Paramount Plus gets a price hike as it merges with Showtime

Paramount reported its quarterly earnings on Thursday, revealing that nearly 56 million users are now subscribed to Paramount Plus. The streaming service gained 9.9 million subscribers, up from 46 million in Q3. In addition to sharing its earnings results for Q4 and 2022 as a whole, Paramount confirmed that a price hike is in store for Paramount Plus later this year.

Paramount Plus price hikes are coming

Let’s start with the news that actually impacts consumers. In January, Paramount announced that Showtime would be integrated into the Paramount Plus streaming service before the end of 2023. The combined offering will be called Paramount Plus with Showtime. Unsurprisingly, this merger also comes with a price hike for subscribers.

According to TechCrunchthe Paramount Plus Premium tier will increase from $9.99 a month to $11.99 a month later this year. Meanwhile, the Essential tier, which doesn’t include any Showtime content, will jump from $4.99 to $5.99 a month. Existing and new customers will be impacted, but Paramount didn’t reveal when the price hike will occur.

As for the 9.9 million new subscribers the streamer added in Q4, Paramount attributes the growth to a strong content slate which includes new streaming series (Tulsa King), new entries in existing franchises (Top Gun: Maverick, 1923), and the NFL.

Despite the growth, Paramount lost $575 million on streaming in the fourth quarter — almost $75 million more than it lost in Q4 2021. Nevertheless, Paramount CEO and President Bob Bakish is bullish on the future of the company’s streaming strategy:

“In 2022, Paramount Pictures had 6 films open at #1 in the US box office and Paramount regained its position as the most-watched media family in linear television. Our content and platform strategy is working and, with even more exceptional content coming this year, we expect to return the company to earnings growth in 2024.”

Paramount didn’t share any details about when Paramount Plus with Showtime will launch.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Psyche: NASA Mission to a Metal World thumbnail

Psyche: NASA Mission to a Metal World

The Psyche spacecraft will reach its destination in early 2026, where it will commence its two-year-long scientific survey of the asteroid. When our solar system was very young, there were no planets—only a diffuse disk of gas and dust circled the sun. But within a few million years, that churning cloud of primordial material collapsed…
Read More
Webb team brings 18 dots of starlight into hexagonal formation thumbnail

Webb team brings 18 dots of starlight into hexagonal formation

This early Webb alignment image, with dots of starlight arranged in a pattern similar to the honeycomb shape of the primary mirror, is called an “image array.” Credit: NASA/STScI/J. DePasquale The James Webb Space Telescope team continues to make progress in aligning the observatory's mirrors. Engineers have completed the first stage in this process, called…
Read More
Why do cats and dogs rub their butts on the floor? thumbnail

Why do cats and dogs rub their butts on the floor?

Home News Lifes-little-mysteries A cat hides under a rug with its butt sticking out. (Image credit: harpazo_hope via Getty Images) Dogs and cats are cute, playful, lovable… and extremely gross. Besides eating poop and licking their butts, one of the most bizarre things these pets can do is rub their rumps on the floor.But why…
Read More
NASA confirms DART probe impact changed asteroid’s orbit thumbnail

NASA confirms DART probe impact changed asteroid’s orbit

STORY WRITTEN FOR CBS NEWS & USED WITH PERMISSION This imagery from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope from Oct. 8, 2022, shows the debris blasted from the surface of Dimorphos 285 hours after the asteroid was intentionally impacted by NASA’s DART spacecraft on Sept. 26. The shape of that tail has changed over time. Scientists are continuing to
Read More
Misogynistic attitudes towards women's sport among male football fans thumbnail

Misogynistic attitudes towards women’s sport among male football fans

Openly misogynistic attitudes towards women's sport may be common amongst male football fans, according to new research involving online message boards. The Durham University-led study, based on a survey of 1,950 male football fans on UK football fan message boards, found openly misogynistic attitudes towards women's sport among those surveyed, regardless of their age. Progressive…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share