When Netflix increased prices this week, Christopher Duggan was annoyed. The 59-year-old communications professional in the St. Louis area is sticking with Netflix and two other streaming services but said he’s tired of constant price increases and haggling with his cable and internet provider over escalating bills.
Amazon's Prime Video has shifted its strategic focus towards live sports and away from original television shows and movies, seeking to meet internal corporate profit targets, The Information reported on Friday.
Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN)'s Prime Video is reportedly shifting its strategic focus towards live sports broadcasting, moving away from its traditional reliance on original television shows and movies. The move is part of an effort to meet corporate profit targets,
Netflix remains a strong player but lacks the upside potential and risk-reward balance to justify its valuation and is unlikely to outperform the market. Read more here.
Netflix is by far the most popular streaming service, and its new pricing structure makes it among the most expensive. For comparison, Amazon Prime Video, the second most popular service, costs $14.99 per month or $139 per year (it's bundled with the Amazon Prime delivery service). Disney+ is $15.99 with no ads, and ad-free Hulu is $18.99 a month.
Discover the latest Telugu movies, web series, and dubbed films available on popular OTT platforms like Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, Aha, Hotstar, and more. From new releases like Vedhika's Fear, Anasuya Bharadwaj's Razakar,
Amazon Prime is gaining Australian subscribers to become a major competition to Netflix in the local market.This is according to JustWatch, who analysed subscription stacks among 2.3 million Australian users during the fourth quarter of 2024.
The company raised subscription prices across most plans in the U.S. and several other markets. It added 19 million subscribers in the fourth quarter of last year.
Netflix's earnings report sent its stock surging — and made it a bit more clear how sports content impacts the company's present and future.
Mel Gibson’s so-called movie jail continues to be lenient, because the director is once again back with a new action blockbuster starring Mark Wahlberg, aka Flight Risk, which opens in movie theaters this weekend.
Netflix dropped an action-packed thriller last week, titled Back in Action, starring Cameron Diaz and Jamie Foxx. The plot of the movie follows two former CIA agents who are dragged back into the world of espionage when their real identities are revealed.
Also starring Julia Fox, Chris Sullivan, and Callina Liang, Presence originally premiered at Sundance Film Festival last January, where Neon bought the distribution rights in a $5 million deal. Critics described the film as a “slow burn,” despite the film’s brief 85-minute runtime, so settle in.