Saturday, January 19, 2013

'The whole TV experience is changing'


For nearly three decades, the first place viewers could get films to watch at home was the local video shop. Dominated by BlockBuster, these were the libraries where movie buffs could get their education. Today, however, much larger stores are available for anyone to watch almost anything instantly online, on smart TVs and on phones and iPads, and this week BlockBuster slipped barely noticed into administration. It just couldn’t take the tablets.
In a pointed demonstration of what went wrong, TV giant Sky today reveals that its own, new download service will launch this week. With 3million people already using its Sky Go service to watch programmes on tablets and phones, now up to four users for every one of its 11million subscribers will be able to download films and TV to watch wherever and whenever they want thanks to Sky Go Extra. That means the only place you can now download the latest new Hollywood movies, all the Bond films, Harry Potter and countless more TV shows online in the UK is via Sky.
Luke Bradley-Jones, brand director of TV products at Sky, says that it’s commuters and families eager to entertain their children that have driven massive growth in the existing service’s popularity. “We’re adding hundreds of thousands of users a month,” he claims. “And it’s in the last six months that it’s become well known and rapidly adopted.”
Thanks to Sky’s grip on new movie rights, Sky Go Extra immediately puts intense pressure on much-vaunted video-on-demand services such as Netflix and Amazon’s Lovefilm. While Lovefilm may have a huge archive of older films and Netflix specialises in TV, neither has Sky’s catalogue of the latest Hollywood films.
Key to the growing rivalry between such services is the difficulty in getting access to content. Film distribution remains thoroughly stuck in a model that sees new releases first in cinemas, then on aeroplanes, followed by pay-per-view, then subscription and free TV services. Netflix has, for instance, been reduced to bidding for individual titles – as a result it will show The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey first, after it closes in cinemas – but Sky’s catalogue of the newest releases remains far deeper. And while it is hard to see that many people would sign up to Netflix just for The Hobbit, it is also trying to increase its range of unique programmes: the remake of the classic House of Cards starring Kevin Spacey, for instance, will be a Netflix exclusive from February 1.

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