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New Video Strategy For CNN Means End To Pipeline

By Staci D. Kramer - Tue 22 May 2007 10:24 PM PST

CNN’s deal to acquire a minority stake in Internet Broadcasting Systems came close to completely obscuring a major shift in the network’s video strategy. (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution went into detail.) Premium service Pipeline will disappear as a brand at the end of June, some 18 months after it started in private beta and more than two years after CNN execs said they would try a hybrid free-premium approach. No word on the actual number of subscribers for the premium multi-stream offering. On the fifth anniversary of 9/11, it drew 1.2 million unique visitors; I gather it would be safe to say the number of paying subs was lower than that. How much lower? Good question. Those who are paying should get a notice next week; annual fees will be refunded on a pro-rated basis.

The brand will dissolve but the multiple live streams will remain, probably not ad supported at the start. On-demand video and packages will be ad supported. One of the reasons given for going premium in 2005 was the cost of broadband delivery. Those costs have dropped while the ability to make money through advertising has increased. CNN serves some 90 million free videos a month, a three-fold increase in the past year, according to the network.

Turner Broadcasting has had mixed success with premium broadband. The Time Warner unit has tried various mixes with GameTap but says it’s succeeding with premium sports subs. Pipeline wasn’t the first effort at charging for news video; the network sold subscriptions for video and was part of RealNetworks’ content aggregation efforts. 

Posted in: Advertising, Companies, Time Warner, Turner, Media, TV, Cable & Telecom


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3 Responses:
  • From !nvitedmedia Wed 23 May 2007 05:38 AM

    “...came close to completely obscuring a major shift...”

    think it was planned this way?

  • From Staci D. Kramer Wed 23 May 2007 05:44 AM

    Could have been but the WSJ had the info and chose to play it down. Maybe the reporter didn’t realize the significance.

  • From Aaron B. Brown Wed 27 Jun 2007 09:21 AM

    Typical, CNN and Time Warner finally do something right, creating something that was worth paying for, and it folds in less than two years.  No wonder they can’t make any money and CNN’s market share dwindles every year.  Those corporate slugs can’t even recognize a great thing when they see it.  I say that within five years the CNN Center in Atlanta will be closed, and the CNN network as we know it will cease to exist.

    I notice that the corporate worms at Time Warner didn’t have any problem sending e-mails to their paying customers lying to them when they said the service would continue for free, when in fact the service had been slated for cancellation months ago, and most of the employees got their pink slips weeks ago.  This is the way corporations do business in America now, deception and deceit is the order of the day.  Apparently they’ve taken a page from the Bush administration and screwed the people who put their trust in them once again.  I’m done with CNN and Time Warner.

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paidContent.org, flagship of the ContentNext Media network, provides global coverage of the business of digital content.

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