Thursday, September 25, 2025

Pricing yourself out of the entertainment market?

 

That's what Ted Gioia claims Apple, Disney+ and other streaming entertainment services are doing to themselves by continually raising prices.  After detailing just how much more those services are charging today, he notes:


Years ago, I claimed that streaming economics were broken, and price increases were inevitable. But I never anticipated the rapacious response of the suits in the C-suite.

The short explanation is that they do it because they can. Sure, some people cancel their subscriptions, but not enough to make a difference. Most subscribers simply put up with it.

That’s why the streamers keep boosting prices again and again. They will continue doing it until they encounter serious resistance—and they haven’t hit it yet. So I expect more of the same.

But there’s a danger to this business strategy. Look at Las Vegas, where tourism is collapsing because the casinos went too far. For a long time, the public didn’t flinch in the face of price hikes, but then it got ridiculous:

  • $95 ATM fees
  • $14 coffee
  • $50 early check-in fees
  • $30 cocktails

The casinos have now earned a reputation as exploitative price-gougers. Tourism is now down sharply—hotel occupancy has dropped 15%. The city feels “eerily empty.”

This isn’t easy to fix. Once you destroy your reputation and lose the customer’s trust, it’s almost impossible to get it back. That happened in an earlier day to Sears and K-Mart, and they never recovered.

Something similar may already be happening at Disney’s theme parks. Some visitors report that Disney World is empty—looking like a ghost town even during Labor Day weekend.

They squeezed customers too many times, without increasing value. And Disney is now trying to do the same thing with streaming. Let’s see how it plays out.

The streamers are following a very simple strategy: (1) Raise prices and (2) Cut costs. You might notice that improving quality and reputation are not part of this equation.

In business strategy this is known as an endgame maneuver. It works in the short run, and is smart if you’re running a dying or declining company. Squeeze all the cash out of it that you can, before everything collapses.

This is also a popular strategy with private equity funds. They specialize in acquiring wounded businesses, and making these same moves.

But when prestige companies like Apple and Disney act this way, you really need to scratch your head. Why are these (once) respected businesses treating their own brands the same way a private equity firm deals with a declining industry?

These companies were once focused on innovation and rewarding customers. That could happen again, but not under the current leadership.

Until that leadership changes, expect to see more price increases. And if you want to stop it, don’t complain—just cancel.

And if you’re totally fed up with streaming costs, consider switching to books. I hear they offer a sweet deal on them down at the public library.


There's more at the link.  If you follow the entertainment industry at all, particularly from a business and economic perspective, Mr. Gioia should be on your daily reading list.

I can't say any of this has affected my wife and myself directly.  We don't even own a TV, because there's hardly anything worth watching on it, so the cost of streaming services isn't in our budget.  As for visiting places like Las Vegas or Disney World, we aren't interested in what they have to offer.  Our only trip to Las Vegas was to a writers' convention a few years ago, and we were stunned by the prices demanded for ordinary, everyday goods and services.  We reckoned the cost of living in Las Vegas was at least double, and in some cases triple, what we paid at the time in North Texas.  We fled back to sane pricing as soon as we could, and we aren't about to be fleeced again, thank you very much.

Nevertheless, I know a lot of people do spend money on these things, and I hear more and more complaints from them about their affordability.  I'm not necessarily very sympathetic, you understand:  to me, one prioritizes one's purchases around everyday importance.  Housing, food, transport, school, etc. are a lot higher priority than what's on the TV screen!  However, I know there are families actually cutting back on food purchases in order to pay for multiple subscription TV services each month.  I can only hope that they come to their services before things get completely out of hand.  (I don't suppose it helps that the very TV services they can't afford are constantly advertising food, entertainment, etc. that they can afford even less!)

Oh, well.  I guess the entertainment moguls will go on extracting every penny they can from an increasingly impoverished audience, until the consumer can no longer afford them - then they'll demand a government bailout for their "industry" . . . and guess whose tax dollars will be expected to pay for that?



Peter


19 comments:

Aesop said...

The prices in Vegas for ordinary everyday goods and services are...ordinary.

Because ordinary people live there.

Just get out of the hotels on The Strip.
Those places employ Disneyland pricing, because their Mickey Mouse business model thinks customers can't escape them.

Except they can, by traveling a half a mile east or west of the neon Fruitcake Zone.

Disneyworld is even easier to solve: don't go.

And when you see the gang at Mauschwitz suspending retards like Jimmy Kimmel over customer complaints, you can tell the walkaways are starting to pinch them in the wallet.

Anonymous said...

Gambling is for people who have enough $$$ to afford to lose. Similar to the stock market - if you bet on wrong number, you can't expect things to fall right in place. I've been to Vegas twice but not to gamble. Mainly sight see. Back in 2014, things were a lot more affordable. And my wife and I were much more mobile than we are now. For us, renting a car removed a lot of 'stop and admire'. Better to walk and take the bus to get to destinations.

M said...

"However, I know there are families actually cutting back on food purchases in order to pay for multiple subscription TV services each month."

How many of those families are making meals at home?
As opposed to cutting back on restaurant meals, or ordering in?

The "multiple subscription services" part already indicates a lack of planning ability. It would not surprise me at all to see this carried through on other parts of their lives.

Anonymous said...

Part of the problem is their pricing model stinks. I picked up a promo deal for Disney+ for 3 bucks a month and took the opportunity to watch both seasons of Andor (great show, btw) and decided there was no way I was going to keep going with it once the deal was done. If I'm going to pay $13 a month for a service, I should get one or two short commercials, max, not five minutes of them, and I shouldn't have to pay $19 a month to get it ad-free.

Texas Dan said...

$95 ATM fees? Wowzer.

JohninMd.(HALP!) said...

As an old fart on a fixed income, ANY of the hi-priced pay systems are off the menu, from the git...I'm still paying a damn mortgage. The only reason we have Hulu in the house is my son is paying for it, or I'd just be in my books, and the CD movies I've been gifted over the years...

Ritchie said...

The dancing clowns need me, I don't need them. I find myself declining to respond.

Dragon Lady said...

I am going to Vegas later this year for a work convention. There will be very little out-of-pocket for me, other than some trinkets and my morning coffee, otherwise it would be a no-go. My husband wanted to come along - he hasn't been to Vegas in years - but changed his mind when he learned that the "$10 steak buffets" don't exist, and haven't in at least 15 years, the drinks aren't free in the casino, and the shows are expensive.

Don Curton said...

I go thru about every 6 months and start cancelling subscription services. It's too easy - you go on Amazon Prime, find a movie to watch, realize you'll either pay $15 to buy the movie or sign up (first month free) for another subscription service. So I sign up, forget to cancel, and 6 months later catch it and cancel. And so on and so on. I probably lose $30 to $50 a month until I clean house. I can afford it, but it rankles. Especially since I'm paying for a service and still have to watch commercials. I'd go cold turkey except for the wife.

Technomad said...

Disney's had a death wish for some time. They managed to muck up the Star Wars franchise, which I would have thought anybody with an IQ above room temperature could run. The "sequel trilogy" made the hardcore fans who made the franchise the cash cow it was nostalgic for the prequel movies, which I would have thought was impossible.

Nate Winchester said...

There's actually a good number of free streaming services out there you can enjoy. (Tubi, Pluto) One of them even utilizes your library card!

nbc said...

Try this: https://www.loc.gov/free-to-use/public-domain-films-from-the-national-film-registry

0007 said...

Me, I just buy "previously owned" DVD's at the thrift stores. Have in excess of 1000 at the moment.

Anonymous said...

Disney World: Went in '97 for honeymoon and in '09 with the kids and it was FANTASTIC. Went in fall of '20 and it was horrible. Yes that was pandemic era with many attractions closed, parks under staffed and the staff there was grumpy and focused on enforcing masking. The parks seemed dirty. Not the happiest place on earth, not even fun. Then came Disney's hard shift to wokeness. I shall not return.

audeojude said...

this ran to long and had to be broken up.. so look for part 2

We use cruncyroll for anime and Asian films we like and I pay for that. Though they are on the edge of being canceled as they raised my rates by 60% withing 6 months of subscribing. I pay 14.99 a month there now. I hate to say it... it really pisses me off to say it but just about any of the family friendly programing out of japan and china is better than stuff made in America in terms of clean content and story lines. No Chinese stuff at all for the most part is not family friendly They take their control of content made there very seriously. Have to vet the Japanese stuff as it can go south to very adult very quick but 80% of the programing is very clean.

My sister pays for Netflix but it's getting really irksome dealing with commercials for a paid for service. Since I'm not paying for that one I just keep my irk mostly to myself. I just keep reminding her that if she gets tired of paying it to go ahead and cancel. Also the variety of quality levels is all over the place and 80% of the content I don't want my kids watching for either adult content or progressive liberal crazy stuff being the point of the shows.. Funny, a lot of the anime is on Netflix also.

Then there is amazon video.. I have a prime account and the streaming video is just a by product. I have had and keep prime for the shipping. It is worth the 140 bucks a year I pay. Funny enough my wife and I hardly ever use the streaming nor do the kids. My sister uses it a fair amount though. Lol go figure. She has full access to my amazon account and uses it all the time so I'm happy that she gets some value out of it to.

Makes me so happy that I have family that I don't even have to think about trusting. They are just flat out trustworthy. She accidentally buys a book on my credit card, i get a call saying so and that she will pay me back. Most of the time its small and I just go don't worry.. or she adds a gift card and I don't realize it and do a major purchase that wipes her card out, I just call her and tell her to use my card for that amount. God I love my family.

I keep thinking about paying to remove adds on youtube. Family love youtube... Though kids have to watch with us present in the room or at least in next room so we can hear it. It can go south pretty quick sometimes. Mostly the kids not come to us and tell us that they turn that channel off as they said bad stuff. :) we talk to them often about that type of stuff and why we don't want them listening to it. Lay out the reasons its not good. so far haven't had much issues there.

audeojude said...


part 2

tubi and pluto we have and I dislike but kids and mom use them some.

Something no one mentioned is that every smart tv on earth now comes with free tv content that is Over the Air just streamed over the internet. I think my tv has 190+ channels of content. Most of it older stuff but some local channels, there are sport channels that talk about sports but don't show it much to my wife's dismay. If you have a plex account, even a free one they have the same type of streamed tv shows in plex. We use that for the media server because back 15 years ago they offered life time membership for under 100 dollars and I decided to purchase it. To my shock they have honored the life time membership all these years. Kudo's to them, first software company I have dealt with that actually honored something like that for this long.

We have a local media server with some stuff on it that we have purchased over the years. Most of it is really old stuff that isn't even available nowadays. Ripping old dvd's and on very rare occasion vhs to a stream-able video file is pretty easy. Habitat and library sales are great for old dvds and even blueray stuff at $1 a disk or a $1 for a full tv series. Funnily my kids like that really old programming a lot. I have all the seasons of hogans hero's. My kids binge watch that when bored sometimes. Who knew? We have taken joy in sharing Saturday morning cartoons from mom's and my childhood with the kids. The un edited versions. Stuff like yogi bear, He Man, Space ghost, Scooby Doo, jetsons, Hong Kong Phooey and inspector gadget etc.. Lot more.

Last but not least... buy an antenna and attach it to your tv. We have one hanging behind the tv on the wall. Horrible place to put it for reception and we still have 27 channels we can view locally including 6 or 7 HD ones. If I actually installed the really old yagi tv antenna still new in box (about as long as I am tall 6') that's has been sitting in a shed for 30 years and put it up on a pole higher than the house I could probably pull in over 100 channels from the 5 city's within a 100 miles of me. Actually any of the decent smaller modern antennas put up over the height of your house would probably do a great job. Sadly I bitterly refuse to watch over the air content as the commercials gradually make me homicidal. It feels as if it's 50% content and 50% commercials nowadays.

Sadly I have turned into the I want it right damn now with no commercials person. Mostly I just watch the old stuff on our server or crunchyroll which has no commercials at this time. In case nobody knows what cruncyroll is it is a website crunchyroll.com that is an American distributer that license content from japan and lately some stuff from china and korea to redistribute in the US.

ok this ran way longer and detailed than I intended. :) enjoy

Anonymous said...

I’m just too old, I remember when Las Vegas had a reputation of being a super cheap vacation, as long as you didn’t drink or gamble. (Had lots of Baptist friend laud the cheap buffets and low priced luxury hotels).

Anonymous said...

My OCD / Grammar -Typo Nazi self just reared its head.

"... I can only hope that they come to their services before things get completely out of hand. ...".

I suspect you meant "... I can only hope that they come to their senses before things get completely out of hand. ..."?

If not, I must be in a senior moment as I am overlooking any possible sensible meaning to the sentence.

Good Luck with the surgery!

Have a Good Day👋
👽

Anonymous said...

Don’t pay for that!!!!! Use Brace browser and it’s free! Please don’t give google any more of your money!