HBO Max and Discovery+ will merge in 2023

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What the HBO Max and Discovery+ merger means for your favorite streaming service
Two apps become one.


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Two worlds collide.

Since its launch last year, HBO Max has been arguably the very best streaming service you could throw your money towards. That may not last forever.

That’s because HBO Max, as we know it, probably won’t exist by this time next year. In an earnings call last week, HBO Max’s parent company Warner Bros. Discovery announced that the streaming service known for its high-quality selection of great content would merge with Discovery+, a reality TV-focused streaming service.

This is all sudden and difficult to grasp, so let’s take some time to break down what this means for you and why this is happening in the first place.

Wait, is HBO Max going away?
The answer to that question is sort of, but not really. To put it simply, by summer 2023, HBO Max and Discovery+ will merge into a new streaming service that doesn’t yet have a name or (rather importantly) a subscription price.

For reference, HBO Max costs $10/mo with ads and $15/mo without them, while Discovery+ is $5/mo with ads or $7/mo without them. Launching a new combined streaming service at around $20/mo would be a risky play for Warner Bros. Discovery, but we can’t discount the possibility right now. It's also possible that existing subscribers will get grandfathered in with their current subscriptions, but again, it's too early to say that for sure.

As for what content will be available on this new app, expect a combination of what’s already on the two existing apps, with some things perhaps being removed between now and summer 2023. Heavy hitters like HBO Max’s Harry Potter and DC Comics franchises will surely join Discovery’s popular shows like Deadliest Catch and Property Brothers, but we’ll find out more about the catalog over the next year.

As for that remark about content being removed, that’s not idle speculation — it’s already happening. Warner removed six streaming-only movies from HBO Max recently, including Seth Rogen’s An American Pickle and Melissa McCarthy’s Superintelligence. Stunningly, Warner also canceled the release of Batgirl last week. That movie had been shot and was in post-production with a budget of $90 million before Warner decided it wouldn’t be seen by anyone.

The one constant connecting all of those titles is that they were HBO Max originals, so perhaps the strategy going forward will focus more on movies and shows that were released theatrically or aired on actual cable television. If the upcoming third season of Warrior is shelved because of this, I might just move to the woods and give up on the streaming future.

Why are HBO Max and Discovery+ merging?
That’s the million-dollar question, and it mostly boils down to cold, hard business.

Warner Bros. and Discovery merged back in April to form the corporate entity behind all these moves. Since then, the company has cut back on $825 million worth of content, per SlashFilm. The idea, as explained by IndieWire, is most likely to use removed or canceled content as tax write-offs and recoup some of those investments during hard economic times. Maintaining one streaming app instead of two could be seen as another cost-cutting measure.

It’s ruthless and doesn’t seem like something you’d do if you cared about art, but it’s right in line with what you’d expect after seeing this…questionable slide from Warner’s earnings call last week:



Come for the word "genredom," stay for the, uh, interesting notion that women broadly prefer less thematically substantial or "prestigious" content.

Again, to the C-suite people at companies like Warner Bros. Discovery, this is all about business. And sometimes business means intentionally slashing your own tire when you’re seemingly leading the race.

The HBO Max and Discovery+ streaming service merger, explained | Mashable
 
@DC_Dude

Just re-looked at my bill and it’s quite the deal. CRAVE On Demand here in Canada gets me HBO, HBO Max, and Showtime content for approx’ $8 in total (3 in 1). It is listed as one of the “combo packs” and hopefully they can grandfather it along when I re-up again in Dec for phone, internet, TV. They’ll probably pull some BS and say it’s no longer available as a “legacy” priced bundle or some shit, lol.
 
Like I said before..... in the beginning of cable...everyone paid for cable to get HBO..... now HBO wants you to pay them again..... while still paying to get them with your cable package :hmm:

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I got rid of cable in the summer of 2022 and I'm saving $140 a month from a package deal (TV, internet and landline phone) $211 w/ taxes already included. HBOMAX was free with the HBO cable subscription, I'm under the assumption that's the case with other cable providers?
 
I got rid of cable in the summer of 2022 and I'm saving $140 a month from a package deal (TV, internet and landline phone) $211 w/ taxes already included. HBOMAX was free with the HBO cable subscription, I'm under the assumption that's the case with other cable providers?


How much does your provider currently charge for internet?

I was with Shaw from the late-90s to 2009. Switched over to Telus in spring 2009 (and more recently Telus fiber optic) in late-2021. It's just over $50.
 
Like I said before..... in the beginning of cable...everyone paid for cable to get HBO..... now HBO wants you to pay them again..... while still paying to get them with your cable package :hmm:

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Yeah fuck them for that. Almost 4 years ago, I called Comcast and threatened to leave them for another company and managed to negotiate with them a cancellation of all premium cable tv services but keeping high speed internet + basic cable and HBO for $60. Now I pay $80 for it + $15 for an IPTV with 2,800 channels, On Demand, PPV and all the league passes streaming through my Firestick and my Mac.

All I basically look at on the IPTV is sports.
 
Yeah fuck them for that. Almost 4 years ago, I called Comcast and threatened to leave them for another company and managed to negotiate with them a cancellation of all premium cable tv services but keeping high speed internet + basic cable and HBO for $60. Now I pay $80 for it + $15 for an IPTV with 2,800 channels, On Demand, PPV and all the league passes streaming through my Firestick and my Mac.

All I basically look at on the IPTV is sports.
Their game is negotiating into another program plan every year that's a lil more expensive, until they get you on their top plan.... I started with their triple play, internet cable and phone for $129/mth.... every year it would expire, and I had to renegotiate into another plan .... that would end up a lil more expensive..... to paying $257/mth now :hmm:
 
I got rid of cable in the summer of 2022 and I'm saving $140 a month from a package deal (TV, internet and landline phone) $211 w/ taxes already included. HBOMAX was free with the HBO cable subscription, I'm under the assumption that's the case with other cable providers?
Like 60 but I'm on a promotion so it come out cheaper with just internet and landline
 






Chris and Andy are joined by the chairman and CEO of HBO and HBO Max content, Casey Bloys, to talk about how programming for the network has changed since they shifted more squarely into streaming (5:15), the changes the network has been through since merging with Warner Bros. (33:05), and how the success of shows like House of the Dragon has informed what HBO wants to do going forward (54:16).
 
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