From Quibi’s ashes, new short-form streamers are thriving

Four years after Quibi’s $1.75 billion crashout, its successors are flying high. 

Apps like DramaBox and ReelShort are betting on short-form. They present feature-length films, diced into consumable minutes-long bites akin to a TikTok. The more clips you want to see, the more you’ll have to pay. And it’s worked: Both apps report over $20 million in revenue from in-app purchases, and have climbed the charts above entertainment stalwarts like Hulu and Prime Video. 

The rise of the short-form streamer

In January, The New York Times asked: “Minute-Long Soap Operas Are Here. Is America Ready?” The consumer response has proven it is. Short-form apps now often rank above legacy streamers, and make tens of millions in revenue from in-app purchases. Thanks to some savvy ad placements, they just keep growing. 

At first glance, these apps look a lot like TikTok. Their clips are often around one minute long, viewed in vertical mode on your phone. To get from one clip to the next, you swipe up, replicating TikTok’s infinite scroll. But TikTok’s algorithmic feed makes multi-part content challenging. There’s no guarantee that your audience will give that profile bubble a click, finding the adjoining videos. That’s where these short-form streamers differ, making a singular feed for each film-like plot. 

At the top of the industry, ReelShort and DramaBox jostle for first place. The duo are almost exactly equal for in-app purchase revenue, each collecting a combined $28 million across iOS and Google, per Appfigures. But DramaBox crushes ReelShort in app store rankings. In the Apple App Store, DramaBox ranks 9th to ReelShort’s 15th, above Peacock and Hulu. In Google Play, DramaBox leads the market in third place, ahead of streaming juggernaut Netflix. ReelShort lags in 23rd. 

There’s something irreconcilably cheesy about these apps, making it difficult to take them seriously against the bigger streamers. After all, they traffic in short-form soaps, spitting out minute-by-minute clips of “My Secret Agent Husband” or “One Fateful Night With My Boss.” But, with shrinking attention spans and minimized interest in prestige television, maybe these apps are Hollywood’s next big product. 

The bones of Quibi

DramaBox and ReelShort aren’t the first short-form experimenters. That title belongs to Quibi, Jeffrey Katzenberg’s 2018 media experiment. Katzenberg collected $1.75 billion from investors to prop up his streamer, before dissolving in 2020 and selling off its library to Roku for less than $100 million

There are several reasons why these streamers have succeeded where Quibi couldn’t. Quibi went for prestige, pumping out shows with Anna Kendrick and LeBron James. ReelShort leans more into larger-than-life romances and thrillers. Quibi also embraced the traditional subscription model, charging $8/month with a brief free trial. Compare that to DramaBox, which offers twelve free episodes before offering a pay-per-view model, profiting on sheer human impatience. 

But these apps could also prove that Katzenberg’s idea was well-founded, if mistimed. Quibi premiered in 2018, the same year Musical.ly became TikTok. They then shuddered in 2020, right as TikTok was ascending. Nowadays, when short-form video is king and each social media company looks to build their own knockoff, the market seems more tenable. Who knows how a 2024 Quibi would perform.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91229310/from-quibis-ashes-new-short-form-streamers-are-thriving?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Létrehozva 6mo | 2024. nov. 18. 12:20:05


Jelentkezéshez jelentkezzen be

EGYÉB POSTS Ebben a csoportban

Goodbye human drivers? Waymo’s robotaxis are now fully operational

Summoning a robotaxi from your phone is not a futuristic fantasy since Waymo achieved full commercial deployment.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91325288/goodbye-human-drivers-waymos-robotaxis-a

2025. máj. 6. 8:50:02 | Fast company - tech
‘You got to be really careful what you tie your name to’: The Hawk Tuah girl is planning a rebrand

Haliey Welch, better known as the Hawk Tuah girl, is ready for a rebrand.

After being thrust into the spotlight in 2024, thanks to her now-iconic “Hawk Tuah” catchphrase—featured in a vi

2025. máj. 5. 23:30:07 | Fast company - tech
Anthropic hires a top Biden official to lead its new AI-for-social-good team (exclusive)

Anthropic is turning to a Biden administration alum to run its new Beneficial Deployments team, which is tasked with helping extend the benefits of its AI to organizations focused on social good—p

2025. máj. 5. 21:20:03 | Fast company - tech
Speed-limiting devices could be coming for reckless U.S. drivers in these states

A teenager who admitted being “addicted to speed” behind the wheel had totaled two other cars in the year before he slammed into a minivan at 112 mph (180 kph) in a Seattle suburb,

2025. máj. 5. 16:40:03 | Fast company - tech
Nvidia chips could face new tracking rules under a bipartisan bill to stop chip smuggling to China

A U.S. lawmaker plans to introduce legislation in coming weeks to verify the location of

2025. máj. 5. 16:40:02 | Fast company - tech
Meta’s AI social feed is a privacy disaster waiting to happen

Since ChatGPT sparked the generative AI revolution in November 2022, interacting with AI has felt like using a digital confession booth—private, intimate, and shielded from public view (unless you

2025. máj. 5. 14:20:05 | Fast company - tech