Streaming video boomed in 2020 as shut-in viewers signed up for anything and everything—but the good times could be fleeting https://t.co/aJHH8ts8dn via @Lilliannnn & me
— Drew FitzGerald (@DrewFitzGerald) December 30, 2020
"The largest streaming services are expected to finish 2020 with combined U.S. subscriber numbers more than 50% higher than a year ago"https://t.co/FR2Z5pOI1i
— Charlie Bilello (@charliebilello) December 31, 2020
“Instead of a streaming war, there’s been streaming coexistence.” U.S. households now subscribe to three streaming services on average. https://t.co/3U42LkJh4e
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) December 31, 2020
“Instead of a streaming war, there’s been streaming coexistence and parallel growth," @Harris_X_ CEO @DritanNesho https://t.co/NiozBdtiei
— Michelle Manafy ? (@michellemanafy) December 31, 2020
I am at 9
— Raju Narisetti (@raju) December 31, 2020
Pre-Covid Americans told a WSJ-Harris Poll survey that they were willing to subscribe to an average of 3.6 streaming services.
Then came the pandemic.https://t.co/FzKMfR5u9q via @wsj
? STREAMING WARS ?
— Benchmark (@GetBenchmarkCo) December 30, 2020
✅ Room for MANY as the average US household subscribes to 3.1 streaming services in 2020 vs 2.7 in 2019
1️⃣ $AMZN Prime Video ended 2020 with 50m - up from 43m in 2019
2️⃣ $DIS Plus has 37m subscribers - up from 24m a year earlierhttps://t.co/4tyNkPTSWC
Streaming subscriptions were way, way up in 2020 https://t.co/phqeL4T0YB pic.twitter.com/tx5Dhn1i74
— New York Post (@nypost) December 30, 2020
주요 스트리밍 서비스 가입자는 작년부터 50% 증가했으며, 이는 대유행이 어떻게 일부 산업을 활성화시키고 다른 업종을 파괴했는지를 보여주는 증거입니다. https://t.co/nXVOTTscm1
— editoy (@editoy) January 2, 2021
In the mobile business markets eventually inevitably reach minutes in the day limits. You can only make so many calls in a day. Video has the same issue but for now streamers are eating the lunch of old school video.
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) January 2, 2021
Human eyes are a data input mechanism. https://t.co/ZwgVaJIU2W pic.twitter.com/Kh7Vd1rlPK