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Sports streaming is here. Will TV break?
  + stars: | 2024-02-09 | by ( Deirdre Bosa | Jasmine Wu | Laura Batchelor | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSports streaming is here. Will TV break? But now, you've got Thursday Night Football on Amazon Prime, Lionel Messi on Apple TV, WWE Smackdown on Netflix, and Google's YouTube TV as the fourth biggest TV provider in the country. Even traditional TV is giving in, with a new mega-sports app from Fox, Disney's ESPN, and Warner Brothers Discovery. This week on TechCheck, we update our "Great Rebundling" deep-dive and ask, does live sports break the dam?
Persons: you've, Lionel Messi Organizations: Sports, Amazon Prime, Apple TV, WWE, Netflix, YouTube, Fox, ESPN, Warner Brothers Discovery
Analysts are largely bullish on Walt Disney stock ahead of the media company's fiscal first-quarter earnings out Wednesday afternoon. But analysts are not sure about the effect of the move on Disney's share price just yet. Analysts are generally optimistic on Disney ahead of earnings, with some even thinking the stock is trading at a cheaper valuation than it should be. Disney remains Morgan Stanley's sole overweight media stock given the firm's bullish view on parks and streaming, analyst Benjamin Swinburne wrote in a Monday note. DIS 1Y mountain Disney stock.
Persons: Wells, Steven Cahall, Morgan Stanley's, Benjamin Swinburne, Swinburne, Jason Bazinet, Bazinet, Hugh Johnston, Disney, Blackwells, Nelson Peltz's Organizations: Walt Disney, Disney, Blackwells, ESPN, Fox, Warner Bros . Discovery, UBS, Big Tech, Citi, Hulu, DIS, Capital, Fund Management Locations: rebundling, Tuesday's, F1Q23
Cable companies are trying to catch up with the times, though, and now want you to replace your clunky set-top cable boxes with sleek, Apple TV-like streaming devices – gadgets that could save customers money. Xumo is one step in cable companies’ broader strategy to combine live TV with streaming – essentially rebundling streaming services like the old cable bundle. Moving from a cable box to Xumo will save cable customers money. It’s a shift for cable companies that long relied on trying to get households to add as many set-top cable boxes in their homes as possible. It could be a while before the ancient cable box completely disappears, however.
Persons: Max, , Xumo, Bruce Leichtman, ” Craig Moffett, Jessica Fischer Organizations: New, New York CNN, Cable, Apple, Comcast, Netflix, Disney, CNN, Google, “ Cable, Locations: New York
Disney has offered to pay Comcast $8.6 billion to take full control of Hulu. Disney is already in the process of rolling out a unified app that'll make Hulu's general entertainment content available in Disney+ . "With Hulu firmly in the Disney fold, they can create their own mini-bundle with kids and family (Disney +), general entertainment (Hulu), and sports (ESPN). The valuation also has to take into account that Hulu contains an entire Disney basic cable network, FX on Hulu. Netflix is set to spend $17 billion on entertainment content in 2024, while Disney is poised to spend $15 billion.
Persons: Bob Iger's, , Bob Iger, Hulu —, what's, Comcast's NBCUniversal, pare, he's, Jonathan Miller, Brian Roberts, there's, Bernstein, Laurent Yoon, Read, Jordan Helman, Max, Puck, Disney, Bernstein's Yoon Organizations: Disney, Comcast, Hulu, Service, YouTube, News, Century Fox, Marvel, Netflix, Integrated Media, ESPN, ABC, LightShed Partners, Warner Bros, Wall, Paramount Global, Paramount, Showtime, HBO Max, Macquarie Equity Research, Media, Disney Disney, Hollywood Locations: Disney, Hulu, Canada, India, Hollywood
Disney will write "a big check" for Comcast's 33% share of Hulu, said NBCUniversal CEO Jeff Shell. With Bob Iger returning as Disney's CEO, Comcast is hoping for a broader conversation to seal the deal. Comcast is eyeing assets such as ESPN, FX, and NatGeo in return for surrendering its stake in Hulu. Former Disney CEO Bob Chapek, who was unceremoniously fired on November 20, refused to hold any talks on the topic with Comcast CEO Brian Roberts, according to a Comcast insider and a high-level Hollywood executive familiar with thinking inside Disney. Representatives for Hulu, Disney, and Comcast had no comment.
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