CNN+ Streaming Service Will Shut Down Weeks After
it Launched
The new corporate owners of CNN are moving to end the
new streaming service after a splashy debut.
Chris
Wallace inside the CNN+ studio in Washington in January. He was among the media
stars CNN hired for the launch of the new streaming operation.
By Michael
M. Grynbaum, John Koblin and Benjamin Mullin
April 21,
2022
Updated
12:29 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/21/business/cnn-plus-shutting-down.html
Warner
Bros. Discovery has decided to shut down CNN+, the ballyhooed streaming service
that had been intended to bring CNN into the digital future, just weeks after
its splashy debut.
The service
is set to cease operations on April 30. Andrew Morse, CNN’s chief digital
officer and a key architect of the streaming strategy, will also step down.
“While
today’s decision is incredibly difficult, it is the right one for the long-term
success of CNN,” Chris Licht, the incoming president of CNN, wrote in a memo.
“It allows us to refocus resources on the core products that drive our singular
focus: further enhancing CNN’s journalism and its reputation as a global news
leader.”
Mr.
Lichtalso held an all-hands meeting among CNN+ staffers on Thursday
The
shutdown is a stunning and ignominious end to an operation into which CNN had
sunk tens of millions of dollars, from an aggressive nationwide marketing
campaign to adding hundreds of new employees to hiring big, high-priced media
stars, including the former “Fox News Sunday” anchor Chris Wallace and the
former NPR co-host Audie Cornish.
But the
service’s fortunes changed abruptly after CNN’s former parent, WarnerMedia — owner
of the prestige TV powerhouse HBO and the storied Warner Bros. film studio —
completed its merger with Discovery, home to reality TV hits like “90 Day
Fiancé” and the home-improvement gurus Chip and Joanna Gaines. Since the merger
closed earlier this month, doubts have swirled over the future of CNN+, which
was promoted to CNN employees and subscribers as the future of the network.
Executives
from Discovery, including its chief executive, David Zaslav, are beginning to
impose their designs on the newly formed company, which is called Warner Bros.
Discovery, putting in place a new management team and sketching out the
contours of a new streaming strategy.
Jason
Kilar, WarnerMedia’s chief executive, and Ann Sarnoff, the top executive of the
WarnerMedia Studios, have both announced their departures from the company.
CNN had
planned to spend more than $1 billion on CNN+ over four years, according to
people familiar with the matter, budgeting for 500 additional employees,
including producers, engineers and programmers, and renting out an additional
floor of its offices in Midtown Manhattan to accommodate them.
But the
newly formed company has its own corporate priorities that could conflict with
the big spending of CNN+. As part of its deal with former WarnerMedia owner
AT&T, Discovery executives agreed to assume $55 billion in debt, which
executives are now under pressure to repay. The company also said it would find
$3 billion in savings between the two companies, which could result in belt
tightening at some divisions.
In
February, as CNN was preparing to release the streaming service, the network
was torn by the departure of Jeff Zucker, its long-serving president who
resigned after failing to disclose a relationship with the network’s marketing
chief. Mr. Zucker was a champion of CNN+, and his exit meant loss of the most
prominent proponent of the service at the network.
Still, the
network forged ahead. In February, addressing a group of anchors and executives
stunned by Mr. Zucker’s departure, Mr. Kilar said that the streaming service
was integral to the future of CNN. And in March, as the merger with Discovery
loomed, CNN held a launch party for the new service at Peak, a sleek restaurant
and bar at 30 Hudson Yards not far from the network’s New York offices. At the
party, CNN announced that Ted Turner, the voluble founder of CNN, was the
service’s first subscriber.
This is a
developing story. Check back for updates.
Michael M.
Grynbaum is a media correspondent covering the intersection of business,
culture and politics. @grynbaum
John Koblin
covers the television industry. He reports on the companies and personalities
behind the scripted TV boom, and the networks that broadcast the news. He
previously covered fashion. @koblin


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