What the article doesn't tell you is whether it's a net loss of customers or made up for with new subscribers. It's just a cancellation rate minus context.
But not any one service---all of them, at different points over the year, with no accounting as to how many came back.
I contributed to that statistic. Hell, I probably skewed it high. Last year, I cancelled:
- Disney+ (grandkids moved 2,500 miles away---I got it when they premiered "Hamilton" and kept it because I figured the kids would be at our house a lot.)
- Hulu (finished Season 5 of "What We Do In The Shadows". We'll be back when Season 6 drops.)
- Peacock (finished Season 1 of "Poker Face". We'll be back when Season 2 drops.)
- Paramount+ (finished Season 2 of "Yellowjackets". We'll be back when Season 3 drops.)
- AMC+ (finished Season 1 of "Cooper's Bar", which is moving to another platform. "Better Call Saul" ended. Will renew for "Dark Winds", but after we finish some stuff on other platforms.)
- Starz (finished Season 2 of "Shining Vale" and they've cancelled it and removed it from the platform. That would land them on my FTG list, but "Party Down" Season 4 will probably drop this fall and I'll be back.)
That's six platforms. Disney+ is the only one I wouldn't be likely to renew, except it and Hulu are going to be one platform this year, and I'll go back to Hulu.
We're actively watching shows on Netflix, Amazon and Max. As long as we are, I'll keep those subscriptions. Even if we weren't actively watching anything on Amazon, it comes with our Prime membership).
We're not actively watching anything on Apple+ at the moment, but my Apple One bundle (Music, TV and storage) makes it make sense to keep while waiting for new seasons of "The Morning Show", "Severance" and "Schmigadoon!". There's also a rumored new season of "Big Little Lies".
Streaming services aren't "beginning" to struggle with profitability. Amazon, Netflix and Hulu are all profitable and have been. Every other major has been in the red since day one and only Max has fixed that and become profitable via some very aggressive cuts.