A new service called Quibi is a gamble by Hollywood that it can
carve out another category in the crowded streaming video
landscape. It offers slickly produced movies, reality shows and
news, but in chunks of 10 minutes or shorter, and delivered only
to mobile phones.
Quibi stands for "quick bites," and the platform is backed by
$1.8 billion from movie studios and other investors.
After more than two years of work, the company considered
postponing Quibi's launch as authorities urged people to stay
indoors to prevent spread of the coronavirus. Executives had
been promoting Quibi for "on-the-go" viewing. They decided,
however, that newly homebound audiences might embrace a
diversion.
"I think we may just be the right thing at the right time,"
Quibi founder Jeffrey Katzenberg, the former head of Walt Disney
Co's <DIS.N> movie studio and Dreamworks Animation, said in an
interview.
"It's a place to go and have a distraction and some laughter and
some fun," he added. "That's really a great thing to be able to
do now."
Currently, Quibi is available only in the United States and
Canada. The company offers a 90-day free trial. After that,
Quibi will cost $5 a month with ads, or $8 a month without them.
Some T-Mobile <TMUS.O> customers can get Quibi free for a year.
One selling point is its large roster of top Hollywood names.
"Hunger Games" actor Hemsworth stars in a thriller called "Most
Dangerous Game," one of Quibi's "movies in chapters." Basketball
superstar James appears in a documentary about his Ohio school
for at-risk youth. And Chrissy Teigen rules over "Chrissy's
Court" in which she decides small-claims cases.
Future projects are promised from Steven Spielberg, Demi Lovato,
Will Smith, Laura Dern, Kevin Hart, Bill Murray and others.
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REASONS TO BE SKEPTICAL
Quibi has intrigued the media industry because it is different to
Disney+ <DIS.N>, HBO Max <T.N> and others aiming to compete with
full-length TV shows and movies on Netflix Inc <NFLX.O>, said
EMarketer forecasting analyst Eric Haggstrom. No platform has
invested as much as Quibi to produce high-quality programming in
snippets, he said.
But, he said, "there are really good reasons to be skeptical."
For one, it is unclear if people will pay for short videos watchable
only on their phones, Haggstrom said. The younger audience that
Quibi is targeting already consumes short-form entertainment for
free on platforms such as TikTok and Alphabet Inc's <GOOGL.O>
YouTube.
"Quibi is a giant experiment," Haggstrom said.
After the United States and Canada, Quibi would consider rolling out
to Australia, New Zealand and Western Europe, with the aim to
eventually go global, said Chief Executive Meg Whitman, the former
Ebay CEO.
First, the company wants to learn from the initial markets.
"We know nothing about how people will use this app," Whitman said.
"We need some time to work out the kinks."
Whitman and Katzenberg said they do not know how viewership will be
affected by the global pandemic that is forcing people to adopt new
routines. Industry data show TV viewing and mobile phone usage has
increased.
Disruption to the economy also will lead people to scrutinize their
monthly expenses, Whitman acknowledged.
"We have to make sure that we're giving a value to our customers,
that we will be one of the things that they want to hang on to
because they love it," she said.
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; editing by Bill Tarrant and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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