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  • Just the other day, as part of the marketing for the soon-to-launch Disney Plus streaming

  • service, Disney released a full list of every title that will be available to stream on launch day.

  • They Tweeted every single title as well as posted a 3 hour long video teasing everything

  • the service will offer.

  • A lot of people are already starting to think about what they'll watch first, what they'll

  • re-watch for the first time in years, and what they'll check out for the first time ever.

  • It got me thinking, how long would it take to watch everything Disney Plus will have

  • to stream on day one?

  • I don't like burying answers.

  • It'll take a long time.

  • Watching every single film and television episode offered on Disney Plus on launch day

  • would take 3,931 hours, or 163.8 days.

  • If you treat that like a full time job, clocking in at nine and out at five, that would stretch

  • out to over 491 days.

  • Alright.

  • Video over.

  • Bye everyone!

  • Just kidding.

  • Let's look at some ways those numbers break down.

  • Before we do though, let me offer a preface.

  • When it comes to television, these numbers make the assumption that every episode of

  • every show listed will be on the service.

  • That might not end up being the case, due to perhaps licensing issues with episodes

  • here and there or perhaps Disney will wait a while to put new seasons of current shows

  • up there, but I wanted to mention it either way.

  • These numbers also exclude six original Disney Plus shows and two original movies, of which

  • we don't yet know the exact runtime.

  • Since Disney has announced that they'll be releasing episodes for new shows on a weekly

  • basis instead of all at once, then we can at least estimate that in total it's maybe

  • an extra nine or ten hours of day one content that isn't accounted for.

  • OK so that said, let's look at some of these numbers.

  • Splitting it up between television and film, the service is going to offer 501 movies on

  • day one and 132 television shows.

  • The movies will run a total of 757.6 hours long, or 31.5 days.

  • Just slightly over one full month.

  • As for television, those 132 shows will be comprised of 3,310 episodes, totaling 3,173.4

  • hours of content, or just over 132 days.

  • An average of one show per day seemed off to me at first, but it's ultimately because

  • there are a number of shows that were a 1-3 episode mini-series, or short-lived shows

  • that never made it past 10 episodes.

  • In any case, in terms of pure hours, television will make up the lion's share of the platform.

  • The longest film in their day one library will be the 1965 classic, The Sound of Music,

  • at two hours and fifty-four minutes long.

  • Shortest film gets a little messy because you've got made for TV films and direct-to-DVD

  • stuff, but if we're looking at theatrical releases, the 2011 Winnie the Pooh movie clocks

  • in at just 63 minutes long, which beats out the original Dumbo by one whole minute.

  • Of course for television, the longest running series is The Simpsons at 31 seasons and over

  • 664 episodes.

  • Now what I found interesting was the content distribution by decade.

  • Each following decade is longer than the previous one, which I suppose isn't that much of a shock.

  • It gets a little harder to measure though when you consider some shows, such as the

  • Simpsons which is present in four decades.

  • So if we pull that show out of the list as an outlier, because let's be honest, there's

  • nothing quite like The Simpsons, you end up with a gradual increase right up until the

  • 2010's, when it skyrockets.

  • I think that happens for a few different reasons.

  • The easy explanation is that there's just more content now then there was in the past.

  • Today we think of Disney as this international behemoth of a media company, but up until

  • the 90's that really wasn't the case.

  • They had plenty of cultural capital with Mickey Mouse and Disney classics, but in terms of

  • size, they were just a regular studio.

  • More importantly though, and this is also speculative, I think it's a reflection of

  • when the media industry began to think ahead about streaming.

  • While it's easy to assume that since Disney owns all of their content that they would

  • have no issue streaming any of it, that isn't always the case.

  • When a studio licenses a third-party song or clip for a show, they usually have to specify

  • the details of how that show will be distributed.

  • It's just a part of the business.

  • But it gets messy 20-30 years down the line when an entirely new form of distribution

  • is invented and they don't have the rights to use the song or clip in that form of distribution.

  • Older television shows sometimes ran into this issue when it came to their DVD release,

  • because they were originally produced at a time when DVDs didn't exist.

  • In some cases it meant the show couldn't be released on DVD, and in others it forced

  • the creators to actually go back and take out the music.

  • Netflix really threw video streaming into the mix in 2007, and while Disney wasn't

  • diving head first into that world right away, it was the kind of shift in media that forced

  • companies to pay attention to streaming distribution rights when they made new movies and shows.

  • So, personally, I suspect there's just more content from the 2010's with clear-cut rights

  • that make it easier to stream.

  • Whatever the reason, that skewed distribution of content doesn't change the fact that

  • it's still a lot of content.

  • Oh, and if you're wondering about the value of all that media, at $7 a month for Disney

  • Plus, you'd be paying just under one fifth of a cent per month for each hour of content

  • on the platform.

  • However if you were one of the lucky ones to get the D23 Founder's Circle promotion

  • which was three years of Disney Plus for $141, then you're only paying one-tenth of one

  • cent per hour of content per month.

  • Now, the one question I can't answer, If you are getting Disney Plus come November,

  • what are you going to be watching first?

  • Thanks for watching.

  • To offer full disclosure since I'm sure it comes off as otherwise, I was not paid

  • or compensated in any way by Disney to make this video.

  • I just have that much free time on my hands apparently.

  • Though, Disney, if you want to cut me a check I certainly won't say no.

  • Call me.

Just the other day, as part of the marketing for the soon-to-launch Disney Plus streaming

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ディズニー・プラスでエブリシングを見るにはどのくらいかかる?(発売日) (How Long Would It Take To Watch EVERYTHING on Disney Plus? (Launch Day))

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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