This was originally going to be a rant about how streaming TV is now worse than cable, but as I crawled deeper into the rabbit hole, I realized that not only is streaming TV starting to look just like cable did in the 1990s, but the so-called Golden Age of Television that we’ve been enjoying is a bubble that’s about to burst.

But maybe that’s not entirely bad. Stick with me.

The Downfall of Streaming TV | The Bubble has Burst

If you grew up watching TV in the pre-streaming era, you’ve probably gotten increasingly frustrated over the past few years as everything that was cool about streaming TV has slowly eroded. It’s to the point now that we either pay more for streaming services than we did for cable, or deal with so many ads that streaming feels more like cable than ever.

But I’m not here to point out what you already know. Instead, I want to talk about the inevitable collapse of this Golden Age of TV that we’ve been enjoying for the past few years. The landscape of really high-quality shows, on-demand, ready and waiting for us anytime we turn on our TV, is going to look a whole lot different soon. I’m going to explain how and why. And then I’ll get into why maybe it isn’t all bad. Let’s get into it.

The bubble is going to burst

When I talk about a a bubble bursting, I’m recalling the collapse of the real estate market in 2008. The story of how we got to where we are today is important, and I’m about to dive into that. But before I do, let me tell you how I got here … as in here, writing this article.

Three things happened over the past few weeks that got under my skin. First, Amazon instituted an upcharge for ad-free streaming. At least we had a few months’ notice. But without saying anything, Amazon also stripped away once-free perks like Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos surround. Now, if you want ad-free Prime Video and high-quality HDR and surround sound, you have to pony up $3 a month.

Amazon Fire TV
Amazon Fire TV Digital Trends

I’m a little bothered at yet another upcharge. But to be fair, everyone else is doing it, so I’m not shocked Amazon is, too. It’s just that I really feel like ad-free Amazon Prime Video was a nice value add to the two-day free shipping I get on all the stuff I end up buying.

More recently, Walmart bought Vizio for $2.3 billion. I have a whole article about what that means, but the news boils down to the fact that Vizio TVs are going to have tons of ads on them. You’ll open up your home screen to find Netflix or YouTube and an ad for a deal on tires at the Walmart auto center waiting for you. Lovely.

As if I needed something else to be annoyed by, I recently turned on my Google TV to be greeted by a Kia EV6 ad presented like a TV show I could watch. One of the reasons I preferred Google TV was that the ads were mostly for content I could watch, not products I could buy. Well, that’s changing, and we can expect to see the same on just about every other streaming platform.

Google TV
Google TV Digital Trends

Individually, those three occurrences were annoyances. But taken together, they call attention to how streaming TV has somehow become worse than cable. It’s expensive to start with, and now that subscription prices have gone up, premium features like 4K and HDR add even more cost and the experience is now filled with ads. This is not the streaming TV future I signed up for.

Which got me thinking about how we got here. Here’s a little streaming TV history for you.

How we got here

It all started with YouTube and its first big online hit: SNL’s Lazy Sunday short. From there, streaming video took off like a rocket. And that caught the attention of entrepreneurial visionaries and well-established mega-media conglomerates alike.

After failing three times to persuade Blockbuster to partner with Netflix, Reed Hastings (co-founder of Netflix) launched Netflix’s streaming service in 2007. Around the same time, Comcast, Myspace, Facebook, AOL, MSN, and Yahoo created a little skunkworks project called Hulu. NBC and Fox were quick to join up, and Hulu was launched to the public in March 2008.

So now we have Netflix doing movies, Hulu doing TV shows, and Blockbuster no doubt feeling huge regret about some poor life decisions.

Coincidentally, it was in 2008 that I began my career in tech journalism. As streaming TV grew, I, with the support of Digital Trends, made covering streaming video developments a core part of my job. And that’s when cord-cutting became a part of our lexicon.

The cord-cutting revolution

If you’re, say, 25 years old or younger, you might have missed the whole cord-cutting revolution. My 16-year-old daughter, for example, doesn’t know a world without streaming TV. But for many of us, cord-cutting was exciting.

Cord-cutting represented a lot of things. It was about sticking it to the man, spending less money, and freedom. The freedom to watch what you wanted, when you wanted, and without ads. It was TV on your terms.

Remote controls from Google, Amazon, Apple and Roku.
Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

For a while, subscription fees were enough to float streaming service boats. But as more people fled from linear TV to streaming services, advertisers had to follow.

Once streaming services could show how many eyeballs they were getting and when they were getting them, advertisers moved to streaming platforms in droves, and streaming services were only too happy to take that money. Keep in mind there was a time when you would watch a live show on TV, and during advertising breaks, there would just be a black screen. That changed quickly.

When streaming services started making big money, they started making content. Netflix famously launched House of Cards in 2013, quickly followed by Orange is the New Black, Bojack Horseman, Black Mirror, and so many others.

Not to be outdone, Hulu hopped into the mix with The Morning After and, later, The Handmaid’s Tale. Amazon started with Alpha House and Betas.

Hulu Handmaids Tale
The Handmaid’s Tale on Hulu Digital Trends

Most of us know where it went from there. Subscription prices started creeping up. Ad-supported and ad-free tiers were created. Certain features were withheld as “premiums” you had to pay for, like 4K and HDR. And crackdowns began on shared accounts.

Safe to say, the cord-cutters dream is over, and has been for a while.

All the while, the platforms we used to access these streaming services – Roku, Android and Google TV, Apple TV, Fire TV, LG’s WebOS, and Samsung’s Tizen — all saw exponential growth. And that’s when the push for ads on those platforms caught traction. So now, not only were we seeing ads on the streaming services themselves, but we were seeing ads on the platforms we use to get to our streaming services.

This brings us to where we are today. When we turn on our TVs, we see platform-specific retail ads. Amazon is marketing Amazon stuff, and Walmart is marketing Walmart stuff. Roku and Google take money from whoever is ready to spend.

Icons for services like YouTube TV.
YouTube

There are now “free” ad-supported tiers on every major streaming service. Some services are nothing but free TV with lots of conventional ads. Live streaming TV, like YouTube TV, is just as expensive as cable.

And don’t get me started on bundles. The great “unbundler” that streaming was supposed to be ended up as the worst bundler of them all. It’s enough to drive you back to cable or satellite – almost. Cable boxes don’t have their own ads. But they will soon. And besides, a lot of the content we want to watch is original content you can’t get on cable. This leads us nicely into the part of the story where we look at where things are headed.

What’s next for streaming TV

As I mentioned, we are just months away from seeing ads on cable and satellite box platforms. It seems inevitable. Hell, it’s been a while since I had cable, so for all I know, those ads have already started to show up.

Next, we can expect to see more cable-like fees coming to streaming services. It’s not as mysterious and old school as cable access fees and terrestrial broadcast fees, but say you like to cancel a streaming service and resubscribe just when your favorite shows come out – right now, that’s a good way to save money! Ditch Disney+ until the next season of The Mandalorian comes out, resubscribe, binge, then cancel again, right? Not for long, folks. I think pretty soon you’ll have to pay a resubscribe fee if you do that, which will make canceling a whole lot less attractive.

Din Djarin flying while holding onto Grogu.
Disney

I think we can expect to see more of what used to be standard features becoming paid features or add-ons. Maybe a limit on the number of hours you can stream in a day or month. Maybe bingeing a whole season costs extra.

Why more money-grabbing? Because despite all the rate hikes we’ve seen and the ad revenue coming in, it’s still not enough.

I fear they still aren’t making enough money to sustain themselves.

Streaming services were a hard sell when they got started. There was a whole chicken-or-the-egg situation happening wherein streaming services needed eyeballs to sell advertising, but at the same time, they needed revenue to secure or make content to attract viewers. So, they made a lot of investments and lost a lot of money as they offered up lots of content to watch for a relatively low price. It was never a sustainable model. Eventually, they would need to jack up the price of subscriptions and pull in advertising revenue to turn a profit.

And they have. But I fear they still aren’t making enough money to sustain themselves. That’s why I see a bubble that’s about to burst.

What we saw during lockdown was a temporary flood of viewers to streaming services. Just take a look at Roku’s stock prices over the last three years — skyrocketed during lockdown, and then the bottom fell out. Way out.

A man watches a movie in a studio with a Sonos Era 300 in a surround sound setup.
Zeke Jones / Digital Trends

That influx of viewers inflated optimism and production budgets. A lot of money was spent in hopes of retaining viewers. But the entertainment inflation was temporary. The tide has receded, and streaming services are now facing facts: There are too many streaming services competing for viewers, and they aren’t pulling in enough views to make up for all the spending they did when viewership was through the roof.

Economics 101 tells us that the market will only bear so much. People are deciding to cancel their subscriptions as they realize they don’t have as much time for TV watching as they did just a few years ago. Apps like Mint and Rocket Money have made entire businesses out of helping us cancel subscriptions we don’t use.

As that subscription money dries up, so, too, does the ad money due to the loss of viewership.

Plus, production costs have gone up. Inflation has had a real impact on the cost of making a movie or TV show. Add the writers’ and actors’ strikes that resulted in a loss of production time and yet another hike to the cost of production — it costs more to pay actors and writers now — and you have a perfect storm for collapse.

The inevitable is coming

I think the consolidation of streaming services is inevitable. It’s hard to imagine Hulu, Peacock, and Paramount Plus all surviving when they compete for many of the same shows. Having one streaming service for Star Trek and another for Friends and Seinfeld seems silly.

When the consolidation happens, it will be led and controlled by the legacy media giants, which are already a blend of studios and distribution platforms like Comcast/NBC/Universal; they make the content and own the streaming services that content goes to. In this case, they also own the internet pipeline it travels down to get to your TV. Yes, this is problematic, but apparently, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is cool with it, so that’s that.

I have a hard time imagining that Hulu, Peacock, Paramount Plus, Sling TV, YouTube TV, Fubo, Pluto, and countless others can all coexist.

I don’t think Netflix and Max are going away, but I have a hard time imagining that Hulu, Peacock, Paramount Plus, Sling TV, YouTube TV, Fubo, Pluto, and countless others can all coexist. I think content will need to funnel down into just a handful of streaming services. And then those streaming services — because they offer access to so much content — will ramp up in cost, at least in the short term.

As we see that consolidation, I think we’ll see a reduction in the number of shows made. Budgets will once again be poured into guaranteed hits. I think we will start seeing a greater disparity in the quality of the shows we’re offered. Not all of them are going to be bangers like they are now, all with huge production budgets, excellent writing, and stellar visual effects.

A man watches a program on a Roku. Plus Series TV.
Digital Trends

Eventually, we might just have ’90s-style cable TV again, but it’s on the internet.

That sounds like going backward. And going backward is bad, right?

Well, maybe not entirely.

The upside

Have you noticed that there are fewer watercooler moments around TV shows? It used to be everyone was talking about the latest episode of Lost or Game of Thrones. More recently, though, it seems like everyone is watching something different.

Hey, did you see the latest episode of Jack Ryan? Huh? No … is that on Netflix or what? Oh, hey, are you watching The Lincoln Lawyer? Huh? What’s that?

Maybe when there are fewer just absolutely amazing shows, more of us will be watching the same thing at roughly the same time. Maybe we won’t feel like we’re constantly missing out on the next must-see TV hit. Maybe.

And maybe if there’s stiffer competition among fewer competitors, prices will eventually level out a bit. I mean, you can easily exceed the cost of cable TV subscription costs with just a handful of streaming services right now. Perhaps if we don’t have to subscribe, unsubscribe, and resubscribe to multiple services, the market will stabilize, picking teams won’t be as arduous, and streaming services will make their prices more compelling to lure viewers over.

One can hope. All I know is that the cord-cutting revolution is over, and it looks like we lost. While the Golden Age of TV has been a fun ride, capitalism, being what it is, will almost certainly end it.

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