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Wednesday 12 June 2019 3:58 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 12 June 2019 6:08 pm

Sky puts Netflix in its sights as it doubles investment after Chernobyl success

By: James Warrington

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The growth was driven by the success of blockbuster British dramas such as Chernobyl (Image: Sky)

Sky has unveiled plans to double its investment in original programming as it looks to build on the success of hit show Chernobyl and take on streaming services such as Netflix.

The company said it has secured backing from new owner Comcast to launch Sky Studios, a new Europe-wide development and production division.

Read more: Channel 4 grows revenue as it doubles down on digital

Sky currently spends roughly £500m each year on its own programmes, but said it plans to double this investment over the next five years.

The move comes after the success of mini-series Chernobyl, which was the firm’s most successful production to date and has been ranked the most popular TV show ever on IMDB.

Sky also won two Baftas for Patrick Melrose, which starred Benedict Cumberbatch, and has gained critical acclaim for European series such as Gomorrah.

“This is a transformational development for us,” said Sky group chief executive Jeremy Darroch.

Read more

Uranium miner plots London float as father-and-son team reopen abandoned site in northern Italy

“Sky Studios will drive our vision to be the leading force in European content development and production. Our ambition is to make Sky Studios famous for quality content and a place where Europe’s top creatives will want to do their best work.”

Sky, which owns streaming service Now TV, will be hoping the investment can help it take on its larger rival Netflix.

But with the US streaming giant expected to spend $15bn on content this year, Sky remains a long way behind its deep-pocketed competitor.

“Sky could not have picked a better time to announce this, following the incredible success of Chernobyl,” said Dani Warner, broadband and TV expert at uSwitch.

Read more: Netflix raises prices by 20 per cent as it blames $15bn production budget

“In content terms, this is the first real show of muscle from new owners Comcast. Premium content both drives conversation and hype, and is popular with viewers – but it doesn’t come cheap.”

Sky Studios will be led by Gary Davey, who is currently the firm’s UK managing director of content. The new divisions will create productions for Sky channels, Comcast firms NBS and Universal, and other distribution outlets.

Read more

Sky buys ITV broadcasting arm in £1.6bn deal

Studios revenue rose three per cent to £893m, driven by an 11 per cent jump in external sales to streaming platforms.

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