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Star Trek Discovery Leaving Netflix For Paramount+ Internationally, season 4 global launch in 2022

So, when do you strike out on your own? Competition is already fierce. Do you wait until a more favorable market? How long?

I don't know the nuances of these deals but I don't fault expansion. Your competitors are gaining an edge daily. What are we doing to expand our market share while minimizing support to the competition?
 
So, when do you strike out on your own? Competition is already fierce. Do you wait until a more favorable market? How long?

Corporations like ViacimCBS get suckered into a damned if you do, damned if you don't pattern of over expanding and over extracting - fair enough you break up Netflix's near monopoly with healthy competition, and the consumers are happy enough with two to three big streaming services to choose from in a regulated market.

But when having a dozen or more services, with increased subscription costs, with ViacomCBS seeing it as a excuse to aggressively clamp down on IP at the audience's expense, then there's too much of a feeding frenzy and hyper competition between too many streaming services becomes toxic (and there may be a sunk cost fallacy, with ViacomCBS execs thinking their own streaming service would be more profitable than using Netflix as a middle man, when Paramount+ could be too expensive and fail).
 
Not exactly a failure since Netflix still pays them for oversea viewers for disco. This screw up is going to be a lot worst because most of the world has no option to see it so they have to go one method.
If you seen the map in the first post it’s not a temporary inconvenience for most of the world since CBS doesn’t have the know how and money to go whole world like Netflix. This is no crime other than losing viewership which will piss off their shareholders. Star Trek fans will of course have to go one route due to this stupid mistake.
Actually torrents is outdated there are some sites that actually stream the episodes for free but you have to register for their account which can be done with any email address.
It sucks but Disney does have the know how and capital to go overseas, not as good as Netflix so there are some sites that steam Disney plus series because there is no Disney plus for certain countries. But that’s the risk for going solo.
Not going to happen with Star Trek fans who watch season 1 on Netflix despite the huge amount of backlash and bashing we get for supporting disco since season 1. CBS clearly doesn’t care about Star Trek fans going down their route for their oversea deployment. Even the most Optimistic nations getting their app still have to wait for months for season 4 and that’s the most lucky fans. The rest has to wait for years or non at all. Well if they don’t want those fans money the fans will watch it and doesn’t care about CBS since CBS doesn’t care about Star Trek fans.
Alex, you made all these posts one right after the other in a short period of time. In the future, choose the posts that you want to quote by pushing the +Quote button which can be found in the bottom right corner of each post next to the Reply button, and then you can consolidate all the posts you want to respond to into one big reply like I have above. Thanks. :)
 
It has been almost a week now since the news dropped, and I'm getting used to it by now. Sure, it sucks, but it happens to us all the time.Especially in film department, if we don't get a theatrical release of a film, I have to wait until it's out on streaming or Blu-Ray, and that is always at least a four-month wait. This often happens with films that are not well received or don't perform well enough on their domestic markets.

And in the end, it's just entertainment. I'l live.
 
I am glad I live in Canada, it's still on Crave here. Crave has better content than Paramount Plus.

So, when do you strike out on your own? Competition is already fierce. Do you wait until a more favorable market? How long?

I don't know the nuances of these deals but I don't fault expansion. Your competitors are gaining an edge daily. What are we doing to expand our market share while minimizing support to the competition?

There are going to be winners and losers in the Streaming Market and I think some of the losers will team up eventually.

The big winners seem to be Netflix and Disney Plus. It does seem like Paramount Plus and Peacock are kinda on the loser side.
 
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I wouldn't classify NBC Universal as losing the Streaming game because they have something that no-one else does: content, both old and new, from the biggest pro wrestling/Sports Entertainment company in the world (the WWE). Even with AEW gaining traction, the WWE is still the kingpin, and only having to pay $10 and change a month for what they produce, especially their PPVs, is a huge deal even if Netflix and Disney seem higher-profile with regards to the content they offer.
 
When is all of Star Trek being pulled off Netflix, I just did a quick look and Enterprise is still there.

‪‪I don’t think they’ve specified a time that’s happening yet, it’s just assumed that when the current contracts run out they won’t be renewed. In the U.S. 3 of the 5 the pre-Discovery series that were on Netflix were removed at the end of September this year, with only TNG & DS9 still available.

With the removal of TOS, VOY & ENT from Netflix US, and the removal of Discovery from Netflix International, several of the industry articles reporting on the news have asked the same question, when will the rest of the Star Trek catalogue be leaving, and suggesting that it will likely be sooner than later.
 
So, when do you strike out on your own?
I think my answer would be in the form of a different question - should you strike out on your own? You can make content and sell it to existing streaming services - none has a monopoly enough to practice price control so you still have that leverage. Meanwhile you avoid all the costs and risks of launching and running a steaming service of your own and are extremely flexible in the marketplace - if one streaming service you have a contract with folds, you shrug and move to the next. Deciding instead to launch a niche service in countries where you don't have great brand recognition (albeit Paramount is a better 'name' than CBS) where your competition is Amazon, Netflix and fucking Disney seems... odd. I don't get the business decision here at all.
 
I think my answer would be in the form of a different question - should you strike out on your own? You can make content and sell it to existing streaming services - none has a monopoly enough to practice price control so you still have that leverage. Meanwhile you avoid all the costs and risks of launching and running a steaming service of your own and are extremely flexible in the marketplace - if one streaming service you have a contract with folds, you shrug and move to the next. Deciding instead to launch a niche service in countries where you don't have great brand recognition (albeit Paramount is a better 'name' than CBS) where your competition is Amazon, Netflix and fucking Disney seems... odd. I don't get the business decision here at all.
On the hand I see your point. But, from the business side, I see it as a adjusting how they are directing money. Some businesses will struggle with putting out money to support competitors which doesn't benefit them fully. So, while I don't know if you "should" I do think that the drive is to feel that they are more in control of their brand and IP. While I don't know the money side I can imagine that the numbers reflect a lot of output to competitors that they feel can be directed elsewhere, as well as trying to branch in to a new market.

For my experience, I worked for a retailer who slowly eased in to online ordering. They did it all themselves, they did not rely upon a third party platform, like Amazon, because it afforded them more control over how this new program was rolled out. So, for me, as a business minded person, having direct control means more.
 
Some good news for a change. Never heard of Pluto TV. Anyone here has experience with them?
 
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