Please do. I'm just saying we don't have all the information and that if we follow the argument to its logical conclusion then the failure of the model is inevitable.
Maybe if their strategy didn't seem confused and contradictory, then things would be more clear and people could see how CBS intends to make its streaming model work well. I think CBS should take some blame for having a muddled message.
Like this Nickelodeon announcement, now that is something I said they should do, but a week before this Nickelodeon said it was working with Netflix to put content on their site. So who is getting what?
All the Cartoon Network stuff is going to HBO Max and all the Disney kids stuff is going on Disney plus, they are not putting their content their sites and selling it to others.
You said they didn't appeal to kids, but clearly CBS has decided it does, but does CBS/Viacom have mastery over its library or they sharing it with others?
What did Nostadamus have to say about the subject? That's what I want to know.
And people can never see the writing on the wall and make sound predictions based on ongoing trends?
Did one have to tell the future to see that Blockbuster held on to it's old business model for too long and that would cost them dearly in the internet age?
This is a simplification of what actually happened. UPN and WB merged to form CW. CW is still around today and is, ironically enough, owned by CBS.
Toward the end of UPN's run, before the merger, it felt on secure(-ish) enough ground that it could threaten to cancel ENT if the series didn't improve. Otherwise, a shake-up wouldn't have been forced upon them for the third season and Paramount wouldn't have had to negotiate with UPN to get a fourth season, to reach (almost) 100 episodes.
Don't they only own half of it and the other half was owned by AT&T?
It seems like both WB and UPN failed on their own if they had to merge together rather then suceed as separate entities. Regardless I do not see how UPN's strategy of relying mostly on Star Trek to thrive worked out well for them. Maybe CBS All Access cannot stand on it's own if it is repeating UPN's mistakes and may again need to merge with another player, like WB and UPN did.
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