Culture Chick-Fil-A Hatches Plans For Streaming Service As Reality TV Comes Home To Roost - The chicken restaurant is apparently launching a Netflix competitor.

By Peter White
August 21, 2024 11:07am

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Chick-Fil-A is moving aggressively into the entertainment space with plans to launch a slate of originals for its own streaming platform.

Deadline understands that the fast-food firm has been working with a number of major production companies, including some of the studios, to create family-friendly shows, particularly in the unscripted space. It is also in talks to license and acquire content.

We hear that this includes a family-friendly gameshow from Glassman Media, the company behind NBC’s The Wall, and Michael Sugar’s Sugar23, which is behind series such as Netflix’s 13 Reasons Why. Deadline understands this show has been handed a ten-episode order.

Budgets on the unscripted side are believed to be in the range of $400,000 per half-hour. Sources told us the idea is to launch later this year and there’s also talk of scripted projects and animation.

Brian Gibson, who has worked on series including History’s Top Gear remake and Fox’s adaptation of The X Factor, is leading the programming charge and has been in talks with various producers.

Chick-Fil-A, known for its fried chicken sandwiches, is the latest company outside of the entertainment industry to move into making its own originals. It joins the likes of Lyft, which has produced shows such as Lucky Lyft, a game show hosted by Bob The Drag Queen, and Airbnb, which previously produced documentary Gay Chorus Deep South that aired on MTV.

Chick-Fil-A, which operates over 3,000 restaurants in the U.S., has previously produced content for its own site before including Stories of Evergreen Hills, a series of short, animated films. It has also diversified into other areas such as making children’s puzzles and games under its Pennycake brand.

One source told Deadline that it was a positive move for the reality TV industry, which has been struggling in recent years, and another source added it was a good opportunity, comparing it to branded content. Chick-Fil-A declined to comment.

Source (Archive)
 
Staying privately owned lets you get weird
I don't know, the craziest diversifications were made under public companies. I guess there's still Berkshire Hathaway but that's more of an investment operation and not extensions of your core market. Acquisitions is where you make strange bedfellows, like Red Lobster, Play-Doh, and Star Wars toys (General Mills), Days Inn, Hertz auto rental, and Blizzard Entertainment (Cendant), or Sega, Paramount Pictures, and the National Casket Company (Gulf + Western).
 
Chick-Fil-A is moving aggressively into the entertainment space ... to create family-friendly shows
Wholesome media whose chief purpose *isn't* to subvert or mock White, Christian, intact families? Go on...

this includes a gameshow from Glassman Media
Careful now guys...

It joins the likes of Lyft, which has produced shows such as Lucky Lyft, a game show hosted by Bob The Drag Queen,
and Airbnb, which previously produced documentary Gay Chorus Deep South
Lmao. I guess these were family friendly too, in a "middle aged men in lingerie twerking with children" kinda way?

I can picture the Brooklyn marketing team desperately trying to reach Heartland America, but only coming up with DEI hicklib minstrel acts...
 
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