Images: ESPN/Fox
ESPN and Fox just pulled the streaming equivalent of showing up to the group chat with matching save-the-dates.
Yesterday, ESPN revealed its flagship streaming service will go live on August 21—the exact same date that Fox is launching its new “Fox One” streaming service.
ESPN’s new direct-to-consumer offering, ESPN, whose name was apparently chosen by George Foreman (who named all of his sons George Foreman), features two plans:
Meanwhile, Fox’s $20/month Fox One service will grant viewers direct access to its Sunday NFL coverage, Saturday college football content, MLB postseason games, and all other live sports or news on its broadcast and cable TV networks.
They’re joining a crowded market. Streaming services have multiplied in recent years, with subscriptions—sometimes multiple—now required to tune-in to key matchups. Watching every NFL game this season requires six-plus subscriptions, totaling ~$800–$1,500.
Big picture: US cable operators have relied on live sports to maintain subscriptions for years, as viewer interest in other programming has plummeted. But by the end of this month, sports fans will have two fewer reasons to keep paying for cable.
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