CNN+ will shut down at the end of April

CNN+, the streaming service that was hyped as
one of the most significant developments in the history of CNN, will shut down
on April 30, just one month after it launched.
CNN+ customers "will receive prorated
refunds of subscription fees," the company said.
The decision was made by new management after
CNN's former parent company, WarnerMedia, merged with Discovery to form Warner
Bros. Discovery earlier this month.
The prior management team's vision for CNN+
runs counter to Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav's plan to house all of
the company's brands under one streaming service. Some CNN+ programming may
eventually live on through that service. Other programming will shift to CNN's
main television network.
"In a complex streaming market,
consumers want simplicity and an all-in service which provides a better
experience and more value than stand-alone offerings, and, for the company, a
more sustainable business model to drive our future investments in great
journalism and storytelling," Discovery's streaming boss J.B. Perrette
said in a statement.
"We have very exciting opportunities
ahead in the streaming space and CNN, one of the world's premier reputational
assets, will play an important role there," Perrette added.
Perrette and incoming CNN CEO Chris Licht
notified staffers of the decision in a meeting on Thursday afternoon. Licht
bluntly told employees it was a "uniquely shitty situation."
Hundreds of CNN+ staffers may lose their
jobs. Licht said in an internal memo that "all CNN+ employees will continue
to be paid and receive benefits for the next 90 days to explore opportunities
at CNN, CNN Digital and elsewhere in the Warner Bros. Discovery family."
Staffers who aren't absorbed elsewhere in the
company will receive a minimum of six months of severance, he added.
Licht said in a town hall style meeting with
staffers that "this was an incredibly successful launch" but simply
incompatible with the newly merged company's plans.
"It is not your fault that you had the
rug pulled out from underneath you," he said as he vowed to minimize the
impacts to staff.
During the town hall, Perrette expressed some
frustration with the "prior leadership" of CNN, which was led by Jeff
Zucker until February, and WarnerMedia, which was led by Jason Kilar until
early April.
"Some of this was avoidable," he
said, but "prior leadership decided to just keep going" with the
planned March launch of CNN+ despite the impending merger, he said.
The streaming service ended up launching just
two weeks before the WarnerMedia-Discovery merger completed, much to the
exasperation of Discovery leadership, which had a different strategy but could
not legally communicate with CNN executives before the deal was official.
The executive vice president in charge of
CNN+ and all of CNN's digital businesses, Andrew Morse, who worked closely with
Kilar and Zucker, will depart the company after a transition period.
In a note to employees, Morse described his
nine years at CNN as an "incredible ride" and said, "As the
company enters an exciting period of change, it's clear that the vision the new
leadership has for the future is different than the one we've had. That's OK.
That's all part of change."
Licht said in the town hall that he wanted
Morse to stay, but respected the decision.
Alex MacCallum, the head of product and
general manager of CNN+, will run CNN Digital and work with Licht "to
determine a leadership strategy going forward," the company said in a
press release.
The decision to shut down CNN+ just weeks
after it launched marked a stunning end to the streaming news service.
Executives had touted the application as the most significant launch since Ted
Turner founded CNN in 1980.
CNN had poured hundreds of millions of
dollars into the new streaming app and lured top talent from other networks for
it, including Kasie Hunt from NBC and Chris Wallace from Fox News.
The streaming service featured hours of daily
live programming and weekly shows.
That programming will continue to stream
through the end of the month.
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