Media Money
- My Exclusive Interview With Bob Iger
- Activision Blizzard's "Modern Warfare 2" Sales Break Records
- Disney's CFO-Theme Park Chairman Executive Swap
- What to Expect From Disney Earnings?
- Ahead of Earnings Disney Restructures Studio
- Murdoch Lashes Out At Google
- Why Google is Paying $750 Million for Ad Mob
- Modern Warfare 2's Record-Breaking Launch
- Food Network, HGTV Drive Scripps Networks' Upside Surprise
- Disney's 'Carol' Tests Widest 3-D Release Ever
RSS FEED
MOST SHARED
- U.S. May Wind Up Green With Envy
- Warren Buffett to CNBC: 'I Haven't Bought American Express In Years'
- CNBC Video: Warren Buffett & Bill Gates - Keeping American Great
- EADS Cautious on Full-Year Forecast after Earnings Dip
- Taking a Page from Obama's Asia Agenda in Investing
- Stronger Yuan Needed for Global Rebalancing: IMF Chief
- JP Morgan to Bid Over $3 Billion for Cazenove Stake
- Washington Not Trying to Contain China: Obama
- Signs of Stability, but 'We're Not All Satisfied': GM CEO
- Warren Buffett to CNBC: 'I Haven't Bought American Express In Years'
- CNBC Video: Warren Buffett & Bill Gates - Keeping American Great
- U.S. Stocks Rally for the Second Straight Week
- Dollar is Not Plunging—So 'Calm Down': Market Strategist
- Strategists Say Markets Have More Upside — But How Much?
- Hirschhorn: Risk-Averse Traders
- Roginsky: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Financial Reform
- This Year's Biggest Thanksgiving Leftover: Cash
- TV Series Inks Unique Deal For Fight
- BlackRock: Central Banks To Be Net Buyers of Gold
- Lowe's Meets Third-Quarter Profit Expectations
- Cisco Ups Tandberg Bid, Claims Over 40% Backing
- 'Significant Weakness' Still Ahead: Fed's Hoenig
- Stronger Yuan Needed for Global Rebalancing: IMF Chief
- Small U.S. Cities Lose Luster in Downturn
- Washington Not Trying to Contain China: Obama
- How Much Do You Know About Green?
- Solar Energy Emerges From a Dark Period
Correspondent
DVD sales used to be the bread and butter of the movie studios business, even more important to the bottom line than box office receipts. But thanks to shifting consumer patterns and the recession, home video sales are stuck in the kind of decline that's making studio chiefs think about reinventing the business model.
![]() |
Now some new data reveals just how bad the home video business is: DVD sales fell 13.5 percent in the first half of the year according to Digital Entertainment Group.
It's not that piracy has replaced DVD sales — broadband capacity is still too limited for that — but people are opting to rent rather than buy.
Here's the good news:
Movie rental revenue grew 8 percent in the first two quarters, which helps Netflix [NFLX
Loading...
()
], Blockbuster [BBI
Loading...
()
] and Redbox.
This makes sense: Americans are consuming more entertainment, staying home and avoiding shopping and travel, but they don't feel compelled to add more DVDs to their library.
Blu-Ray sales rose 91 percent in the first two quarters, but that business is still very niche, just $408 million. Unlike the transition from VHS to Blu-Ray, we're not going to see the same kind of purchasing.
Why not?
The answer is that DVDs don't seem outdated, and there are plenty of digital distribution options, both legal and illegal.
On-demand movies, through cable or satellite video-on-demand or online streaming, grew 22 to $968 million.
Questions? Comments?









