More political or sulphurous content | Disney+ is eyeing up adults

(Paris) sextape by Pamela Anderson or the birth of punk in the United Kingdom: Disney+, king among children, sets out to conquer adults with more political or sulphurous homemade content, investing land already occupied by its rivals.

Posted at 11:10 a.m.

Carole GUIRADO
France Media Agency

Disney announced it at the end of 2020: its Disney+ online video on demand (SVOD) platform was going to work hard to win the hearts of adults on the continents where it would be established.

Because even if Disney + “has developed very, very quickly” since its launch in November 2019 in the United States, the group, which reigns in youth content, has seduced “all the consumers it could with this family brand” on this primary target, particularly in North America, notes Richard Cooper, director of research at Ampere Analysis, a research firm specializing in the media.

Its subscribers could however note that Disney had moved away from the universe of Mickey with the release at the beginning of the year of Pam and Tommya series biopic around the flight of the sextape from the wedding night of American actress Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee, drummer of the rock band Mötley Crüe, whose distribution caused a scandal in the 1990s.

Canon trajectory

This first sulphurous step marks the ambition of the group, which is aiming for 230 to 260 million subscribers by 2024, to continue its successful trajectory on the streaming video on demand.

In just over two years, Disney+ has climbed into the top three worldwide with nearly 130 million subscribers in around 60 countries behind Amazon Prime video (more than 175 million in more than 200 countries and territories) and the Netflix pioneer (nearly 222 million subscribers in more than 190 countries).

And this thanks to a gigantic catalog of content, composed among other things of the Star Wars, Pixar or Marvel universes, but also from other studios (FX, National Geographic, 20th Century Fox), consequence of the acquisition by Disney in early 2019 of a much of 21st Century Fox.

In the battle of streamingwhich is now played internationally given the saturation of the North American market, Disney is following in Netflix’s footsteps: some 340 original programs are being produced outside the United States, for broadcast within two years, including 60 series in Europe.

“Brand Activism”

On the old continent where there are more public sector broadcasters, “the volume of culturally relevant local content is quite high and easily accessible”, which has led Disney to “choose carefully” its local productions, analyzes Richard Cooper, interviewed by AFP.

Among these, the miniseries Oussekine in France, online on May 11, which retraces the broken course of Malik Oussekine, a French student of Algerian origin who died in 1986 under the blows of the police or the Italian series The ignorant angelsavailable since April, about a woman who discovers her late husband’s lover.

Series Pistoladapted by Danny Boyle (Trainspotting, slumdog millionaire) memoir of the guitarist of the British punk band Sex Pistols, will land at the end of May while in Germany Sam, a saxon will chronicle the rise and fall of East Germany’s first black policeman.

“Disney is developing an increasingly committed discourse by taking on themes that relate to inclusion and diversity” to align itself with its competitors, in particular Netflix, which is already very present on these subjects, estimates with AFP Louis Wiart, professor of communication at the Free University of Brussels.

For the researcher, this positioning stems from “brand activism” which consists of “putting forward a series of commitments to strengthen its image, but also to consolidate its link with the public”.

On its site, Disney affirms it: it works to “amplify underrepresented voices and untold stories” in the name of “accurate representation in media and entertainment”.

This “social and more liberal” ideological perspective, which appeared in the 1990s through independent heroines such as Pocahontas, Mulan or Jasmine (Aladdin), finds “a second wind” with adult content, carried by contemporary movements like MeToo or Black Lives Matter, concludes Louis Wiart.


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