Apple subscription TV on-demand service rumours | Tech News

Are Netflix and Amazon’s offerings enough for you, or are your evenings still empty and in need of entertainment? The good news is that Apple is gearing up to take on Netflix, Amazon and UK services such as Now TV, with its own TV shows and movies which will be available to watch via subscription on the Apple TV, iPhone and iPad.

With many new shows in the works, we may soon hear news about the new subscription service being planned by Apple. Nothing was announced at WWDC on 4 June, but we don’t think it’ll be long.

You can already stream some Apple’s shows, as long as you subscribe to Apple Music for £9.99 a month (details of these below). It is thought that when it launches the new subscription service will either be available via a re-branded Apple Music or via the TV app. It’s not clear whether Apple will include the content as part of the Apple Music monthly subscription, but it looks likely. The company says that there are now 38 million subscribers to Apple Music.

One of Apple’s series of content related hires is the ex-controller of BBC One & chief creative officer of Channel 4. Jay Hunt is expected to commission programmes on behalf of Apple for Europe and the UK market. Read more about Apple’s team of execs working on the streaming project here.

We have information about all of Apple’s new shows below, including a series from La La Land director and writer Damien Chazelle, news that Apple has signed up a show by Bob’s Burgers creator staring Frozen’s Kristen Bell and Josh Gad, and a show by Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon who co-wrote The Big Sick.

It appears likely that Apple will be offering this content for free (rather than via a paid for download or rental as it does currently). In June 2018 the company signed a contract with the Writers Guild of America that will dictate payments to writers for content that is streamed over “free-to-consumer services”.

Apple is also reported to be planning to offer movies two to three weeks after cinema release, in a move that could threaten cinema chains. Find out more below.

Why is Apple trying to get in on TV and video content? According to Bloomberg (in October 2017), Apple CEO Tim Cook wants to double revenue from its services business by 2020. That includes iTunes, Apple Music, and the TV app (read about how to use the TV app here).

The company is said to plan to spend $4.2bn on original programming by 2022, including $1bn in 2018.

According to Loup Ventures analyst Gene Munster (famous for his predictions that Apple would launch an actual television), Apple will spend more on original content than any other tech giant, with a budget of $8.3bn, compared to Netflix’s $6.8bn.

Apple’s Eddy Cue says the company isn’t going to buy Netflix or Disney, though, despite rumours. Read more about why Apple might buy Netflix here.

It is likely that if you want to watch this content on your TV you will need an Apple TV to do so – read all the rumours about the 2018 Apple TV here.

Apple’s team of TV and film execs

Apple’s Eddy Cue has been building a video team for some time. He says that the team is now made up of more than 40 people.

The video team is based in Los Angeles and is lead by two ex-Sony Pictures execs Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg, who have shows such as Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul under their belt, have worked at Sony for 15 years (Amburg) and 20 years (Erlicht).

When he was given the job in June 2017, Erlicht said: “It will be an honor to be part of the Apple team. We want to bring to video what Apple has been so successful with in their other services and consumer products – unparalleled quality.”

Van Amburg added: “Apple has a relentless focus on delighting customers with their products. We will bring that same intention to Apple’s programming and we could not be more excited about what lies ahead,” according to a report on Deadline Hollywood.

In September 2017, in Erlicht and Van Amburg’s Apple’s TV content team was joined by Matt Cherniss, president of US TV broadcasting company WGN. He was behind shows such as Manhattan and Salem and has previously worked for Sony, Warner Bros. Pictures and Fox.

And in late October 2017 Apple added the former controller of BBC One and chief creative officer of Channel 4 to its team of creatives working on video content.

Jay Hunt was behind shows like Sherlock, Luther, and then helped Channel 4 buy The Great British Bake Off. In her new role at Apple she will be creative director Europe, worldwide video. It is thought that she will be commissioning programming on behalf of Apple.

In February 2018 Apple hired Gaumont Television executive Carol Trussell as Head of Production at its Worldwide Video Programming division.

When at Gaumont, Trussell was responsible for Narcos and Hannibal amongst other shows. She was previously a producer for HBO’s True Blood

Apple has also hired The Paramount Network’s Dana Tuinier as creative executive for comedy. Before Paramount, Tuinier worked at Fox on shows including New Girl, Almost Human and Glee.

Studios

The company had been said to be taking out a lease on The Culver Studios – a studio where The Matrix was shot – to be its base in Hollywood, however, according to Variety, Amazon has taken over those studios. Apple is said to be signing a lease on another property in Culver City (which is about eight miles from Hollywood), it’s a four story building offering 128,000 square feet of office space, and is expected to be ready in 2019.

Writers

The company has also signed a contract that should simplify the process for paying writers for content that is to be streamed for free.

Apple has signed a contract with the Writers Guild of America, but, crucially, the company has agreed to voluntarily exceed the minimum standards set out in the Guild’s master contract, going above the minimum basic agreement if its programming is offered free to consumers online, according to Variety.

The current MBA (minimum basic agreement) does not cover free-to-consumer services, so negotiations relating to those have to happen with each writer. Crucially, under the new contract, writers will be covered for shows that air free to the consumer.

A letter from WGA West president David A. Goodman and executive director David Young notes the relevance of this to free-to-consumer services, such as the ones offered by Facebook and Crackle.

“As this market develops, it will be imperative to negotiate MBA protections for writers creating content for such services. Our Apple deal moves us in that direction while the 2020 negotiations are still two years away,” they write.

(In the US Facebook offers a range of shows via a Watch tab. Watch can be personalised so you can discover shows based on what friends are watching. The Product director Daniel Danker is an ex-BBC iPlayer executive. The goal is for anyone to be able to make shows for Watch – it seems that at the moment these are mostly reality shows.)

What TV shows is Apple making?

Wondering what shows the team at Apple is making? The company has been unable to keep rumours and snippets of information getting out about its plans here, so we already know about quite a few of the shows the company is working on. With so much information about the shows that are coming from Apple, there can be no doubt that the company intends to extend its own offering beyond iTunes rentals very soon.

And it’s not skimping. Apple is said to have invested at least $1bn in 2018 buying and producing its own video content in a bid to compete with Netflix and Amazon, according to reports.

The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg claim that the investment could translate to 10 new shows, but there are more than 10 shows listed below.

According to Apple senior vice president of Internet Software and Services Eddy Cue, speaking at the South by Southwest conference in March 2018, Apple plans is to produce a small number of quality shows rather than focus on quantity.

Back in January 2017, Apple Music head Jimmy Iovine confirmed that Apple had plans to offer original video content via its Apple Music service. Speaking at a Television Critics Association event, Irvine said that Apple is working towards creating “an entire cultural, pop cultural experience, and that happens to include audio and video,” via the Apple Music service.

Don’t expect to see anything like Game of Thrones coming from Apple’s studios though. Apparently the company isn’t looking for sex or violence. According to Bloomberg: “Apple wants comedies and emotional dramas with broad appeal, such as the NBC hit ‘This Is Us’, and family shows like ‘Amazing Stories.'”

Top executives don’t want kids “catching a stray nipple,” the report claims.

Apple has launched two shows so far, Carpool Karaoke and Planet of the Apps, and you can find out more about them below. Those shows are currently distributed via the £9.99 a month Apple Music subscription service, but it is likely a new service would be launched to host the new movie and TV content, perhaps Apple Movies.

However, the new shows in the pipeline aren’t all about music. We have details on some of the other new shows that Apple is working on:

Oprah

Apple has signed up Oprah Winfrey to create original programmes for it.

The multiyear deal will see Winfrey create “original programs that embrace her incomparable ability to connect with audiences around the world,” according to a statement from Apple.

Cartoon Saloon animated film

Apple is seeking to acquire animation rights to movie from Academy Award-nominee Cartoon Saloon, according to Bloomberg.

The company is negotiating with Cartoon Saloon – the studio behind “Secret of Kells,” The Breadwinner” and “Song of the Sea.” The animation Apple is seeking the rights for hasn’t yet been made.

Apple will have to release the film to cinemas prior to making it available for download in order for it to qualify for an Academy Award.

Ed Sheeran documentary Songwriter

Apple is said to be making a documentary about singer Ed Sheeran.

The documentary will be directed by Sheeran’s cousin Murray Cummings.

Apparently the documentary will be released in the cinema as well as on Apple’s own platforms (via Deadline).

Shantaram

Based on Gregory David Roberts’ 2003 novel, which is based on Roberts’ life. The main characterising is a convict who flees an Australian prison for Bombay where he meets gangsters and criminals.

Little Voices

Little Voices is described as a dramedy, with characters attempting to find their “authentic voice”. It will be produced by J.J. Abrams and Sara Bareilles.

Dickinson

Hailee Steinfeld (of Pitch Perfect 2, Enders Game and Edge of Seventeen), will star in “Dickinson” – a series about poet Emily Dickinson.

Little America

This one is being co-written by Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon who wrote the Big Sick. It’s about American immigrants and will be produced by Master of None co-creator/executive producer Alan Yang.

M. Night Shyamalan show

All we know is that a psychological thriller written by Tony Basgallop is in the works and that the first episode will be directed by M. Night Shyamalan.

Isaac Asimov’s Foundation

Apple has landed a TV adaptation of Isaac Asimov’s science fiction novel trilogy Foundation.

According to a Deadline report, the project from Skydance Television will be produced by David S. Goyer and Josh Friedman as well as Skydance’s David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and Marcy Ross.

Goyer’s credits include The Dark Knight, Batman Begins, Ghost Rider, and more. He co-wrote the upcoming Terminator reboot.

Friedman’s credits include Avatar 2, the War of the Worlds remake and Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles.

Top of the Morning

Apple has also bought a new drama starring Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon.

The company beat others in a bidding war for the two-season show, based on the book Top of the Morning. Ellenberg’s book looked at the lives of morning TV presenters.

Aniston and Witherspoon are co-owners and executive producers along with Michael Ellenberg’s Media Res company, which will produce the show. The series was to be written and executive produced by Jay Carson (who was behind House of Cards).

However, there’s already been a bit of drama regarding this show. The creator Jay Carson has left the project due to “creative differences” according to Variety. That site suggests that Apple may be closing a deal with Kerry Ehrin to head up the project in Carson’s absence. Ehrin was creator, executive producer and showrunner for Bates Motel.

Central Park

This will be an animated musical comedy series staring Kristen Bell and Josh Gad (who last worked together on Frozen), as well as Hamilton‘s Leslie Odom Jr and Daveed Diggs, Tituss Burgess from Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Transparent actress Kathryn Hahn and Academy Award nominee Stanley Tucci, according to Digital Spy.

The series is based on a family of Central Park caretakers who have to save the world.

It’s from the creator of Bob’s Burgers, Loren Bouchard and is being co-written with Josh Gad and Nora Smith. Apple is committed to 26 episodes over two seasons.

The Obamas

It was reported that Apple, Netflix and Amazon were apparently in a bidding war over a show that would star former President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle Obama, hosting conversations on topics ranging from health care to climate change. However, in May 2018 it was revealed that Netflix had won the rights to the show.

Swagger

Swagger is a drama series based on the life of Kevin Durant, a Basketball player. It will be written and directed by Reggie Rock Bythewood who wrote Notorious B.I.G. biopic Notorious.

Untitled drama from La La Land writer

La La Land’s Damien Chazelle has been signed up by Apple to write and direct a drama series for Apple.

House of Cards studio MRC is also involved with the show.

Untitled: ‘You Think It, I’ll Say It’

Staring Kristen Wiig and produced by Reese Witherspoon, this comedy series is based on Curtis Sittenfeld’s short story collection titled You Think It, I’ll Say It.

Comedian Kristen Wiig used to appear on Saturday Night Live.

J.J. Abrams Si-Fi drama

Apple is said to be in a bidding war with HBO for this one (January 2018), reports Variety.

See

Described as an “epic, world-building drama”, See is directed by Hunger Games director Francis Lawrence and written by Steven Knight.

Untitled: ‘Space drama’

As yet unnamed, this drama comes from Star Trek veteran Ronald D. Moore.

Are You Sleeping

This crime drama, based on a novel by Kathleen Barber, sees a murder case reopened after a Serial-style podcast publicises it.

The series is being written by Nichelle Tramble Spellman, who also wrote The Good Wife.

Reese Witherspoon’s production company, Hello Sunshine, is co-producing it for Apple.

Amazing Stories

Apple has also bought Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories, which was being executive produced by Spielberg in partnership with Bryan Fuller, however, Fuller departed the show in February 2018.

Apparently that drama will transport the audience to worlds of wonder through the lens of today’s most imaginative filmmakers, directors and writers.

In May 2018 it was revealed that ‘Once Upon A Time‘ co-creators Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis would be the executive producers on the show.

It’s thought that Fuller’s ideas for the show weren’t family friendly enough for Apple, according to a Variety report.

Apple Movies

As mentioned above, Apple is hoping to secure a deal with animation studio Cartoon Saloon – the award-nominated studio behind “Secret of Kells,” The Breadwinner” and “Song of the Sea.”

This isn’t the only movie related ambition for Apple. Movie studios are said to be working with Apple on plans to release movies for rental just two or three weeks after cinema release, according to an August 2017 Bloomberg report.

Apparently these PVOD (premium video on demand) rentals would be available to download months before they hit services like Netflix and Now TV, but they would have a higher price than Apple’s usual rental deals. According to the Bloomberg report, if rented from iTunes the movies could cost between $30-$50, while the average price of a cinema ticket is $8.84. ($30 is about £24).

It’s normal for digital rentals of movies to be available around three months after cinema release.

This move could be a threat to cinema chains, although the high price of the iTunes rentals is likely to put most customers off – although the price of taking a family of four to the cinema might turn out to be higher than the rental price of the movie.

4K movies

4K titles are already available to watch on the 4K Apple TV and these new titles are available at the same price as HD titles are currently. In fact, announcing the 4K content at the September iPhone X launch event, Apple confirmed that if you have already purchased a HD title you will be able to automatically get the 4K version.

Netflix and Amazon Prime Video will both support 4K on Apple TV.

Older Apple TVs will not be able to play the 4K content.

How will Apple deliver the content?

This isn’t clear, yet. But there are a few possibilties:

Merging Apple Music and the iTunes Store

Apple may expand the remit of Apple Music to include TV and movies, as was the case when iTunes expanded to include TV and movies back in 2005. Back then Apple introduced iTunes 6 and added support for purchasing and viewing video content from the iTunes Music Store.

Initially the iTunes Music Store offered Music Videos and a small selection of TV shows, including Lost and Desperate Housewives. Since then, the collection has expanded to include content from numerous television networks and movies.

Eventually the iTunes Music Store dropped the word music, as its focus was much more…

However, the main complaint many have with the iTunes Store as it stands is that content can either be bought or rented, you can’t sign up for an all-you-can-eat style subscription service such as Netflix offers.

Loop analyst Gene Munster claims that Apple will rebrand Apple Music within the next two or three years, launching the new content under that banner, reports Variety.

In a 22 November research note Munster wrote: “Apple should be able to quickly expand their sub base given they have a running start with just over 30 million Apple Music subs that will have access to the video offering for the same $10 per month.”

Apple TV app

To date Apple’s TV app is the closest Apple has come to offering customers all the shows and movies they might want to watch in one place. It pulls the information about all the content from all the different content apps you might have on the Apple TV and your other Apple devices into one place so that you can make a choice about what you want to watch without having to go into all the different apps – although once you make that choice, you will currently be transferred to the other app to watch the content.

It seems likely that Apple plans to release its first few content projects to everyone with an Apple device via its TV app.

A Bloomberg report in May 2018 suggested that Apple could change the way its TV app works to accommodate this. Currently the TV app, which is found on iPhones, iPads and the Apple TV, is able to direct users to subscription content, such as Netflix, Amazon Prime and Now TV, but you cannot actually subscribe or watch the content through the Apple TV app. It looks like this is set to change, with Apple’s TV app being able to play the content without kicking you out into a separate app to consume it.

The Bloomberg story suggests that the updated TV app could be available in 2019, and that with the new functionality, Apple could be opening the TV app up to allow its own content to be streamed.

The Apple TV app launched in the UK in December. At launch it offers content from My5, ITV Hub, iPlayer and Amazon Prime Video. Netflix was later added to the offering. Read about how to use the TV app on iPhone or iPad here and how to use the TV app on Apple TV here.

On a subscription basis?

Apple currently has an extensive library of movie and TV shows available via iTunes. Rather than being available on a subscription basis, as with Netflix and Amazon, you can only choose to rent of buy movies, or buy individual episodes or series passes for TV content.

Since Netflix took off there have been calls for Apple to offer content via a subscription service.

Apple’s willingness to offer shows to Apple Music subscribers, and it’s hires in the TV and movie production field, does seem to indicate that this is something it plans to do, but it isn’t clear whether it will only offer it’s own content via subscription, or if it will offer all the content available on iTunes. People want the latter, but Apple will need necessary deals with the content providers in place before it can do so.

One thing is clear, Apple is unlikely to offer a commercial-based model in order to cut the subscription cost to consumers. Speaking at Recode in February 2017, Apple’s Eddy Cue said of such models: “I’m not saying we’ll never do it.. I don’t think it’s the direction we should be going. I don’t think that’s what our customers are asking for.”

What shows has Apple already made?

The Wall Street Journal reported in January 2017 that Apple has been talking to producers about creating premium programming and movies. So far we know only of the following programmes that have been made for Apple’s streaming service:

Carpool Karaoke

A popular spot on CBS’s The Late Late Show, 16 episodes of Carpool Karaoke will be available to stream via Apple Music – though not all will star original host James Corden, and the majority will instead feature a variety of celebrity pairings.

The show was set to start streaming in April, but eventually premiered in August 2017. You will need an Apple Music subscription in order to watch the episodes.

Bloomberg has revealed that the reason for the delay was the “Foul language and references to vaginal hygiene,” that had to be removed from some episodes.

Apple is showing a pair of ads for upcoming episodes, one of which will feature Queen Latifah, and the other featuring Miley and Billy Ray Cyrus, plus the rest of their family. This time the presenter is Jada Pinkett Smith rather than creator James Corden.

Here’s the ad for the episode featuring the Cyrus family.

Previous episodes have included Ariana Grande and Seth MacFarlane…

…and “Game of Thrones” co-stars Maisie Williams and Sophie Turner.

If you have signed up for Apple Music, or if you sign up for the free three-month trial, you can watch the first episode here.

Planet of the Apps

Hosted by Will.i.am this is a sort of Dragon’s Den for App developers. It features celebrities including Gwyneth Paltrow and Jessica Alba mentoring app developers. App developers have the length of an escalator ride to pitch their apps.

Apple posted this trailer:

Planet of the Apps is available on Apple Music – you can watch it here.

Unfortunately, the show didn’t impress. according to Variety’s Maureen Ryan it was a: “Bland, tepid, barely competent knock-off of Shark Tank.”

Vital Signs

Backed by Apple, Dr Dre’s semi-autobiographical six-part series was rumoured to be in production in February 2016. However, little has been revealed about this show since those reports appeared regarding it.

How can I watch Apple’s TV shows?

Currently you can only watch Apple’s own TV shows via the Apple Music app (which means you need to subscribe to that). However, according to Bloomberg, the shows Apple is making will not be placed on Apple Music, which will limit its focus to music-related video.

The shows that are currently live are available for Apple Music subscribers for £9.99 a month. You can also sign up for a free trial for three months here.

As of February 2017 there were 20 million paid subscribers to the Apple Music service. Subscribers are able to stream the shows on their Apple devices including the newest Apple TV model, the iPhone and iPad, and the Mac.

When will I be able to watch Apple’s TV shows in the UK?

iTunes tends to be region specific so it is possible that there may be a delay in content being available in the UK, and some content may never be made available in the UK. However in terms of the Apple Music shows those programmes were available in the UK at the same time as they went live in the US, so that may be the case with at least some of the content available on Apple’s Movie & TV streaming service.

The UK Tech Weekly Podcast team discuss Apple TV-streaming plans in episode 52, starting at 24 minutes.

Background to Apple’s Movie & TV streaming service plans

There have been rumours for years that Apple planned to work with the networks to distribute content via its own streaming service. Here is a rundown of the various rumours that have emerged, as well as some of the hurdles Apple is said to have encountered along the way.

Why has it taken Apple so long to offer a streaming service?

Back in 2015 Apple was said to be negotiating deals with networks. At the time, ESPN’s boss John Skipper confirmed that he was working on a deal with Apple for its rumoured streaming service, but revealed that Apple was having more trouble convincing other networks to join in.

However, it appears Apple hit a bit of a brick wall with the negotiations because by August 2015 talks with CBS, Fox, and NBC were said to have stalled. And then, in December 2015 it was claimed that Apple was putting its plans for the streaming service on hold because the cable companies and networks were proving too resistant to the idea.

By February 2016 CBS CEO Les Moonves had confirmed that talks with Apple had stopped following months of conversations with content providers: “We had conversations awhile back, and we haven’t had recent conversations with them,” Moonves said.

Why did Apple fail to come to an agreement in these negotiations? One report claimed that Apple was looking to collect a 30% fee from all subscriptions and the network operators weren’t happy about this.

Having failed to negotiate content deals will Apple instead seek to acquire companies that have content available for distribution? There are claims that the company could buy Disney, for example, more on that below.

For now the company seems to be distancing itself from the idea. Speaking at Recode, Apple’s Eddy Cue said that Apple isn’t “trying to buy a bunch of shows,” indicating that Apple isn’t planning to make any content acquisitions, and back in June 2016 Apple’s Eddy Cue said that Apple wasn’t interested in becoming a Netflix competitor.

Is Apple going to launch a television?

The short answer: no. Rumours that Apple would launch a TV were circulating for some time, spurred by the fact that Apple’s co-founder Steve Jobs seemed to hint in his biography that he intended to reinvent television. This spurred a long-running  rumour that Apple would launch an actual television set.

Jobs told his biographer Walter Isaacson: “I’d like to create an integrated television set that is completely easy to use… It will have the simplest use interface you could imagine. I finally cracked it.”

Apple CEO Tim Cook seemed to share Jobs’ TV dreams. Over the years he has suggested both that the TV experience needed to be bought up to date, and that Apple might revolutionise television. He stated back in September 2014: “Think how much your life has changed, and all the things around you that have changed, and yet TV, when you go into the living room to watch TV or wherever it may be, it almost feels like you’re rewinding the clock and you’ve entered a time capsule and you’re going backwards. The interface is terrible, I mean it’s awful. You watch things when they come on unless you remember to record them.”

Analyst Gene Munster was probably the most vocal in his predictions that Apple would launch an actual TV, he may even have been correct, as there were reports that Apple did have a team working on an actual TV, but it appears that the company eventually ditched the idea.

Instead of launching an actual television, the company launched Apple’s tvOS and the re-imagined Apple TV in 2016, both of which could be seen as the culmination of Steve Jobs vision for TV. However, those who were hoping for the reinvention of television, with a fancy TV set and a Netflix-style streaming service were disappointed.

Read our review of the 2015 Apple TV here.

Will Apple buy Netflix?

One rumour that’s been doing the rounds for some time, is that Apple could buy Netflix. However, Apple’s Eddy Cue has quashed that rumour by saying that Apple isn’t looking to buy a content company: “We might be better buying somebody or doing that, but that’s not what we’re trying to do,” Cue said at the Recode conference in February 2017.

Cue reiterated this at the South by Southwest conference in March 2018, saying that Apple isn’t going to buy Netflix or Disney, instead Apple will make its own original content.

One reason for the rumours that Apple could buy the likes of Netflix is the fact that due to US tax reforms it should now be easier (and less expensive) for Apple to repatriate its $200+ billion dollars held overseas back to the US – and that could pave the way for some big spending on acquisition.

Will Apple buy Netflix? We think it’s unlikely given Apple’s recent spending to create its own team of executives to develop shows for its platform. But, given Netflix’s 115 million subscribers and it’s excellent collection of shows and movies, it would certainly be an attractive buy. Not to mention the fact that buying Netflix would keep it out of the hands of Amazon, Google and Apple’s other competitors.

Will Apple buy Sony, Paramount…

Apple CEO Tim Cook and senior vice president Eddy Cue have been talking with TV and film producers in Hollywood.

The New York Post source told the paper that Apple “Is looking for a transformative acquisition and not just a deal to buy TV shows”.

The Apple execs have met with execs Paramount Pictures and with Sony TV and film.

The outcome of discussion with Sony execs might be the eventual hiring of Sony execs Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg, who have shows such as Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul under their belt. These ex-Sony Pictures execs will help Apple with its programming plans.

Could Apple buy Disney?

Apple could probably buy a whole country if it wanted to, it has so much money in the bank. As to whether it might buy Disney, there are reasons to think that such a deal wouldn’t be completely surprising: to do so would bring content, excellent co-branding potential, and a 30% share of Hulu.

There is also the fact that Steve Jobs was Disney’s biggest shareholder following his sale of Pixar to the company, and the fact that Disney CEO Bob Iger sits on Apple’s board.

With all that in mind, it’s hardly surprising that the rumour has been circulating.

However, Apple’s Eddy Cue has said that Apple is not going to buy Disney, putting pay to any rumours that Apple could be interested in the Mickey Mouse house.

Could Apple buy HBO? Time Warner?

There was a rumour that Apple was considering buying HBO, the home of Game of Thrones as part of an acquisition deal with Time Warner.

Back in early 2016 a New York Post report even claimed that Apple might even buy Time Warner, Inc. That purchase would include HBO, CNN, HLN, TNT, TBS and the Cartoon Network. However, no such deal emerged.

You might also like

Comments are closed.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. AcceptRead More