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CNN+ Is Shutting Down

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CNN+ Is Shutting Down

CNN+ is shutting down just three weeks after the cable network launched the failing streaming service, it is being reported.

According to Variety, CNN’s newly installed CEO; Chris Licht, circulated a memo to staffers on Thursday announcing an “important meeting” scheduled for noon Eastern time.

The network made it official with an announcement shortly afterward.

CNN+ Is Shutting Down

Licht was expected to inform staffers that the fledgling streaming service would be discontinued.

Andrew Morse, CNN’s executive vice president whose portfolio includes oversight of CNN+, has already been told of the decision, according to Variety.

Prior to Thursday’s decision, the future of CNN+ was in doubt as new corporate parent Warner Bros. Discovery was looking to cut costs and reorganize the company.

Warner Bros. Discovery, which formed last week out of the merger between Discovery and WarnerMedia, is in the process of shoring up at least $3 billion in cost savings in 2023.

As part of its review of CNN+, which has roughly 150,000 subscribers, WBD is suspending all external marketing spend, according to a report from Axios titled “CNN+ looks doomed.”

The publication said CNN’s original plan to become profitable in four years by investing $1 billion in the service is being “knee-capped,” citing plans to eliminate high-level positions across WarnerMedia.

This includes potentially replacing Chris Cuomo’s 9 pm ET primetime slot with a “live newscast, instead of personality-driven perspective programming.”

A result for WBD declined to comment.

Cuomo was fired from CNN in February after being suspended for advising his brother, then-New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, how to dodge his own sexual harassment allegations. The anchor sued CNN for $125 million, calling his termination “the epitome of hypocrisy.”

Cuomo also claimed that CNN’s habit of making “exceptions” to its rules “began at the top” with former CNN president Jeff Zucker and former chief marketing officer Allison Gollust, who both resigned under pressure last month for failing to disclose their affair.

Zucker was replaced with Licht, an executive producer with stints at CBS’s “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, “CBS This Morning” and MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”

Aside from general cost-cutting, WBD CEO David Zaslav has been vocal about combining its various streaming services in one place and building it around HBO Max, source told The Post.

Under previous ownership, CNN+ execs were hoping to attract 2 million subscribers in the first year and 15 million to 18 million over four years, Axios said.

Roughly $300 million has been spent and hundreds of jobs have been created to support the streaming service to date.

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