I spent three days filling in at my trade-pub client FierceVideo covering industry developments–which allowed me to spotlight yet another example of customer abuse by a telecom conglomerate.
7/21/2021: Verizon Q2 earnings show video continuing to shrivel, FierceVideo
As I wrote in a Forbes post months ago, the sales pitch awaiting at Verizon’s site suggests this company is already acting like a post-pay-TV provider.
7/21/2021: Netflix launches in-house casting department, FierceVideo
Before writing this post, I would have guessed that Netflix had set up its own casting operation long ago, but I’m not exactly a student of Hollywood’s workings.
7/22/2021: Verizon adds Apple TV, Fire TV apps for Fios TV, FierceVideo
I had this story mostly written when I thought I should step through the ordering process on Verizon’s site to see if it would suggest its new Apple TV and Fire TV apps as alternatives to renting its Fios TV boxes–and then I was surprised and annoyed to see the company list a $20 monthly fee for the privilege of using these apps. Verizon’s inability to read the room here–even after it’s seen more than 20% of its TV subscriber base boil away in the last four years–is something to behold.
7/22/2021: Redbox turns to Wurl to boost its free-with-ads streaming TV, FierceVideo
My editor asked me to write up this bit of embargoed news she’d gotten; no problem.
7/22/2021: AT&T continues to shed video subs but touts HBO Max success, FierceVideo
AT&T’s earnings call confused me more than a little when the company spent so much time talking up the HBO Max video business that it will soon spin off into an independent company.
7/22/2021: Twitter tests downvotes, Al Jazeera
The Arabic-language news network had me on to discuss Twitter’s new experiment in letting some iOS users downvote replies–with that negative feedback only shown to the authors of those replies, not to the general Twitter public.
7/23/2021: Locast lights up Pittsburgh, FierceVideo
My last post for Fierce this week covered the expansion of this non-profit organization’s free streaming of local broadcast stations to the Pittsburgh market, which I used as an opportunity to educate readers about that region’s unusual second-person plural pronoun “yinz.”