Mon 10 Jun 2019
TV IN 2019: PART ONE – STREAMING SERVICES by Michael Shonk
Posted by Steve under TV Adventure , TV Drama , TV Espionage & Spies , TV Horror , TV mysteries , TV Science Fiction & Fantasy[26] Comments
by Michael Shonk
The entertainment called television has escaped the boundaries of the TV set and now can be found almost anywhere. So where are all those shows hiding?
During the last few years the total of original scripted TV series has approached nearly five hundred every year. With the upcoming explosion of new major media players joining the streaming wars the number of scripted original shows should increase like bunny rabbits.
The business of television is in chaos as even the major broadcast networks are now minor players left playing a role for their business masters or they are struggling to find a way to stay relevant. But more about that in Part Two, in which broadcast networks and cable will be covered.
Many of you have probably sampled or subscribed to at least one streaming service. The main ones have been NETFLIX, Amazon Prime and Hulu. Soon some of the world’s largest media conglomerates – Disney, AT&T (WarnerMedia), Comcast, and Apple will debut their streaming services, all with their own original programs.
CBS has fought off media conglomerate Viacom and started its own streaming service with original programs. However due to the fall of CBS mogul Les Moonves, and Viacom slow but steady recovery, few would be surprised if Viacom and CBS rejoin together. Viacom recently bought streaming service Pluto to use to streaming all of its cable networks once it’s ready.
Many other networks – broadcast and cable – have an online site where you can catch up on their programs you might have missed.
A streaming service – usually for a fee – allows you to watch TV shows and movies on your computer or other devices via the Internet. There are smart TVs such as Roku, over the top box such as Apple TV and devices such as Amazon’s Fire stick that connects your TV to the streaming world.
Netflix remains one of the most successful and powerful studios in the World. As it continues to develop original programming faster than any viewer could possible watch, Netflix has also created a film studio and plans to become a major player in movies as well as television.
One update from the clip, BLACK MIRROR is playing on Netflix now. I would add to the list of shows worth checking out – THE UMBRELLA ACADEMY, SANTA CLARITA DIET, and DARK CRYSTAL: AGE OF RESISTANCE (coming in August).
Netflix has also rescued two network series from recent cancellation – LUCIFER (FOX) and DESIGNATED SURVIVIOR (ABC). It has been announced LUCIFER has been renewed for another season after its current – it will be the fifth and last.
DISNEY is now the top media giant in the business. It owns the rights to Mickey Mouse, Marvel, The Simpsons and Star Wars. It currently runs two streaming services –ESPN+ and Hulu.
Hulu has been around for some time and was owned by Disney, Fox, Comcast and WB. Disney now has full control over Hulu and plans to continue its focus on TV series, especially network and cable TV series. Hulu is not best known for its originals but THE HANDMAID’S TALE, CHANCE and CATCH 22 are worth checking out.
Disney+ will be the company’s third streaming service and the one that will get most of the attention. This is the one Netflix needs to fear. It will be available this year and one of its first original series will be STAR WARS MANDALORIAN
This year will also see AT&T join in the TV streaming fun. Its recent purchase of Time Warner gave the phone company a strong presence in the cable world. Reportedly the new service will be called WarnerMedia. They are still working on what kind of service will they offer. Will it be one service uniting HBO, Cinemax and all of WarnerMedia to cost $16-$17 a month or will it be a three tier – basic, HBO and premium? WarnerMedia has announced its first original program. TOYKO VICE will star Ansel Elgort and is based on the non-fiction book by Jake Adelstein.
Warners have not had much success in the streaming business. Warner Archive with its over priced small library of old movies and TV series was a failure. DC UNIVERSE has had two minor success with DOOM PATROL and TITANS, but the service just cancelled SWAMP THING after one episode. Boomerang is an offshoot of the cable Cartoon Network spin-off network Boomerang. It focuses on post 50s to today era of classic cartoons such as Bugs Bunny, Yogi Bear, Scooby Doo, and 90s favorite KIDS NEXT DOOR.
Premium channels have their own streaming service that can also be found at Apple TV and Amazon Prime (for the price of subscription). These channels also offer apps that allow you to subscribe to the streaming service and watch it without needing cable.
WarnerMedia has the most successful of the pay networks HBO. There is a question about what HBO will replace the epic hit GAMES OF THRONES with. At the moment only one series, THE LONG NIGHT will come from the world of GAMES. However THE LONG NIGHT will take place in Westero a thousand years before the GAMES timeline. Of course HBO does have some other shows to watch.
Cinemax has grown up from its days as a soft porn cable network. Today it does some wonderful action series such as C.B. STRIKE, RELLIK, WARRIOR and JETT.
CBS owns premium channel SHOWTIME and streaming CBS ALL ACCESS.
SHOWTIME has always stood in the pay TV shadow of HBO and now it has even more competition. Perhaps its highlight of 2019 will be CITY ON A HILL.
CBS ALL ACCESS is best known for the CBS classic TV series and originals STAR TREK DISCOVERY, THE TWILIGHT ZONE (with host Jordan Peele) and THE GOOD FIGHT (sequel to THE GOOD WIFE). Currently in season three, the critic favorite GOOD FIGHT will air season one this summer on CBS.
STARZ has increased its original programming over the last few years featuring high production values in such series as BLACK SAILS, WHITE PRINCESS and my favorite COUNTERPART (that ended recently after two seasons),
I recently reduced my cable to just basic and had to live without my favorite network EPIX. I discovered EPIX app and for $5.99 I am again watching series such as BERLIN STATION, GET SHORTY, DEEP STATE, and PERPETUAL GRACE LTD on my Roku TV and without cable.
COMCAST owns NBC Universal and all the cable stations that go with it. It has plans for a free ad supported streaming service this year but has fallen behind its fellow growing media giants.
Apple TV is a box that connects your TV to streaming services. Apple TV+ debuts sometime this year as a streaming service specializing in Apple’s original programs
Did you notice AMAZING STORIES is coming back with new stories and produced by Stephen Spielberg? Below is a promo for FOR ALL MANKIND, a TV series set in an alternative history where the Russians were first to the Moon.
Of course I have not forgotten Amazon Prime. Prime exists to promote free shipping at a retail online store. There are many services offered to Prime members and the video streaming is just one of them and because of that it can get lost and forgotten.
Prime, like Netflix and Hulu, has save broadcast and cable TV from cancellation. After three seasons of THE EXPANSE SyFy could no longer afford to make the series. Fortunately, Prime will air the original fourth season of TV’s best science fiction series THE EXPANSE. I recommend you watch the first three seasons now on Prime.
There are a nice variety of original programs hiding on Prime worth watching such as BOSCH, PATROIT, GOLIATH, FLEABAG, SNEAKY PETE, and MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE.
There seems to be a streaming service for every taste, genre and need. A good place to find the small service for you is to search through Amazon Prime Channels.
Fans of British TV should start at BRITBOX, a streaming service from the BBC and ITV. Most of the best of British TV can be found there including every classic DOCTOR WHO episode in existence. My one complaint is there is not enough 60s series, especially not enough from ITV.
Acorn is a service that airs series from Britain, but also Australia and New Zealand. New Zealand’s BROKENWOOD MYSTERIES remains high on my favorites list. Currently Acorn has five seasons and a six is on its way.
Small streaming services such as Acorn can offer you first glimpse of quality TV before mainstream television finds it. In Acorn’s case it was the first to show MISS FISHER’S MURDER MYSTERIES in America. Since MISS FISHER ended with season 3, Acorn has the Australian sequel called MS FISHER’S MODERN MYSTERIES – Miss Fisher’s niece joins the Adventuress Club to solve mysteries in the groovy 1960s.
If you don’t mind subtitles there is the online only streaming service MHz Choice that has some of Europe’s best TV series. There is the French version of Maigret, the Italian version of Nero Wolfe, Detective Montalbano, Irene Huss, Donna Leon’s Bronetti Mysteries, Baantjer Mysteries, and so many more.
Anime can be found at each of the major streaming services. Netflix tends to focus on original anime. Hulu and Amazon Prime have older shows. Free service Crackle offers some great dubbed choices including TRIGUN and DEATH PARADE.
There are also streaming services just for the animated genre such as Crunchyroll or Funimation. I have been watching a lot of anime this year and appreciate the genre’s ability to world build completely different times, places and its own realities. My favorites include ACCA: 13-TERRITORY INSPECTION DEPARTMENT, BUNGO STRAY DOGS, 18IF, BLACK LAGOON and STEINS;GATE.
PBS MASTERPIECE has added FRANKIE DRAKE MYSTERIES. Now here is a series that illustrates how hard it is to find some of these shows. FRANKIE began at CBC (Canada) and done by the people behind MURDOCH MYSTERIES. Frankie and her fellow female PI have adventures and solve mysteries in the 1920s. It has been on Ovation under the title THE ARTFUL DETECTIVE and also on Alibi, but now on PBS streaming it finally gets a chance at a decent size audience.
SHOUT FACTORY is more into cult TV and movies.
There are many free streaming services most with ads. Here is a list suggesting some free sites you might sample.
Sony’s CRACKLE is by far the best of the free streaming services with better than average network TV series, movies and anime. It also has a growing selection of original TV series include ART OF MORE, THE OATH, and START-UP.
There are hundreds of streaming channels available from DOGTV a channel for your dogs to watch while you are away to POKERGO that offers live access to over 100 poker tournaments a year.
More and more live TV is available through streaming. MLB.com offers you the ability to watch every major league baseball game played (subject to local blackouts) as does NHL and hockey. Amazon Prime, Hulu, Yahoo, YouTube, Playstation Vue and others let you watch live events and sports on your devices beyond your TV screen.
Streaming offers the TV Viewer several advantages over broadcast and cable television. You can watch TV from around the world not just the US and a few imports. No longer is the TV viewer chained to the TV set, instead TV is available to watch wherever the viewer is. Streaming has no time periods or schedules, the days of scheduling your life around your favorite TV show are over, now your favorites wait for you.
In my next post I will examine the broadcast and cable networks, their future, their search for an identity that will set them apart from the crowd and survive the current chaos that is the business of television.
June 10th, 2019 at 8:42 pm
Looking forward to it!
June 10th, 2019 at 9:40 pm
Thanks for this, Michael. I hope this post doesn’t overload anyone’s browser, though!
I haven’t yet investigated any of the multitude of clips and trailers, but I will, even though I don’t subscribe to any of the streaming services, nor at the moment even have any of the premium movie channels.
I guess I’m an old-fashioned DVD kind of guy, a dog too old. But who knows, maybe?
And as Dan says, looking forward to Part Two!
June 10th, 2019 at 11:28 pm
Hey Steve, you can certainly do both if you can afford it. I spend so much money on Amazon Prime that it more than pays for itself.
I’m a DVD guy myself. I hate streaming…
June 11th, 2019 at 12:26 am
I have more than one reason for this two part look at TV today. One is to help readers here find where the great TV is hiding.
You can find some of it on broadcast and cable but all of it – including broadcast and cable – is streaming. You want to check out the Italian version NERO WOLFE, you won’t find it on broadcast or cable just one online streaming service – there is no America approved DVD either. Want to see the new MS FISHER? Or the very MURDOCH MYSTERY like FRANKIE DRAKE – only on line (for now as I suspect FRANKIE will finally make MASTERPIECE THEATRE on PBS after a few years online).
Me-TV fans? Streaming services offer those same shows and more.
Check out the clips and see if there is anything you want to try. Take advantage of the free week to month offers. I signed up for a free week five days before GAMES OF THRONES ended. I watched the season of GAMES in a few days, then I sampled everything else and found nothing I wanted to watch and cancelled the free membership. I pay for a membership until I have watched all I want, cancel and when in the future there are shows to watch I subscribe again. Do that with cable.
June 11th, 2019 at 11:04 am
I wouldn’t know how to “stream” a program if you paid me. When we got our new TV recently, the set-up asked to connect to our internet. We gave it the password, and it said “wrong password”. It wasn’t wrong, of course. So I guess that was that. Bah. I’ll read a book.
June 11th, 2019 at 11:22 am
We are of the same generation, Rick, but after growing up with only two local TV stations to choose from, I’m fascinated by all that’s available now. If you’re a streamer, you can never say there’s nothing on.
June 11th, 2019 at 11:37 am
Rick, I understand. But you and I have both survived new gadgets before. I still try to understand why I could program a VCR but have no idea how to handle a DVR. I still don’t own a mobile phone. You can survive without TV.
None of us could ever imagine we not only would learn how to use computers but how much they would take over our lives.
I have owned my Roku for two years so my memory is somewhat fuzzy on how I set it up. I remember once I connected it to the Internet the hard part was done.
While CBS all ready has some of its stations local news on its streaming service, while every major live sporting event is available on streaming, you can live a happy life without TV or books for that matter – but what would be the point of that? 🙂
June 11th, 2019 at 11:52 am
Steve, I was born in 1954 and had only two TV stations in my area. I don’t blame my age as much as what is important to me. I spend most of my time at home alone. The last thing I want to waste my brain cells on is how to use a mobile phone…so I don’t.
I prefer reading on a 27 inch desk top rather than print or Kindle because my eyes can’t handle the small print. Books are bad for me because both of my hands are very weak and can no longer hold them.
The problem with streaming TV and ebooks is they correct problems many people don’t have. Why change when you enjoy it the way you are doing it?
But when the next 9/11 hits are you going to run for a TV or watch it streaming on your phone?
June 11th, 2019 at 11:56 am
Funny, all these comments about the format, but not one about any of the shows.
June 11th, 2019 at 12:46 pm
Michael, I have noticed and wondered about that, too. My answer is that it’s difficult to talk about programming that’s either upcoming, or on now but you haven’t seen or don’t have access to.
That leaves the format as something you can talk about, which I think is important too. It’s interesting to me, at least, to know more about how people are adjusting to the new world of entertainment. (And keep in mind that readers of this blog skew old.)
June 11th, 2019 at 12:50 pm
I see I forgot to say in my previous comment that I’ve now had a chance to watch all of trailers of upcoming shows and I liked a lot of what I saw. Thanks again, Michael, for putting all of this post together. I know you certainly didn’t get it done overnight!
June 11th, 2019 at 1:57 pm
Steve, originally all I wanted was to post YouTube trailers promoting this summer and fall programs. But I always ended up explaining all the stuff going on around those shows and networks. So I just gave up and let my writer free.
June 11th, 2019 at 2:53 pm
And let me add you can also watch YouTube on your television, whether it is whole movies (that was the only way we could get the otherwise unavailable AMERICAN HOT WAX), or videos, or whatever.
Most of our time these days is spent watching streaming shows on Netflix and Amazon Prime and Acorn. We do watch some on HBO and Showtime and Cinemax and Epix and a few others – BBC America, FX, TCM, etc. We are never short of shows to watch. Lately we’ve been enjoying subtitled shows in Swedish, Finnish, Danish, Norwegian, Spanish, German, Hebrew, Italian, and French.
June 11th, 2019 at 3:22 pm
Jeff, are you thinking of dumping cable? I live in a gated community that supplies basic cable for free. I can buy a lot of streaming service for the price of cable.
Any programs you are looking forward to this summer or fall? PERPETUAL GRACE LTD has been a lot slower than I expected.
YouTube? Never heard of it. YouTube has been so desperate to dump the free section that draws the people and legal problems. They offered a service to stream similar to Sling and others. They are selling movies, TV and music. They are promoting a streaming service for live news and sports.
YouTube is currently part of Google. They are in the news today for another hate video popping up on their service. Government is noticing the power the high-tech business such as Google and Facebook have and are making plans to take them on.
Nearly all of television is controlled by a half a dozen media monsters and may be next if the government beats the high-tech big guys.
June 14th, 2019 at 6:51 am
Michael, you can find the Italian NERO WOLFE telefilm series on broadcast sometimes, and in some areas…MHz Choice is the money-making online cousin of the small public-broadcasting network MHz Worldview, which runs much the same sort of programming in a linear feed, with a mix of Deutsche Welle and France 24 English-language news and culture-reportage programming in the daytime. That’s how I finally got to see the NERO WOLFE series with Wolfe unsurprisingly and Goodwin improbably fluent in Italian…still have one on the DVR, when the local affiliate was finally re-added to our delinquent cable service. The broadcast network seems to be promising in promos they’ll be running the WOLFEs again, but with no firm date I’m aware of. https://mhznetworks.com/mhz-worldview/where-to-watch-map/
June 14th, 2019 at 7:01 am
And, fwiw, Acorn was and remains a syndicator of its programming, mostly to public broadcast stations and also recurringly with the RetroTV small commercial broadcast network (Acorn is currently feeding them THE INDIAN DOCTOR)…so you see a slew of their programming on broadcast and therefore on cable as well…but, as with MHz, the online is much more convenient for what you want off their menus when you want it…for the extra fee.
June 14th, 2019 at 7:11 am
The WNET/WLIW New York-based broadcast/free online feed ALL ARTS is a good thing to look into at the moment, at least (who knows if it will remain free indefinitely)…I’m particularly happy to see the series BORGEN get another free-access life online, since it was introduced in the US by Link TV when that service also had a free online presence. https://allarts.wliw.org/watch/ (and skip past page one which is currently devoted to a new one-minute program’s various episodes…you’ll see more substantial programming in the following hundred or so “pages”…
June 14th, 2019 at 8:18 am
Great article, Michael. I heard NPR TV critic David Bianculli say that no one could watch all the available TV content available in 1 year. Looks like you did! We have several streaming services and we love ’em, although they ain’t cheap. I wish there was one for classic and foreign films. Perhaps it’s hard to get the rights to them. I don’t know.-Finally, I have a question: Is the fact that these services are starving for content the reason there has been an avalanche of popular movies made into TV series?
June 14th, 2019 at 11:29 am
Todd, thanks for the information. There is an endless number of places to find TV. AT&T have its own channel. I almost added Charter’s Spectrum Channel which I think offers online, cable and phone. It had this “classic” most of us was lucky enough to avoid.
The TV sequel to movie BAD BOYS, L.A. FINEST.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mB9eIkghwB0
June 14th, 2019 at 11:40 am
Cole, TCM tried a streaming service called Filmstruck. It failed. They had teamed up with Criterion, a label known for classic and foreign films. Criterion has a channel now.
TCM is owned by Warner who is now owned by AT&T. Warner Media streaming has said it will have at least one streaming service coming out this year. No one knows if Warner Media has plans for TCM in their streaming service,
June 14th, 2019 at 11:47 am
16. Todd. Isn’t Acorn getting involved with producing content as well. I think that MS. FISHER MODERN MYSTERY is a co-production between Acorn and Australia’s Channel 7.
I think they have a hand in keeping my favorite BROKENWOOD MYSTERIES alive.
Oh, and to the curious. I watched the first episode of MS FISHER MODERN MYSTERY. It is ok but need some time to develop. The first script never caught the time period the way MISS FISHER did.
June 14th, 2019 at 12:09 pm
18 Cole, forgot to answer your questions. Netflix is attempting to become a major Hollywood theatrical movie studio so it has more than its share of movies.
Netflix original programs allows them to benefit from all the financial advantages of owning its own content (which is why they won’t miss the Marvel series they dropped). Both Hulu and Amazon Prime realize they need to increase their originals as the network and cable reruns will leave them for the streaming service of the studio that produced the content.
Cable has found the original movie is more profitable than old reruns of hour long TV series you can find on streaming and other cable channels. Hallmark Holiday and Hallmark Mystery are more popular than ever before.
Cable needs original programs with a fanbase that will demand their local cable service has that channel. When there are as many channels as there is on cable and the endless streaming/online services and everyone needs at least one hot show, it is a great time to be a Hollywood producer.
Broadcast networks still like the 30 minute/60 minute format. And now are reduced to playing a minor role with its business overlord…but more about that in Part 2 of TV in 2019.
June 14th, 2019 at 2:19 pm
I don’t think anyone could keep up with all these streaming services, not only knowing what is on where, but actually watching them all? Impossible.
I’ve basically away from my computer for a couple of days, and I’m glad to see that the comments on Michael’s piece are still coming in.
A lot of these shows have (or will I hope) turn up on DVD. For example I purchased the following sets from Amazon earlier this week:
Les Petits Meurtres D’agatha Christie, Set 1
Antoine Dulery
Captain Marleau, Vol. 2
Corinne Masiero
Captain Marleau, Vol. 1
Corinne Masiero
Nero Wolfe
Pietro Sermonti
Michael, Since I know you are a fan of Ross Thomas’s books, you probably know about this already, but in case not, USA is doing a series on his novel BRIARPATCH:
https://deadline.com/2019/06/briarpatch-kim-dickens-cast-usa-crime-anthology-series-1202627895/
June 14th, 2019 at 2:35 pm
Steve, thanks. I have been following this project since it was in development a year or two ago. I am still waiting to hear a premiere date. Considering it is cable it could be anytime. The book remains a favorite and the people behind the project are talented, but one always worries about how is TV or movies going to ruin a favorite book.
June 15th, 2019 at 2:20 pm
Michael, doesn’t surprise me at all that Acorn is actually producing programming of late, much less that they have taken an active role with the MISS FISHER sequel.
June 15th, 2019 at 2:22 pm
And, Cole, you should probably take a look at the Criterion service, even if a lot of the offers are a bit more “cult” favorites than a more TCM-style sense of “classic”…