This week on TechHive: The beginning of a breakdown for linear TV

Take roughly 7.5 minutes of show, add roughly 2.5 minutes of commercial, combine into 30- or 60-minute increments, repeat. For decades, TV channels have adhered to this rigit time slot formula for practically everything except live sports and breaking news.

But that’s starting to change now. A couple weeks ago, Fox announced that it would adopt a six-second ad format, beginning with its on-demand shows and eventually moving to its linear broadcast channel. And last week, AMC announced a $5 per month streaming service that will let cable subscribers watch shows like The Walking Dead at the same time as the live broadcast, but without ads

Those developments could be the beginning of a breakdown for linear TV as we know it. When commercial breaks become drastically shorter, or when a subset of viewers can watch new shows with no breaks at all, spacing every program into 30- or 60-minute time slots becomes obsolete. Read the full column on TechHive.

Weekly Rewind

PlayStation Vue price changes: On Thursday, Sony quietly eliminated all “Slim” plans from PlayStation Vue. That brings the starting price to $40 per month–$10 more than the corresponding Slim package–regardless of whether live, local channels are available in your area. Existing subscribers will get to hang onto their old plans for the next three months, according to Sony’s FAQ.

The upside is that Sony, like other streaming bundlers, has been steadily adding more live, local channels in more markets, and that’ll likely continue as networks make more deals on behalf of their affiliate stations. Still, I’m mourning the loss of what used to be an excellent option for antenna users–or at least those who didn’t mind jumping over to a separate app or input to watch those local channels.

Tough times for Disney channels: While the decline of Disney’s ESPN empire has been well-documented, the network’s channels for children are also struggling. The Wall Street Journal reports that the Disney Channel and Freeform have each shed roughly 4 million subscribers over the past few years. Ratings for Disney channels have also declined year-over-year in the first half of 2017.

The obvious culprits are streaming alternatives such as Netflix and YouTube, which offer troves of child-friendly TV without the burden of a big cable bundle. But it’s also worth noting how the fates of ESPN and Disney channels are currently intertwined. These channels are almost always packaged together, and so they both lose a viewer when someone opts for a service like Sling TV Blue (which lacks Disney-owned channels), or a sports-free skinny bundle from their internet provider. For Disney, whose young viewers translate into merchandise sales and Disney World tickets, that’s a liability.

As more sports-free streaming bundles become available, how long until Disney and ESPN channels split apart to stop the bleeding?

More Catch-Up

Save More Money

The Google Play Store is currently offering any movie rental–including new releases–for a buck. Just head to this link and click “Continue,” and you ‘ll have until October 13 to redeem the rental. You can then watch the movie on any device that supports the Google Play Movies & TV app, including Chromecast, Roku players, and Android TV devices.

Thanks for your support!

For folks in the United States–that’s most of you–I hope you had a fine July 4th. The holiday made for a slow news week, but I’ve got lots of reviews, comparisons, and guides to crank out in the weeks ahead.

If you’d like to support this newsletter, you can contribute to my Patreon (for recurring donations) and my Ko-Fi page (for one-time donations). You can also respond to this email or find me on Twitter with your questions and feedback.

Until next week,
Jared