Warner Bros. Discovery unveils new flagship streaming service, ‘Max’
Milly Alcock as Rhaenyra Targaryen in HBO’s “House of the Dragon,” a prequel to “Game of Thrones.”
Warner Bros. Discovery
Warner Bros. Discovery on Wednesday unveiled its new blended streaming service of HBO Max and Discovery+, called “Max.”
The company made the announcement at an presentation in Burbank, California. Warner Bros. Discovery executives have been planning to combine HBO Max and Discovery+ for more than a year as part of the rationale for merging Discovery Communications and WarnerMedia, which was divested from AT&T in April 2022.
The new combined platform should allow Warner Bros. Discovery to better compete with Netflix and Disney’s suite of streaming services (Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+) globally as the streaming wars mature in the coming years. Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has said his company’s direct-to-consumer products will break even in 2024 and produce $1 billion in profit in 2025.
Legacy media companies have pivoted away from traditional pay-TV and built their own subscription streaming products as millions of Americans cancel cable each year.
Warner Bros. Discovery had more than 96 million global streaming subscribers, from either HBO Max, HBO or Discovery+, at the end of the fourth quarter. About 55 million of those customers came from the U.S. and Canada. Average monthly revenue per user was $7.58.
Warner Bros. Discovery previously said it plans to launch the combined service in Latin America later this year and in Europe and Asia in 2024.
CNBC first reported Warner Bros. Discovery was leaning toward choosing Max as the new name of the service in December.
Disclosure: Comcast, which owns CNBC parent NBCUniversal, is a co-owner of Hulu.
This story is developing. Please check back for updates.
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