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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhat the Writers Won

https://prospect.org/labor/2023-09-29-what-writers-won-wga/

The end of the five-month Writers Guild of America (WGA) strike was the most important thing thats happened in Hollywood in a while, but another important development has been largely overlooked. Amazon has announced that it would start running ads in Prime Video series and movies, which viewers can escape by purchasing a more expensive ad-free tier.
With Amazons move, pretty much every streaming service now has at least one tier with advertising, from Netflix to Max to Hulu to Peacock to Disney+. Its just one way in which the streaming model, which has lost enormous amounts of money for virtually every company that has tried it, is slowly but surely turning back into traditional television. Cable companies are also now replacing the TV bundle, where they sold a collection of channels at one price, with a streaming bundle, where streaming networks are tied together at one price.
Its realistic to expect that, in a few years, TV customers will have a streaming bill instead of a cable bill, one that will cost about the same to watch the same shows littered with the same ads. It makes sense for consumers who are overwhelmed with different charges for different streaming networks. And it makes sense for the networks to combine carriage revenue, which used to come from the cable companies that distributed their channels, with advertising revenue.
The writers were on strike because the actual entertainment creators were poised to become the only ones to lose out in this transition. As I wrote when the strike began in May, entertainment writing over the past decade has shifted to a gig-economy model, making it next to impossible to earn a living. This was a function of streaming video popping up as a new distribution channel, unrestricted by the contractual agreements of broadcast and cable.
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pwb
(12,242 posts)to do that to premium Streaming. I would leave any channel who starts doing that.
I would think this model wouldn't go over well on Amazon.
If I'm already paying for a service, why do I have to watch commercials? The content provider is squeezing every corner of these businesses.
Good for the writers!
Sympthsical
(10,421 posts)As streaming gets more expensive, more tiered, and more compartmentalized and ad-driven, a circle of friends started a Plex server and started tossing everything - ev-er-y-th-ing - on it.
I may start trimming down my subscriptions. I've been slowly realizing I use them less and less. I can't tell you the last time I actually used my Netflix subscription. I think my partner was watching Heartstopper. Is that on our server . . . *checks* Yes, it is.
The whole point of streaming is cheaper than cable and no ads. Once that becomes no longer true, people will bail from them, too.
hurple
(1,336 posts)Plex is currently getting into hot water for groups of "friends" doing exactly what it sounds like you are doing. Word is they're about to start playing hardball on groups like that.
Sympthsical
(10,421 posts)They're software engineers, so they've always got something going on I barely understand.