From Yahoo:
“Data: Users
spent nearly 1T hours streaming in 2020, with Disney+ 'breakout' platform”
Disney's (DIS)
smashing digital success shows no signs of letting up. New data revealed that
users flocked to streaming platforms in massive numbers last year as the
COVID-19 pandemic took hold — with the entertainment giant one of the biggest
beneficiaries. According to a new report from mobile analytics and market data
company App Annie, time spent on video streaming apps on Android phones hit 935
billion hours in 2020 — a 40% increase from 2019 levels. More specifically,
Android customers streamed 240 billion hours in Q4 2020 — up from 146 billion
hours in Q1 2019 and a rise of nearly 65% in 2 years, the company said. Disney+
was the number one 'breakout' entertainment app in the U.S. for 2020 (in terms
of year-over-year growth), whereas Netflix emerged as number one in global
markets like Argentina, Brazil and Mexico. Overall, Netflix ended 2020 with
nearly 204 million paid subscribers — up 21.9% from the prior year. Basking in
the success of huge subscriber growth and buzzy content offerings, Disney+ unveiled
its new "Cruella" trailer last week, as part of a wider embrace of
live action adaptations after the success of "Mulan."
Disney delayed
the bulk of its 2020 blockbusters due to the pandemic, and has not said whether
"Cruella" would hit theaters, or if Disney+ was even an option.
Currently, the movie is scheduled for release on May 28, 2021. Oscar winner
Emma Stone stars in the title role, and Glenn Close — who once played the title
role herself — serves as an executive producer. Meanwhile, previous
villain-centric prequels have done well in year's past. Disney's
"Maleficent", which debuted in 2014, brought in over $750 million
globally at the box office while Joaquin Phoenix's "Joker" amassed
over $1 billion in worldwide sales back in 2019. It's been a busy week in the
streaming wars, with Netflix's "Bridgerton" (NFLX) announcing new
cast members, and the impending launch of the Star channel on Disney+. However,
the seemingly endless flood of streaming news comes as users crave more and
more content. As lockdowns took hold last year, consumers showed that "the
accessibility of apps can’t be beat, even if your commute is from the bed to
the desk to the couch," Lexi Sydow, App Annie's senior market insights
manager, told Yahoo Finance. Short and "snackable" content reigned
supreme, with App Annie reporting YouTube (GOOGL) as the #1 video streaming app
by overall time spent on Android phones in all markets analyzed except China —
averaging 23.1 hours per month in the U.S. TikTok emerged as another winner
with U.S. Android consumers spending 21.5 hours per month on the social app —
up 70% from 12.8 hours per month in 2019.
In the U.S.,
the percentage of Netflix iPhone app users who also use TikTok more than
doubled from 21% in 2019 to 49% in 2020, the company added. "TikTok’s user
overlap with top streaming apps grew dramatically in 2020, more than doubling
in the U.S., and Twitch remained a top 5 competitor among more ‘traditional’ streaming
rivals," Sydow said. "TikTok and Twitch pose a dramatic shift in
consumption towards user-generated and mobile-focused; a shift traditional
players and marketers alike need to bake into their mobile strategies,"
she added.
^ I Stream
things, but don’t use my cell phone (since cell phones don’t work in my
region.) ^
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