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BBC, Channel 4 and ITV plot U.K. streaming service to ward off Amazon, Netflix

https://www.theguardian.com/film/20...te-uk-streaming-service-combat-netflix-amazon

https://www.fiercecable.com/video/b...ing-service-to-ward-off-amazon-netflix-report

And also in the article NBC/Comcast is at play on how they are going to compete against Netflix and Amazon in the United Kingdom.

The BBC, Channel 4 and ITV have held discussions about joining forces to create a British streaming service to combat the increasing power of Netflix and Amazon in the UK.

The early-stage talks, which are also understood to involve NBC Universal, the US TV and film group that owns the maker of Downton Abbey, are focusing on how the UK’s main broadcasters and makers of top shows can work together to create a streaming rival to the popular and deep-pocketed newcomers that have transformed broadcasting.
“All options are open, they are early conversations and no direction is firm yet,” one source with knowledge of the talks said. “But they know a video-on-demand platform play would be a true defence for the UK creative industries.” A second source described it as a “public service broadcaster domestic competitor to Netflix.”

Netflix has 8.2m subscribers in the UK and 4.3m British households are signed up to Amazon Prime Video, .

The BBC, which has traditionally dominated the UK TV and radio landscape, recently as viewers move inexorably towards on-demand viewing. The corporation owns the UK’s biggest and most recognisable video service, iPlayer, but has conceded that 16 to 24-year-olds .

The broadcasters understand the strategic benefits of some form of potential tie-up of their catch-up TV and on-demand services, but history says it will be fraught with difficulty.

It is the third time in just over a decade that the BBC, ITV and Channel 4 have endeavoured to set aside decades of rivalry to join together to secure a digital future for British TV. Previous efforts to balance the commercial and public service remits they follow have proved challenging.

The established British broadcasters held similar talks two years ago but in the end only the BBC and ITV managed to hook up . It was hoped that partners including Channel 4 would come on board for a UK service, but a British launch did not take place.


ITV and Channel 4 have since had a string of senior management changes, most notably in appointing new chief executives in Carolyn McCall and respectively, both of whom are looking hard at the best strategic digital options for the future.

It is understood that all options are on the table in the talks, which also included the BBC’s commercial arm, BBC Studios. The corporation has been keen to use the strength of iPlayer as the master brand, which has met resistance from Channel 4 and ITV, which have been driving their services, All 4 and ITV Hub, with increasing success with viewers.

Another option might be to revitalise a workable plan to expand BritBox and a third to launch a whole new brand and subscription video-on-demand service.

The discussions bear similarities with the ill-fated Project Kangaroo, a video-on-demand service from the BBC, ITV and Channel 4 that was set for launch in 2007 but became tangled in red tape and was ultimately .

Following the watchdog’s ruling, the field was open for foreign rivals to take the front foot, as feared by the broadcasters. and Amazon began its push in earnest with the .

Kangaroo, which got as far as briefly appointing the former BBC, Microsoft and Johnston Press boss Ashley Highfield as chief executive, aimed to be an open venture that also allowed TV production companies to join.
 
The BBC, which has traditionally dominated the UK TV and radio landscape, recently as viewers move inexorably towards on-demand viewing. The corporation owns the UK’s biggest and most recognisable video service, iPlayer, but has conceded that 16 to 24-year-olds .

This paragraph is gibberish. It needs some sort of verb before or after "recently" and after "24-year-olds."
 
The BBC, which has traditionally dominated the UK TV and radio landscape, recently as viewers move inexorably towards on-demand viewing. The corporation owns the UK’s biggest and most recognisable video service, iPlayer, but has conceded that 16 to 24-year-olds .

This paragraph is gibberish. It needs some sort of verb before or after "recently" and after "24-year-olds."

It seems to be a problem with copy and paste, the original article says "recently said it risked being overtaken by competitors" .........."but has conceded that 16 to 24 year olds spent more time with Netflix than with all of BBC TV including Iplayer"


And thats basically the way I see it. The only question is.....will these people 'grow' into the BBC as they get older, or will they stay with Netflix etc?

It's an important question, because although a TV licence is required to watch Iplayer online, it isn't needed to watch Netflix or Amazon Prime.
 
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