Warner Bros. Discovery has confirmed it will merge its HBO Max and Discovery+ services into one streaming platform next year. During a quarterly earnings call on Thursday, CEO David Zaslav said the combined services will be launched next summer, with a release planned for Latin America, Europe and other markets through 2024 as the company hopes to reach 130 million subscribers by 2025. The new Subscription Video on Demand (SVOD) service will include the full libraries of both streaming platforms and have ad free, ad-lite and a free-with-ads versions. 'With respect to streaming, our main priority right now is launching an integrated SVOD service,' Zaslav said during the call. 'Once our SVOD service is firmly established in the market, we see real potential and are exploring the opportunity for a fast or free ad-supported streaming offering that would give consumers who do not want to pay a subscription fee access to great library content, while at the same time serving as an entry point to our premium service.' But as he touted the new services, which does not have a name yet, Zaslav remained quiet about the company's plan to find $3 billion savings that will result in layoffs.
HBO Max, which has 73.8 million subscribers, will see it's library merge with Discovery+
[img][/img] Paramount, which operates its own streaming service, saw its stock drop by 30 percent since April. It's stock is currently down more than 15 percent since February
This year, Warner Bros. has returned to exclusive theatrical windows for at least 45 days before sending movies to HBO Max. Zaslav said the company would shift its focus on attracting top-tier storytellers for its TV and film projects and commit to theatrical releases, where more money can be made. 'That's why most people got in this business — to be on the big screen when the lights went out,' Mr. Zaslav said. 'That is the magic, and the economic model is much stronger.' The change comes as streaming services have seen lackluster performances in Wall Street, with Warner Bros. Discovery's stock down more than 31 percent from its initial price of $25.50 in April. Within that same time, Netflix saw its stock plummet by about 36 percent, with Paramount's stock also seeing a drop of about 30 percent.
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[url=]Speculation Is on Fire Around HBO Max's Future, Planned Layoffs in Major Streaming Shake-Up[/url]
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