Disney Streaming Hits Back Against Federal Shutdown

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A split-screen image showing two streaming platforms. Mickey Mouse sits crying in between.

Credit: Inside the Magic

Disney is not going to let a federal injunction shut down its dream of cornering the streaming sports market.

The image shows a dark blue background with the text "VENU" in bold, orange letters, and the word "SPORTS" in white, uppercase letters below it. It evokes the sleek branding of a Disney streaming service.
Credit: Venu Sports

Almost exactly a month ago, the planned launch of Venu Sports, the massive new streaming platform that promised to combine the sports networks of The Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Fox, was shut down over potential antitrust issues.

U.S. District Judge Margaret Garnett granted FuboTV, a rival sports streaming platform, a preliminary injunction against the new joint venture, stating, “Once [Venu Sports] launches, [Disney, Warner, and Fox] have no reason to take actions that could allow for the emergence of direct competitors.

Related: Disney+ Announces Hundreds of New Titles Set To Join Streaming Service

Unsurprisingly, the fallout from that decision has been intense. It directly led to the collapse of negotiations between Disney and DirecTV; the latter claimed that the Mouse House was insisting that the pay-TV company waive legal rights over potential monopolistic practices for the privilege of carrying the Disney Channel and ESPN.

Split background featuring ESPN's Monday Night Football logo on the left with the NFL shield, and the Disney Channel logo on the right. In the foreground, Mickey Mouse is seen gesturing towards the Disney Channel side.
Credit: Inside the Magic

Although the two companies have since come to a new agreement, it is telling that Judge Garnett’s decision rattled Disney so much that it is already making plans to ensure that no partner companies can argue with it.

Now, Venu Sports has formally filed an appeal in the Second Circuit against the preliminary injunction, asking that it be reversed and, essentially, Disney, Warner Bros., and Fox be allowed to do whatever they want (per Deadline).

The filing boldly claims that three of the largest media companies banding together to corner a streaming niche is actually the most competitive thing that can happen for the marketplace, saying, “The ruling denies consumers a new, lower-cost, innovative product—so as to protect Fubo from increased competition. That is the opposite of what the antitrust laws seek to achieve.”

Related: Disney Pushes for More Potentially Anticompetitive Streaming Deals, Report

The image shows the "ESPN Monday Night Football" logo with the NFL shield, set against a backdrop of a digitally-rendered Walt Disney castle and the words "Walt Disney Studios" at the bottom.
Credit: Inside the Magic

Moreover, the filing claims that Venu Sports cannot be anti-competitive because consumers can get all of the content elsewhere; that seems to imply that there’s no actual purpose to the streaming service, but that’s not really the question at hand. The filing states:

“Venu would have no exclusive content; every network available on Venu would remain available to consumers via other MVPDs. Venu also would lack many widely viewed sports and non-sports networks. For example, it would not carry CBS, NBC, CNN, Fox News and many others. Venu would provide an additional, lower-cost option by offering a subset of the networks MVPDs typically carry at a lower price. Thus, Venu’s entry would increase output and lower prices. Fubo (a competitor) might not like that, but consumers would, and consumers are the appropriate focus of antitrust law.”

The appeal is currently pending, but whichever way it goes, this will have a huge impact on sports fans and the streaming wars.

Would you sign up for Venu Sports if it’s available? 

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