Categories: Technology

Disney Plus, Hulu and Max will be available in a bundle soon, to take on Netflix’s dominance – and we’re officially back to cable

Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery have announced a brand new innovation: cable TV. Okay, not quite. But they have announced a streaming services bundle that looks very much like the cable bundles we expected streaming to get rid of. Starting this summer in the US, you’ll be able to subscribe to a bundle that combines Disney Plus, Hulu and Max.

The bundle will be available from all three providers via their own branded apps, and you’ll have a choice of a lower-cost ad-supported plan and a more expensive ad-free option. Prices for those options haven’t yet been announced; more details “will be shared in the coming months” according to the press release.

The future of streaming looks a lot like its past

For viewers, the ability to have access to all three services for (presumably) less money than individual subscriptions is attractive. And that’s because at the moment, as in the past, TV shows and movies are often siloed and exclusive to specific services – so you can’t just subscribe to one service and get access to everything. But with a bundle you can access a whole bunch: as Disney and Warner Bros put it, their bundle gives you entertainment from lots of brands including “ABC, CNN, DC, Discovery, Disney, Food Network, FX, HBO, HGTV, Hulu, Marvel, Pixar, Searchlight, Warner Bros. and many more.”

With the cost of the best streaming services going up significantly and frequently, the cost of accessing everything you want to watch is getting awfully high. That means many of us are being much more selective with our choice of subscriptions; I know in my own case the days when I happily subscribed to a half-dozen different streamers are long gone. But the problem for the likes of Disney and WB is that when people are cutting, they’re mostly not cutting Netflix – it’s become the default streaming service, and a bundle is the best way for other companies to try to compete with its breadth and popularity.

This isn’t the only Disney/Warners bundle: the firms have also teamed up with Fox for a sports subscription bundle that’s currently slated for a fall debut. And it won’t be the last such bundle in streaming, either. We only recently saw that Apple is looking to team up with Paramount Plus. For streamers, bundling their services together can reduce the rate of people canceling their subscriptions and can boost engagement, and therefore ad revenues too. In a sector where despite attracting millions of subscribers, many services are still losing money, expect more such team-ups in the not too distant future.

You might also like

https://www.techradar.com/rss

Carrie Marshall

Carrie Marshall

Share
Published by
Carrie Marshall

Recent Posts

Diddy’s teenage daughters, 17, attend prom as he apologizes after shocking video of him violently beating ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura

By Sharon Mai and Adam Levy and Isabelle Stanley and Marjorie Hernandez For Dailymail.Com Published:…

1 hour ago

Shocking photos reveal how boy racers left car park covered in tyre marks after dozens of vehicles gathered for illegal meet

Were YOU at the car meet? Email poppy.gibson@mailonline.co.uk By Poppy Atkinson Gibson Published: 04:41 EDT, 20…

1 hour ago

Slack is training its AI models on your chats — unless you opt out in a tricky way

In a controversial move, Slack has been training the models it uses for its generative…

1 hour ago

Bella Hadid looks amazing as she strips off to black bikini on a yacht in France

BELLA Hadid looked like she was living the good life as she joined a host…

2 hours ago