"For one thing, the streamer got those 2 million subscribers only after implementing what felt like an everything-but-the-kitchen sink strategy to boost its numbers following the disastrous second-quarter stall. Consider all the actions Shell’s underlings at NBCU and Peacock took over the last few months to goose the numbers, as well as some of the other factors that helped drive sign-ups:"
"Plus, while slow or stalled growth is obviously not unique to any one streamer this year, particularly in the U.S. market — just ask Netflix — unlike most of its rivals, Peacock is starting from a very small base and is priced to move. Even at 15 million paid users, Peacock is only one-third to one-fifth the size of Hulu, Disney+, HBO Max, or Netflix, which in theory means it should have a lot of room to attract new users. And because its premium plan is priced at a modest $5 per month, there isn’t the sort of barrier to sign-up that HBO Max (cheapest plan: $10) or Netflix ($15.50 for the most popular tier) face. Shell is not wrong when he notes that Peacock has seen its paid user base grow by 70 percent so far this year, but it started at such a comparatively tiny base — 9 million subscribers — that it’s hard to get all too excited about the net addition of two million paid users within the past six months. Peacock’s rate of growth simply isn’t all that impressive."
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Read about the books Universal Studios has tried and failed to censor on Amazon.com, as well as other stuff..
And read the books at another location where Universal Studios and its stealth marketers won't be able to post negative, misleading (stealth marketed) reviews of the books via them purchasing candy and Rogaine Foam on Amazon.com (allowing them access to the book review section) and not actually buying and reading the books.
And read the books at another location where Universal Studios and its stealth marketers won't be able to post negative, misleading (stealth marketed) reviews of the books via them purchasing candy and Rogaine Foam on Amazon.com (allowing them access to the book review section) and not actually buying and reading the books.
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