Wednesday, 21 October 2020

Quibi will reportedly shut down its mobile-centric streaming service

Quibi streaming app on Android smartphone stock photo 1

  • Quibi, the streaming service that launched earlier this year, is reportedly shutting down.
  • The service was supposed to appeal to younger audiences with its mobile-centric business model.
  • However, the service fell short in the number of its paid subscribers.

It looks like it’s lights out for Quibi. The streaming service, which launched mid-April 2020, will reportedly shut down its operations. The Wall Street Journal was the first to report this development.

Quibi recently hired a restructuring firm, which supposedly offered a number of options for the failing service. One of those options was to shut down entirely, and that appears to be what Quibi co-founder Jeffrey Katzenberg decided to use, according to the story. He has reportedly called investors to give them the news.

Katzenberg and Quibi’s other co-founder and CEO Meg Whitman raised $1.75 billion to fund the streaming service. What makes Quibi unique is that it’s mobile-centric and is only available on Android and iOS. Quibi shows are also no more than ten minutes in length. The theory was that people on the go could watch these short segments of a series at work during breaks.

However, the service, which cost $4.99 a month with ads and $7.99 a month without ads,  launched just a few weeks after the coronavirus outbreak. That meant many people were stuck at home, which cut into the service’s idea of offering streaming entertainment on the go. Many people asked for smart TV apps, and earlier this week, Quibi actually launched those apps for Android TV, Apple TV, and Amazon Fire TV devices.

There’s no word yet on exactly when the Quibi shut down will happen.  Deadline reports that the Quibi shut down could take several months. There’s also no word on where the over 50 scripted and unscripted TV series on the service, many of which have yet to debut, will turn up after the shutdown. Deadline claims that Katzenberg and Whitman may still sell off the service if someone becomes interested in buying it.



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