all pretty complicated, but companies seem very eager to incur write-downs, perhaps in part to show their shareholders that they are serious about getting their financial houses in order. (Thatâs key for companies like these, which are feeling a squeeze after years of relentless, profligate spending on content to populate their platforms â especially during the pandemic.) Disney, for instance, announced that it will incur a whopping $1.5-$1.8 billion impairment charge from removing content from its platforms, which translates into a very sizable write-down and a lower tax burden.
Iâve explained each of these factors in an oversimplified way, but you can see a pattern here. Executives believe itâs time to pump the brakes. Weâre exiting an era in which entertainment companies threw money at projects without seeming to quite realize that a $10 subscription fee wasnât going to pay for all of this and that, further, consumers have a limited appetite (and wallet) for streaming subscriptions. Shareholders want answers; companies respond.
Unfortunately, that means some of us are losing easy access to the shows we love or, at least, meant to get around to watching someday. The good news is theyâll probably still be accessible, at least via FAST. Thatâs not convenient, kind of annoying, and, I suspect, might make more than a few streaming subscribers decide this whole thing isnât worth it. But the entertainment business has entered its most chaotic era, and this is just one more symptom of it.
At least you donât have to learn to set your VCR
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