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Businesses Movies Television The Almighty Buck Entertainment

Enemy Number One is Netflix: The Monster That's Eating Hollywood (business-standard.com) 312

From a WSJ report: Tara Flynn, a rising star at a TV production unit of 21st Century Fox, walked into her boss's office last August and told him she was quitting and joining streaming-video giant Netflix Inc. The news was not well-received. "Netflix is public enemy No. 1," said Bert Salke, the head of Fox 21 Television Studios, where Ms. Flynn was a vice president, according to a Netflix legal filing. When Netflix finalized Ms. Flynn's hire a few weeks later, Fox sued, accusing it of a "brazen campaign" to poach Fox executives. In response, Netflix argued Fox's contracts are "unlawful and unenforceable." The ongoing legal battle is just one sign of the escalating tensions between Netflix and Hollywood as the streaming-video company moves from being an upstart dabbling in original programming to a big-spending entertainment powerhouse that will produce more than 70 shows this year. It is expanding into new genres such as children's fare, reality TV and stand-up comedy specials -- including a $40 million deal for two shows by Chris Rock. The shift has unnerved some TV networks that had become used to Netflix's original content being focused on scripted dramas and sitcoms. Netflix's spending on original and acquired programming this year is expected to be more than $6 billion, up from $5 billion last year, more than double what Time Warner Inc.'s HBO spends and five times as much as 21st Century Fox's FX or CBS Corp.'s Showtime.
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Enemy Number One is Netflix: The Monster That's Eating Hollywood

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  • Good. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by OffaMyLawn ( 1885682 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:46AM (#54119509)

    At least the majority of what Netflix is doing is actual original programming. Hollywood needs someone to kick them swiftly in the ass and stop doing remakes of old shows and movies (some of which aren't actually old, Matrix reboot?)

    Their Marvel based offerings are quite good, and Stranger Things is phenomenal.

    Amazon is creating some genuinely entertaining original content as well. I think it's time for a changing of the guard.

    • Re:Good. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by postbigbang ( 761081 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:49AM (#54119541)

      Oh, poor Hollywood. Got some competition. The MPAA might have to change their draconian thinking.

      Hollywood hasn't had a new idea in decades. Whether it's Netflix, Amazon, whoever, I hope they eat Hollywood's lunch and burp afterwards. The sooner, the better.

      Then the TV networks will have to look at their tawdry monopoly and figure out how to compete with both the cord cutters and those that aren't going to use an antenna anymore. Oh dear. Here, let me see if my heart bleeds for them. Nope.

      Hollywood and the networks had a nice long run. Goodbye.

      • Re:Good. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by number6x ( 626555 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:26PM (#54119851)

        Netflix's push for more original content is, partly, a result of the major studios effort to starve Netflix of content a few years ago [slashdot.org].

        Netflix decided to use the money it was no longer spending on licensing to the studios to buy or finance Netflix 'original' content. Much of the original content is even made by the TV production departments of the very studios that are complaining about Netflix. If the major studios had financed these productions, they would have made the first pass profits and then licensed re-runs to Netflix.

        By breaking this model, the studios left a big chunk of the viewing (and paying) market un-served. Netflix stepped up to the plate and said "We'll take those profits that you are leaving on the table, thank you very much!"

        The studios bosses need to read pogo [wikipedia.org].

        • Re:Good. (Score:5, Interesting)

          by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @01:55PM (#54120623) Homepage Journal
          Per the article:

          It is expanding into new genres such as children's fare, reality TV and stand-up comedy specials

          PLEASE Netflix, don't go down the route of fscking "reality tv"....please....

          If it gets overrun by reality crap, I"ll drop netflix.

          Hell, if they ever syndicate something awful like the existing kardashain shit out there, I"ll possibly pull the plug on NF.

          I like a lot of what NF is doing, I do wish they'd get back a little more of the commercial movie stuff, but in all I'm fairly happy with their offerings.

          But geez, "reality" tv type stuff has ruined what used to be good networks.

          DIY...dead to reality stuff, no longer DIY stuff.

          Cooking Channel and FoodTV...I rarely see a show on there where someone actually cooks recipes to show and educate the view...it is some fucking contest or reality type cooking thing.

          More and more seems to fall to this crap and it makes me sick.

          The latest victim I've heard about, is the show I really used to like to watch, Wheeler Dealers on the Velocity channel.

          The main part of the show, was with Edd China doing the mechanical work and explaining what was going on.

          Well, apparently a US company has bought them off, and was going to cut the actual "meat" of the show drastically....and I envisioned, having Edd and Mike argue like the fucking Tuttle's did on that chopper show...?

          I respect Edd...who QUIT the show. [youtube.com] I'll not be watching it anymore.

          So, Netflix...keep up the good work and leave the CRAP reality/contest shows to the regular networks that are rapidly becoming non-relavent anymore to anyone that wants to view something worth watching.

          • by gnick ( 1211984 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @02:08PM (#54120743) Homepage

            Hell, if they ever syndicate something awful like the existing kardashain shit out there, I"ll possibly pull the plug on NF.

            With the latest Netflix app, you can pick and choose what you watch. If they produce something you're not interested in, you can watch something else. Amazing!

            • One of my gripes with regular TV was that they replaced (relatively) good shows with their (un)reality & sitcom crap. I wouldn't give a !@#$ if Netflix had that crap, as long as they don't replace better stuff with it.

            • by Maritz ( 1829006 )

              If they produce something you're not interested in, you can watch something else. Amazing!

              Witchcraft!

          • Re:Good. (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @05:42PM (#54122453)

            PLEASE Netflix, don't go down the route of fscking "reality tv"....please....

            They already did, but it seems you didn't even notice.

            My wife and I watched through their original series Ultimate Beastmaster [netflix.com] a few weeks back, which is a reality TV show that knocks off American Ninja Warrior (and the shows it knocked off before it). The fact that you seem to have not been aware of its addition just goes to show why it's not a concern if they get into reality TV. Netflix can add content intended for me without displacing content intended for you. It's not a zero-sum game. My gain is not your loss, unlike with network TV, where my gain naturally comes at the loss of whatever show used to occupy that time slot.

            All of which is to say, I'm fine with Netflix adding more content of more varieties for more people. That I don't enjoy all of it is fine, so long as they keep adding the stuff I enjoy too.

      • Re:Good. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Penguinisto ( 415985 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @01:06PM (#54120199) Journal

        Hollywood hasn't had a new idea in decades.

        You can thank the terms "Intellectual Property" and "Monetization" for that. Seriously - when creative works are locked-up tight in literal century-plus copyright term lengths, and are bought and sold like commodities under that condition? There's little wonder that Hollywood is trying to see some kind of ROI on the stuff they bought, as opposed to coming up with (or at least taking a risk on incorporating) original stuff.

        Drop copyright term lengths back to 25 years (retroactively, BTW), and I bet you'll see Hollywood get their shit together again... because then they won't have a choice but to do so.

    • Re:Good. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:12PM (#54119707)

      The problem with the networks and cable channels is that they put out really crappy "reality shows" because it's cheaper and can't understand why people quit watching their shows and cut the chord and start getting their TV from places like Netflix.

      Meanwhile, Netflix, who have a much better pulse on who is watching what (they get better access. Direct access to the data) pick up shows that people actually want to watch. (it's not reality shows). Then they make sure they are done right. A lot of what Netflix produces is much better than the average from networks and cable.

      If you want to fight Netflix- create shows that people want to see and stop cutting corners producing reality shows.

      • Re:Good. (Score:5, Interesting)

        by citizenr ( 871508 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:28PM (#54119869) Homepage

        cable companies have fantastic metrics, there is a reason cable card died - they want you to use their spying always logged in cable box. It tracks every channel switch, every mute, every volume change.

        • Perhaps the cable companies failed to communicate that data to the channels they hosted. They forgot to tell NBC that nobody gives a frick about the bachelor and forgot to tell the History channel no-one wants to watch pawn stars.

    • Obviously they aren't appealing to the new content creators. Netflix is far-reaching and easily accessible. Same goes for Amazon. If 21st and the other network producers don't catch up technologically, they'll be left in the dust.

      • Re:Good. (Score:5, Interesting)

        by OffaMyLawn ( 1885682 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:42PM (#54120007)

        I don't know if it's so much that they're not appealing to new content creators or that they're afraid to take the risks investing in new IP.

        My guess would be a mixture of both. They're probably not actively seeking people looking to launch new properties, and when someone offers up something new and original those ideas are probably met with a mountain of skepticism and dread that they're going to lose their investment.

        Look at all the barriers that were put in the way of creating Deadpool. From a terribly screwed up version in Origins: Wolverine, to Ryan Reynolds having a terrible history in superhero movies (Green Lantern was...painful.) It took some serious fighting to get that movie made, and made right, despite the character himself having a relatively sizable fan base.

        Sometimes I think the creators think the battle isn't worth it, and sometimes the studios think the risk isn't worth it. Both combined have given us the situation we have today, but thankfully we have Netflix and Amazon willing to pick up the slack.

    • "At least the majority of what Netflix is doing is actual original programming"

      I agree, Hollywood should stop making movies pitched at six to twelve year old. Just how low do you have to pitch it that a talking CGI midget racoon is the best thing about a movie.
    • Re:Good. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by pr0t0 ( 216378 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @02:16PM (#54120813)

      Hollywood needs to get over itself, in a big, big way. For every soccer mom that wants to read about the custody battles between Brad and Angelina, there's someone who's just plain sick of it. Sick of actors grandstanding and talking about subjects they know nothing about (Tom Cruise). Sick of self-important over-inflated egos throwing phone books at a concierge (Russel Crowe), or denigrating a lighting guy on the set (Christian Bale) because he interrupted your "process". Get over yourself. You aren't half as believable as you think. And it would be great if people stopped interviewing Gwyneth Paltrow so we aren't subjected to whatever inane half-thought she vomits out.

      I'm sick of the "Hollywood Accounting" used to show movies that take in hundreds of millions of dollars have made no money. I'm sick of the over-paid, over-hyped, over-the-top everything actors, directors, producers, and everyone else right down to craft services. You're an adult man, wearing tights, speaking a fictitious language, and wielding a fake sword to tell a story for the purposes of entertainment. Or you're a "reality" television star who's only real talent came from a leaked sex tape (Kardashian). You people are not doing medical research, astrophysics, or materials science. At best, the only problem you may be solving is boredom.

  • Good (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:47AM (#54119525) Journal

    The film and TV industry have been in a stasis for decades. TV, in particular, hasn't really changed significantly since the early 1960s, and Hollywood has basically functioned the same way since the collapse of the Studio System. It's time for a big shake up and if companies like Netflix and Amazon can deliver that shakeup, then so be it.

    • Re:Good (Score:5, Interesting)

      by TWX ( 665546 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:10PM (#54119683)

      TV has changed though. TV seemed to have mostly avoided the serialized nature of shows from the movie houses and radio programs ending on a cliff-hanger, "Tune in next time to find out what happens!" to an episodic format where each individual program told a whole story that was reasonably self-contained. One could enjoy the show without having to know too much about what happened previously, so the threshold for new viewers was low. Unfortunately for the studio this also meant that it was easy for viewers to stop watching the show if the quality took a dip, as there was no need to find out where the plot or arc was going. Obviously not all TV followed this model (thinking of soap operas in particular) but if you look at shows like M*A*S*H or The Honeymooners or Star Trek or The Odd Couple you find most episodes are self-contained, and that it's fairly rare for most stories to directly span more than one episode. Even if characters change out it doesn't affect the ability to start watching.

      Sometime in the nineties this shifted, and TV became serialized like those old radio shows and old movie house pre-movie filler shows. There were some elements introduced and resolved in a single episode but a lot more of the plot, if not most of the plot, directly tied into a long-term direction that the season or the whole show was building toward. It's a lot harder to just pick up a show like this, but if the studio manages to attract an audience then that audience might stick around for more episodes even if some are subpar along the way because they want that conclusion that appears to be coming. PVRs and streaming the existing episodes helps make it easier for the viewer to get into the show in the first place.

      I prefer the episodic model, as I don't feel compelled to watch if I don't want to, and I don't worry if I miss an episode or if I watch them out of original order. Unfortunately this model is increasingly relegated to half-hour sitcoms, and anything with dramatic content is now serialized whether it needs to be or not.

      • Re:Good (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Cro Magnon ( 467622 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:29PM (#54119879) Homepage Journal

        The serialized shows are a double edged sword. They might encourage me to stick with a series, but they also discourage me from starting one, especially if I don't start until Episode #5.

        • The serialized shows are a double edged sword. They might encourage me to stick with a series, but they also discourage me from starting one, especially if I don't start until Episode #5.

          Indeed... and as a corollary, if episode #1 of a season totally turns me off or I decide that it's crap, I may just decide to not bother with the rest of the season. If I change my mind later and decide maybe to give it another shot, I'd immediately think 'why bother? I'd have to catch up first, and I'm not really sure if it's worth the time to do so.'

          Best example I can think of is The Walking Dead, when they killed off a character at the end of last season that a huge chunk of viewers really liked, and the

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Also Netflix seems to understand that their customers binge watch. They don't want to wait every week for a new episode. They will watch 4 or 5 in a row as their time allows.
      • sure, that means it doesnt matter if you are watching Blindspot or Streets of San Francisco, the plots are the same.

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        if you look at shows like M*A*S*H or The Honeymooners or Star Trek or The Odd Couple you find most episodes are self-contained, and that it's fairly rare for most stories to directly span more than one episode. (...) Sometime in the nineties this shifted, and TV became serialized (...) I prefer the episodic model, as I don't feel compelled to watch if I don't want to, and I don't worry if I miss an episode or if I watch them out of original order.

        Because VCRs became affordable and common. About the episodic format though, I think you're one of the few that don't enjoy any character development or long story arcs but would rather have a series spinning its wheels in one place. It's okay to be on season two when the show is at season five, unless you're the kind of person who can't put a book down. Even if the show is mostly the same like Big Bang Theory it's much better with a glacial drift, major big boobs Houlihan and i-want-out Klinger were pretty

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Daetrin ( 576516 )

        I prefer the episodic model, as I don't feel compelled to watch if I don't want to, and I don't worry if I miss an episode or if I watch them out of original order. Unfortunately this model is increasingly relegated to half-hour sitcoms, and anything with dramatic content is now serialized whether it needs to be or not.

        Everything you say is a very valid concern for the old model. There are a number of shows i stopped watching because i missed enough episodes that i didn't feel like i'd know what was going on currently. Some of those i would try to catch up later on DVD, but that means you're now running at least a season behind, especially since back in the day it took forever for TV shows to come out on video.

        However Netflix actually does away with a lot of the downsides of such serialized content. If it's on Netflix

      • I personally *despise* the episodic model. I'm all for the serialized one, and in fact, except Netflix's offerings, the serialized versions found on networked shows pale in comparison (in terms of serialization that is). I'm one of those people who really enjoyed the serializing nature of LOST (minus the disastrous 6th season). I absolutely never watch episodic television. I find it cheap, and non-artistic. In a perfect world, I'd like most TV shows (not all, but most) to end in 3 seasons: beginning-middle-

        • I think it depends on the show and the strengths and qualities of the writers involved. Sometimes serialized shows work, and sometimes they would be better off episodic .

          A lot of shows get ruined by serialization if the writers aren't skilled enough to introduce character development without compromising plot (or even if they are very skilled, but just better at plot than "character development"). As an example, take Sherlock, great when it first started out when it was more episodic in nature but has be

      • The problem with the serialized series is that many arcs simply do not contain enough plot to be sustained over 10-13 shows. Often by the end of the series, one is feeling that the ending is long overdue - and I've often stopped watching these series at show five or six simply because their plot pacing was so glacial.

        If Netflix wants to really produce great programs, they also need to drop the standard 10 or 13 program package. Sometimes a story does take a long time to tell. Other times it's just filling o

    • Exactly.

      My heart pumps purple piss for these studio assholes that refuse to adapt to changing technology and customer expectations. If you don't want to lose your customers to a more agile company offering better service, then you can either make your offerings better, or continue to lose relevance.

  • *Voice of Smithers*
  • by chew8bitsperbyte ( 533087 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:48AM (#54119535)
    Imagine that, spend more on developing quality original content and consumers and producers will flock to you. Who would've thought... The legacy production houses had a huge leg up but never bothered, remaining content in their old, "good-enough-to-get-enough-eyeballs-for-advertisers" model. Looks like Blockbuster won't be the only giant getting taken down by Netflix.
  • "Public enemy #1" whereby "public" means "anybody I care about, everyone else can go get stuffed."

  • Innovation (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Mindragon ( 627249 ) * on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:50AM (#54119547) Journal
    Netflix organized themselves around innovation. The studios did not -- they organized themselves around "wall building" techniques: Net Neutrality, DRM, Anti Piracy campaigns, political lobbying and more. Now Netflix is winning and what do the studios do? Whine.
    • and what do the studios do? Whine.

      If everybody would just cry hard enough, they'd have a new moat. Think of the poor unemployed cartoon princesses if they fail! Why isn't the water rising?

  • by notes rules ( 652573 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:50AM (#54119551)
    Every old business model fights to save itself, and accuses the new business model of some nefarious intent. Sears->Walmart Taxis->Uber/Lyft Barnes&Noble->Amazon Yahoo->Google Newspapers->Slashdot/Reddit/Blogs etc. etc. Business is best when new, healthy models overtake old, unhealthy businesses. It is called "creative destruction" and it has been going on for a long, long time.
    • by ravenshrike ( 808508 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:09PM (#54119677)

      What's really amusing about the B&N/Amazon thing is that as B&N falters against Amazon(I will point out that TradPub is as big of a problem for B&N here as anything they're actually doing wrong) the tiny bookstores that B&N pushed out of the market are starting to come back. They won't thrive nearly as well as they used to of course, but they'll at least exist.

  • by simp ( 25997 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:52AM (#54119563)

    Netflix is the monster that eats normal tv. And I'm fine with that. Being able to watch a movie/series/comic/whatever when you want WITHOUT commercials is so much better than what the normal tv channels have to offer.
    Sure you can have discussions that not all the content that you want is on Netflix. Ok then watch normal tv. But I can't handle the burden of interruptions by commercials, news flash or moving widgets on my screen anymore.

    Some cable companies already realize that: a internet plus phone subscription with my local isp is just as expensive as an internet plus phone plus tv subscription...

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:01PM (#54119619)

      Once you are used to not having *everything* and realize you have *enough*, Netflix becomes the unquestionable leader.

      You just have to get over the idea that it is worth paying 15x as much to get "everything". After you have had Netflix you realize you can't watch everything so why pay for it.

  • They should do a Firefly spinoff or actually do Firefly and then make it one of the most successful blockbuster shows in the 'verse.
  • Employee Retention (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bano ( 410 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:56AM (#54119595) Homepage Journal

    A company whose employee retention plan is to call the lawyers likely isn't a great place to work anyways.

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @11:57AM (#54119601) Homepage

    Go look at Hollywood movies and try to find one that is not:

    1) a Remake
    2) a Sequel
    3) Based on a book/videogame or similar items.

    And traditional TV isn't much better - Riverdale, Lethal Weapon, Supergirl, etc. etc.

    Now check out Netflix's stuff.

    Yes, Netflix is pumping money into it - because they are making more money than Hollywood because they are MAKING GOOD, ORIGINAL SHOWS.

    Don't blame the winner for earning more money and reinvesting it. Blame the loser for losing their market share.

    • by MrLint ( 519792 )

      As a counter, recall the old adage "There are no new stories"

    • by ravenshrike ( 808508 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:12PM (#54119705)

      Training Day was actually shaping up to be pretty decent, if formulaic. Then Paxton died.

    • by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:45PM (#54120021)

      Now check out Netflix's stuff.

      Daredevil? House of Cards? Fuller House? Arrested Development? All of them are reboots/sequels or remakes. What makes them good or bad is not whether they are remakes. Hollywood has been doing remakes from the beginning (The Wizard of Oz and The Maltese Falcon are both remakes of earlier, less successful attempts to adapt those books to the screen).

      • You have a point, but missed my point, which is also correct.

        Netflix (etc.) does do some remakes/reboots/sequels. - more than 10%. Hollywood always did some remakes. But modern Hollywood is 95% remake/reboot/etc. Hollywood used to be more balanced. Now, Hollywood insists on massive budgets for productions (superhero for example.) For this reason, they insist on a 'proven' subject, hence the remakes.

        The remakes, etc. are the SYMPTOM, not the cause of my subject Lack of originality has destroyed Holly

  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:00PM (#54119611)
    The only reason Netflix makes their own content is they were being squeezed by Hollywood for higher and higher licensing fees. Back in 2011, when Netflix had to raise fees for streaming and mail-in service to cope with raising licensing fees, their customers revolted. So Netflix did two things: 1) split their business into two with DVD mailing separate from streaming and 2) offer fewer and more outdated movies. However content stagnated. I suppose that Netflix could have shown TV shows in syndication but that would not distinguish themselves enough from other players or even cable. Creating their own content was the only to keep themselves relevant in the streaming business. Netflix started with TV shows like abandoned properties (Arrested Development) and original new TV shows (Orange is the New Black) which has brought in many new and returning customers. Now they are branching into films.
    • by timholman ( 71886 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:22PM (#54119805)

      The only reason Netflix makes their own content is they were being squeezed by Hollywood for higher and higher licensing fees.

      Exactly so. The Law of Unintended Consequences in a nutshell. The networks and studios decided to shut down Netflix and monetize their old movies and TV shows on their own. And for a while, it worked. Netflix lost subscribers, and their movie selection was absolutely abysmal. But unlike the networks and studios, Netflix was able to adapt, and it became exactly the type of company that the networks and studios could no longer hurt.

      It's such a pleasure to watch Hollywood being devoured by the monster it created.

    • You nailed it! Netflix was forced into this position by the old-school content creators and their (sic) valuable content libraries. It's not hard to make a TV show and there are plenty of great writers, actors, and directors just waiting to make some great stuff.

      This is a lesson is greed. Netflix wanted to charge customers a flat-rate and the studios wanted to eat Netflix's profit. There was a time where it looked like Netflix would collapse because the price of content was going up, but they raised pri

    • Netflix is also buying Indie films at festivals and ... gasp ... showing them. I never understood the studios' predilection for buying up these movies and then never distributing most of them.
  • Massive presumption (Score:2, Interesting)

    by JustNiz ( 692889 )

    The article is based on one massive, ludicruous presumption that we all actually want Hollywood to survive.
    Hollywood clearly have a stranglehold on the market, but the only output they can create is mindless, formulaic dross aimed at the lowest-common-denominator. They are also a breeding ground for radical left-wing socialists, scientologists, and talentless, shallow, manufactured "celebrities" that are famous just for their "lifestyle", not for actually achieving anything of real merit.
    I say the world, es

    • I think you need to dial it down to a 5 and just watch indie movies....

      • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

        I would love to watch indie movies, but Hollywood has already made sure that they don't even get a chance to play in the vast majority of US theatres.

    • The article is based on one massive, ludicruous presumption that we all actually want Hollywood to survive. Hollywood clearly have a stranglehold on the market, but the only output they can create is mindless, formulaic dross aimed at the lowest-common-denominator. They are also a breeding ground for radical left-wing socialists, scientologists, and talentless, shallow, manufactured "celebrities" that are famous just for their "lifestyle", not for actually achieving anything of real merit. I say the world, especially the US, would be a MUCH better place totally without Hollywood.

      I'm European and left-leaning, but not so much that my ear touches the ground. In the US political spectrum that probably makes me a 'radical left-wing socialist'. (we prefer the term `humane realist', but never mind).

      The idea that Hollywood (of all places) is a "breeding ground for radical left-wing socialists" is so ludicrous that I kindly suggest you get some mental health support ASAP while you're still insured against calamities such as this.

      Apart from that rather large niggle, I actually agree with y

  • Fairly priced competition that gives its customers what it wants AND has good customer service? FUCK THEM! /s
  • by BlueCoder ( 223005 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:10PM (#54119685)

    Finally a company ready to actually spend money and do the right thing by their customers.

    Netflix is sending a message to all the old guard cable stations. They can and will cut out the middle man. They will not be extorted for content.

    You keep trying to milk us more and more... fine, we'll make the shows ourselves.

    It also wouldn't surprise me if netflix started up a sister company to cover and stream sports. More likely to partner with a company already in the biz though.

  • BULLSHIT! (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:15PM (#54119737)

    We all know PIRACY is the one number enemy of Hollywood! No one else has done trillions of dollars in damages!

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:18PM (#54119759)
    They've been trying to murder Netflix for years and replace them with their own (pay-per-play) systems. That's not escalating tensions, that's a life or death battle. You saw the same thing when the ACA threatened to bring single payer to the insurance companies here in the states. They're fighting for their life.
  • All that money, time and effort and they got fooled. So fucking funny.

  • Serves them right (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JWW ( 79176 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @12:30PM (#54119889)

    I would have loved for Netflix just to have become a place where I could watch recent and older hollywood movies, completely replacing video rentals. But I get to be frustrated that new movies aren't there to watch and old movies aren't there to be found.

    But hey, whats this, its a Netflix original show? Hey it isn't half bad. Well I could watch more of this.

    Hollywood, you had the chance to box Netflix in and have them just BE the rental market. You could have just banked fewer dollars from rentals but still retained a lot of control.

    But nooooo, you had to block the access to your catalogs of movies to try and cripple them. Now they're creating content that is very often better than what you are coming up with.

    Cry me a river, hollywood. You deserve to go down, hard. You've never really played fair with your customers and now we're buying entertainment elsewhere....

  • Nope, can't say it with a straight face.

  • "Phonographs are killing the piano industry" screamed the piano makers, "Radio is killing the theater" screamed the performers. "Video is killing the radio star" Screamed the radio DJ's, "Netflix is destroying video rental stores" Screamed blockbuster.

    And here i sit at my piano, practicing along with a 'how to play piano' video on youtube, produced by a musician/former radio star, whilst watching a London theatrical performance that was recorded and made available for viewing on streaming Netflix.
  • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Monday March 27, 2017 @01:27PM (#54120385) Homepage

    I know everyone wants to back the little guy, but Netflix is actually recreating the very monopolies we are trying to break-up:

    The common complaint about cable was that they bundled everything together. You had to pay a monthly fee, you couldn't pick your channels a la carte, and if you wanted to watch "Game Of Thrones" you had to subscribe to HBO and pay monthly, even for just one show. In addition, nobody liked having to pay for cable TV & internet both, since it felt like the same service from the same company. Then to make matters worse, you had to buy HBO on cable just to stream the show on HBO's web site, which made no sense. (HBO might have fixed this, but the same goes for other channels, and sporting events.) This drove piracy mainstream. [theoatmeal.com]

    But the bigger issue is that telecommunications companies are buying out content providers. [wired.com] This merging is dangerous [fool.com], because a telecom company controlling say, a media news outlet [wikipedia.org], can't be unbiased. And there is nothing to stop them from offering certain content on their networks only.

    Netflix threatened to break that all up. I could buy my internet from anyone, subscribe to Netflix, and have so much content we didn't need cable TV. We no longer paid for TV "channels" we didn't need. But then Amazon Prime came along, and then we needed to buy Netflix + Amazon. Oh, and buy Hulu for your TV watching. So now, we need to again buy all these services in order to have access to a full catalog of content. We are back to premium TV channels again. But at least we gained our a la carte stations!

    But if Amazon and Netflix start to offer exclusive content, we get back to the media companies (Amazon, Netflix) being content providers too. I want to watch just one show, and I have to subscribe to Netflix. I's the HBO Game-of-thrones scenario all over again.

    The solution is, and has been for 40+ years, to break apart the monopolies. We must separate content delivery companies from content creating companies. That no longer just means the telecom monopolies shouldn't be content providers, but it also means the streaming companies can't be content creators, and transitively, the telecom can't be either one. This gets us back to the ideal world where we choose our telecom company, choose our streaming service, and choose our content - all separately. Every streaming service should be able to provide all content, or nearly all of it. Competition comes back, we no longer have the zero-rating problem. [wired.com].

    So cheer Netflix's success, but be careful what you wish for. At the present rate, we will all be paying $50/month for all these streaming services just to get the content we need.

    P.S. We also need to stop each streaming service provider from using their own protocol. You bought a Roku box last year huh? Well, you can't access the newest coolest streaming service because they didn't make a firmware update for that service. If 20 years ago, you told people that their TV or cable-box needed a firmware update every time a new channel came-out, they would be attacking the telecom companies with pitchforks. Yet that is happening today and people accept it.

    • But that's the thing... you don't need any of the content. It is want only. If I was truly interested in originals to all the streaming services, Netflix and Amazon have already embraced binge watching. I enjoy Game of Thrones and will rejoin HBO Now when it comes back. In between episodes, I intend to binge Westworld, which sounds right up my alley, but HBO doesn't have enough content to keep me around the whole year. Once GoT is over with I'll drop HBO Now again. This makes it a hard market to break

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