Wiedenfels said the services would unite to
create a more broadly appealing consumer product, with HBO Max's
more "male skewing" scripted series complementing Discovery's
reality shows, with their heavily female viewership.
"The acquisition power of HBO Max, combined with the retention
power of the Discovery content, I think, is going to make for a
blowout DTC (direct-to-consumer) product," Wiedenfels told the
Deutsche Bank Annual Media, Internet & Telecom Conference, using
the industry's term for streaming.
The melding of the two services, following the completion of
Discovery's $43 billion acquisition of AT&T's WarnerMedia in a
deal announced in May 2021, had long been anticipated.
Wiedenfels said the company would need to "harmonize" the
separate technology platforms to offer a single streaming
product, with more than 200,000 hours of movies and television
episodes. There will be an ad-free service and a less expensive,
ad-supported tier.
The deal, on track to close in the second quarter, last month
passed the U.S. Department of Justice's antitrust review,
clearing another key hurdle toward closing.
Discovery+ has 22 million subscribers, and HBO Max, together
with its HBO television network, has 73.8 million subscribers.
(Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski in Los Angeles; Editing by Will
Dunham)
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