Lost, Desperate Housewives, Commander in Chief and Alias are the four series the Disney-ABC TV Group has chosen to stream for free online. Full-length recent episodes of Lost, Desperate and Commander, along with the entire present season of Alias, will be available at ABC.com as part of a two-month experiment the group is taking on.
News has trickled out about Disney-ABC’s intention to stream free, ad-supported episodes online in the past weeks. Executives have spoken of a project called “My ABC,” which was later confirmed by B&C to be the group’s internal name for the streaming project. The goal is to see whether viewers take to watching shows in this manner. Disney-ABC has already been aggressive with the pay-to-download model, supplying episodes of many of its shows to iTunes and wants to see whether other viewing models work as well or better.
Advertisers participating in the trial include AT&T, Cingular, Ford, Procter & Gamble, Toyota, Unilever’s Suave, Universal Pictures and Walt Disney Pictures, and others. Viewers will get to watch the episodes for free, but will be forced to pause for a few ads per episode, likely in unorthodox formats, like advertiser-sponsored online games. Albert Cheng, executive VP of digital media for the Disney-ABC Television Group, told B&C the challenge is to put content out there while keeping it close.
“When you get to a world where digital media's gatekeepers have gone away and consumers can access content any which way they want,” he says, “branding becomes all the more important.”
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6323427.html?display=Breaking+News
News has trickled out about Disney-ABC’s intention to stream free, ad-supported episodes online in the past weeks. Executives have spoken of a project called “My ABC,” which was later confirmed by B&C to be the group’s internal name for the streaming project. The goal is to see whether viewers take to watching shows in this manner. Disney-ABC has already been aggressive with the pay-to-download model, supplying episodes of many of its shows to iTunes and wants to see whether other viewing models work as well or better.
Advertisers participating in the trial include AT&T, Cingular, Ford, Procter & Gamble, Toyota, Unilever’s Suave, Universal Pictures and Walt Disney Pictures, and others. Viewers will get to watch the episodes for free, but will be forced to pause for a few ads per episode, likely in unorthodox formats, like advertiser-sponsored online games. Albert Cheng, executive VP of digital media for the Disney-ABC Television Group, told B&C the challenge is to put content out there while keeping it close.
“When you get to a world where digital media's gatekeepers have gone away and consumers can access content any which way they want,” he says, “branding becomes all the more important.”
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6323427.html?display=Breaking+News