Tag: entertainment industry news

  • 4th Year of Disney+ price increases announced

    4th Year of Disney+ price increases announced

    Walt Disney, opens new tab said on Tuesday it will raise prices for its flagship Disney+ streaming service in the United States next month, as the entertainment giant pushes to bolster profits from its digital platforms.

    Starting October 21, the ad-supported Disney+ plan will increase by $2 to $11.99 per month, while the ad-free premium tier will rise $3 to $18.99 a month. Annual premium subscriptions will jump $30 to $189.99.

    Bundled packages combining Disney+ with Hulu and ESPN+ will also see price hikes, according to the company’s website.

    Disney is facing heightened public scrutiny following the recent controversy over the temporary removal of Jimmy Kimmel Live! from ABC, which sparked calls to even boycott the company’s services.

    Disney+ launched in November 2019 at $6.99 per month, gradually raising its prices since then as part of a broader strategy to stem losses and turn streaming into a growth engine. Its streaming business had achieved profitability for the first time last year

    It is the fourth consecutive year Disney has raised its subscription prices. The company imposed a 38% price hike in December 2022, followed by further increases in October of 2023 and 2024. Reuters

  • Paramount slams entertainers’ boycott of Israeli film bodies

    Paramount slams entertainers’ boycott of Israeli film bodies

    Paramount said on Friday it condemned a pledge signed earlier this week by more than 4,000 actors, entertainers and producers, including some Hollywood stars, to not work with Israeli film institutions that they see as being complicit in the abuse of Palestinians by Israel.

    Why It’s Important
    Paramount became the first major studio to respond to the pledge released on Monday.

    Some organizations have faced calls for boycotts and protests over ties with the Israeli government as the humanitarian crisis in Gaza from Israel’s military assault grows, and images of starving Palestinians, including children, spark global outrage.

    Key Quotes
    “We do not agree with recent efforts to boycott Israeli filmmakers. Silencing individual creative artists based on their nationality does not promote better understanding or advance the cause of peace,” Paramount said.

    “We need more engagement and communication – not less,” it added.

    The pledge from earlier this week said it was not urging anyone to stop working with Israeli individuals but instead “the call is for film workers to refuse to work with Israeli institutions that are complicit in Israel’s human rights abuses.” Film Workers For Palestine, which published the original pledge, reiterated as much after Paramount’s statement.

    Israeli film institutions had engaged in “whitewashing or justifying” abuse of Palestinians, the pledge had said, drawing parallels with how entertainers had made a similar pledge in the past against apartheid-era South Africa.

    Signatories included actors Olivia Colman, Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Tilda Swinton, Riz Ahmed, Javier Bardem and Cynthia Nixon.

    “We sincerely hope that Paramount, in its statement today, isn’t intentionally misrepresenting the pledge in an attempt to silence our colleagues in the film industry,” Film Workers for Palestine added.

    Context
    U.S. ally Israel’s assault on Gaza since October 2023 has killed tens of thousands of people, internally displaced Gaza’s entire population, and set off a starvation crisis. Multiple rights experts and scholars assess it amounts to genocide.

    Israel casts its actions as self-defense after an October 2023 attack by Palestinian Hamas militants in which 1,200 people were killed and more than 250 taken hostage. Reuters

  • Warner Bros Discovery in Paramount Skydance’s sights

    Warner Bros Discovery in Paramount Skydance’s sights

    Long-gestating speculation about a sale of Warner Bros. Discovery burst out into public view on Thursday after the Wall Street Journal reported that Paramount’s new owners are preparing a bid for the rival media company.

    Analysts told CNN that the potential offer from Paramount is likely the beginning of a bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery, known as WBD. They cautioned that any actual deal would be a protracted, complicated affair.

    Shares of WBD, CNN’s parent, surged 29% to close at a three-year high. WBD’s stock has now almost fully rebounded to the level the company started when it was formed through a merger in 2022.

    Shares in Paramount soared more than 15% in a further reflection of investor enthusiasm about the beleaguered media giants.

    Long-gestating speculation about a sale of Warner Bros. Discovery burst out into public view on Thursday after the Wall Street Journal reported that Paramount’s new owners are preparing a bid for the rival media company.

    Analysts told CNN that the potential offer from Paramount is likely the beginning of a bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery, known as WBD. They cautioned that any actual deal would be a protracted, complicated affair.

    Shares of WBD, CNN’s parent, surged 29% to close at a three-year high. WBD’s stock has now almost fully rebounded to the level the company started when it was formed through a merger in 2022.

    Shares in Paramount soared more than 15% in a further reflection of investor enthusiasm about the beleaguered media giants.

    Comcast, Amazon and Netflix have been named as other potential bidders for all or part of WBD.

    Earlier on Thursday, analysts at Wells Fargo called the streaming service and movie studio side of the WBD house “an attractive M&A candidate” and asserted that Netflix “is the most compelling buyer.”

    Paramount’s apparent interest is no surprise since the company’s ambitious new CEO, David Ellison, has talked about a desire to strike further deals.

    Ellison, son of Oracle billionaire Larry Ellison, headed up the much smaller Skydance Media, and spearheaded the recent takeover of Paramount’s TV and movie studio assets.

    Having worked hard behind the scenes to win Trump administration approval for the deal, Ellison has spent recent weeks setting the merged Paramount Skydance on a new, digitally native path.

    John Malone, chair emeritus of WBD’s board and a longtime mentor to WBD CEO David Zaslav, said during a recent book tour that he has conferred with Ellison about “further consolidation in the media industry.”

    Malone told The New York Times that he met with Ellison on the sidelines of an annual conference of media and tech moguls in Sun Valley, Idaho, last summer.

    Of Ellison, Malone said he would “bet on that guy.”

    Representatives for the two companies declined to comment on the Journal’s account of an expected bid.

    WBD, meanwhile, is continuing to prepare for its corporate breakup. CNN and other TV networks will be part of “Discovery Global,” while HBO, HBO Max, the Warner Bros. studio and other assets will be part of “Warner Bros.”

    At an investor conference earlier this week, Zaslav said that “everything’s on track” for the split.

    Zaslav has spoken repeatedly about the need for consolidation in the industry, and some observers have speculated that the two halves of WBD, once split in 2026, would seek to be buyers, rather than sellers. CNN

  • WBD, Disney sue Sling TV/Dish over short-term passes

    WBD, Disney sue Sling TV/Dish over short-term passes

    US media giant Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) is taking Sling TV, the over-the-top service owned by TV carrier Dish’s parent company Echostar, to court over its short-term live broadcast packages.

    Sling, which allows users to stream live TV, recently introduced passes offering access to its full bundle for a day, weekend, or full week, something WBD alleges violates the terms of the pair’s carriage deal.

    In the legal complaint, filed with the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, WBD has stated that the ‘passes’ “violate both the plain language of the Dish affiliation agreements and the longstanding industry practice of offering television content through monthly subscription services,” adding that the bundles “undermine programmers’ business model, which depends on monthly subscriptions.”

    While Sling’s services usually start at $45.99 a month, the new system includes a $4.99 day pass for 24 hours, a $9.99 Weekend Pass, and a $14.99 7-day pass. They were rolled out at the start of the college football and NFL seasons.

    WBD further alleges that Sling TV launched the short-term passes without any consultation, and yet explicitly advertises WBD networks as part of the bundles.

    The media giant has also reportedly said that it is hoping for an “amicable” resolution to the dispute, likely eager to avoid its own iteration of the breakdown in relations and subsequent blackout of Disney-owned channels on TV carrier DirecTV that plagued 2024.

    For its part, an Echostar statement appeared unrepentant, with the firm saying: “Sling TV has broken the mold of expensive, rigid bundles with flexible Sling Orange Day, Weekend and Week Pass subscriptions – pay-as-you-want instant access.

    “This customer-first model challenges the old guard’s outdated pricing playbook, exposing their dependence on market power and resistance to change. With no long-term contracts and lower costs, Sling puts control back in the hands of subscribers, signaling a shift toward competition that puts consumer value ahead of monopolistic control.”

    WBD is not the only media heavyweight that has taken issue with the practice; in fact, Disney has already launched a suit against Sling (also with the US District Court for the Southern District of New York), once again claiming it was not consulted about the offering.

    In a statement, Disney told outlet Deadline: “Sling TV’s new offerings, which they made available without our knowledge or consent, violate the terms of our existing license agreement. We have asked the court to require Dish to comply with our deal when it distributes our programming.”

    Sling subsequently made a statement to Deadline that it will “vigorously defend our right to bring customers a viewing experience that fits their lives, on their schedule and on their terms” and described Disney’s lawsuit as “meritless.”

    The company added that its new passes were “designed to redefine streaming and give viewers more flexibility, more choice and more control over how they watch live TV.” Sportcal