EnTech Fest Panel: Passionate Audience Key to DTC Services Fandango and Angel Studios

Building a passionate audience is the key objective at direct-to-consumer services Angel Studios and Fandango, executives said Feb. 25 during DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group’s EnTech Fest conference at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles.

“We want audiences to care,” said Thomas Hughes, EVP, head of distribution strategy and global partnerships at Angel Studios. “That’s our difference, is to bring audiences in and have them invest in what we do.”

Angel, which he noted has 2.1 million members, is based on a unique model where members vote on films greenlighted and, for a monthly fee (from $12 to $20), are offered tickets to its theatrical movies and access to its a streaming service.

“Nobody [in the executive suite] decides what gets made at Angel; the audience decides,” Hughes said. “Every film, even a licensed film. These days we have licensed films with partners like Lionsgate on our platform, and those films — even if it’s been out for 15 years — they go in front of our audience and the audience chooses whether or not we put our name on it.”

Cameron Douglas, who is SVP of OTT/Streaming for Fandango and heads the company’s transactional (digital sale and rental) streaming service Fandango at Home, agreed that, as at Angel, the audience connection at Fandango is all important.

“We both address very passionate audiences, just in a very different way,” he said.

“I think what’s happening now is the ultimate goal of Fandango being synonymous with fandom. Whether you’re seeing something in the theater or at home — then Fandango will be able to support you,” he added.

Fandango was recently spun off from Comcast under the Versant Media Group monicker.

Cameron Douglas

“[Versant] is managed under four pillars. Political news and opinion. Business news and personal finance. Golf and sports participation. And then sports and genre entertainment and that’s where Fandango is part of that portfolio,” Douglas said. “Now each of those have very passionate audiences. … But Fandango I’d say has the most traditional passionate fan base. That could be the guy who always wants to see opening weekend premium movies coming out at the theater. That could be the person that wants to collect the next superhero movie on Fandango at Home when it comes out, and they’d be willing to pay $20 for that. That is the dad that just wants to have a family night with his kids and go out to the theater. He actually organizes that and buys the tickets through Fandango. That is the fandom that we are talking about, and that’s what we’re leaning into going forward.”

That isn’t to say each of the services works alone.

“With the help of partners like Fandango at Home we distribute well beyond our own platform,” Hughes said. “But we don’t make movies. We don’t develop movies. People bring us movies and series that either go into theaters if it’s a movie or on our platform if it’s a series, and then we do full distribution downstream. We are licensing to third parties, to SVOD platforms in many instances, and again working with transactional partners like Fandango at Home to unlock other revenue streams for these filmmakers. We do it a little bit differently in that we don’t take a distribution fee. … We only participate in the profitability when it becomes profitable.”

Douglas agreed that partnerships are key.

“We identify organizations like Angel Studios that are willing and interested in working with us both with theatrical and at Home entertainment that we’ve built where they can lean into the power of what we can do to market their films,” he said.

At Fandango, the new spin-off company also offers new opportunities, buttressed by the existing flat, but stable, transactional digital entertainment business, Douglas said.

“If we’re looking at who we serve now, we own the transactional customer,” he said. “We have this great ticketing business. We have 41 million addressable consumers every month. We have hundreds of millions of hours consumed on Fandango at Home every year. … Basically that is our current audience.”

The cable channels that came along with Versant also offer new opportunities in the Fandango at Home DTC ad-supported marketplace.

“It is well known that the cable audience is declining and there is a passion for what that traditionally has been, which is an ad-supported business, to go into streaming and digital,” Douglas said. “We’ve always had a nascent AVOD and FAST component at Fandango at Home, post Vudu, but we haven’t invested in it.”

The new, smaller organization at Versant “allows us to focus and make investment in relaunching essentially later this year our FAST business” with these cable assets’ content, including reality and true crime content.

“What actually came along with the spinoff is Versant now has a vast library of originals produced by E! and Syfy and Oxygen, etc. — a lot of reality, a lot of true crime,” he noted. “And true crime is huge in AVOD.”

That kind of ad-supported programming has growth potential, he noted.

“That is really the growing part of the business because the transactional part of our business, which we are very successful at, is a mature market,” Douglas said, noting that Fandango has added PPV and cable TVOD capabilities that also allow it to enter the live streaming market.

Still, attracting and keeping a passionate viewer is the top challenge, both said.

“[The key is] finding customers and keeping them,” Hughes said. “We believe a number of our members believe in us causally, but at the end of the day people want to be entertained, and there has to be enough entertainment value there to extract their money on a month in month out basis. That’s the challenge.”

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Sights From DEG’s EnTechFest 2026

DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group held its fifth annual EnTech Fest at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles Feb. 25. The one-day event featured keynotes by Cineverse CEO Chris McGurk, Netflix ad chief Amy Reinhard, and Kartel CEO Kevin Reilly; exhibits, panel discussions, case studies and fireside chats; and the DEG’s signature annual reception. Conference topics included emerging technologies, the consumer experience, immersive storytelling, artificial intelligence and advanced content delivery. Launched in 2022, EnTech has become a key event on the digital entertainment world’s annual calendar. (All photos by Media Play News staff)

DEG’s EnTech Fest & Summer Symposium 2025

DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group held its fourth annual EnTech Fest at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles on June 3. The one-day event, combined this year with the digital entertainment trade group’s Summer Symposium, included exhibits, conference sessions, and an annual reception that one attendee said “is the best networking opportunity we have each year.” Conference topics included emerging technologies, the consumer experience, immersive storytelling, artificial intelligence and advanced content delivery. Launched in 2022, EnTech has become one of the most popular events in the digital entertainment world, drawing hundreds of attendees from the top studios, streamers, research houses and technology companies. (All photos by Media Play News staff) 

Google to Open EnTech Fest By Exploring Edge of XR, AI Tech in Filmmaking

DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group’s EnTech Fest & Summer Symposium will kick off June 3 with a deep dive into Google’s work with innovative filmmakers, including Darren Aronofsky and Doug Liman.

The objective: To foster the adoption of practical and responsible XR and AI tools and open up new consumer experiences.

DEG chair Jonathan Zepp, leader of global partnerships for Emerging Content, XR and TV Platforms at Google, will lead the day’s first keynote discussion, “Exploring the Edge of XR & AI Technology in Filmmaking With Google.” Participants include Google’s Tom Hume, director of product management for Google’s DeepMind; Katherine Erdman, product manager for Android XR; and Jed Weintrob, president of 30 Ninjas, an award-winning immersive story studio he co-founded with feature film director Doug Liman and Julina Tatlock. 

The studio’s marquee project for 2025 is “Asteroid,” an XR app featuring an original 180-degree immersive short film directed by Liman and co-produced with Google’s Android XR team. 

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The panel will examine AI’s role in storytelling through examples, including “Asteroid,” and Google’s recently announced partnership with Primordial Soup, a new venture dedicated to storytelling innovation founded by Aronofsky.

Primordial Soup is producing three short films using Google DeepMind’s state-of-the-art generative AI models, tools and capabilities, including Veo. Each film will be helmed by an emerging filmmaker, who will be mentored by Aronofsky and supported by Google DeepMind’s research team.

The one-day EnTech event includes exhibits, conference programming, and DEG’s annual industry reception.

Focus exhibit categories include Emerging Technology, Consumer Experience, Immersive Storytelling, Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Content Delivery.

Admission to EnTech Fest 2025 is free for DEG members. Non-members can attend for $695. Register here.

 

DEG Announces Speaker Lineup for 2025 EnTech Fest

DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group has announced that speakers from Amazon Web Services, Disney/Marvel, LG Electronics, NBCUniversal, Micosoft and Google, among other companies, will be attending its EnTech Fest 2025, taking place at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles. (Update: originally scheduled for Feb. 5, the event was moved to June 3 due to the L.A. wildfires.)

Among those scheduled to speak are AWS’s Ian McPherson, Google’s Jonathan Zepp, Bango’s Luisa Muneratti, Blu Digital Group’s Silviu Epure, Circana’s John Buffone, CivicScience’s John Dick, Disney/Marvel’s Barbara Ford Grant, LG Electronics’ Matt Durgin, Iyuno’s Chris Carey, Lionsgate’s Gray Ainsworth, Microsoft’s Pedro Gutierrez, NBCUniversal’s Evan Moore, Pixelogic’s Shana Priesz, Spherex’s Teresa Phillips, Reelgood’s David Sanderson, Stability AI’s Hanno Basse and Symphony AI’s Darren Lepke.

The one-day event includes exhibits, conference programming, and the DEG’s annual industry reception.

Focus exhibit categories include Emerging Technology, Consumer Experience, Immersive Storytelling, Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Content Delivery.

Admission to EnTech Fest 2025 is free for DEG members. Non-members can attend for $695. Register here.

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Registration Opens for DEG’s Day-Long Entech Fest 2025 Confab

DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group on Nov. 1 announced that registration for EnTech Fest 2025 is now open.

The one-day event includes exhibits, conference programming, and DEG’s annual reception.

Focus exhibit categories include Emerging Technology, Consumer Experience, Immersive Storytelling, Artificial Intelligence, and Advanced Content Delivery.

Admission to EnTech Fest 2025 is free for DEG members. Non-members can attend for $695. Use “EarlyBird25” for 25% off registration until Dec. 31.

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Fragmentation, Content Discovery Key Topics for Speakers at EnTech Fest

Fragmentation in the digital marketplace and strategies to make finding content easier were key topics for speakers at the Feb. 7 EnTech Fest in Los Angeles, presented by DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group.

During the conference, which DEG president and CEO Amy Jo Smith said drew 750 attendees, panel moderator Mark Finer of Communication Research unveiled a study conducted with Screen Engine that found nearly half of consumers want to access all of their content in one place.

LG Electronics’ Matt Durgin (left) and Communication Research’s Mark Finer on an EnTech Fest panel Feb. 7.

Smart TV home pages are a key entry point to finding content.

“The home page is where we’re impacting changes to the entertainment space, so it’s a big responsibility to manage these home pages,” said Matt Durgin of LG Electronics. That entry point often looks similar among manufacturers, he said.

“Look at everyone’s home page,” he said. “It’s FAST. It’s everyone’s service, and probably an ad.”

Still, manufacturers are trying to group content so that consumers can more easily find what they want to watch, speakers said.

For instance, Roku’s Jason Weber pointed to his company’s “Sports Zone” category, which aggregates all live and upcoming sports.

“We work with our partners to leverage metadata that they provide,” said Google TV’s Tom Gorke. Google TV’s home page surfaces “continue watching” content for the consumer, no matter where that content resides. Google TV also has a “live” tab to show available live content.

“We understand what services a user subscribes to, and we can then provide them with recommendations from those services,” he said, noting that for instance a Max title can appear right next to one from Paramount+.

Evolving personalization is “a core goal of ours,” he said.

Vizio’s Madhu Somasundaram (left) and Roku’s Vicki Liao on an EnTech Fest panel Feb. 7.

Vizio’s Madhu Somasundaram noted his company leverages automatic content recognition (ACR) data, which collects viewing data on Vizio TVs, “to see what consumers want.”

Fandango’s Cameron Douglas noted that the company’s Vudu digital transactional service has 25,000 AVOD titles, mostly independent films — part of a vast library of more the 250,000 titles.

“It’s easy for stuff to get lost,” he said. “The industry needs to get better at personalization. It amazes me how much stuff is found just through search.”

Paramount Streaming’s Will Gurman said the company links brands to boost the overall business and drive consumers to content they might like. For instance, the company used viewings of the Paramount hit show “Yellowstone” as a “hook” to drive audiences to other Westerns on Pluto TV. He said Paramount Streaming uses a mix of human curation and data to match consumers with content.

“We’re trying to lean in to hyperfocus on categories where we think audiences will cluster,” he said.

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In helping consumers find content, “we’re really trying to emulate an experience similar to a rabbit hole” using “robust machine learning,” said Tubi’s Sam Harowitz. The AVOD company — which Harowitz said sees VOD (rather than linear FAST) as the future of streaming — last year mounted a Super Bowl ad in which a comedically aggressive rabbit pushes consumers down a “rabbit hole” of content, exhorting viewers to “find rabbit holes you didn’t know you were looking for.”

As FAST channels have exploded, Roku’s Vicki Liao said, “We have become more focused on selecting channels to fill where there’s an audience or genre need.”

She added, “We’re always looking at things that can be improved with product features or even human curation.”

DEG Hosts EnTech Fest 2024

DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group held its third annual EnTech Fest at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles on Feb. 7. The one-day event, which includes exhibits, conference sessions, and the digital entertainment trade association’s annual reception, drew a record crowd. EnTech Fest is aimed at content distribution and marketing executives, platform partners, technology enablers, trend trackers, connected device and display developers, and innovators across the digital entertainment ecosystem.  (All photos by Media Play News staff) 

Panels on Indie Content and AVOD, Digital Supply Chain Slated for Feb. 7 EnTech Fest

Panels on indie content on AVOD platforms and the future of the digital supply chain are on tap at the upcoming EnTech Fest, to be presented Feb. 7 at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles by DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group.

The “Role of Indie Content on Major AVOD Platforms” panel (10:05-10:40 a.m.) will discuss programming AVOD platforms, how certain content attracts advertisers, viewership versus SVOD, licensing, collaboration between platforms and rights holders, promotion, and growth. Speakers include Sam Harowitz, VP, content acquisitions and partnerships, at Tubi; Vicki Liao, director, content acquisition, at Roku; Julie Dansker, SVP, streaming and content strategy, at Shout! Studios; Will Gurman, VP, global partnerships and content strategy, at Paramount Streaming; and Madhu Somasundaram, director of programming and operations, at Vizio.

The “10 Principles of 2030 Vision for Distribution” panel (3:45-4:30 p.m.) will discuss use cases and practical applications of the 2030 vision for digital entertainment distribution supply chain strategy and operations. Panelists will discuss the opportunities and challenges from the content owners’, distribution partners’ and service providers’ perspectives. Speakers include Eric Iverson, director of product strategy at Amazon MGM Studios; Scott Levine, senior product manager at Skywalker Sound; Greg Geier, SPV, digital media supply chain strategy and operations, at Sony Pictures Entertainment; Craig Seidel, CTO at Pixelogic; and Mark Turner, project director, production technology, at MovieLabs.

Also among the planned presentations are research sessions from Circana, Bango and Omdia and keynotes from Matt Strauss, NBCUniversal chairman, direct-to-consumer and international, and Keith LeGoy, Sony Pictures Entertainment chairman, worldwide distribution and networks.

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EnTech Fest is an event for content distribution and marketing executives, platform partners, technology enablers, trend trackers, connected device and display developers, and all innovators across the digital entertainment ecosystem, including DEG member studios and platforms. The one-day event includes exhibits, conference programming, and the DEG’s annual reception.

Focus exhibit categories include Emerging Technology, Consumer Experience, Immersive Storytelling, Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Content Delivery.

EnTech Fest 2024 is free for DEG members. Register here.

Research Presentations From Circana, Bango and Omdia Among Sessions at Feb. 7 EnTech Fest

Research sessions from Circana, Bango and Omdia are among the presentations at the upcoming EnTech Fest, presented Feb. 7 at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles by DEG: The Digital Entertainment Group.

Giles Tongue

Bango VP of marketing Giles Tongue will present “The Subscriber Strikes Back.” The presentation will explore the impact of content hubs, flexible tiered subscriptions, and the rising demand for transparent costs.

It will cover how content providers are leveraging super bundling to achieve better reach, increased acquisition and retention to remain competitive in the ever-changing media and entertainment landscape.

John Buffone

Circana VP and industry advisor John Buffone will present “Unbundling the Compete Consumer Trend.” The inflationary environment is driving pricing and product mix shifts, consumer trade-off decisions and a challenging retail environment.

This session will explore the risks and opportunities for streaming amidst consumer’s shifting $3.2 trillion retail spending.

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Sarah Henschel

Sarah Henschel, Omdia principal analyst, media and entertainment, will present “Media and Entertainment Trends Shaping 2024.” The presentation will examine key trends that will shape the global media and entertainment industry in 2024, analyzing the characteristics of each of the trends and their impacts on the market. Profitability looms on the horizon for D2C streaming services and sports, AI and bundling continue to adapt the online streaming experience.

As previously announced, Matt Strauss, NBCUniversal chairman, direct-to-consumer and international, and Keith LeGoy, Sony Pictures Entertainment chairman, worldwide distribution and networks, will keynote EnTech Fest.

EnTech Fest is an event for content distribution and marketing executives, platform partners, technology enablers, trend trackers, connected device and display developers, and all innovators across the digital entertainment ecosystem, including DEG member studios and platforms. The one-day event includes exhibits, conference programming, and the DEG’s annual reception.

Focus exhibit categories include Emerging Technology, Consumer Experience, Immersive Storytelling, Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Content Delivery.

EnTech Fest 2024 is free for DEG members. Register here.

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