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LG, Sony, Other TV Cos Take On Former Program Partners

By Erik Sherman | Jul 30, 2009

Back in January, LG Electronics essentially went into competition with broadcast, cable, and satellite video providers with its NetCast Entertainment Access. Certain of its HDTV offerings provided built-in streaming from both YouTube and Netflix, as well as news, weather, and photos from Yahoo. Now it’s expanding the service by integrating access to titles from Vudu, adding an extra 2,000 HD videos for purchase or rental with no monthly fees and no additional set-top box. This is just the latest indication of a fundamental shift in the media-technology partnership.

Where once electronics companies made televisions and left the programming to broadcast, cable, and satellite, now the manufacturers are walking right around their old partners. It’s not just LG:

  • Sony and Microsoft have made deals for streaming through their games consoles.
  • Sony has also recently announced that it is including Netflix streaming in its Internet-enabled Bravia sets this fall.
  • Mitsubishi has a promotion with Vudu, offering a free set-top box and $50 in movie credits with the purchase of specific HD televisions.
  • Other set manufacturers, such as Samsung and Philips, have integrated Ethernet jacks into their products so they can plug into a home network and reach the Internet.

This is a kick in the face of the content provider industry, which has been pushing pay-per-view and on-demand programming for years. But now the set manufacturers are giving consumers a way to combine the two programming models directly with a much broader choice of content, presumably getting a cut of the resulting revenue stream, something that they don’t get from the traditional provider industry. That suggests a few things that we can look forward to in the near:

  1. Content providers go along with the hardware-wants-to-be-free trend and start offering “free” televisions for people who are willing to sign up for two to three years worth of service. That makes them bigger customers of the manufacturers and more able to twist arms to reduce the end-run competition.
  2. Netflix and/or Vudu will get acquired, whether by an LG or Sony or by a Comcast or Verizon. Controlling content will be key, and given that consumer demand for streamed video is only going to grow, the streaming services are only going to get more popular.
  3. A potential new business model would be for a Hulu to work directly with the set companies, provide authorized on-demand television shows with some ads and the combined attraction of convenient delivery and full-screen viewing. That will be popular with the studios, but less so with the broadcast/cable/satellite crowd.

Image via stock.xchng user swetko, site standard license.

Erik Sherman is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in Newsweek, the New York Times Magazine, Technology Review, the Financial Times, Chief Executive, and other publications. Follow him on Twitter.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • LG adds Vudu HD service to NetCast service for its Web-enabled TVs

    ZDNet - 118 days 2 hours 8 minutes ago

    Unlike a global competitor like Philips, LG Electronics is still trying to make an impact in the North American TV market. It unveiled its version of Internet-enabled TV, called NetCast, last month with four new sets. Among other services, NetCast offers Netflix’s on-demand movie service, and today it’s added another streaming video service...

  • LG's Netflix-friendly 47LH50 and 50PS80 NetCast HDTVs now shipping in America

    Engadget - 166 days 8 hours 27 minutes ago

    Without a doubt, the next big thing in the world of HDTVs is internet capabilities . With Toshiba just shipping its own web-enabled sets this week, LG Electronics is making sure it doesn't fall too far behind by floating a few of its own NetCast models out to the open market. Originally unveiled at CES , these HDTVs are the first from the...

  • Vudu streaming video service to be embedded in select LG TVs

    CNET News - 118 days 14 hours 4 minutes ago

    (Credit: Vudu)Vudu's Internet video-on-demand service will be coming to select LG TVs in August. The service will effectively embed the functionality of the Vudu BX100 set-top box into the televisions, obviating the need for connecting an external box to access the Vudu's lineup of movies and TV shows, hundreds of which are available in HD video...

  • Vudu Movie Streamer Plummets to $150

    Wired - 288 days 2 hours 19 minutes ago

    Vudu on Monday slashed the price of its TV set-top box in half. The price cut brings the Vudu HD movie rental box down to $150 -- about $80 less than its major rival, the Apple TV. Vudu launched its

  • Vudu slashes prices for video-on-demand boxes

    FierceMarkets - 287 days 11 hours 53 minutes ago

    Vudu, under stiff pressure from Netflix's popular "Watch Instantly" streaming video service , has cut the price of its BX 100 set-top video delivery box in half, from $295 to $149. Vudu also cut the rate of its premium STB, the Vudu XL, from $999 to $499. While Vudu's offering is now a lot less expensive, it still faces the barrier to...

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