Disney Dumps Disposable DVDs

brisem

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Disney Dumps Disposable DVDs
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz (TMF Edible)
February 10, 2005

Selling DVDs coated in a destructive film that would let oxygen eat away at their viewing functionality within two to three days? Rubbish. At least that's what Disney (NYSE: DIS) seems to be saying after quietly pulling out of its test markets for the concept recently.

The retreat shouldn't have come as much of a surprise. W.D. Crotty made the right call two years ago, when he figured the concept was doomed. While I was a bit more optimistic a few months earlier, when the partnership between Disney and Flexplay was first announced, my upbeat demeanor washed away like a self-destructing disc's contents in June of 2003, when even Disney CEO Michael Eisner admitted that the concept "probably won't work."

That wasn't much of an endorsement, especially since testing was still just two months away.

While environmental groups must be happy that Disney won't be contributing to any more direct-to-landfill junk -- well, at least since last year's Home on the Range home video release -- the disc's failure wasn't just its own doing. Priced as high as $6.95, the disc was initially marketed as a convenient alternative to the typical DVD rental that the viewer would have to rush back to the store.

That market cratered with the even niftier convenience of having flicks delivered by mail. Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX) pioneered that field, but it also quickly attracted cost-cutting competition from Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) and Blockbuster (NYSE: BBI), and in all likelihood, Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN) will join the fray.

What would you rather do? Pick up some beef jerky and a dated DVD that was ticking toward obsolescence at your local convenience store? Or pay a little more than twice as much to go through as many home-delivered titles as a month would allow?

Flexplay didn't get any help on the bricks-and-mortar front, either. When Blockbuster launched its "No Late Fees" campaign last month -- even if it's deceptive on many different levels -- it ruptured the urgency of watching a flick the moment it was rented.

This doesn't mean, though, that the concept of destructible media is toast. Flexplay sold the technology to privately held Convex Group. Sound familiar? Convex is also the company behind LidRock, which places promotional music and video discs under the lids of soft drinks dispensed at movie theaters, theme parks, and fast-food chains.

Because the value proposition of discs with fruit-fly lifespans is close to nil, Convex will have to either significantly lower selling prices or attempt to make the product more attractive. It sounds like a tough job, but nothing seems too outlandish for a company that is also willing to package a hit single within your next cup of Coke (NYSE: KO).

Want to learn more about destructible DVDs?

Disney's DVD Disappointment
Eisner Reflects
The Self-Destructing DVD
Mini CDs Right Under Your Nose
Longtime Fool contributor Rick Munarriz wonders whether he could coat some of his bad market calls with the same EZ-DVD technology to make them invisible in two to three days. He does not own shares in any of the companies mentioned in this story. The Fool has a disclosure policy. He is also part of the Rule Breakers newsletter research team, seeking out tomorrow's ultimate growth stocks a day early
 

CTXRover

Well-Known Member
I always thought this was a dumb idea and I never could figure out its usefulness. They should have never even wasted their money on testing this idea. It could have been used for something much better.
 

donsullivan

Premium Member
I've never understood many of these decisions that have been made by Buena Vista Video over the last few years. They keep trying to deal with these proprietary technologies that nobody else buys into. First it was DivX and then these self destructing DVD's. The industry converges on standards for a reason, but for some reason Disney just keeps trying to go off and do their own thing. It never works, it always costs gobs of money and yet they keep doing it!
 

WifeIsDisneyCZD

New Member
Good - It Was A Really Dumb Idea From The Start!

I work in the environmental field and we have been challenging this idea since it's inception 2 years ago. I sent Disney an official letter asking them to pull this idea and they sent me a form letter in response.


With all the access to Libraries, Blockbuster, Netflex, Walmart Rentals, Cable, and Dish - You wouldn't think that there would even be much of a market for this type of thing.<O:p</O:p

My family loves Disney and this issue has always been a thorn in my side when I was spending money in WDW - I'm glad they finally saw the light!
 

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