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Squawk on the Street

Bob Iger has been ‘fixing’ Disney and putting the company in a position to grow: Guggenheim’s Morris

Michael Morris, Guggenheim Securities media and entertainment analyst, joins ‘Squawk on the Street’ to discuss why Morris would give Iger a B grade in his first year back as Disney CEO, Morris’ expectations for fixing the general entertainment business, and how the analyst would judge Disney’s position relative to peers.

https://www.cnbc.com/video/2023/11/...in-a-position-to-grow-guggenheims-morris.html
 
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/disney-aggressive-price-hikes-shake-230000846.html

Disney’s Aggressive Price Hikes Shake Up the Streaming Landscape | Chart
by Christofer Hamilton
Mon, November 20, 2023 at 5:00 PM CST

The cost of streaming is going up.

Given the changes seen in the entertainment industry since we last looked at the pricing landscape of U.S. streamers in Q1 it should not be surprising that there have been a number of price increases recently. There was already pressure from Wall Street for these companies to make streaming profitable. Now, as the strikes come to an end and it looks like writers and actors will be paid more for their work, the cost of producing content is likely to rise. Consumers should expect to shoulder some of the burden of more expensive content in the form of higher subscription fees.

Before the latest round of price hikes from Disney, Hulu, Disney+ and especially the bundled offering were each priced competitively relative to the competition. Now, after Disney raised the monthly price of ad-free Hulu (a 20% price hike) and Disney+ (up 27%) the standalone platforms look steeply priced compared to other services.

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For example, Hulu and Max have nearly the same demand for their on-platform shows and movies but Max costs $2 less per month for its ad-free tier ($15.99). This pricing strategy could be a way to more strongly incentivize subscribers to upgrade to the pricier Disney+/Hulu bundle. This combination provides users with the most in-demand catalog of content among these platforms in the U.S. at a very competitive price.

One of the more aggressive price hikes recently came from Apple TV+ which raised its price from $6.99 to $9.99 at the end of October. This means the subscription price for Apple TV+ has doubled in the span of a year (up from its launch price of $4.99). The total catalog size of Apple TV+ is a fraction of most of these other platforms, which could make it hard to compete for subscribers who value the options that a larger catalog provides.

However, the focus of Apple TV+ on originals, exclusivity, and quality could make up for its smaller streaming catalog. The platform’s strategy of building a catalog of originals means that Apple TV+ is the only place a majority of these titles are available, in theory enabling it to charge a premium. We have shown in the past how Apple TV+ original series tend to attract higher audience demand on average.

Two buzzy awards contenders currently in theaters, “Killers of the Flower Moon ” and “Napoleon,” will stream on Apple TV+ and should bolster the platform’s reputation as a home for quality content. If these factors can keep subscribers sticking around despite the price increases, then Apple TV+ will be enjoying healthier margins because of this decision.

Christofer Hamilton is a senior insights analyst at Parrot Analytics, a WrapPRO partner. For more from Parrot Analytics, visit the Data and Analysis Hub.
 
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/para...ance-pacts-add-to-ma-narrative-212122261.html

Paramount: Stock jumps as Bellator sale, severance pacts add to 'M&A narrative'

by Alexandra Canal · Senior Reporter
Mon, November 20, 2023 at 3:21 PM CST

Paramount Global (PARA) stock closed nearly 6% higher on Monday following two new developments that suggest the struggling media giant could be exploring more M&A deals.

Late Friday, the company quietly revealed in an 8-K filing that current executives including CEO Bob Bakish, CFO Naveen Chopra, and executive VP Christa D’Alimonte will be offered severance if they are terminated within two years "following the consummation of a change in control."

Also on Monday: The Saudi-backed Professional Fighters League (PFL) confirmed it completed the acquisition of mixed martial arts promoter Bellator from Paramount, which previously controlled the rights.

The deal comes after Paramount announced its Showtime sports division, which included boxing and MMA, will shut down at the end of the year. Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed although reports suggest PFL stock was included in the sale, which will allow Paramount to maintain a minority ownership stake.

"PARA's recent announcements on severance/change in control + Bellator sale adds to the M&A narrative," Wells Fargo analyst Steve Cahall wrote to clients on Monday.

Paramount has long been viewed as a potential acquisition target due to its small size relative to competitors. The company boasts a current market cap of just around $9 billion, compared to Disney's (DIS) $170 billion and Netflix's (NFLX) $208 billion.

However, Cahall said he remains "skeptical there's a more drastic change in strategy coming," explaining that although the severance changes are "positive at face value," that doesn't necessarily indicate a higher likelihood of M&A.

"It's all up to Chairwoman and controlling shareholder Shari Redstone," he said. "PARA is willing to part with non-strategic assets, but we don't see it parting from major assets like CBS, Studios, etc. And, we don't think there are buyers for it as a whole," he wrote.

Cahall, who maintained his Underweight rating and $12 price target, said a "meaningfully profitable" direct-to-consumer (DTC) streaming business could change that outlook as it would mean the company can survive unfavorable linear television trends, which have been hard hit by cord-cutting.

In the prior quarter, the company reported a DTC loss of $238 million, narrower than analyst expectations of $438 million and the $343 million loss seen in the year-earlier period.

Paramount now forecasts full-year direct-to-consumer losses in 2023 will be lower than in 2022, with anticipated fourth quarter DTC losses similar to the year-ago period.

To note, virtually every media company has been bleeding money in streaming, with the exception of Netflix (NFLX) and, most recently, Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD).

"While DTC losses are getting better faster it's an uncertain path to break-even ... clarity on DTC profits would change that outlook," Cahall said.

Severance sweetened: Paramount executive Bob Bakish. (Thilo Schmuelgen/REUTERS) (Thilo Schmuelgen / reuters)
The company has recently committed to divesting non-core assets as it works to pare down debt and improve its balance sheet. Last quarter, it announced the sale of Simon & Schuster to investment firm KKR after the publishing giant's sale to Penguin Random House collapsed late last year. The $1.62 billion, all-cash deal was completed last month.

Paramount's strong slate of assets suggests more M&A activity to come. Showtime and BET Media Group have been two assets recently the subject of sales rumors, although no deals have been made.

Alexandra Canal is a Senior Reporter at Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @allie_canal, LinkedIn, and email her at alexandra.canal@yahoofinance.com.
 
https://www.ft.com/content/c14581c7-60ef-4921-a640-640a3d6ef9d6

Can Disney rediscover the magic?
by Christopher Grimes, Anna Nicolaou
11/21/2023

There are no sure things in Hollywood. But if there were a secret formula for making blockbusters, it would look a lot like what Marvel Studios has done over the past 15 years.

Since the release of Iron Man in 2008, Marvel has generated $30bn at the box office, with three of its Avengers movies ranking in the list of top 10 highest-grossing films worldwide.

Many thought Disney chief executive Bob Iger overpaid for Marvel when he bought the studio for $4bn in 2009, but that smug sentiment among his Hollywood rivals soon turned to envy.

After an epic hot streak, however, there has been growing concern inside the company that the Marvel hit machine is running out of steam. Its latest film seems to have confirmed those fears. A $200mn sequel to the successful Captain Marvel released in 2019, The Marvels had the worst opening weekend ever for the Disney-owned studio, taking in $46mn.

Perhaps worse for Disney, the problem is not confined to Marvel. Pixar and Lucasfilm — two other Iger acquisitions that gave Disney the most coveted collection of intellectual property in the industry — also seem to have hit a wall. In 2019, Disney studios produced seven films that made $1bn or more but since then there has only been one: last year’s Avatar sequel.

Disney needs to start making hits again,” says Michael Nathanson, a media analyst at research firm MoffettNathanson. They need to address the content pipeline, which has really suffered over the past few years.”

The problems at Marvel mirror a new sense of vulnerability for both Disney, whose success in Hollywood had seemed unstoppable, and Iger himself, who returned to the company a year ago after his handpicked successor Bob Chapek was dismissed after less than three years.

His dramatic comeback was cheered by staff and Hollywood at large. But he has found himself navigating the company in a far less forgiving environment than the one he left in 2020.

The era of low interest rates that made billions in streaming losses seem palatable is over, leaving traditional media groups to cope with high debt loads and intense competition for fickle streaming customers. The traditional TV business is in decline.

He acknowledges that Disney’s studios have hit a rough patch and is taking a hands-on approach to improving the quality of its movies. Iger has scaled back the number of films being made and is engaging in “candid” discussions with studio chiefs when films like The Marvels miss the mark.

“With creativity, it’s not sometimes as precise as you want it to be — it’s not science or math,” he tells the Financial Times. “There’s risk in everything we do. But I think it’s important when you do something that doesn’t work to understand why.”

His first year back in the job has also been marked by a series of crises — from the lengthy Hollywood strikes to a bitter legal clash with Florida’s governor — along with the ongoing financial aftershocks of the streaming revolution and pressure from hard-nosed activist investor Nelson Peltz.

Iger was jeered by actors and writers picketing outside Disney’s Burbank headquarters after he said their demands
weren’t “realistic” — a blow for a CEO who considers himself talent-friendly.

The road back starts with restoring Disney’s creative spark — Iger’s top priority on a lengthy to-do list as he seeks to transform the company he ran for 15 years.

Any pay-off from these changes will take time, given the long gestation period for feature films. But getting it right is crucial: hit films feed through to the rest of Disney’s business, from theme park and leisure attractions to merchandise such as lunch boxes, toys and apparel.

Reinvigorating Disney’s legendary studios will be a challenge, but it is just one of the crucial tasks the chief executive faces over the remainder of his tenure, which is due to end in 2026.

Iger says his first year back was mostly “spent on fixing”, but he is now looking for ways to get Disney’s businesses growing again.

A big part of that depends on whether he can finally turn streaming — including Disney+, Hulu and the ESPN sports network — into something profitable.

He thinks Disney can. “We feel really good about the potential of this business,” he said earlier this month.

Balance of quality and quantity​

Analysts and Disney executives say the problems at Marvel, Pixar and Lucasfilm can be traced back to the heady period following the launch of the Disney+ streaming service in 2019.

Disney wanted to catch up to Netflix, and to do that it promised new original series at a low subscription price. The company’s number of subscribers soared — as did its content budget, which reached $30bn in 2022.

All the Disney studios — but especially Marvel and Lucasfilm — were charged with developing binge-able new series in addition to their regular roster of feature films. The result was hit programmes including The Mandalorian from Lucasfilm, and Wandavision and Loki from Marvel. But it stretched the studios’ creative teams to the limit.

“It was just, ‘go get as many subscribers as you can,’” says a Disney veteran. “And in doing so the studios were asked to make a lot of content.”

The glut of Star Wars spin-offs and Marvel superhero shows on Disney+ over the past 18 months has led to diminishing viewing figures and often lacklustre critical responses.

For Iger, the February release of Marvel’s Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania seemed to embody a number of problems with the studios. It was the third Ant Man movie, and its reception from critics and Marvel fans alike was unenthusiastic.

Hollywood strikes paused Disney production for five months, but the entertainment group is also being more selective about what it greenlights © Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images

“Sequels typically worked well for us,” Iger noted at a conference shortly after the film was released, before questioning whether that was still the case. “Do you need a third and a fourth?” he asked.

The overall lesson, Iger has said, is that “quantity can be the enemy of quality”. But that may be changing. Disney recently revised its release schedule, which includes only one Marvel film in 2024 — the third instalment of the Deadpool series starring Ryan Reynolds — while a new Captain America movie has been shifted to 2025. Part of the shake-up has to do with the Hollywood strikes, which paused production for five months, but the company is also being more selective about what it greenlights and when movies should be released.

“Their content output is key,” says one institutional investor. “They got the balance wrong between the quality and the quantity.”

Iger is also asking the studios to do more with less. The company’s overall cash content budget for next year will fall by $2bn, bringing it to $25bn. He has overseen a major restructuring of the entertainment group to unwind a structure designed by former chief executive Chapek, which left studio chiefs out of the loop on distribution and other decisions.
Now creative executives have more control. The chief executive says he already detects a change of atmosphere. “I think there’s a lightness in the step at Disney these days that is palpable when you walk on the lot.”

Trouble at Marvel​


Global box office of the past five Marvel films at the global box office compared to their predecessors:
• Thor: Love & Thunder
| Jul 2022 | $761mn
Thor: Ragnarok | Nov 2017 | $854mn
• Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
| Nov 2022 | $859mn
Black Panther | Feb 2018 | $1.35bn
• Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania Feb 2023 | $476mn
Ant-Man and the Wasp | Jul 2018 | $624mn
Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol 3 | May 2023 | $845mn
Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol 2 | May 2017 | $864mn
The Marvels | Nov 2023 | $161mn (as of Nov 19)
Captain Marvel | Mar 2019 | $1.13bn
Source: Comscore

What is not changing, however, is the management of the studios.

Kevin Feige, the architect of Marvel’s cinematic universe strategy, remains in place, alongside Pixar’s Pete Docter, Lucasfilm’s Kathleen Kennedy and Jennifer Lee, chief creative officer of Walt Disney Animation Studios.

Some investors say they would have expected changes at the studios given their recent performance. But inside Disney, supporters point out that this is the same team that produced the record results in 2019.

In a call with investors this month, Iger praised the “talented team at the studios” and their new focus on quality, while assuring them he was aware that “our performance from a quality perspective wasn’t really up to the standards that we set for ourselves.”

A broken television model​

While Iger tries to revive Disney’s creative engines, he is also navigating the collapse of television businesses that for decades reliably delivered mountains of cash. Profits at Disney’s TV networks business unit fell by $1bn in the fiscal year 2023 as more customers moved to streaming services.

Iger, known for his bold acquisitions, has taken the unusual step of publicly floating ideas of selling off some of Disney’s TV assets. He says he wants to find a partner to join Disney in the ESPN sports TV business and has discussed the possibility of selling the ABC television network.

Early this year he even questioned the need to keep the Hulu streaming service — though he has since determined that it belongs inside Disney. The company is also engaged in active talks about partnerships for its Star India business, but so far no deals have been sealed.

Iger sounded the alarm about the collapse of the TV business in July at the annual gathering of media titans in Sun Valley. Linear television channels “may not be core to Disney”, Iger told CNBC, speaking from the ski resort town. “The business model . . . that has delivered great profits over the years, is definitely broken.”

It was a full circle moment for both Disney and Iger. His predecessor, Michael Eisner, had run into billionaire Warren Buffett at the Sun Valley summit in 1995, where the two men initiated talks for Disney to merge with ABC. That $19bn deal flung Disney headfirst into the television business, and brought the former weatherman Iger into the Mickey Mouse empire.

Disney’s main traditional television asset, ESPN, was a crown jewel through the 2000s as it rode the wider boom in cable TV, providing the cash that helped finance Iger’s ambitious acquisitions of Pixar, Marvel and Lucasfilm.

‘The Mandalorian’ was one of the new series made after Disney tasked its studios with developing binge-able content in addition to their regular roster of feature films © Disney+/Lucasfilm Ltd

ESPN still delivered $2.7bn in profits from $17bn in revenue last year, according to recent filings. But it is viewed by analysts as a melting iceberg, as millions of Americans cancel their cable TV packages every year. In its heyday ESPN beamed into the homes of more than 100mn households in the US, but this number has dwindled to less than 80mn.
ESPN is a “company fighting to stay in its place”, Bank of America analyst Jessica Reif Ehrlich wrote this month. This is why Iger is seeking a “strategic partner” to acquire a stake in ESPN, although Ehrlich believes “the benefit to prospective buyers appears nebulous”.

Some envision a scenario where a tech company — say Apple or Amazon — would partner with ESPN as they seek to make sports content a bigger part of their own streaming offerings. The benefits for Disney would include help in paying for ever-increasing sports rights. The company has also reportedly held discussions with sports leagues about partnerships.

Iger said this summer that the goal was to find a partner to help with “distribution, technology, marketing, and content opportunities where we retain control of ESPN”.

At the same time, he is weighing when to finally take ESPN “over the top” — meaning placing more content available to its pay TV customer on its streaming service. When that happens, it would be a signal that streaming’s victory over traditional TV was finally complete.

Pressure to perform​

The man many consider to be the King of Hollywood has sometimes seemed daunted by the array of problems in his in-tray since his return.

Almost immediately, Iger found himself in a proxy battle with the activist investor Nelson Peltz, who sought a seat on the Disney board, cost reductions and attacked the company’s “balance sheet from hell”. Iger responded with swingeing cuts aimed at saving $5.5bn — which ultimately cost 7,000 jobs — and announced plans to restore a dividend by the end of this year. Peltz backed off, but he grew concerned as Disney shares declined as much as 30 per cent this year.

Now the start of Iger’s second year back from retirement is looking a lot like his first: with yet another challenge from Peltz.

Peltz’s Trian Partners is expected to put forth a slate of at least two candidates for the Disney board early next month. Last week, another activist firm, ValueAct, confirmed that it had taken a large stake in Disney and has engaged in talks with management.

The prospect of an expensive proxy fight is not what Iger wants as he attempts to shift his focus from restructuring and cuts to “building our businesses again”.

Iger has committed to spending $60bn over the next decade to expand Disney’s theme parks, which have mounted a robust recovery since the pandemic. He is standing by his pledge that the Disney’s streaming businesses will be profitable by late 2024 after more than $11bn in total losses since its 2019 launch. The market is responding well; shares are up 13 per cent over the past month.

Nevertheless, like last time, Peltz is expected to hammer away at Disney’s board, which he has accused of being too cosy with Iger. During his first stint running the company, Iger was granted contract extensions in 2013, 2014 and twice in 2017; a board with a different make-up extended his contract this year until December 2026.

Investors say Iger needs to get his succession right given Chipek’s ill-fated tenure. “Iger’s biggest weakness is succession planning for sure,” says an institutional investor.

They say the earlier extensions may have cost Disney good potential CEO candidates, including Tom Staggs and Kevin Mayer, who left the company when it became clear they wouldn’t get the top job. Now the two men are running their own company, Candle Media, and acting as advisers to Iger.

“Disney has been a controversial company in the governance area for a long time,” says Charles Elson, a corporate governance expert at the University of Delaware. “A lot of people can run that company. He’s not the only person on Earth who can do it. A healthy board should go find someone else.”

But Iger says the board is actively working on finding his successor, adding that he is already doing many of the things Peltz would want to see.

“We have a very solid succession process in place. We have reduced costs, we’re getting streaming on the path to profitability,” he says. “I’m not concerned. I refuse to get distracted and not get the job done.”
 

https://variety.com/2023/tv/news/ho...ng-yvette-nicole-brown-mike-royce-1235802726/

11/21/2023

A Silver Lining for An Industry in Desperate Need Of a Reboot
Hollywood skirts disaster with short-term strike savings, steep cuts and austerity measures
By Cynthia Littleton

Hollywood’s season of strikes came at enormous cost to the entertainment industry. It came in projects that weren’t greenlighted, sleeper hits not realized, breakthrough gigs not booked and paychecks not earned.

But by the simple math of Hollywood’s true bottom line, there’s no other way to say it: The strikes waged by the Writers Guild of America and SAG-AFTRA were a short-term financial gift to studio conglomerates that had already been listing because of streaming losses. The dual strikes gave the studios cover to hit the reset button on business plans that had already been scaled back.

“In a weird way the strikes have been a mask for the deeper issues we’re struggling with — the costs of content, the quality of content and the eradication of several revenue streams,” says Jeremy Zimmer, CEO of United Talent Agency. “These are all real issues that need to be dealt with.”

Moody’s Investors Service estimates that the work stoppages will produce about $10 billion in additional free cash flow over a 12-month period across the largest conglomerates, notably Disney, Comcast, Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount Global and Sony Corp. That’s an astounding figure, and one that underscores how much money Hollywood has committed to content production in recent years. The business has been on a bender, fueled by the availability of cheap debt and optimistic projections about the potential of fledgling streaming platforms.

But over the past 10 months, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery alone have shed nearly 10,000 jobs and slashed billions of dollars in production and marketing costs. Disney originally forecast shelling out a little more than $30 billion on content (including sports rights) in fiscal 2023, which ended Sept. 30. But the Mouse’s actual 2023 number dropped to $27 billion after the strikes began and is projected by Disney to drop again to $25 billion in fiscal 2024. Moody’s estimates the total cost increase across all major studios from the three-year union contracts inked with the Directors Guild of America, WGA and SAG-AFTRA to be in the realm of $600 million a year.

After the WGA went on strike May 2, the pause in payments to talent and expenditures on scripted production gave studio executives time to reassess content strategies. Hollywood spent freely on made-for-streaming TV shows and movies in part because interest rates on debt were so low that it was easy to finance production with borrowed money. But the cost of servicing that debt has climbed sharply. So has the price of everything, from boom mics to production trailers.

As film and TV production lurches back into high gear this month, the business is already on a different course than it was before the writers went pencils down and the actors joined them on July 14 . The environment for the foreseeable future will be all business. Studio sources report that instead of the usual exodus around the winter holidays, a lot of soundstages and location shoots will be in full swing the day after Thanksgiving. Moreover, the deal-making environment is expected to be extremely “surgical,” in the words of a top studio executive. Instead of multimillion-dollar outlays on multiyear development deals, the focus will be on script sales, short-term talent holding deals and other project-by-project transactions.

Some see a wave of austerity coming to an industry known for its glamour and largesse. Neil Begley, senior VP of Moody’s, who covers Hollywood for the debt rating agencies, thinks the double whammy of the COVID shutdowns in 2020 and 2021 and the strikes will add up to long-term changes.

“We believe studios will look for cost savings that will not materially impair the volume of film and TV or the quality of storytelling that will be noticed by audiences,” Begley wrote in a research note on Nov. 10, two days after the SAG-AFTRA halted its strike. “We expect studios will trim their use of A-list talent, greenlight less filming on location and instead use more soundstages and green-screens, and that they will trim postproduction spending and special effects. We believe that there are significant opportunities to tighten the budget processes given well known industry excesses. The will of studio executives to do this exists, given the secular pressure on linear television distribution, thin margins in film and collective industry losses in streaming.”

As studios cut spending, they will also face newly activated union members who will look to enforce contracts and push hard for future gains. Zimmer notes that it took a dual strike and other industry turmoil to give SAG-AFTRA the leverage to land meaningful wage gains for the lowest-paid working actors for the first time in years. He sees it as a reflection of the nation’s larger macroeconomic struggle with the lopsided distribution of wealth as the divide between the 1% and everyone else grows.

“The wage gap is a fundamental problem in the United States,” Zimmer says. “It’s one of the roots of why there is so much strife in our country. We’re definitely in a period of time where labor unions are much more active. They’re trying to shrink the wage gap as it exists in our industry and as it exists in many industries.”

Fewer Blockbusters, Shorter Seasons
Moviegoers and TV lovers will feel the post-strike content slowdown

By Jennifer Maas, Joe Otterson and Rebecca Rubin

There will be blockbusters next summer — just not as many as studios had hoped. The same goes for new installments of shows like “Grey’s Anatomy,” “Law & Order: SVU,” “NCIS,” “9-1-1” and other scripted favorites.

After a double-whammy strike year that shuttered production for more than six months, moviegoers will feel the pinch next summer with a thinner-than-planned slate of big-budget sequels and superheroes. Studios have shuffled releases like Paramount’s “Mission: Impossible 8” to 2025, while bankable sequels, including Sony’s “Venom 3” and Barry Jenkins’ “Lion King” spinoff “Mufasa’s Kingdom” for Disney, have bolted out of popcorn season for November and December release dates, respectively.

TV series production plans have also been turned upside down by the strikes led by the Writers Guild of America and SAG-AFTRA. Traditional network TV procedurals and comedies will likely be the first wave of fully scripted series to get up and running by year’s end.

In other words, Hollywood is getting back to work, but it’s far from back to normal. With the extended pause on production, some films simply couldn’t be completed by their original release dates. It’s a fate that big-budget movies face and one that could create a domino effect on the release calendar. With a logjam of projects that need reshoots and other tinkering, the post-strike scramble will soon reveal whether films like the “Mad Max” prequel “Furiosa” now set for release on May 24, and Universal’s disaster epic “Twisters” (July 19) will make it to the finish line as planned.

“Nothing about moviegoing is settled right now,” says David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm Franchise Entertainment Research. “Scheduling bottlenecks and delays are coming. It’s going to take time to rebuild.”

On the small screen, where broadcast network schedules were heavily impacted, a clearer picture is finally emerging. CBS was first out of the gate, revealing premiere dates of new and returning scripted series that will keep the traditional TV season on schedule. Its comedies and dramas will air 10 to 13 episodes from February to May. The same will likely go for other broadcast networks.

Viewers might be frustrated that their shows have just come back, only to go away again three and a half months later, but broadcasters are avoiding robbing the 2024-25 season for what remains of 2023-24. They want to get back on schedule, and they want viewers to get back on their schedule too.

At streamers and premium cablers, sources say execs are discussing saving time and money by shooting back-to-back seasons of big-budget series. Good candidates for this treatment would be HBO’s “House of the Dragon,” Netflix’s “One Piece” and Amazon’s “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power.” Another plus: It gives networks and streamers a stockpile of episodes and a better chance of premiering seasons at a pace that keeps fans happy.

Speaking of savings, consumers also can expect to see a dramatic drop in the volume of new shows arriving on streaming every week. Budgets are already falling as more companies embrace austerity programs to get through hard times.

The belt-tightening will be felt across television. Sources stress that expensive shows will still exist, but networks and studios are looking for series capable of sustaining long runs on a budget, namely sitcoms and procedural formats. In other words, programs like “Law & Order” and “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” aren’t going anywhere just yet.

“You have to remember that ‘Game of Thrones’ wasn’t ‘Game of Thrones’ when it started,” one agency source says. “The show had a relatively small budget early on and then grew into what it became. Taking a flier on a brand-new show with a $100 million budget out of the gate can’t continue.”

Another new normal: your favorite TV shows and movies heading to different platforms. Insiders expect companies to continue licensing their shows and films to outside streamers in a way they haven’t been for the past few years. Recently, Warner Bros. Discovery has been putting certain HBO shows on Netflix — like “Insecure” and “Band of Brothers” — with several big DC titles like “The Batman” and “Wonder Woman” soon to follow suit. Disney CEO Bob Iger also hinted the Mouse House is “in discussion” to lend some of its titles to Netflix.

It’s a way for these companies to make some quick cash. But Iger, as well as Netflix movie chief Scott Stuber, have acknowledged a greater need to prioritize quality over quantity. What’s the point of endless streaming options if nobody wants to watch them?

“At the time the pandemic hit, we were leaning into a huge increase in how much we were making,” Iger said during Disney’s latest earnings call. “We lost some focus.”

Back then, Stuber recalled in a recent Variety interview, executives were asking themselves: “Do you have enough film and television on a basic business level?” Now, he says, “creativity needs momentum. We’re all hoping to get back to what we do together best — and that is to tell great stories.”
 
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/b...2024-cord-cutting-ampere-analysis-1235667867/

New Warning Sign for Pay TV Erosion
Next year will record the first-ever annual decline in global pay TV penetration, Ampere Analysis forecasts.
by Georg Szalai
November 21, 2023 - 2:28 AM PST

Cord-cutting amid the rise of streaming services and the high price of the TV bundle has significantly reduced pay TV penetration in the U.S. in recent years, while Asia-Pacific and Europe have continued to experience growth. Now, research firm Ampere Analysis is predicting this will change, forecasting that 2024 will record the first-ever annual decline in global pay TV penetration, meaning the number of pay TV subscriptions relative to the number of households.

“This will follow pay TV penetration peaking at 60.3 percent in the fourth quarter of 2023,” it highlighted in a summary of a new report. “By 2028, global pay TV penetration will have fallen by almost four percentage points.” The decline of pay TV “has been driven by North America, but all regions will be in decline by 2025,” it emphasized.

“Growth in global pay TV uptake has been driven over the last five years by Asia-Pacific and Central and Eastern Europe,” explains Rory Gooderick, senior analyst at Ampere Analysis. “However, declines coming from the Americas, which are driven by streaming competition and the high price of pay TV in North America, currently sitting at over $90 a month, will contribute to global pay TV penetration declining for the first time in 2024.”

In North America, pay TV penetration has almost halved from a high of 84 percent in 2009 to 45 percent in 2023, “caused by a combination of high costs and competition from a mature subscription video on demand (SVOD) market,” Ampere noted. “Despite this decline, the annual revenue generated per user will sit at over $1,100 in 2023 across North America, the highest across any region.”

Latin America has also shown declining penetration since 2016, led by Brazil, “which has posted a drop of roughly 10 percentage points since its peak pay TV penetration of 42 percent in 2016,” according to the report.

In contrast, the Asia-Pacific and Europe regions have seen the highest pay TV penetration growth in recent years, “with large gains coming from China Mobile after it acquired an IPTV license in 2018,” Ampere explained. “This growth has mostly been driven by low-cost IPTV services, which are often bundled into broadband packages for a low or nominal cost. While these regions will also fall into decline after 2025, there are still some growth markets, such as Portugal, Serbia, Hungary, which are expected to see further growth in the forecast period.”

The bundling of services provides a key opportunity here, according to Ampere, pointing to the recent carriage deal between the Walt Disney Co. and Charter Communications as a possible blueprint. “Despite the projected decline in the reach of pay TV products, cable and satellite platforms will remain a powerful force in the TV world and important distribution partners for streaming products, as evidenced by the recent distribution deal between Disney and Charter in the U.S., which saw select Disney streaming services bundled into Charter’s TV packages,” said Gooderick. “This package structure, already increasingly common in Europe and parts of Asia, offers a framework for traditional cable TV companies to transition their business into a streaming aggregation play and stabilize subscriber trajectories.”
 
https://finance.yahoo.com/video/max-announces-black-friday-offer-221705705.html

Max announces Black Friday offer for new subscribers
Josh Schafer and Eyek Ntekim
Mon, November 20, 2023 at 4:17 PM CST

Warner Bros. Discovery’s (WBD) Max is offering new subscribers 70% off it's ad-supported plan for the the first 6 months. The Black Friday deal takes the monthly cost down to $2.99/month.
Yahoo Finance’s Josh Schafer, Alexandra Canal, and Pras Subramanian weigh in on this offering and deep dive into whether other streamers would consider this as well.
For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.
 
https://finance.yahoo.com/video/max-announces-black-friday-offer-221705705.html

Max announces Black Friday offer for new subscribers
Josh Schafer and Eyek Ntekim
Mon, November 20, 2023 at 4:17 PM CST

Warner Bros. Discovery’s (WBD) Max is offering new subscribers 70% off it's ad-supported plan for the the first 6 months. The Black Friday deal takes the monthly cost down to $2.99/month.
Yahoo Finance’s Josh Schafer, Alexandra Canal, and Pras Subramanian weigh in on this offering and deep dive into whether other streamers would consider this as well.
For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Man, if it only it were three dollars cheaper, then I would still never watch it.
 
But...but, if it were three dollars cheaper, they'd be paying you to watch it! Okay, only a penny a month, but still...

I keep a list of shows I want to see on various paid services. I do have some from HBO, so maybe I'll take advantage of this promotion.
 
I look forward to one of this forum's resident wonks giving us the highlights. 😁
As far as the Domestic Parks:

-Annual attendance up 6% from the prior fiscal year
- Parks per guest spending up 3%
- Hotel Occupancy 85% vs 82% the prior year (2023 had 23,000 more available room nights)
- Per Capita Resort Spending Flat

International Parks:
- Annual Attendance up 55% from the prior fiscal year
- Parks Per Capita guest spending up 21%
- Hotel Occupancy 74% vs 56%
- Per capita resort spending up 14%

Since it’s come up in this thread Labor Costs for the global Disney Parks and Resorts was up 15% from 2022 at $7.550B vs $6.577B
 
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/11/21/disney-thanksgiving-wish-box-office.html

Disney used to own the Thanksgiving box office. ‘Wish’ is trying to win it back

Published Tue, Nov 21 2023 - 6:00 PM EST
Sarah Whitten@sarahwhit10

Key Points
  • “Wish,” which arrives in theaters the day before Thanksgiving, has two goals: Pull Disney out of its animation rut and kickstart the holiday weekend.
  • Early ticket sales suggest the film could secure $55 million for the Wednesday-to-Sunday period including Thanksgiving.
  • Before Covid, the five-day Thanksgiving spread tended to result in more than $250 million in ticket sales. In the last two years, it has yet to reach $150 million.
Disney is wishing on a shooting star this week, hoping that its celebratory 100th anniversary film “Wish” will mark a turning point for its beleaguered animation division and jumpstart the Thanksgiving box office.

The House of Mouse posted its biggest year ever theatrically in 2019 — with a whopping seven films surpassing $1 billion in global ticket sales — but has yet to recapture that magic even after relaxed Covid restrictions brought moviegoers back to cinemas.

Its Marvel Cinematic Universe films have been hit-or-miss with audiences, with “The Marvels” most recently opening to an all-time franchise low. But Disney’s animation arm, which has ruled the box office for decades, has had more rotten eggs than golden ones in the last three years.

Much of Disney’s troubles have stemmed from executive decisions to pad its fledgling streaming service Disney+ with content, stretching its creative teams thin, and sending theatrical movies during the pandemic straight to digital.

This has been particularly apparent with Disney’s animated features, both from its Walt Disney Animation studio and from Pixar. Parents, confused about when and where animated films from the studio were being released, didn’t show up to theaters. And the films that were released weren’t all well-received by critics or audiences.

This has had a direct impact on the key Thanksgiving holiday, which Disney has long dominated at the box office.
Disney declined to comment for this story.

Feast or famine

The week of Thanksgiving is typically a robust time at the box office, a tradition for many families who gather during extended time off from school and work.

In the last decade, not counting 2020, 2021 and 2022, the five-day Thanksgiving spread — from the Wednesday before Thanksgiving through Sunday — has resulted in more than $250 million in ticket sales each year.

Many of those weekends were fueled by Disney animation hits as well as Lionsgate’s Hunger Games films.

However, in the wake of the Covid pandemic, the box office has struggled to regain its foothold on the Thanksgiving holiday.

“Thanksgiving as a holiday moviegoing corridor has diminished in its revenue-generating horsepower in the post-Pandemic era and this means that at least for now, the odds are against any film becoming a massive breakout hit over the five-day frame,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore. “Thanksgiving films in this movie marketplace must rely more heavily on December moviegoing to determine their ultimate box office fate.”

Box office analysts often disregard 2020′s $21.4 million Thanksgiving haul, as few theaters were open and there were few films to watch. But, 2021 and 2022 had more titles available and neither reached $150 million in domestic ticket sales for the five-day period.

Early ticket sales suggest “Wish” could secure up to $55 million for the Wednesday-to-Sunday period including Thanksgiving. That trails previous Thanksgiving openers from Disney including “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” “Coco,” “The Good Dinosaur” and “Tangled” but is higher than the $18.9 million brought in by “Strange World” last year and the $40.6 million from “Encanto” in 2021, according to data from Comscore.

Yet, if “Wish” does reach that $55 million mark, it would be the seventh-biggest Thanksgiving opening of all time.
Add in second-week sales from Universal’s “Trolls Band Together,” Lionsgate’s “Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes,” and TriStar’s Eli Roth slasher flick “Thanksgiving,” as well as new entrants such as Apple’s

“Napoleon,” and box office analysts foresee a haul of between $150 million and $160 million for the five-day spread.
“This is shaping up to be a very crowded Thanksgiving at the multiplex,” said Dergarabedian. “And ‘Wish’ will have to hope that the other new PG-rated animated family films on screens, like ‘Trolls Band Together,’ will not siphon off a larger-than-expected share of the target audience.”

Not to mention, box office expectations have not been particularly accurate this year. Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour concert film, Disney’s “The Marvels” and “Ballad” all delivered opening weekends that were shy of expectations.

Trouble in the Magic Kingdom

“Wish” has a lot riding on its opening weekend, as Disney looks to rebound from a slew of box office letdowns.

“After the misfire of ‘Strange World’ last year and the lingering impact of short-lived streaming strategies, it’s important for ‘Wish’ to bring back a bigger portion of their core audience now that other studios and animated franchises have performed so well over the last 18 months,” said Shawn Robbins, chief analyst at BoxOffice.com.

Universal’s animated films, in particular, have excelled. In 2022, “Minions: The Rise of Gru” snared $942.5 million at the global box office, and earlier this year “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” tallied more than $1.35 billion globally. Similarly, Sony saw great success with “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse,” generating $684.9 million globally.

Meanwhile, Disney has yet to secure more than $500 million worldwide from an animated feature since 2019.

“Elemental,” released over the summer, managed to collect $479.8 million. The last time a Pixar film grossed less than $500 million was 2017′s “Cars 3,” which drew $383.5 million in ticket sales. On the Walt Disney Animation side, the last film to fall short of the $500 million mark before 2020 was 2014′s “Planes: Fire and Rescue,” which racked up $151.4 million globally.

Whether “Wish” wins over audiences is up in the air. It hasn’t inspired critics. The day before its opening, the film was hovering under 60% on Rotten Tomatoes, which translates to a “rotten” rating. Still, other Disney films such as “Pocahontas,” “Robin Hood,” “Oliver and Company,” “Atlantis: The Lost Empire” and “Brother Bear” all hold a rating under 60% on the review aggregator but are fan-favorite films for many.

So, even if “Wish” doesn’t have an immediately strong box office, it could find life on Disney+. After all, that’s what happened for Disney’s “Encanto.”

Released in 2021 for the Thanksgiving holiday, “Encanto” generated $40.6 million from the five-day Thanksgiving weekend domestically and went on to tally $257.5 million globally during its run. In the home market, the film continued to capture the attention of kids and adults alike with catchy tunes such as “We Don’t Talk About Bruno” and “Surface Pressure.”

″‘Wish’ comes at an opportune time because the market has been starved for family content since summer ended,” said Robbins.

Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC. NBCUniversal is the distributor of “Trolls Band Together,” “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” and “Minions: The Rise of Gru.” NBCUniversal also owns Rotten Tomatoes.

– CNBC’s
Gabriel Cortés contributed to this article.
 
That's not bad, but not great either. I was hoping it would do more. Still, hopefully it will have legs. I've seen it and I really can't understand some of the reviews I've seen. It's really good!
I'm really happy you liked it. I really thought that Wish could make over $70M over a holiday week(end), especially a holiday that is steeply tied to families and outings like Black Friday shopping, etc.

I won't be seeing Wish in the theaters, because the trailer and songs weren't remarkable in any way for me. I purchased my tickets for Napoleon. I love watching artists cook. Here's hoping Apple will buy the rights to "The Bikeriders". Jeff Nichols deserves a studio better than what TWDC has to offer.
 
I'm really happy you liked it. I really thought that Wish could make over $70M over a holiday week(end), especially a holiday that is steeply tied to families and outings like Black Friday shopping, etc.

I won't be seeing Wish in the theaters, because the trailer and songs weren't remarkable in any way for me. I purchased my tickets for Napoleon. I love watching artists cook. Here's hoping Apple will buy the rights to "The Bikeriders". Jeff Nichols deserves a studio better than what TWDC has to offer.

Yeah, the songs are fine, but they aren't that special. They did try to do something different with some of them, but I don't see a breakout hit like "Let it Go" or even "Bruno." It really needed a good, pop hit. Sometimes I wonder why they don't just get Alan Menkin back in the fold!
 
I'm expecting a sub $50M 5 day with it being closer to $45M than $50M. The reviews from critics are not good and the reviews from audiences are not looking much better. My wife and I are planning to see it this week but I'm walking into it with very low expectations.
 
On the topic of Box Office:
Further to 'The Marvels' opening weekend estimates above:

https://www.the-numbers.com/market/

Current total box office and tickets sold data has 2023 looking worse and worse every week.

- 2023 is currently trending 26.8% behind 2019 in tickets sold
- 2023 Box office is on pace for 16% less revenue
- 2023 has had 149 movies released to date vs 130 released for all of 2019

No bueno.
A month later and current trends are getting worse:
https://www.the-numbers.com/market/

- 2023 is currently trending 28.9% behind 2019 in tickets sold
- 2023 Box office is on pace for 18.2% less revenue.

We have to stop being surprised by low box office.
 












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