Warner Bros Discovery Relaunches HBO Max Streamer as ‘Max’ in Bid for Broader Audience 

Jeremy Strong arrives at the HBO and HBO Max Post Emmys Reception on Sept. 12, 2022, in West Hollywood, Calif. Strong plays Kendall Roy in the HBO television series “Succession.” (AP)
Jeremy Strong arrives at the HBO and HBO Max Post Emmys Reception on Sept. 12, 2022, in West Hollywood, Calif. Strong plays Kendall Roy in the HBO television series “Succession.” (AP)
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Warner Bros Discovery Relaunches HBO Max Streamer as ‘Max’ in Bid for Broader Audience 

Jeremy Strong arrives at the HBO and HBO Max Post Emmys Reception on Sept. 12, 2022, in West Hollywood, Calif. Strong plays Kendall Roy in the HBO television series “Succession.” (AP)
Jeremy Strong arrives at the HBO and HBO Max Post Emmys Reception on Sept. 12, 2022, in West Hollywood, Calif. Strong plays Kendall Roy in the HBO television series “Succession.” (AP)

When the HBO Max streaming service relaunches on Tuesday as "Max," Warner Bros Discovery Inc will learn whether mixing critically acclaimed dramas with reality fare that some might describe as a "guilty pleasure" will attract more subscribers.

"Max" will bring together HBO’s high-end scripted programming like "Succession" and Warner Bros films with Discovery’s food, home and lifestyle content, including "Fixer Upper: Welcome Home," in a bid to broaden the appeal of the original HBO Max service, as well as reduce the number of people canceling the service each month. It also plans to expand the portfolio of children's content.

Warner Bros Discovery first announced the planned changes on April 12.

The media company forged by the 2022 union of WarnerMedia and Discovery is betting that the addition of Discovery content will help retain viewers who typically sign up for HBO Max to watch a season of their favorite show – and then cancel after the finale.

It is a formula that proved successful for the Discovery+ service in Poland and the Nordic countries.

"In markets where we had scripted entertainment and nonfiction sitting together, we know the proposition works," said JB Perrette, Warner Bros Discovery’s president and chief executive of global streaming, adding that despite the common perception of HBO viewers "as only living in an ivory tower of HBO, the reality is we all have guilty pleasures."

Max also will seek to mine the media company's rich trove of entertainment franchises, with a forthcoming "Harry Potter" series, a "Game of Thrones" prequel and the DC Comics-inspired "The Penguin," starring Colin Farrell. Perrette said the company also is thinking about how to incorporate sports in its streaming offering.

In its first-quarter results announced earlier this month, Warner Bros Discovery said its streaming unit, which includes the HBO Max and Discovery+ services, posted adjusted pretax earnings of $50 million, compared with a loss of $227 million a year earlier. It gained 1.6 million subscribers.

"Our US streaming business is no longer a bleeder," CEO David Zaslav said on a post-earnings call.

That marked a milestone for a division that had been losing money in its bid to gain subscribers and a foothold in the industry's digital future. However, Zaslav said the churn on HBO Max was unacceptably high. Some 6.5% of HBO Max subscribers canceled the service in April, double the churn rate of rival Netflix Inc, according to the analytics firm Antenna.

Discovery+ will remain a standalone platform, though its most popular shows will also be available on Max.

Max has three tiers: an ad-supported version for $10 per month and ad-free version for $16 per month, both with the ability to stream on two devices at once; and a $20-per-month ad-free version that can be streamed on four devices at once.



Chile Technical Woes Prompt Latest Shakira Concert Postponement

Colombian singer Shakira performs at the worldwide launch of her 'Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran' tour in Bogota on February 26, 2025. STRINGER / AFP/File
Colombian singer Shakira performs at the worldwide launch of her 'Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran' tour in Bogota on February 26, 2025. STRINGER / AFP/File
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Chile Technical Woes Prompt Latest Shakira Concert Postponement

Colombian singer Shakira performs at the worldwide launch of her 'Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran' tour in Bogota on February 26, 2025. STRINGER / AFP/File
Colombian singer Shakira performs at the worldwide launch of her 'Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran' tour in Bogota on February 26, 2025. STRINGER / AFP/File

Colombian superstar Shakira has had to postpone another concert, this one set for Sunday in Chilean capital Santiago, due to "technical problems," the event's producers announced.

A statement from Fenix Entertainment posted on social media said workers had encountered problems due to the uneven ground under the stage, AFP said.

The statement said a new date for the concert would be announced shortly. Left unclear was whether a second concert in Santiago, set for Monday, would still go on.

Shakira has faced a series of setbacks since launching her first world tour in seven years.

The 48-year-old singer had to postpone an earlier concert in Colombia due to problems with the stage roof. And in Peru, she postponed a show after being hospitalized with abdominal pain.

Shakira launched the tour just days after her new album "Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran" won the Grammy Award for Best Latin Pop album.

After Chile, the tour is set to continue in Argentina, Mexico, the Dominican Republic and the United States.