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Disney is launching a cheaper, ad-supported version of its Disney+ streaming service later this year, and reports this week revealed how the company plans to run fewer ads on the cheaper plan than some rival streamers.

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Disney says it intends to run ads for four minutes on movies and shows that last an hour or less, according to Variety and The Wall Street Journal.

That's the same as HBO Max, less than NBC's Peacock, which runs no more than five minutes of ads every hour, and less than Disney's own Hulu, which runs anywhere between nine and 12 minutes for every hour of content. For context, viewers of traditional TV are usually exposed to between 18 and 23 minutes of ads per hour, according to data from Kantar.

Disney also confirmed to TechCrunch that preschool programming will not have any commercials whatsoever. In other words, preschool kids who use their own profile to watch Disney+ on the cheaper plan won't see any ads.

Disney has yet to reveal the price of the ad-supported plan, which is set to debut in the U.S. in late 2022, but Disney executives suggested during the company's recent earnings call that once the cheaper plan launches there will likely be a price increase to the existing ad-free plan, which is currently $7.99 a month.

Netflix is planning to introduce a new ad-supported tier in the final three months of the year, with the plan aimed at attracting new subscribers who find the current pricing unaffordable. Netflix has long resisted implementing an ad-supported tier and has said multiple times in the past that the streaming service would never show ads, but it is hemorrhaging subscribers.

Disney in June 2021 also said that it had no plans to introduce a cheaper ad-supported tier anytime soon because it was satisfied with its paid subscriber model, but then the company changed its tune in March.

Other entertainment companies like Discovery, NBCUniversal, WarnerMedia, and Paramount have launched ad-supported subscription tiers to offer content at multiple price points. When Disney+ launches its ad-supported tier, it will make Apple TV+ one of the only services not to offer a cheaper streaming option.

Right now, ‌Apple TV+‌ is priced competitively even with ad-based services at $4.99 per month, but Apple does not have the wealth of content that other streaming services are able to offer.

Article Link: Disney+ Ad-Supported Plan to Limit Commercials to Four Minutes Per Hour
 
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I am guessing the ad-supported tier will also remove the option to download content for offline playback? However, nothing beats those idiots at Netflix limiting HD / 4K to the premium plan in 2022
Not that I'm a fan of Netflix, but HD is in the "Standard" plan. You can choose to downgrade to the "Basic" plan and receive SD content.
 
How long will the four minutes per hour last? There is only one direction ad time goes.

What amuses me as I watch this field mature is that we are heading back to where we started. For a brief time we escaped from ads thanks to DVRs. I encounter so few TV ads these days that when I do encounter them I find them to be an all out assault on my senses, besides being generally an insult to my intelligence. I’d rather watch nothing than ever suffer through ads again.
 
I am guessing the ad-supported tier will also remove the option to download content for offline playback? However, nothing beats those idiots at Netflix limiting HD / 4K to the premium plan in 2022
And then including multiple streams in the package people have to buy to get that video quality and then being upset when those multiple streams are used by people in different locations.
 
How about put all the ads at the beginning. Then people can watch the shows or movies uninterrupted.
They won’t because it will be too easy for people to ignore. I’m sure there will be different pricing for ads based on where they will appear as well. Ads that interrupt your viewing are annoying to the viewer but very valuable to an advertiser because they know they have you if even for 5 seconds.
 
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