Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

CNN+ will shut down April 30 after just one month

Nuclear weapons experts have a phrase: “Bouncing the rubble.” It’s what happens when you use more firepower than what’s needed to actually kill a thing. At some point, you’re just blowing up things that already have been blown up. And that’s where we’re at just minutes after Variety broke the news that already was pretty likely — CNN+ is being killed after about a month of life. The New York Times reported that the end date is set for April 30.

CNN’s Brian Stelter and Oliver Darcy confirmed the news in a story … on CNN.

Recommended Videos

The service officially launched on March 29 (after soft-launching a day earlier) for $6 a month. Actually, it didn’t even cost that much yet, as new subscribers were still within a 50-percent-off window that wasn’t set to end until April 26, which is just another reminder of how quickly it’s come and gone.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The CNN story said that customers “will receive prorated refunds of subscription fees.”

Series of screenshots of CNN Plus on an iPhone.
CNN+ / Digital Trends

CNN+, if we’re all being honest with ourselves, likely was doomed from the start. While CNN (the network) paved the way for cable TV news (for better or worse), a dedicated streaming play was never put in a position to succeed, for any number of reasons. Start with the oversaturation of news in the first place. Twenty-four hours of content already is too much space to fill in any real coherent manner, leaving us in the mess we’re in today. So getting folks to pay for even more news (or “news,” even) was always going to be a tough sell. (Though the cult of Fox Nation may disagree.)

Then there is/was the content itself. The problem isn’t/wasn’t with the star talent — CNN+ has/had plenty. (We’ll stop with the tense shifting now, but you get the idea.) Brian Stelter. Anderson Cooper. Sara Sidner. Wolf Blitzer. Poppy Harlow. Christiane Amanpour. Sanjay Gupta. All familiar faces on CNN, and you’d be able to pay for even more of them on the streaming side of things. But did you really need a book club from Tapper? Or parenting tips from Cooper? Or, more to the point, did you really need to pay for that sort of thing?

The more interesting question on this front is with the new talent. Chris Wallace finally had enough of Fox News and hung it up there. But he’s still a stellar journalist by any standard, so it’ll be interesting to see if he ends up on CNN proper or just does something else. Same goes for Rex Chapman, and to maybe a lesser extent Scott Galloway, whose No Mercy, No Malice show, while good, really was just an extension of all his other shows on other platforms.

And all of this really comes down to the business side of things. CNN+ was launched while still under the WarnerMedia umbrella, which until April 8 — not even two weeks into the life of CNN+ — had been owned by AT&T. Now it’s been divested and digested and regurgitated into the new “Warner Bros. Discovery” behemoth, with new executives at the helm, on the lines, worrying about navigation, and pretty much any other part of the boat we can use to stretch that metaphor within an inch of its life.

None of this is it the fault of the folks in front of the camera, or directly behind. And who’s to say that it means the death of Interview Club, the one real interesting feature of CNN+ that allowed subscribers to submit questions to hosts and guests. Those questions would be moderated before being answered, in hopes of keeping the feature from becoming the worst parts of a Reddit AMA, but it was something that no one else was really doing on the news side, at least not in this sort of way.

Add all that up, though — and multiply it by the lack of willingness from the incoming executives — and there’s just no denying it. CNN+ had an uphill battle from the start. Where it lands at the bottom remains to be seen.

Phil Nickinson
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
New sports streaming service aimed at 60 million ‘cord-nevers’
The Fox Sports and YouTube TV logos.

While much remains to be announced, we're slowly getting a little more information on the yet-to-be-named sports streaming bundle that will combine the assets of ESPN, Fox, and Warner Bros. Discovery. (We're going to call it the "super sports streaming bundle" for now.)

Fox Corp. Executive Chairman and CEO Lachlan Murdoch spoke a bit about the new service during his company's fiscal 2024 second-quarter earnings call on Wednesday.

Read more
Max is now available to watch on YouTube Primetime Channels
Max on YouTube Primetime Channels as seen on an iPhone.

Max — the streaming service that houses all the shows and movies from the combined Warner Bros. Discovery universe — is now available to watch in full on YouTube. Or, rather, on YouTube Primetime Channels.

That's the somewhat clunky name for the scheme by which you can watch subscription services from within YouTube itself. It's exactly the same idea as what's going on with NFL Sunday Ticket. You subscribe and watch on YouTube and pay via your Google account. It's also pretty much the exact same thing as Max on Amazon Prime Channels. But unlike the Amazon options, only one flavor of Max is available on YouTube PrimeTime Channels. You'll get the full version, sans advertising, for $16 a month. (It rounds up to a little more than $18 a month after taxes.)

Read more
Max is pulling some features from its ad-free subscription
A reminder that HBO Max is becoming Max on May 23, 2023.

Legacy subscribers to any sort of digital service are correct to be a bit wary whenever changes come to a platform and they’re told that they can keep their current plan. Because you know the other shoe is going to drop at some point.

And that point is soon for early subscribers to Max’s ad-free plan, which was all you could get in the early days of the now-rebranded HBO Max. Subscribers today are getting emails that point to changes in their ad-free service. It shouldn't come as a complete surprise, though, since Max originally said the original HBO Max plans and features would be good for at least six months after Max launched. And here were are six months later, with changes taking place.

Read more