Forum - View topicNEWS: Crunchyroll Gets US$750,000 Investment by TV Tokyo
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Blood-
Bargain Hunter
Posts: 24137 |
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I'm going in the opposite direction with respect to my CR subscription renewal. It's coming up in May, I think, and I'll be upgrading to premium membership because I'd like to check out some of the K-dramas. |
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britannicamoore
Posts: 2618 Location: Out. |
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Thats amazing. What was it? This time last year or the year before and most people hated what CR stood for. Now its raking in the cash. Simply amazing.
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Power2All
Posts: 2 |
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Its more like: "stupid people empower stupid people" then that it does good.
CR's attitude on forums is ridiculous, stealing ideas from others, implementing it as their own work (bullshit ofcourse, but who will stop them), and now they get a financial injection... Just wtf xD CR is no business, atleast, it is now, but it started as a hobby project sofar I know. Anyway, good luck to them I guess... |
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hissatsu01
Posts: 963 Location: NYC |
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Oh, to be a fly on the wall during the negotiation of deals like this. I for one would love to see what Crunchyroll's books look like, though nothing like that will ever happen without them going public. Because based on even the roughest of estimates, I don't see how they can do much more than break even, and that's a stretch. For the sake of comparison, iTunes is still not profitable after many years of operation, and even with huge name brand recognition and popularity. But iTunes is there to support hardware sales that are Apple's bread and butter. What does the comparatively minuscule Crunchyroll have to fall back on, not to mention the much higher bandwidth costs of streaming video. I've yet to see any evidence that this business model isn't voodoo, having more in common with late 90's internet boom stuff than anything resembling a profitable business plan.
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Dargonxtc
Posts: 4463 Location: Nc5xd7+ スターダストの海洋 |
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I wish they gave a percentage. If 750k bought a 49% minority share of Crunchy then that means the company is likely doing terrible and is desperate for the cash. If it bought 15-20% of the minority share then that would mean that Crunchy is actually "probably" doing okay for itself as far as small businesses go.
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samuelp
Industry Insider
Posts: 2246 Location: San Antonio, USA |
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Well, remember the initial capital investment from venrock was more than 4 million... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crunchyroll So unless they'd been losing money hand over fist for a year it's likely no more than 20%. |
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Dargonxtc
Posts: 4463 Location: Nc5xd7+ スターダストの海洋 |
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Actually, I wrote that with that in mind (I couldn't remember if it was 3 or 4 mil). Which is why a percentage would be an important indicator. It is really not that hard to lose money hand over fist these days. Saying simply because they got 4 million two years ago that it is probably a 20% stake is really nothing more than a guess. Hope you're right though. |
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Mr. sickVisionz
Posts: 2175 |
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Good news imo. Even back when I was heavy into fansubs, TV-Tokyo broadcasted a sizable chunk (probably around 50% or higher depending on the season) of what I was interested in and ended up watching. The more TV-Tokyo stuff the better since it's probably what I'm interested in anyways. It's great to see more JPN producers/broadcasters jumping on board the CR train.
As far as streaming sites not being profitable, one thing that drastically separates CR from places like Hulu and YouTube is that CR focuses on paid subscriptions and ad-supported streams while other sites only do the ad-supported streams. |
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TsukasaElkKite
Posts: 4014 |
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So, CrunchyRoll started out as a pirate site, but decided to do a heel face turn and go good. In addition, they ask for money for it. That sounds fishy as hell.
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hissatsu01
Posts: 963 Location: NYC |
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And iTunes is what? Aside from not profitable. |
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Spotlesseden
Posts: 3514 Location: earth |
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i think CR is making money. Unlike other stream, CR has income from subscription fee too. $750k probably doesn't give TV tokyo that much of the stake.
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Tiamats Reviews
Posts: 12 |
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Try getting money OUT of CR though.
I was one of the first to sign up for CR premium when it was announced, only to find that almost all of the anime was barred for my country. I complained and wanted a refund, since there was nothing to indicate whether i could watch the shows or not. In the end i had to recover my money through a paypal dispute, and CR didn't even respond to that. PayPal gave up waiting for them and instead refunded my cash. Even now when you sign there's no indication as to whether the country your signing up from is able to view the series. It should state whether you can or can not. As for it being successful, not really. It's subs are still pretty pathetic, i've seen speed subs that were better. And BostTV kicked CR's arse when it came to alround quality. Shame the Japanese companies didn't join up with BostTV. CR will never do more than break even, no other site that has tried the format (and no CR arent the first) has lasted more than a few years. Frankly when they die a death i'll dance a jig and throw a party to the demise of trash |
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Mohawk52
Posts: 8202 Location: England, UK |
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Real life is stranger than fiction. Stand and deliver!
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bayoab
Posts: 831 |
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But it seems nobody really knows what is going on inside these internet based companies. |
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TJR
Posts: 223 |
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CR was a capitalist venture from the start. "Shinji" and his "hobby" was nothing more than a facade to lure in the kiddies, and it worked. The founders were top execs at Hot or Not (another capitalist venture that hit it big - the founder/owner of Hot or Not is also an investor in CrunchyRoll), and as you might guess, they aren't personally interested in anime. Rather, they recognized its potential (i.e. via the proliferation of torrent/streaming sites, blogs, and forums) as another social phenomenon that could attract big time interest from outside investors. |
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