Culture

CNN+ got canned faster than Quibi

CNN's streaming service had a rough launch, and after about a month of pain, it's heading for the chopping block.

FEBRUARY 5, 2020: A television screen shot during live CNN coverage of the President Donald Trump im...
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CNN+ is shutting down on April 30, just a month after it launched, according to CNN Business. The news network’s streaming service originally became available on March 29, but apparently didn’t fit into the vision of Discovery, which completed its acquisition of CNN’s parent company, WarnerMedia, earlier this month.

Oh, and one more thing: Closing at the end of April means CNN+ didn’t even survive as long as the now very defunct Quibi.

A sample of the offerings from CNN+.CNN

Shitty situation — Staff were reportedly informed of the decision today by CNN’s new CEO, Chris Licht, and Warner Bros. Discovery’s head of streaming, J.B. Perrette. Some CNN+ shows could survive on a future unified streaming service (maybe as a part of an even more bloated version of HBO Max) but some staff are likely to be laid off.

Licht described the closure as a “uniquely shitty situation,” according to CNN Business.

Warner Bros. Discovery — Word of CNN+’s post-launch blues have filtered out over the last few weeks. The streaming service offered a mix of short-form news content, documentaries, and looser, personality-driven talk shows, but reportedly struggled to attract daily viewers. Less than 10,000 people were using CNN+ on a daily basis just two weeks after it launched, CNBC reported.

Well how’s he ever going to find it now?CNN

As things soured, Warner Bros. Discovery executives also suspended the CNN+ marketing budget, according to Axios. Not a great vote of confidence considering CNN likely needed better marketing to try and draw in more subscribers.

Ultimately, Discovery was frustrated over the direction of CNN+ and the decision to launch the service even though WarnerMedia and Discovery had yet to merge. Axios reports Discovery higher-ups wanted CNN to return to hard-hitting breaking news and become one component of a larger streaming service. Because of the in-progress acquisition, though, they legally couldn’t share those views.

Now it seems Warner Bros. Discovery’s new leaders are making good on their plans.