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NYT: Streaming Success Actually Relies on Theaters, Not Day-And-Date

Want to make a hit on streaming? Release it in theaters instead.

The New York Times just release this piece A Hollywood Twist: Streaming Success Runs Through Theaters. From the article:

Just a few years ago, media executives thought theatrical releases didn’t benefit their streaming services. Now, many of them think the opposite.

For much of the past decade, Hollywood executives striving to catch Netflix started believing that the only way to increase the subscriber numbers for their own streaming services was either by significantly narrowing the time between a film’s theatrical release and its appearance on streaming or by putting both out simultaneously. 

But the industry has now largely come to a very different conclusion: The key to making a movie a streaming success and attracting new subscribers is to first release it in theaters. 

Especially since the pandemic, this “user obsession” has driven tech-minded folks at streamers to demand that movies be released day-and-date on streaming services. “Consumer preferences” — that people should be able to watch anything whenever they want, wherever they way — dogmatically drove this agenda.

But beyond customers asking for it in surveys, there’s no evidence that this makes business sense or actually caters to the customer. The theatrical hype machine and word of mouth is part of wanting to watch something in the first place. I wrote about this in 2017 when Disney first hinted at day-and-date. No amount of streaming marketing can buy theatrical’s inherent offering: placing a movie into thousands of multiplexes across America. It’s like instantly scaling an experiential event into 5000 cities. Why pass that up?

Now imagine you’re Disney or Universal and you actually rely not just on streaming (like the example in this article, Amazon’s original “Red One”) but need to be able to sell derivative merch, products, games and parks tickets for years into the future. You need a red carpet and a theatrical release to launch the multi-year momentum required for that kind of lasting IP.

Could Disney Be the First to Stream Day-and-Date?

I love how ballsy this would be. Disney is out of Netflix and has announced their plans to make a similar service. And in a guest post on THR, Ben Weiss posits this crazy new move: that Disney could quickly amass a big subscriber base by launching their movies on the service “day-and-date” — that’s the much-feared-by-theaters idea that a movie could be streamed the same day it releases in theaters. 

It’s brilliant because it endruns the entire traditional entertainment distribution-windowing business model in favor of the consumer preference of when-I-want-where-I-want. It would definitely grow them a huge base of subscribers. But they’ll never do it. 

  • Disney is already giving up $300 million in revenue by opting out of Netflix. 
  • Theatrical is the majority of their studio entertainment revenue, about 60%… and a move like this wil piss of theaters and threaten that nut. Theaters may refuse to carry the movies or put them in fewer cities. It may even piss off some consumers who still like the theater experience– if their local chain decides not to carry the movies over this move. 
  • If Disney does day-and-date they’re not just threatening the theatrical revenue. They’re endrunning all of their studio ent distribution: pay TV, home entertainment, etc. Why would another provider value their content the same way if it’s already debuted in a streaming window? 
  • And finally, the REAL business of Disney is parks and products — maybe twice the revenue of all of the studio business. What if this slow, gradual windowing model actually helps propel their brands in those venues? It might be a stretch but my instinct is that being in every theater in America is the best billboard ever for a parks attraction or action figure. Better not mess with that. 

But, boyyyy, would I love to live in a world where studios made distruptive moves like this. I dare you, Bob!