Good news. One more reason killing my cable TV connection was a good choice. 

http://money.cnn.com/2013/01/14/technology/netflix-time-warner/

Netflix scores Cartoon Network, Adult Swim and more Time Warner content


Netflix has signed another streaming deal with Time Warner.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

Netflix has sweetened its streaming deal with Time Warner, the network and 
studio owner formerly reticent about selling its content to subscription 
services.

Just last week, Netflix announced it had inked a new deal with Time Warner to 
stream seasons of several series produced by Warner Bros.: "The West Wing," 
"Fringe," "Chuck," and more.

Monday brought the announcement of another contract. Netflix (NFLX) will add to 
its catalog complete previous seasons of shows from Turner Broadcasting and 
Warner Bros., both of which are owned by CNNMoney parent company Time Warner 
(TWX, Fortune 500).

Starting on March 30, U.S. Netflix customers will be able to stream Cartoon 
Network shows including "Adventure Time" and "Johnny Bravo." Adult Swim titles 
include "Robot Chicken" and "Aqua Teen Hunger Force." One Warner Bros. 
Animation show, "Green Lantern," will also become available.

The deal includes a streaming license for TNT's drama "Dallas," but that show 
won't be available until January 2014. The "Dallas" deal will be exclusive to 
Netflix. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Time Warner, like many cable content titans, was initially leery about 
licensing content to streaming services like Netflix. Instead, the company 
pushed hard on an initiative it announced with Comcast (CMCSA) in 2009: "TV 
Everywhere," an authentication system that lets users watch TV online by 
signing in with credentials proving they pay for a cable service.

While Time Warner remains a champion of TV Everywhere, it says it now thinks 
the service can live side-by-side with Netflix and other streaming 
subscriptions.

"The industry has evolved so that TV Everywhere and subscription video 
on-demand services can coexist with the appropriate windowing strategy," 
Deborah Bradley, Turner's senior vice president of program acquisitions, said 
in a written statement.

"Windowing" is the film and TV industry jargon for carefully timing -- and 
delaying -- the release of content through various viewing channels. The goal 
is to maximize revenue from the sales of hot, in-demand programming.

Meanwhile, Netflix has been working to infuse fresh content into a streaming 
catalog some users say is stale. Netflix signed a deal with Disney (DIS, 
Fortune 500) in December, but new film releases from the studio won't be 
available for another three years.

As Netflix has lost some deals, its rivals are happy to pounce. Last year 
Amazon (AMZN, Fortune 500) struck a deal to stream movies from Epix on its 
Prime Instant Video service. Epix, which previously had an exclusive content 
deal with Netflix, is a Viacom-owned company that owns the digital rights to 
many Paramount, MGM and Lionsgate (LGF) movies.                                 
                  



First Published: January 14, 2013: 1:52 PM ET


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