Product Profile: Disney+
INDUSTRY
entertainment
Category
video streaming services
product Profiled
Disney+ video streaming service
H-Score
25
ranked 15th of 20 within the entertainment industry
ranked 69th of 76 overall
product description
Disney’s video streaming service, Disney+, allows subscribers to watch video content on a variety of devices (including televisions, computers, tablets and smartphones) on a 24/7 basis. Use of the service is unlimited and charged at a flat rate. Disney+ has a basic, ad-supported option and a premium, ad-free option.
Disney+ offers more than 1,300 movies and more than 500 television shows.(1) Disney+ had approximately 46 million subscribers in the US and Canada as of April 2023.(2)
product use
Most people use the product by sitting, for sustained periods of time, and watching content on a screen. Most users watch the service indoors most of the time and use the service sometimes alone and sometimes with friends or family. While using the service, the service consumes most, if not all, of the user’s attention. Disney+ is one of several competing video streaming services and most users who watch programming on Disney+ also spend time watching other services as well.
who’s affected
Disney+’s audience skews young: 45% of viewers have been estimated to be children between 2 and 17. Another 23% are 18-34; 23% are 35-54 and 9% are 55 and over. Sixty-nine (69) percent of Disney+’s audience has been estimated to be White; 17% is Hispanic; 10% is Black and 2% is Asian.(3)
influence on health-related behaviors
EATING
slight to moderate negative influence
Television viewers frequently eat while watching TV and the foods they eat tend to be less healthy than foods consumed at meal times. Watching TV multiple hours a day has been linked to unhealthy dietary behaviors, and increased outcomes of diet-related diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease.(4,5)
People tend to eat more mindlessly while watching TV because they’re distracted: food is less satisfying, and you miss cues that you’ve eaten enough.(6)
In Building H’s consumer research 64% of video streaming users (not specific to Disney+) reported eating at least one meal per week and 59% of users reported snacking sometimes, usually or always, while watching streamed content. 37% of users who streamed more than 4 hours per day reported eating more than one meal per day and 49% of those users reported snacking usually or always, while watching.(7)
Some association between diet and television watching has been attributed to the presence of advertisements for unhealthy foods.(8,9)
Disney+ does offer a version of its service with advertisements, but we do not have information on the content of those advertisements to determine if unhealthy foods are being featured.
PHYSICAL ACTVITY
moderate negative influence
Television watching is typically a sedentary activity, thus time spent watching television limits opportunities for physical activity. In addition, television viewing is an especially sedentary behavior, having a lower metabolic rate than other sedentary activities.(10) While a moderate amount of television watching would leave time for more active pursuits, Americans on average spend approximately five hours per day watching TV.(11)
Disney+’s implementation of streaming video uses features that encourage greater use of the service; the flat subscription rate sets no maximum limit on viewing; and, when enabled, the autoplay feature automatically plays next episodes, thus encouraging binge-watching. Disney+ does have one of the less aggressive autoplay implementations: new episodes play a minimum of 15 seconds after the end of the previous episode, and often after the rolling of credits.(12) Autoplay is enabled by default for adults, who can disable it in settings, but is not enabled for children (it can be enabled for them in settings). It’s not clear how many users are aware of the option to disable autoplay or how many exercise it.
- Shift away from encouraging binge-watching:
- eliminate the autoplaying of next episodes or at least eliminate autoplay for children’s programming
- make autoplay opt-in rather than opt-out
Sleeping
slight to moderate negative influence
Late-night television viewing negatively affects sleep in two ways: 1) by offering a competitive alternative to sleep; and 2) through the bright, blue spectrum light of the screens that has been shown to suppress the production of melatonin, a hormone that signals the onset of the sleep cycle.(13)
Building H’s consumer research found that 55% of video streaming users (not specific to Disney+) reported that watching TV or movies caused them to lose some sleep at least once a week on average, with 37% reporting that they got less sleep for this reason two or more times a week. Fifteen (15) percent reported their sleep being affected four or more nights a week.(14)
Disney+ encourages binge-watching (which can compete with sleep) through the use of autoplay.
Disney+ enables parents to set a bedtime for children, which has the effect of displaying a warning on the screen at the designated time, but it does not otherwise limit usage at bedtime.(15) Adults do not have the option of specifying a bedtime.
Disney+ might also influence sleep indirectly through its influences on physical activity and time spent outdoors, as both of those behaviors are positively correlated with better sleep.
- Enable users to set a bedtime mode, as with iOS and Android, such that they can specify the hours when they hope to go to sleep and then respect those hours by making the user choose affirmatively to watch new episodes after the set bedtime.
- Adapt recommendation algorithms to promote less intense programming in the hour prior to the user’s set bedtime.
Engaging Socially
neutral influence
Television watching can be either a solo or a social activity. Building H’s consumer research found that 36% of streaming users (not specific to Disney+) reported watching with others at least 75% of the time, 27% reported sometimes watching with others and 37% reported watching with others less than 25% of the time.(16) These results are consistent with other research that found Americans split their time evenly between watching alone or watching with others.(17)
Watching television alone clearly competes with social activity, but watching with significant others, family and friends may enhance opportunities for engagement.
Disney+ offers a social viewing feature called GroupWatch.(18) With GroupWatch, users can invite up to six other people to join them to watch a title synchronously. The feature also supports communication through emojis. We do not have information on how many people use the GroupWatch feature.
- Promote and/or make the GroupWatch feature more prominent.
- Offer guest passes for subscribers to use to watch (using GroupWatch) with non-subscribing friends.
Getting Outdoors
moderate to strong negative influence
As most viewing takes place indoors, time watching television competes with time spent outdoors.
- Shift away from encouraging binge-watching.
Notes
JustWatch. All Movies and TV Shows on Disney Plus. JustWatch website, accessed November 8, 2023.
Jennifer Maas. Disney+ Sheds 4 Million Subscribers in Second Straight Quarterly Drop, Streaming Losses Narrow by 26%. Variety. May 10, 2023.
Sean Nyberg. Report: Age and Racial Demographics Of Disney+ and Hulu Users Compared To All Streamers. The DisInsider, August 22, 2021.
Georgina Cairns et al. Systematic reviews of the evidence on the nature, extent and effects of food marketing to children. A retrospective summary. Appetite. Volume 62, (March 2013), pp. 209-215.
Ahmad Alghadir et al. Television Watching, Diet and Body Mass Index of School Children in Saudi Arabia. Pediatrics International. Volume 58, Issue 4 (April 2016), pp. 290-294.
Janna Smith and Tanya Ditschun. Controlling satiety: how environmental factors influence food intake. Trends in Food Science & Psychology. Volume 20, Issues 6–7 (July 2009) pp. 271-277.
Steve Downs. A Survey of Modern Life: Food; Delivery Apps, Meal Kits, Groceries and Cooking Dinner. Building H on Medium. January 20, 2022
J.L. Harris et al. Priming effects of television food advertising on eating behavior. Health Psychology. Volume 28, Issue 4 (2009), pp. 404–413.
Cairns et al. (2013)
Barbara Ainsworth et al. Compendium of Physical Activities: Classification of Energy Costs of Human Physical Activities. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. Volume 25, Issue 1 (January 1993), pp. 71-80.
The Nielsen Company. Connectivity is driving how Americans are engaging with TV. Nielsen website, accessed June 22, 2023.
Building H user testing, November 2023.
Matthew Walker. Why We Sleep. Scribner (2018), pp. 267-270.
Steve Downs. A Survey of Modern Life: Sleep; New Data on American Sleeping Patterns. Building H on Medium. May 25, 2021
Rebekah Pierce. The Ultimate Guide to Disney Plus Parental Controls. FindmykidsBlog. April 26, 2023.
Carlo Martinez. A Survey of Modern Life: Entertainment. Building H on Medium. May 4, 2021
When You Watch, Are You Alone? Radio & Television Business Report. January 15, 2019
Disney Plus Group Watch. Disney+ website, accessed December 8, 2023.