NEW YORK — The streaming service HBO Max will launch May 27 in the United States, AT&T’s WarnerMedia announced Tuesday, signalling that the so-called streaming wars won't subside because of the coronavirus pandemic.
WarnerMedia had earlier said HBO Max would debut sometime in May, and it stuck to those plans Tuesday even if some of its planned programming has already been postponed due to the outbreak.
In Canada, a number of original programs produced for HBO Max will be available through Crave, Bell Media's streaming platform, including an update to "Gossip Girl" and DC Comics series "Green Lantern." Last year, the companies announced a distribution pact that would put some of the HBO Max originals on the streaming service first, while others would debut on CTV, its traditional broadcast TV operations.
HBO Max will be among the most expensive streaming services in the U.S., at a price of $14.99 a month. But WarnerMedia is hoping a deep library of HBO hits, including “Game of Thrones” and “Succession"; DC Comics blockbuster movies like “Wonder Woman" and “The Dark Knight”; and hit TV shows including “Friends” and “South Park” will be enough to lure viewers who face a blizzard of streaming options.
New original programming will also be a part of HBO Max, although the much-ballyhooed “Friends” reunion special has been delayed by the pandemic.
Among the fresh offerings: “Love Life,” a scripted comedy with Anna Kendrick; the underground ballroom dance competition series “Legendary”; new “Looney Tunes Cartoons” and Sesame Workshop's “The Not Too Late Show with Elmo.”
A representative for Bell Media said those newly announced titles are "yet to be confirmed" as coming to either CTV or Crave in Canada.
WarnerMedia has said it will also steer some movies directly to HBO Max. The first will be the documentary “On the Record,” about women who have accused hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons of sexual assault and harassment. Simmons has denied the allegations. Shortly before the film’s Sundance Film Festival premiere earlier this year, former executive producer Oprah Winfrey, along with Apple TV Plus, dropped the movie.
“I'm knocked out by the breadth and depth of our new offering,” Robert Greenblatt, chairman of Warner Media Entertainment and Direct-To-Consumer, said Tuesday in a statement.
AT&T is aiming for HBO Max to reach 80 million subscribers worldwide and 50 million in the United States by 2025. (HBO currently has about 35 million subscribers.) Netflix, the streaming leader, said on Tuesday that it's reached 183 million worldwide subscriptions, up about 16 million in 2020. In about six months since its launch, Disney Plus has amassed more than 50 million subscribers, well ahead of the Walt Disney Co.'s projections.
It's unclear if the timing with help or hurt HBO Max. While viewership has surged across streaming services with so many quarantined in their homes, a record rise in unemployment will make the higher cost of HBO Max prohibitive for some.
There are more and more streaming options, including Apple TV-Plus and the recently launched bite-sized Quibi. In July, NBCUniversal will debut the Peacock, a streaming service that's planned to offer a free ad-supported option.
HBO Max will feature some 10,000 hours of programming, drawing from WarnerMedia brands including the Warner Bros. film and TV studio; Turner networks including CNN, TNT, TBS, Turner Classic Movies and Cartoon Network; and others. AT&T will hope to draw its more than 100 million mobile subscribers and leverage previous subscribers. Those who subscribe to HBO through AT&T's DirecTV, U-Verse and AT&T TV will get HBO Max for free.
In advance of the launch of HBO Max, WarnerMedia shuffled its executive roster and named former Hulu chief executive Jason Kilar CEO.
— with files from The Canadian Press
Jake Coyle, The Associated Press