The Apple TV+ streaming service will arrive in November and cost $9.99 per month, according to Bloomberg. The article, quoting unnamed “people familiar with the matter,” says Apple will start with a small selection (five) of shows, then add more “frequently” over several months.
Bloomberg says that a free trial period is likely, as Apple does with Apple Music. The article says all this is part of the tech giant’s goal to reach $50 billion in service sales by 2020.
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Bloomberg says that Apple’s initial slate of shows will include “The Morning Show,” Steven Spielberg’s “Amazing Stories,” “See” with Jason Momoa, “Truth Be Told” with Octavia Spencer, and a documentary series about extravagant houses called “Home.”
The Sellers Research Group (that’s me) thinks that $9.99 per month with only five shows on tap isn’t going to attract a lot of folks. Especially with Disney’s upcoming streaming service to cost $6.99 per month and offer the entire Disney/Marvel/Star Wars library.
Either Apple has something in the works that pundits are unaware of or else it should consider a) reducing the price of Apple TV+, b) offering an attractive bundle for it, Apple Music, Apple Newsroom, and Apple Arcade, or c) keeping Apple TV+ free until the content library is bigger.
By the way, The Financial Times reported yesterday that Apple has set aside $6 billion for original shows and movies.